eating at BlogHer when you’re constantly feeding someone else. {sponsored}

So let’s pretend you’re at BlogHer ’11 and for whatever reason you don’t make it down to breakfast in time for whatever reason. (Sharing a room with six girls and one shower? Hangover? TINY LITTLE BABY ON HER OWN SCHEDULE?) Have you been to the Hillshire Farm booth? Where they will make you a delicious noshing of food featuring any number of Hillshire Farm meat delicacies even when breakfast (or lunch if you’re REALLY hungover) is long gone and over? Yeah. My kind of booth. I tried the turkey sausage today, SO GOOD. Not to mention the protein is a delicious break from ALL. THE. CAKE. POPS.

Wendi McLendon-Covey of Bridesmaids and Reno 911 fame will be on hand to view, admire, meet, greet and discuss the finer points of sausage on Saturday if you’re around.

If you’re not around?

I miss you.

Wish you were here.

*******************

DISCLOSURE: This post number three of  four sponsored posts I’ll be doing with Hillshire Farm and their new “So Good They’ll Think it’s for Them” campaign. I have been compensated for my time and participation, not for promoting a particular product, turkey sausage love? Purely my own. GO MEAT!

the one about me not being able to breastfeed.

Invented in the mid-1800’s as a last-ditch option for orphans and underweight babies, packaged infant formula has since been perfected to be a complete and reliable source of stress and shame for mothers.” -Tina Fey, Bossypants

I do not produce breastmilk.

I figured I’d better come clean on this whole subject since some of you may see Vivi drinking formula out of bottles in a few days.

Ironically this is World Breastfeeding Week.

Chances are there are other women like me out there who see all of this PRO BREASTFEEDING! and GO TEAM MILK BOOBS! talk and feel a rock in their stomach like I do.

The assumption of a bottle feeding mother is hardly ever a good one. Generally the assumption that tops the list is that she gave up. Or that she’s selfish. Or lazy.

I can assure you that bottle feeding does not a lazy/selfish life enable. I have to be twice as prepared when I leave the house because I do not make milk on demand.

Did I give up? Sure, I guess you could call it that if you want to. But I gave up knowing that for eight weeks I did anything and EVERYTHING I could to promote milk production. Vivi had a latch and patience breastfeeding mothers dream of.

nursing with an SNS tube.

I wanted this to work so bad you guys.

I wanted to breastfeed Vivi exclusively just as badly as I wanted to be pregnant.

But my body…it didn’t oblige.

Many bodies out there don’t produce what comes naturally to so many others. Some bodies don’t produce enough tears, some bodies don’t produce enough insulin, some bodies don’t produce enough estrogen, some bodies don’t produce sweat, some bodies don’t produce sperm and some bodies don’t produce babies.

Just because someone has all the parts doesn’t mean they all work in harmony (or at all.)

But a body that doesn’t produce breastmilk is the only one that is judged both openly and silently on a fairly regular basis.

Can you imagine someone who suffers from dry eye syndrome being accosted for putting eye drops in their eyes? “Those have chemicals in them! THEY ARE UNNATURAL! What, are you so selfish that you can’t bother to cry your own tears? Your eyes are going to be damaged, don’t you care?

(I realize the ratio of people who think this way is 1:100, but that one. They are loud.)

I stuck with it. Eight weeks day and night. I did outrageous things for outrageous lengths of time at outrageous hours. People would say “I don’t know how you’re doing it.” I would respond “I can’t not, I’ll know when it’s time to be done and now isn’t the time.”

One morning I looked at a tiny baby Vivi and I said “Baby, I don’t make enough what you need. I’m sorry. I did my best.” She gave me a gummy little smile and I knew it would be okay.

That day I didn’t take fenugreek, domperidone, goat’s rue, More Milk Plus, drink my tea, wear an SNS or pump.

I never made another drop of milk.

There was no tapering. No drying up.

There was nothing. No evidence that I had ever even tried aside from the breastfeeding paraphernalia at the side of my bed.

I was never able to satiate her with breastmilk. Not even once. Not even after spending a week straight in bed doing nothing but everything I was supposed to be doing. I never leaked. I never let down. I never engorged. I never pumped more than an ounce. Combined. All day.

Those first eight weeks went so fast.

Every moment was spent trying to make more milk. Every time I nursed her I would think “This has to be it, this has to be the time I’m able to fill her up.

That time never came.

These last four weeks have been spent settling into our new routine and mourning the loss of breastfeeding.

Vivi is easily the most loved baby to ever exist. We crowd around her daily, fighting over who loves her more. She fits into our family so perfectly. Her little spirit is exactly what we never knew we were missing. Will I ever not feel a tinge of jealously when I see another mom breastfeeding? Maybe. Maybe not.

My boobs don’t work. But my heart does.

