Happy Birthday Jack and Olivia!

Tags

, , ,

February 5, 2014

“There was a star danced, and under that you were born.”

                                                            William Shakespeare

It’s the same bitter cold weather as it was 13 years ago, but I was barely aware of the snow on the ground or the winter chill.  I was inside all day, in a room with long rectangle windows high up close to the ceiling telling me if it was night or day, but not the weather.  I sat between them – Olivia’s incubator on my left, Jack’s on my right – two tiny babies, so small that the preemie hats they wore looked many sizes too big.  At the end of each incubator was an index card – a pink one with “STANTON A, 1530 grams” written on it and a blue one with “STANTON B, 1598 grams” written on it.  Tiny arm bands encircled each tiny wrist.  I could only hold them for short periods of time before they would have to go back into their incubators as they were not able to maintain their body temperature on their own yet.  I held each separately at first, entranced by them, my wee babies.  Olivia had white fuzzy hair.  Jack had only a hint of hair, but it was also white.  I couldn’t take my eyes off of them.

Jack & Olivia in the NICU

Jack, Olivia & Me in the NICU

It was as if time stood still during those 32 days Jack and Olivia were in the NICU (Neonatal Intensive Care Unit).  It was like holding my breath.  Fear and joy mixed together every time I pressed the button to gain entrance into the NICU outer room.  Scrub brushes and special soap for the 2 minute scrub of my hands – skin red and raw, knuckles cracked and bleeding after 32 days of washing.  Then the sterile gown and shoe covers before pressing another button to be allowed into the nursery, saying hello to the ward clerk, knowing everyone’s name by now – passing through the A nursery, where babies who were close to being discharged were in their bassinets.  Then through another door to the B nursery, where babies needing more care were crying or sleeping, various IV’s and machines beeping and buzzing.  This is where Jack and Olivia were.  I could put my hands through the holes, touch them, rub their tiny feet, watch them squeeze the tip of my finger with their whole hand, but I would have to wait to pick them up – wait until a nurse got them out and handed them to me, wait if they had just been out having a bath.  Wait.  It seemed interminable.  The urge, the need to pick them up was so strong.  Interminable.  Time seemed to crawl slowly on.  Days and days in the NICU.  Days they weren’t home, lying next to me.  Interminable.  It’s all so clear in my mind – so real I can close my eyes and see it all, hear the machines, the noise of the babies and nurses.  As if it were yesterday.  But yesterday was their 13th birthday.   My tiny babies. Now beautiful.  Now walking to school on their own, out to lunch on their own, yesterday donning justice robes in a mock trial at the Brooklyn County Court House where their social studies classes went after studying the Constitution.  My babies.  And now time seems to be speeding by, flying past.  But I want to slow it down, relish each moment – slow down time the way it felt when I sat gazing at them in their incubators 13 years ago.

‘Tis The Season…….Writing with Twins

I may have written this 6 years ago, but funnily enough, much of what I said then still holds true today – the distractions and business, the predictable and unpredictable parts of my day- those haven’t gone away.  The thing that has changed is my expectation that being the mother of twins will ever be anything different than filled with a wonderful sort of chaos and lots of joy….and never enough time:)

                                        Writing With Twins

  •                               “…….and that common arbitrator, Time.”
  •                                                                      MacBeth
  •                                                                      Wm. Shakespeare
  •                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   Yes, that’s right.  It is indeed the afternoon before the evening I’m supposed to read a piece I’ve written.  And yes, I did sign up eight days ago to do it.  Since then, I’ve visited Santa at Macy’s, taken Jack and Olivia to three rehearsals for the church Christmas Pageant, gone to the pageant itself, been to ballet classes, a birthday party puppet show, bought a Christmas tree and trimmed it after having a fight with my husband (I’m surprised we were able to fit it in!)  I’ve wandered around to several banks and two different Duane Reade stores to find a gift card for my daughter’s teacher, gone to an extremely tense class parent meeting with the principal, taken Jack to OT (occupational therapy), gone without sleep because Jack threw up twice in the middle of the night, which happened to be the night before my last writing class where I was to have at lease three pages written and ready to be read in class.  This writing I managed to squeeze in after school pick-up, ballet and OT, but before Jack threw up.  Whew!
6 years ago - Choosing a Christmas tree

