Showing posts with label Gentle Parenting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gentle Parenting. Show all posts

07 June 2014

My Two Nurslings and A Family Photo Shoot

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I am super passionate about breastfeeding and all the physical and emotional benefits attached to it. I am thrilled to have been blessed with an amazing nursing relationship with my first “nursling” and excited that so far, I have an amazing nursing relationship with my twins. This is such a short season of life and so I love to capture some of these moments digitally. Originally I had scheduled a photo shoot with one of my favorite photographers (who also did a nursing shoot for me and Elijah). but due to some family needs, we moved our shoot to the end of the month. I am actually doing another nursing shoot for a fellow twin mama who is also a photographer, a Believer and crunchy. (talk about a lot in common!). Since I had my heart set on getting some photos done today, my sweet BFF Heather agreed to come take some shots with my camera and I am SO EXCITED about how they turned out.  We even got some pretty awesome family shots! I am excited to be getting all these pictures done right now especially because I was asked to help organize an Expo and location for the Big Latch On, sponsored by my dear friend and a favorite blogging Mama Kayla of Baby’s Breastie! So in celebration of the wonders of nursing, the Big Latch On and all the exciting events coming up…….

The first batch is sweet nursing moments with my Baby A, Rory. He is my champion nursling, a natural. It is always so relaxing nursing this little one, I could fall asleep.

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I have dreamed of having the chance to tandem nurse since I had Elijah. I don’t do it as often as I thought I would because often, it takes two hands to nurse Patrick but the babies were very willing today! I started off with just Patrick then added Rory…..

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We finished up the shoot with some shots of my Baby B, Patrick. Patrick is a very gentle nursling. He began life with twelve days in the NICU and was not permitted breast or bottle for the first four days of life. Read more about Patrick here. As soon as he was home, I worked diligently as weaning him from the bottle and within one week, he was EBF! (Exclusively breast fed). I am so proud of my little boy and how strong he is. He and I have a very special nursing relationship that we both have worked very hard to maintain.

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Finally here are some of the family shots we got today! I am so excited with how great they turned out considering we were working with three under two!

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07 May 2014

Thou Shalt Not Steal Thy Child's Joy.....



I recently finished reading (and will read again at least once) an AMAZING Christian parenting book called Grace Based Parenting by Tim Kimmel. This book really encompassed so much of what I hope to achieve both as a parent to my children as well as in my own journey of faith, love and devotion to Christ.  The basic concept of the book is to lead your children through example of God's Grace. This does not mean being a pushover and letting them get away with things. It also does not mean being militant and overly strict. It means that you lead by example and you have pure intentions as a foundation for you rules. In other words, it's not all about keeping up appearances.  The book is incredible and I highly recommend it, not only to parents but to anyone who wants a little more direction in their life..

One of the things that resonated with me in this book was where it discussed not taking away your child's joy. So often, children do things, say things, act a certain way, that isn't bad. In fact, it is not bad at all, no malicious intent....it's just, well, annoying. And sometimes the same thing that was fun one minute can be annoying the next. It is so temping to "reprimand" your child, or in my case, my child, when you are simply irritated because you are busy or in a hurry or something they are doing is just rubbing you the wrong way. Kimmel (and I) urge you to resist this.

My two year old, Elijah has such a big heart. He loves BIG! He has enthusiasm for everything he does. He is full of love and joy. And can he be annoying? Of course. But me cutting him short from a silly and harmless game he might be playing or questions he is asking can steal his joy. Sure, there may be instances when he doesn't give it a second thought. But then, you have that moment where you snap and say "Cut it out" or something along those lines and you see those big eyes get even bigger with the biggest hurt feelings you have ever seen. Now think. Were they really doing something wrong? Or did you. I don't know why this resonated with me so much but it is one of the lessons from the book that I have been able to really put into practice and I feel better about my parenting as a result. I think I did a pretty good job in this area anyway, but now I am so conscious of stealing his joy that it is the first thought that  pops in my head (normally) when that "cut it out" instinct kicks in. Now, don't get me wrong. First of all, I have LOTS of other areas that I need to work on. Parenting is definitely a journey, not a destination. And even with this particular aspect, there are days when I lack. And on those days, I apologize. Yup! I look my big baby boy in the eyes, tell him I am sorry then ask him if I can give him a hug. And he always forgives me. How amazing is that. He ALWAYS forgives me. There is totally another lesson in that. But I digress.

We are given such an amazing gift in the children we have in our lives. Not just our own, that call us Mama and Daddy but the ones that look up to us, that watch us, that bask in the glow of our approval and attention. It it takes one word, one look for that joy to come crashing down. So much power for one person (you, me) to have.

