Milk Goddess

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MilkGoddessConfession: I wanted to be Miss America when I was a little girl.

Worse confession: I was actually in training for it, if you consider being in a few “Toddlers & Tiaras” and high school/college pageants being “in training” for Miss America.

My titles were few and far between. I believe I was officially “Little Miss Sweetheart,” which actually means little miss absolutely nothing. When I was 14, I was one of two “freshman representatives” chosen as part of the court in our high school pageant. Not much of a pageant career, sadly.

But the truth of the matter is, every time I entered a pageant, I wanted that damn crown. Yes, I wanted to be “Fairest of the Fair” (as in ferris wheel, cotton candy, carnies) and I wanted to be Queen of the Shrimp Festival too. I wanted to be “Little Miss Heart of Dixie” just as I wanted to be the Kielbasa Queen of some podunk suburban town with one red light.

I just wanted to spend one year reigning over the sausages, the watermelons, the cotton, the peanuts…SOMETHING.

I wanted to rock that damn tiara.  I really did.

But the years went by and I finally gave up, accepting instead the eternal title of “mommy.” And it was a fine trade.

Then, just when I thought I was far too old to be eligible for any title, I found one bestowed upon me in the most unlikely of places — the NICU of the wonderful Children’s Hospital of Atlanta.

My loyal subjects: bow before the Milk Goddess.

When my second child was born extremely prematurely, the hospital became my second home. Everyday after getting my older kid off to preschool, I’d show up in the NICU with my mountainous 32Js crammed into a weeping nursing bra and carrying several bottles of freshly pumped breast milk to put in storage for the baby. Who, by the way, was unable to take liquids by mouth until he was about a year old.

But we were all hopeful, so they asked me to bring it and I brought it. I mean, girlfriend BROUGHT it.

For the first couple of weeks, the nurses would gently tell me that one of their lactation consultants would be dropping by during my visit to support me and give me pointers on pumping and breast feeding. One of them would pop their sweet faces and calm natures into my room and sort of nervously ask me how it was going. I’d tell her about the 12 ounces I brought in from my morning pump and you’d see a look of incredulity cross her face. She’d disappear and come back later, (I assume having confirmed that my section of the freezer was indeed stocked), and then tell me how very lucky my baby (and me) were.

It didn’t take me long to earn a reputation. They began to call me the Milk Goddess.

Because the baby wasn’t taking the milk, however, it really started to accumulate, overflowing my section of the freezer at the hospital and both of our freezers at home. I was incredibly close to starting to ask neighbors for some space in their freezers, and I even inquired at the hospital about donating milk. One of the doctors filled me in on the process and how very needed donated breast milk is all over the world. In the end, I was advised to keep mine because my baby would eventually need it, and after he came home from the hospital, he did (even though via feeding tube instead of by mouth).

In my case, they were right. We began to go through our vast quantity of breast milk pretty fast. But had our situation been different, I would’ve loved the opportunity to help someone else whose dreams of being a Milk Goddess had not come true.

I was a Milk Goddess for about 9 months, wearing a crown with a rhinestone-encrusted cow on it and carrying a septor in the shape of one of those suction tubes that makes your nipples look like tiny penises as they milk you. And then my reign was over.

I was concerned that I’d cling to my crown as they tried to take it away from me. That I’d throw a box of breast pads at the new title-winner and run. But the truth was, it was time to move on. I pageant-waved to my adoring milk-addled fans, handed over my breast pump and walked away to find a smaller-sized bra.

This post made possible by The International Breast Milk Project.
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8 Funny Ways to Entertain Yourself At The Doctor’s Office.

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Disclaimer:  This is a JOKE.  Of course, I respect all medical personnel and would never put my saliva all over their tongue depressors or intentionally set off alarms on a blood pressure machine.  Ask anyone.

Doc office graphicMy family had it a little rough in the medical arena last year.  If you’re new here, you might want to click here.  And here.  And maybe here just to catch up.

Things have turned out amazingly well for us in the long run.  The baby is a year old (corrected age) and 100% fine and dandy even after all that extended preemie drama.

But let’s just say that between my bed rest, his 2 1/2 month NICU stay and the subsequent doctor and therapy visits that sometimes numbered 7 per week (yes, that’s right…more than one doctor and/or therapy visit on at least 2 of those weekdays), it was quite the challenge.