And it belongs to this little girl and her big sister. (And the guy who helped me make them for a few glorious seconds.)

four feet.

unsent-imentality.

Dear ______, I can’t believe the year you’ve had. You’ve handled it with such grace and strength. I wish I could have been there for you more, but just know you were (and always be) in my heart everyday. xo-me.

Dear ______, When I think about that long awaited baby in your belly my arms tingle. I know you’ve fought for this and wanted this for so long, and that it’s finally happening for you? Let me just say from experience, it’s about to get even better. xo-me.

Dear ______, I can’t believe I ever lived a life without you as my friend. Your advice, your support, your sense of humor, your kindness. You are an example of what a true friend is, and that I get to call you mine? I am blessed. xo-me

Dear ______, I’m sorry for that thing that person said about you. I hope you know it’s not true. But boy do I know, when you hear one mean thing about you no matter who it’s from, you’re suddenly sure that EVERYONE around you thinks the same thing and is just being nice to your face. I can assure you that I am not one of those people. xo-me.

Dear ______. You are wonderful. Thank you for always thinking about me and my family. Thank you for your little notes and packages. Thank you for being you and for finding me when I had lost myself. xo-me.

Dear ______, If I were to be honest and tell you how much I really *REALLY* like you? You’d get uncomfortable. But that’s how much I like you. I just keep it to myself because no one likes a creeper. Even though I can assure you I’m not one…much. xo-me.

Dear ______, I still don’t know what I did to make you so angry with me, but I can promise you that if I could undo it? I would. I hate that a friendship ended over a misunderstanding. A mistake. I must thank you for forcing me to grow and feel uncomfortable and learn more about myself. I wish you nothing but the best. -me.

Dear ______, You are beautiful. Like the kind you just stare at and want to comment on but then it becomes kind of weird or even worse sounds insincere. I’m not even sure you realize how beautiful you are, which is probably why you’re so beautiful from the tips of your toes to your fingertips. xo-me.

Dear ______, I never quite know what to say to you. I don’t think you hear how fantastic you truly are nearly enough, but at the same time I’m not sure you’d *really* listen if somebody told you. Which I’m sure they have. Because you are. Fantastic. When you’re feeling crappy know that at least one person believes you can move mountains. xo-me.

Dear ______, I’m sorry. I know you don’t believe my apology or want it, but I am. Do I wish the whole world could get along and hold hands? Yep. Does that make me naive and childish? Probably. Will I piss you off again? Maybe. But if you ever change your mind. I’ll be here. Hand out, ready to sing some campfire songs. My forgiveness is always yours if you ever want it.  Best-me.

Dear ______, If I could take even ten minutes of your pain so you could breathe without that weight on your chest? I would. I hate feeling helpless. I’m always here. No matter what. Take care of yourself, or let me. I’m very good at it. xo-me.

*******

What would you like to say to someone? Why haven’t you said it? You should say it. Go, now.

*******

This post is sponsored by Hallmark’s “Life is a Special Occasion” campaign. Because any I time I get to spend with my true friends is a special occasion. Especially when food is involved. Find out about how to make little moments more memorable with special emails from Hallmark.

smatterings.

Goodbye July! While we’re at it let’s just say goodbye to 2011 because I never even had time to say hello to it. Has this year gone outrageously fast for anyone else? I’m pretty sure if I wrote a check right now I’d still but 2010 in as the date.

Many of you asked if you could still fix a diastasis two, three, even twelve years after your pregnancy. The answer is yes and this is the 4 step program that can help you do just that. Tell them I sent you, not that it matters, I just really think the creator needs to know how powerful social media and word of mouth is. Too many women have been told the only way to fix their FUPA (hat tip, flinger) is with surgery. This is not the case. (See also, not sponsored.)

Babbled this week:

I only have two kids but already find myself screaming “ADDI…VIV…WAIT, NO ADDIE! NO! WHO ARE YOU PEOPLE?” Not to mention the nicknames. (Hey remember Mozzi?)

I asked people what they panicked about as a new parent.  Many different answers and the correct one? Everything.

A visual tour of Vivi’s handmade etsy-licious bedroom.

How do you burp a baby? I’m a sack of potatoes burper myself.

****

A blog I really got into this week? Grumbles and Grunts. I know she swears. Unclench. Most people do. I’m well aware I’M the weird one in this situation.

****

Here’s Vivi observing her (Indiana) kingdom, she likes looking out at city streets. She’s a very observant baby. Watch out, I’m pretty sure she can see your hopes and dreams, make sure they’re clean ones, she’s just a baby.

(Indiana love onesie from Elms and Cedars.)

I really liked these posts about BlogHer.

Why a six year veteran is scared to death. (oh, hi. me. same reasons.)

Get your face out of your phone, your friends are in front of you.