6 years ago – Choosing a Christmas tree

  • I’ve organized the school Holiday Breakfast and been to the first grade Holiday Celebration where I heard a play/poem about Salt Marshes (they’ve been studying them since September).  I’ve been out on a date night with my husband (an every Sunday night occurance).  I’ve stood in a long line in the American Girl store to buy the VERY LAST light-skinned, fair-haired “Just Like Me” American girl doll with blue eyes in the store (who knew there were so many blonde-haired, blue-eyed children in New York City who wanted this doll for Christmas?). I’d like to say that these past eight days were an anomaly or just the usual chaos of the holiday season, the exception and not the rule.   But I can’t.  This is my life, how it truly is – filled with lots of kid things, planned and unplanned.  But in between all of the predictable and unpredictable parts of my days and nights, I write.
  •                                       “…..for she’ll be up twenty times a night,
  •                                             and there will she sit in her smock till
  •                                             she have writ a sheet of paper.”
  •                                                                  Much Ado About Nothing
  •                                                                  Wm. Shakespeare

Recipe for a Family

Tags

, ,

Recipe for a Family – Take two happily married people, one from New Zealand, one from Ohio, see if they can endure 6 years of frustration, uncertainty, doubt, disappointment and tears, mix liberally, cross fingers (and toes), pray a lot, hope for the best, believe in magic, be brave and try one last time and then, voila……a family is born!!

I never knew how much I wanted to be a mother until my children were actually here.  Even though it took me over 6 years to finally conceive and hold a pregnancy to term – well, “almost” term, during those years I was so focused on the details of getting pregnant, I hadn’t spent much time thinking about what comes after.  My life was full of numbers – lab results, FSH – too high, HCG – high and then dropping precipitously as another miscarriage ensued, counting days to ovulation, luteal phase, optimum time for IUI (intrauterine insemination), numbers of eggs encouraged to be produced each month, doses of medicine – Estrogen, Progesterone, Clomid.  The minute details of how to become pregnant filled my mind to the point that the complexities of this process made me marvel that it ever happened at all!  Practical matters took up what little room was left to be filled in my addled brain – $2000 per cycle for medications not covered by insurance.  What could we afford?  Should we skip a cycle to give our cringing bank account and my aging body time to rest, to catch its breath – take time to work harder at more jobs to save up for another round of treatment – trying to see if I could outrun my loudly ticking biological clock speeding on towards 50?  No.  Not much to time to think about motherhood.

And then it happened.  Not long before I turned 50, pregnant with twins.  After the frenetic years of the past, a wonderful calm seemed to drape over me and I settled into being pregnant.  That’s when motherhood began for me.  That’s when I had time to think about it. Me at 50 & 5 months pregnant with twins

The years since then have been jam-packed – a sort of whirlwind of activity as our babies grew from tiny premature infants in the NICU to the giggly, sweet 12 year olds they are today.  But those tough “getting pregnant” years never really leave me.  They are ever-present, lingering at the bottom of my thoughts, sitting silently, informing and influencing the kind of mother I am and serving as a constant reminder of the two remarkable gifts I’ve been given.

 

That’s me 5 months pregnant with twins, not long after turning 50.

Phases in Childhood and Parenting

The colic, the diapers and the sleepless nights are finite.  Eventually they all go away, are resolved.  Sometimes they are replaced by other things that are equally problematic and annoying, but by now you are beginning to see the trend and are slowly gathering more skills as each “phase” of childhood comes and goes.  What didn’t come and go for me was the weight of being so utterly responsible for two helpless human beings.  Yes, they are eventually potty trained and tie their own shoes and do their own homework (ok, maybe I help a little).  Mine even walk home from school on their own.  But what they need from me doesn’t diminish.  It just shifts.  In fact, as I look out the diner window this morning and see a dad pushing his toddler in a pink plastic kiddie car across Broadway at 7:30 on a Saturday morning, I think those years were somehow easier.  Now I know all of you sleep-deprived parents with tiny children would like to come at me with a sharp object right now, but it’s true.  The endless things that needed to be done when they were tiny seemed straight ahead, attainable – dirty diapers – change it, baby crying – feed her, then cuddle – wakes up in the middle of the night…..ok, that one can definitely be a bit tortuous.  But as my children grow, they need guidance, explanations, someone to commiserate with, to vent to, good listeners who are available any time of the day or night.  These are not things I can check off a list so easily nor are they usually things I can “fix”.