16 February 2014

Our Brave Boy Patrick & His 12 Day NICU Stay

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Life for my sweet babies did not begin as I had hoped, prayed and planned. Especially the first almost two weeks for my sweet little Patrick. I am slowing working on processing the birth experience and getting it down in writing but in the meantime, I want to make sure to document our brave boy’s NICU stay in order to share what he has been through and how far he has come.
Patrick’s birth was very traumatic for him. Rory was born pretty easily but Patrick (our Baby B) had trouble descending and his heart rate kept dropping. Attempts were made to pull him out via vacuum when it became clear he needed help and a cesarean seemed immanent. His heart rate had dropped several times during the 45 minute attempt to push him and finally he was taken from me via c-section with the intention of preventing further trauma or damage. Our Patrick was born without breath or heartbeat and I was not even able to see him before he was whisked away with me urging my husband, torn between me and Rory and Patrick, to stay with our sick baby. Patrick’s hear beat started pretty quickly after birth but it was not until he arrived at the NICU that he was able to breathe on his own, a blessing in and of itself. Due to the trauma of his birth and the unknown time he went without oxygen, it was decided that a semi new preventative treatment would be beneficial to Patrick. Patrick was born at 7:12pm on February 2. By 8:30 pm Patrick, still having never been held by either of his parents, was settled into the NICU wrapped in a cooling blanket that would keep his body temperature at 93 degrees for the next 72 hours.
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Patrick on his cooling blanket.
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Seeing and kissing my baby for the first time the morning after he was born.
I was not able to get down to the NICU until the next morning but Chip stayed with Patrick until he was settled. He was put on morphine for the duration of his treatment and given nutrition through IV fluids. He was then slowly warmed over 12 hours once his treatment was complete and only then was I able to hold my baby and feed him.
In the eight days that followed, several things happened. The first was an MRI to check for brain damage and signs of seizure. None was found, praise God, but there were some suspicious spots that were found and needed further inspection. A later CT scan showed clotting on the brain. The cause which could be anything from birth trauma, to prenatal or even could have resulted from his earlier cold treatment. The clots would need to be addressed and treated so family history was taken, a protocol was decided upon and medication levels were determined through trial and error. Patrick will be on a blood thinner called Lovenox, administered now by me twice a day via a shot for 6 to 12 weeks.  He has his levels checked once a week and medication adjusted accordingly and will have a CT scan to make sure the treatment is effective.
While in the NICU, Patrick also had to learn how to eat. Because he went for four days without the opportunity nurture this instinct, I was surprised when he latched on at my first attempt to nurse him at 8 days old. However I also knew the NICU wanted to monitor his intake and that it was not practical with another baby, for me to be able to nurse him for every feed and so the bottle was introduced. Patrick struggled to eat the “minimum” for the first several days and even my attempts at nursing during those days were feeble at best. But after a lot of prayer from friends and family and determination from myself, Chip, my mom, Aunt Linda and other family members and nurses, Patrick’s eating picked up and everything came together at once on February 14….Valentine’s Day…My due date. Patrick had eaten the minimum for 24 hours, his level came back where they needed to be and it was decided that Patrick would go home that night.
I cannot put into words how sad it makes me that my baby went without affection and feeling physical contact (except some limited touches and kisses), being held for four days and after that only intermittent contact until his release. My parenting philosophy is basically to not put my babies down, to feed on demand and shower them with affection. I will forever mourn the fact that the first almost two weeks of Patrick’s life, I was not able to give him what I see as such an important and immediate primal need to be loved. I will always wonder if and how it affected him permanently and I will always be amazed how beautifully and quickly he seemed to overcome this hard beginning. Thanks to prayers, thanks to a merciful God, thanks to some amazing doctors and nurses and thanks to an inner strength that is found in my baby.
I see Patrick thriving and growing and although I believe those days of isolation affected him, he is overcoming it day by day. Through both our hard work, Patrick is now off the bottle completely as of 2/21! He is alert and quickly catching up to his twin brother in strength and already caught up in awareness. We are so grateful for the outpouring of prayers and love that we have received for both of our babies and are just so grateful to have everyone home together. Those 12 days were hard on Patrick but also on our whole family. I wonder about Patrick and Rory, who had spent 9 months together in the womb, missing one another. Chip, Elijah and I spent so much time apart instead of transitioning together as a family of five and Elijah most of all, who missed being with me, his mommy who he was used to being with 24/7. I had worked so hard at building that attachment with my first born and it was so hard to be away from him. I am just so grateful to have my family back together….healthy….happy…..and whole.
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Patrick’s name tag in the NICU made by one of the nurses
Below are some sweet pictures taken by The Tiny Footprints Project, a group of photographers that donate their time and talent to NICU families to photograph their babies.
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Our sweet Patrick freshly off of the cooling blanket
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Patrick had IV’s placed in a different spot every time I visited him. It made me so nervous to hold him because I was scared to hurt him. I know IV’s can hurt!
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I love the sweet friend that took these and that I have these early days with my captured.
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Sweet moments stolen in the NICU
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Chip was the first to get to hold Patrick.
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This was the first time I held my baby

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Aunt Linda with the littlest Parish
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My dad holding his “youngest” grandson
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Looking up at his Pop
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As coincidence would have it, our favorite NP used to work from my dad! She took amazing care of us before we all discovered this connection!
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February 14, 2014 approximately 11:00pm…Patrick is on his way home…….