Evelyn

My blog turned five last week. Five years I’ve been writing here, with all that that entails. I’ve seen the rise of the Mummyblogger happen, and the rise of branded messages too. Things have changed an awful lot since I started and that’s neither good or bad. It’s just change.

It’s different now, this blogging space – MY blogging space is different. The thing about my blog turning five is that I actually care less about traffic now. Growth? That’s something my children are doing – my blog doesn’t have to grow a certain amount per month to keep me happy. Sure, I’d love my blog to be successful and highly trafficked, but it just seems like so much WORK, you know?

Evelyn is sick you guys, and that also changes my perspective. Any time I’m spending on the Internet is time that I’m trying to distract myself. Or time that I’m Googling seizures in newborns. (Don’t Google seizures in newborns if your baby is having seizures.)

Far be it for me to tell anyone what they can and can’t do with their own blog, but I am missing the stories. I am missing strongly held opinions, which seem to have been lost in the wishy washy of trying to keep everyone happy and not upset potential sponsers.

I don’t even know what I’m trying to say here. I want the Internet to distract me and frankly, the things that used to work no longer do. Twitter seems to be a mess of brand messages and self promotion, with no room for conversation and the sycophants rule.

My baby is having seizures and the Internet just seems ridiculous right now. How much of this space matters? Is being famous on the Internet even worth it? Why are we letting other people dictate how we ought to use our own spaces?

My blog turned five and I didn’t even notice, because I was too busy actually living my life.

I find myself caring less and less about what everyone else thinks, and just wanting to tell my stories.

When I read back through this blog, in ten years, am I going to get nolstalgic for the giveaways? Or for the stories I tell about my children?

Evelyn was born and I blogged her stay in NICU, knowing that it would bore people, because I needed to remember it. Now she’s having seizures and I am blogging those, so that I have something to remind me in 10 years (when things will be so very different) of just how terrifying it is to hold my newborn daughter while she twitches and seizes.

It’s funny how things change.

 

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So, Internet. Everything has kind of gone to hell around here in the last few days.

Amy has had conjunctivitis and has been home from school for a week. This morning, Nathan and I discovered that she couldn’t hear 3/4 of anything we said. Luckily, we had a doctors appointment booked already, because it turns out she has what is commonly known as glue ear and has gone quite deaf. This explains why I’ve spent the last few days demanding to know why the TV is turned up so far.

Both of her eyes are bright red still, despite drops, so we walked out of the GP with stronger antibiotics to help clear up her sinuses, which will hopefully let everything fix itself.

Also a good thing that we had a doctors appointment today: Yesterday, I realised that Evelyn was having what I thought might be seizures.

Worse than that, she was having what looked to be lots of seizures, not just one out-of-the-blue convulsion.

I managed to catch some on video, dutifully showed the doctor, wondering if he was going to tell us we were being ridiculous, only to have him look quite concerned. This, I might add, is our incredibly laid back GP, who never seems concerned about anything.

He agreed that they certainly looked like seizures and is currently organising for us to see the hospital clinics, as soon as we can for follow-up. Probably early next week.

Her jaundice still hasn’t cleared up, which could be causing them – which wouldn’t be so terrible. Except then you wonder why her jaundice isn’t clearing up, when she’s feeding and gaining weight so well.

Around in a loop my brain goes.

They’re not terrible seizures, involving mostly eye flicking, rolling and blankness. They last anywhere between 15 seconds and a few minutes and she’s unresponsive while they occur.

She’s only 33 days old.

It hardly seems like we could have broken her in a mere month!

This is why new babies need warranties IMO.

 

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We had the Clinic Health Nurse out to visit us this week, to weigh Evelyn and measure her. You know that there was a small amount of confusion as to how far along I was when I gave birth, and no one has agreed on anything.

I said 36 weeks, minimum. The early ultrasound said 34 weeks. Evelyn’s nurses in Special Care agreed that she was acting like a 36 + week baby, and so did the doctors. The clinic nurses however, they couldn’t decide, and we’ve had a number of confusing conversations regarding actual age, versus corrected age and how many weeks to correct by, and really, I get a headache thinking about it.

ANYWAY.

Evelyn has now, at four weeks old, reached the size of a regular newborn. Slightly heavier than Isaac at birth, slightly lighter than Amy, she is teensy tiny, in a huge kind of way. (Honestly you guys, I cannot believe I birthed two babies as huge as Evelyn is right now. CANNOT BELIEVE.) During weighing, she was 3.17kg, or a spectacular 6lb15oz, with a grand total weight gain of 760g in two weeks.

