FML.
Category: Kids
My 7 New Mommy Must Haves
In no particular order…
1. Nursing Cover
My sister bought a lovely Bébé au Lait nursing cover and told me how indispensable it was to her and it is soooooo true for me too.
I got a free pattern online, bought some fabric on Etsy and my mom made me one.
I love this thing, it is like my security blanket when I go out with my babies. I am just not “open” enough to breastfeed openly and this allows me to feed whenever and wherever I have to. Both Felix and Alexis loved the fabric’s pattern as well and stare at it adorably when they feed. It is also an impromptu blanket for the stroller when we go out and I have forgotten to bring a blanket for the umpteenth time.
2. Microwave Sterilizer
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| Tommee Tippee Microwave Sterilizer |
I had a Tommee Tippee Electric Sterilizer and it wasn’t very long before it stopped working (Just a year or so). I think there was something wrong with the cord connection or something. The heating plate just stopped heating the water up. I also got so pissed off each time I switched the thing on and returned later to find the dreaded “E” error symbol which meant I had wasted time thinking everything was getting sterilized and really it was just sitting there doing nothing.
I bought a Tommee Tippee Microwave Sterilizer this time around and I love not having to worry about the electrical parts failing on me. Just load it, add water, pop it in the microwave, zap it, let it cool down and you’re done!
3. A seriously awesome Stroller
I wanted to be prudent and thought I shouldn’t splurge too much on a stroller so I got a sensibly priced one. Now I can’t help but have stroller envy when I walk through malls. So avoid stroller envy and just get an awesome one, like this one.
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| Quinny Zapp Xtra 2.0 |
[What kills me now, is that I’ve also found an online deal which means it costs only a few hundred more than what I paid for my “sensible” one.]
4. An also seriously awesome Breastpump
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| Medela Freestyle Breastpump |
I’ve blogged before about how my Medela Swing Breastpump was great but now I have the Medela Freestyle Breastpump and it is soooooooo good!
As it is a double breastpump, it takes less time to pump and I can pump so much more too. I didn’t realize I needed it, but now that I have it, I can’t believe I lived without the display in the past. It has a timer, shows how much battery power is left (no more lugging a charger around just in case), shows the intensity level and once you know what level suits you, you can save it as a program.
5. A Diaper Bag that looks good on your husband!
Chances are he’ll be carrying it anyway so make sure its one that looks good on him!
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| I got one like this for J |
6. A Diaper Changing Table
About a week after Felix was born, a friend called and said they wanted to get us something, anything that we’d like. J and I were unanimous, please get us a diaper changing table. We hadn’t really thought it was necessary. We had a changing pad and thought we’d just use our bed, but after changing our bedsheets multiple times because of the many accidents one has with a baby boy and the backache from bending down to change his diaper, our diaper changing table was a lifesaver! No regrets at all.
7. iBaby Feed Timer App
They’ll say it’s not necessary to obsess too much when you’re breastfeeeding, that you’re producing just the right amount for your baby, but the fact is that you will always worry [it’s called being a parent] and it is impossible to remember which side you last fed on because there’ll be so so so many things on your mind.
This app is brilliant. Its so easy to use, just tap on the side you’re feeding on when you start and stop and it’ll keep track of the length of your feed. It also reminds you that you should be feeding soon and keeps nifty statistics. A really great app for new moms. Its free too!
My DIY Tissue Box Breastmilk Storage Organizers
When I had Felix, I blogged about the pressure of total breastfeeding on moms today.
To do that, working moms have to pump and store breastmilk when maternity leave is over (and always all too soon).
So that I wouldn’t go insane in the office from worrying about whether or not I had pumped enough breastmilk for Felix, I started expressing a session a day (when I knew Felix wouldn’t need a feed) and I am doing the same for Alexis.
This means quite a lot of bags of backup breastmilk and since I have mild OCD, I simply could not bear to allow my freezer to look like this…
I also think it is ridiculous to fork out any money for a “breastmilk storage organizer“.
So, this is what I came up with, my DIY Tissue Box Breastmilk Storage Organizers.
I get a sick buzz looking at this:-
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| Step 1: Grab an empty tissue box. |
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| Step 2: Snip diagonal lines at all 4 edges. |
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| Step 3: Cut all the flaps you’ve made away. |
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| Voila! |
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| Tip 1: Number the tissue boxes in ascending order. Tip 2: “File” the breast milk bags from old to new from left to right (or right to left) |
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| This method also makes transporting breastmilk to caregivers easier. Just pop the tissue box (with the lowest number) into an ice box. |
Oh dear, an entry a year.
I suppose a good thing about being a mom of two now is that I can blame my very lethargic blogging style on the fact that I am a mom of two.
I think too many things are going on for me to compress into bite-sized entries.
I do want to put things down before I forget it all though so here’s another attempt at resuscitating this zombie of a blog.
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| Felix is now two and a half and this is what he looks like playing with home made gloop of his favourite colour. |
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| …and this is Alexis, my adorable little girl who is 8 weeks old today! |
I uploaded this same picture of Alexis on Twitter and Facebook too, but I love this picture so much so I’m using it again.
Alexis Teoh Rui Ern
Felix is one!
I don’t know how we did it, but we did 🙂
Felix is a year old and we’re throwing him a little party tomorrow.