My twins, Jack and Olivia have come with me every time I have voted, from the beginning of their lives when they were in their double stroller which wouldn’t fit in the polling booth necessitating an election volunteer to watch them as they slept, all the way to this last election when Jack stood next to me, paper ballot in hand, reading each line and penciling in the dot next to the candidate we picked.  We went from buying cupcakes from our school’s election day bake sales to discussing President Obama’s immigration policy versus Romney’s.  Moral issues, ethics, right and wrong – much headier stuff.  Baby’s First Years seems light reading compared to my present reading – The Drama Years – Your Daughter and Middle School and Raising Cain: Protecting the Emotional Life of Boys.  Much scarier reading.  The older they get, the more I realize that every step of the way of being a mother is asking more of me, not less.  I’m waiting for someone to write a book titled Raising Parents: How to Preserve the Sanity of Parents and Still Enjoying Parenting.  I’d volunteer to write it myself, except I don’t have enough experience yet.  I’m still in the midst of it, or rather at the beginning of it.  The well of emotions my daughter and son are feeling at this age are new to me.  Colic seemed easy compared to this.  Although for both I needed to just ride it out, give a hug, try to stay calm and realize it was something they were going to experience that I could do little about other than comfort.  After years of “doing” things to “fix” things, a boo-boo, a broken toy, this is hard.  As they get older, I’m beginning to see that listening has become the “doing” something for my tweens.  It’s a new phase of parenting, more new things to figure out, just like the day they came home from the hospital almost 12 years ago.

62…It’s Only a Number

Tomorrow I will turn 62. 62!! I mean what sort of number is THAT?  It’s so, well, BIG!! Now, I must admit that I don’t ordinarily spend much time thinking about how old I am, but every September, as my next birthday approaches, I seem to think about little else. And I usually think “this is a number I cannot relate to because when I was a kid (oh no…now I sound like my grandmother), people – women in particular – looked old, had grey or white hair with that blue dye rinse (what is that stuff?). They wore “granny” glasses and they weren’t worn as a fashion statement – they were worn by grannies. And then there were those sort of shapeless flowery print dresses that hung from their bodies in a way that made them look even more shapeless.  And to top off this ensemble, black tie shoes with a 1 1/2″ chunky heel adorned her feet.

My Grandma Carrie wearing the typical “over 60’s” attire

That’s what the 60-something women looked like when I was growing up.  And they also had an “old” thinking. In fact, the word “old” was a regular part of their vocabulary, “these old bones of mine” or “I’m too old to ride a horse”.  I can promise you the word “old” rarely passes my lips unless it refers to things in my refrigerator that need to be tossed out. Admittedly, this is partly because of vanity and ego, but mostly because it’s just not a word that occurs to me to use when describing myself.  Happily, I live in a time when it’s very difficult to tell a woman’s age, hair coloring and gym memberships having a big influence on this fact. But the biggest change is in how different we, the over 50 set, think. For me, this younger sort of thinking has been further enhanced by the fact that I spent my 50’s watching Sesame Street, shopping for Dora the Explorer and Thomas the Train backpacks, reading Captain Underpants and an entire series of Fairy books – Heather, The Ballerina FairyMaggie, the Magic Fairy.  In the past two years, I’ve seen

My 60th Birthday Party – Jack, me & Olivia….yes, I’m the one wearing the Happy Birthday tiara:) 

Smurfs the Movie three times and Ice Age 4 three times.  I can hum the latest Katie Perry tune and know the name of the most recent Adele album.  This is not because I have an unusual taste in reading material and movies.  It’s because I am the mother of 11 year old twins.  Since giving birth not long after my 50th birthday, most of my days have been spent in the company of two short people, a.k.a. my children, leading me to believe that aging is not only a state of mind, but is also greatly influenced by who you hang out with.  Looking at the world through my soon to be 62 year old eyes as well as through the eyes of an 11 year old boy who is crazy about wildlife and drawing comics and an 11 year old girl who loves ballet, fashion and drawing, I figure that makes me about 40.  Now that’s a number I can relate to!

“It takes a long time to become young.”                                                         .                                                     Pablo Picasso