Don’t want to read about BlogHer? Then read my (still) favorite blog of all time.

Take care of each other.

I have approximately 18 loads of laundry to catch up on. RACE YOU!

i like spinach because my mom lied to me. {sponsored}

If you ask my mom about her greatest parenting accomplishments, getting my sister and me to fight over steamed spinach as kids by lying to us is certainly one of them. She told us they were ‘sweet leaves.’ I mean, c’mon, what kid isn’t going to want to eat sweet leaves?

As I recall there was never enough spinach at dinnertime. One measly scoop? THAT’S IT? I may or may not have bartered with my sister to get her share of the green stuff to.

Continue reading “i like spinach because my mom lied to me. {sponsored}”

live and diastasis.

So I have a tear down the middle of my stomach.

Technical name?

Diastasis Recti.

What does it look like?

The one on the left.

image copyright 2010 Julie Tupler, RN

Does it hurt?

Yes. Quite badly at times.

Can you feel your guts through it?

Yep, and it’s just as gross as it sounds.

Can you fix it?

Sure! But I’m learning it’s a whole hell of a lot of work to do just that.

It involves a splint. A tight splint that I have to wear day and night for at least six weeks. A tight splint that I have to wear day and night for at least six weeks in super hot and sweaty Indiana weather.

What does the splint look like?

*deep breath*

Well, before I show you what I look like with the splint on I should show you what it looks like with it off.

Wait wait wait! First, let me show you what I looked like 9 hours before I gave birth. (Perspective. It helps.)

9 hours before she came out.

Okay.

9 weeks postpartum (with a giant diastasis, remember? Good.)

11 weeks postpartum diastasis.

and while we’re at it…from the front.

9 weeks postpartum diastasis.

and now with the splint…

diastasis splint.

diastasis splint.

Yeah. That’s a lot to hold in huh?

So. There you go.

That’s what I’m dealing with over here.

It kind of sucks.

But look what I got out of it!!

my ladies.

Two of ’em! BONUS!

Now move along and have comfort in the fact that not all of us are in bikinis eight weeks postpartum.

dear brain,

I’d be remiss not to thank you for the excellent work you’ve been doing for me lately. Especially when it comes time to dominate my family at monkey match each night. I know you’re well aware that this whole making our living on the Internet thing is feast or famine and we’ve had to pass on a lot of feasts in the past because you just couldn’t be trusted to hold your own.

2.8 self in the mountains.

You’ve been working so well I’ve taken on far more this month than I ever have in all my six years doing this. I have faith that we can do this together brain. That you won’t break on me. At least not until the feast table has been cleared and the food coma has set in.

We’re good brain, you and me.

Let’s keep it that way for as long as possible (at least until the end of August please.)

xoxo, the body that contains you and feeds you all those tasty omega-3’s

the one about vivi’s hair.

So. Maybe you’ve noticed Vivi’s hair.

indulging in some mild narcissism.

She came out with it and it hasn’t gone anywhere since. Addie wasn’t born with quite as much but she has since made up for her follicular shortages at birth with a mop of her own.

Cody drew you a picture in case you’re not familiar.

a guide to my kids. by cody.

She’s taken to doing some mild impressionism work.

Guy Fieri…


sleepy vivi.
Donald Trump…


oh hello cutest baby ever.

Elvis…


magic hairs on a happy baby.

And old school Christopher Lloyd…


6 weeks

and then there’s this one, which isn’t so much about the hair as it is about how awful her life must be to make a face like this.

my hair looks stupid vivi.

I love her so so much.

traveling with kids without traveling to the crazy farm. {sponsored}

Hey remember when I told you about that time we packed up and drove across the country with a two month old and a six year old? I didn’t? Yeah, that’s because I was hoping to never have to think about it ever again. Vivi lost her mind and decided she hated everyone and everything around the western border of Wyoming. I followed shortly by having a meltdown through the canyons of northeastern Utah.

Continue reading “traveling with kids without traveling to the crazy farm. {sponsored}”

drinking perfume in an attempt to sweat it out has crossed my mind…

It’s time to crowd source your brilliance.

The past week temperatures in Indianapolis have been similar to the surface of the sun. For those of you unfamiliar with heat + humidity = heat index, imagine standing in front of a running semi on the hottest day you can imagine while wearing winter clothes.

One of the things I miss most about Utah is the ability to take a shower and still feel and smell as though you cared about your personal hygiene hours later. I’m pretty sure the only reason I shower out here anymore is to scrape off one layer of sweat only to allow another one to adhere to me as soon as I dry off.

I should really like to be a good smelling person. I’ve exhausted my knowledge in the attempt to attain such a lofty goal but have come up only slightly less smelly (and sweaty and sticky.)

Is there something I’m missing? Or are we all doomed to feeling and smelling slimy and miserable in the most humid parts summer?