[Digression: Turns out, Isaac was only 6lb10oz at birth – not the 7lbs I’d been told by a midwife with a conversion chart. I didn’t realise this until Evelyn was weighing more than Isaac at birth, yet wasn’t quite 7lbs. When I announced this to Nathan, he was all “why does this matter?” and I ended up shouting at him, because THESE THINGS MATTER TO WOMEN. And it doesn’t make Evelyn’s 5lb2oz seem so tiny when her brother was only 6 and a half pounds.]

So, four weeks old. Or full term corrected. Or two weeks old corrected. ONE OF THESE IS RIGHT.

See also: headache.

In any case, prematurity is not holding her back.

CAN YOU SEE THAT SMILE?

Yes, that’s right, she’s smiling. Smiling properly. Grinning at her siblings. Smiling at me of a morning. Delightedly pulling faces at my breasts. My breasts get most of the smiles at the moment, which doesn’t surprise me – they’re spectacularly good breasts.

SMILES.

She’s also stopped sleeping for 20 hours a day and is requiring entertaining and talking to and extra attention. In fact, she’s lying across my lap as I type this, trying to eat her fists. She’s practically a real baby now.

[Second digression: I was watching the news last night, and there was a piece on doll making. They showed some of those “real dolls”, you know, the ones that are meant to look like newborn babies? In any case, the lady discussing them was gushing over how REAL they look and how they’ve been mistaken for real babies when they’ve been left alone in cars. I looked at my real baby, snuggled up to my breast and back to the “real dolls” on TV, comparing them.

LADY, if you think your “real dolls” look anything like an actual baby, then your eyesight needs checking. Either that, or you birthed demon spawn and have no other field of reference. And if someone thought that a “real doll” was an actual baby left in a car, it’s only because it looked terribly terribly sick and in need of immediate medical attention.]

HUGENORMOUS BABY.

Accept no imitations.

 

 

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On grief, and the addition of hormones

by Veronica on August 22, 2012

in Evelyn, Grief

I was in the supermarket today when I walked through a cloud of perfume. It’s said that scent evokes memories stronger than other senses and I’m inclined to agree, as I breathed the perfume and tried not to cry. You see, someone had gotten up that morning and headed to the supermarket wearing the same perfume my grandmother used to wear and it was her smell that I was surrounded by for a few moments, standing between the leeks and the strawberries.

If I’d been able to pick which woman was wearing the perfume, I would have asked her what it was, because I don’t know anymore. Sadly, there were quite a few women standing in the fruit and vegetables section and I didn’t think it would be polite to demand to smell them all.

So I turned and walked away, with my tiny daughter tucked under my chin, burying myself in her new baby smell. I regretted it, you know, the not asking. Just quietly.

I knew that this would be the hardest part of having a new baby, the grief and missing, mixed with hormones. It’s a potent mix, guaranteed to have you sobbing on the baby’s head while you burp her.

A few days ago, I went looking back through the baby photos of Amy and Isaac, searching for their newborn photos. I wanted to compare Evelyn’s hair colour with theirs and see how long it took for Amy’s jaundice to clear up. It was a stupid thing to do I realised, as I found photo after photo of my grandmother holding them.

I’m glad I have those photos (oh so glad) and I am also grieving the fact that she will never know Evelyn, who looks so much like her as a baby. Genetics are a funny thing.

Death is so final. There are no do overs and no “just wait, I just need you for right this second”. It sounds stupid to point this out, but it’s the finality of death that continues to slap me in the face, long after the shock and initial pain have faded. Can’t we just rewind time for a little? Borrow her for a day? No. No you can’t.

In the meantime, I admire my daughter’s cheeks that I have worked so hard to fatten up, and I demand that the Internet admire them too.

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Newborn sleeping patterns: They’re not fantastic, are they?

Evelyn is asleep on my shoulder at the moment and I’ve rigged the keyboard to sit half on my desk and half on the arm of my chair so that I can type with two hands. Turns out, I am way too impatient to cope well with one handed typing, preferring instead to not write anything, rather than write slowly.

Instead, you have been able to find me sitting somewhere, while Evelyn naps on my shoulder, fusses or feeds, with my kindle in my hand and my older children arranged around us, begging to cuddle her too. Which is nice, but doesn’t work so well when all Ev wants is the boobs and the smell of the milk bringer. I left my dirty t-shirt with Nathan last night so that I could shower in peace.

She is very snuggle-able, so I’m not minding. Plus, it’s kind of nice to not be feeling guilty about not helping fold the washing, or clean the bedrooms, because sorry dude, baby needs me. I’ll just hang out here with my cup of tea and my daughter, okay?

(HUGE props to Nathan, who is making sure we don’t live in a hovel and changing Isaac’s nappies without being asked. Also bringing me cups of tea and keeping my quota of adult conversation in the “not going insane yet” levels.)

In the meantime, there is this:

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