As you must be able to predict, I did a lot of waiting around.  A LOT of waiting around.

Still do, of course.  Just not 7 times per week.

Meyer.paciWhen I wasn’t holding my arm up as high as it would go tube-feeding the baby, or lifting him and his heart monitor onto a changing table in a cramped bathroom to relieve him of a dirty diaper, or twiddling my thumbs or moving from the main waiting room to the sub-waiting room to the exam room and then waiting some more, I developed some interesting ways to entertain myself.

Even though you may not be at the doctor 7 times per week, if you have kids, you’re there often enough.  And you know what I’m saying when I talk about waiting.

About a month ago, I went to one of the baby’s doctors (and this is a specialist that’s very hard to get into so you just have to take what you get) and after driving 40 minutes to the office in time for my 9:30am appointment, sat in the waiting room with a squirmy baby until 12:45pm without even making it into an exam room.  And then sat in the exam room until 1:30pm waiting on the doctor.  And then barely got an apology.  I’d had a 1-year-old climbing on me like a human jungle gym for 4 HOURS.  He’d had no nap.  He’d had very little food (since silly me thought we’d be home by lunch time from a 9:30am appt).  So, yeah.  I wasn’t amused.  And the doctor could tell when he finally graced us with his presence.

So, because I think you should benefit from my extensive year-long research into the matter, I am here to teach you 8 creative ways to pass the time while you wait at doctor’s office.  And wait.  And wait.  And.  wait.

1.  Learn how you could’ve made 1 Million Dollars.  Back in 1987.

doc.magazines2.  Guess how many tongue depressors are in the jar.  Take them out and count them.  If your guess was within 10 in either direction, you win.  Lick them all then put them back in the jar.

doc.tongue3.  Find reading materials that will inspire you to diet by making sure you never want to eat things like nuts or sausage ever ever ever again.

nutsorsausage4.  Run in place until you can’t breathe, then hook yourself up to the blood pressure machine and press go.  See how long it takes for someone to finally enter the room.

doc.bloodpressure5.  Rate your spelling capabilities against those of the medical personnel in the office you’re visiting.  If you find errors, circle them and write in the correct spelling with a pen from your purse.  Then write, “Guess medical school doesn’t teach you everything, does it, dummy!”

doc.spelling6.  Mess with the computer even though the sign says don’t mess with the computer.  Cancel the doctor’s 4pm massage.

doc.computer7.  Make every hand gesture you can think of with vinyl exam gloves.  Tape them up around the exam room.  Pretend you don’t see anything unusual when the doctor enters the room.

doc.rockon

doc.peacedoc.eff.you

8.  Pretend you’re 20,000 Leagues Under The Sea.  Announce “There She Blows!” to the doctor when she finally walks into the room.

doc.periscope
I’ve shared with you my 8 tried and true (funny) ways to entertain myself while waiting on doctors. Try them. You’ll laugh. You’ll cry. You’ll laugh while you cry. And you’ll probably come up with some more. PLEASE share them with me. I can only read so many magazines from 1987 before I get the yen to start wearing jellies again. And that would be, like, totally gnarly, dude.

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Old Big Shorts

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I had a baby a few months ago, and then I had a long, enduring ordeal with him in the NICU for 2 1/2 months.

And then I spent what seemed like every second of my time taking the baby and Asher to doctor and therapy appointments for the first couple of months after Meyer got out of the hospital.

I couldn’t have dreamed of working out.

So I am not thin right now.

And of course it bothers me.

But does my 4-year-old have to get in on the act?

Last night, I was folding some clothes and as I shook out a pair of my shorts and then held them in front of me to fold, Asher looks up from the bathtub and says, “Are those daddy’s pants?”

“No,” I said. “These are mommy’s shorts.”

Just a beat passes, in which I can feel something horrible coming on.

And then he says, “Sooo big!”

I immediately dropped the shorts to the floor and dove head-first into my bed.

And bit my pillow.

Asher came into the bedroom to ask why I was laughing.

And then he saw the tears in my eyes and wanted to know if I was crying.

I told him truthfully that I had laughed so hard, there were tears in my eyes.

I wasn’t crying.

At least on the outside.

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Baby, I'm Coming Home

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THIS

MINUS THIS

EQUALS THIS

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