I can’t believe I lugged my breastpump etc. to work for 9 months.
I can’t believe I pumped everyday at work for 9 months.
I can’t believe I’m a mom.
I can’t believe I’m so lucky. 🙂
Hope 2013 will be as fun as 2012.
The woes of breastfeeding
My boss had told me that the pain women experience from birthing is nothing compared to the pain they experience from breastfeeding. Truer words were never uttered. Somehow, whenever I imagined being a mom, breastfeeding my baby was always in there.
The pressure to breastfeed is also incredibly great. Every pregnancy website, book, pamphlet you read when preggers goes on and on about why breastfeeding is best. Your doctor, nurse, relatives, friends, and even the stranger you just met will advise you to breastfeed.
So when I was pregnant, I was absolutely determined to breastfeed and by the time Felix came, I had worked myself into a full I’m-gonna-breastfeed-and-nothing-else-will-do frenzy. I did not buy formula just in case, and just talk of feeding Felix formula upset me (it still does). I know it is bonkers. Plenty of babies are formula fed only, but I just wound myself up too much to unwind now on the matter.
As I had blogged previously, I had a burst blood vessel and was not able to sit or lie down directly on my butt. I therefore had to use the side lying position when feeding Felix for about 10 days after Felix arrived. I was not getting the right latch and it hurt like crazy! Just imagine sandpaper meeting nipples. Although I knew I wasn’t supposed to feel any pain when nursing, I was so anxious to breastfeed Felix that I just told myself to ignore the pain as I just didn’t know how to get the right latch.
At about 3 weeks in, the pain was so bad that I just couldn’t bear to let the baby latch as I could feel the pain before it actually occurred. It was pure mental torture, like every 2 hours, I had to work myself up into putting my finger into an electric pencil sharpener.
Due to this, I wanted to allow latching as seldom as possible, so I did not switch breasts at each feed. Eventually, my sister heard about all my breastfeeding woes and she advised me to switch. I did and the additional times latching helped me practice getting the correct latch. About 6 weeks in, the cracked nipples were gone, and now at 11 weeks I can happily say that I’m not afraid of breastfeeding anymore 🙂 I love how convenient it is to go out, no bottles to worry about and at night, no need to drag myself to the kitchen at all. Most of all, I love bonding with Felix.
Course I also had lotsa pumping breastmilk drama. I started pumping in February so that when I go back to work, I would have extra stock in case of wastage and Felix needs more than I can produce because I’m back at work. I was given a Tommee Tippee Electric Breastpump, and it was really not for me. Too many parts to assemble and wash each time, and it was slow as hell. It took me at least 40 minutes to get 2 oz at one sitting. I then bought the Medela Swing Breastpump and only one word, “HALLELUJAH!”. I usually spend about 10 to 15 minutes per sitting and I can get about 4 oz. Unfortunately not all days are good days and I’ve recently reverted back to 2 to 3 oz per sitting. 🙁 I don’t know why. Hopefully things will improve. I’m trying to drink more water etc. I was stuffing myself, but it just made losing weight harder.
*Fingers crossed* Felix will be breastfed only up to the minimum WHO recommendation of 6 months.
Before I forget…
The eternal optimist in me had made fabulous plans to blog all the huge moments of Felix’s arrival and his first few months, as and when things occurred. Obviously, things did not quite go according to plan and all I’ve managed to do was post a piccie of Felix and Jason (see below).
Well, I have finally found the chance today to blog a bit. (Read: Felix is sleeping and I’m not passed out next to him.)
Christmas Day
I woke up at 8 on Christmas morning to pee for the16 millionth time during my pregnancy. Being the grumpy pregnant late night owl, I quickly plonked myself back in the bed when I was done, only to shoot straight back up again cause I felt the “Bloody Show”. No, not a drama nickname I’ve given to what I experienced but the actual medical term for it.
I told Jason the baby was coming, and he shot straight up as well and started saying “Let’s go to the hospital” over and over again. I wasn’t convinced at first but when there seemed to be a little more blood, I caved.
We checked in at 9-ish at the Hospital and were checked out at 11-ish because I was 0 (not even an-ish) dilated. As we were sent off, my doctor happily said “See you in 2 days!”.
So there was nothing for us to do, but go home and wait.
Christmas Night
I can’t remember what happened that afternoon, I guess we were just too anxious, but late afternoon, I decided a movie marathon would be best to pass time. So that’s what we did, we watched “Love Actually”, “Home Alone 2”, “Die Hard” and “Batman Begins”. Jason likes to say the movie choices got steadily more violent as the pain increased. I think it was somewhere between “Home Alone 2” and “Die Hard” that my contractions started and we started timing the length and gaps between. Only way to describe the contractions – worse period pain ever. Jason was so sweet and gave me back rubs and made sure my hot water bottle was there to ease the aches.
Boxing Day
At 230 in the morning, we realized that the contractions were only a few minutes apart, and decided to check in again at the Hospital. 230 to 930 was a blur of pain, falling in and out of sleep. I got a shot of painkiller/anesthesia (I didn’t care what it was, so long as it reduced my misery before my scheduled epidural.) The epidural shot was awful. It took 4 tries to find the right spot, and the first 3 tries hurt pretty bad. Unfortunately, I’m one of those people for whom an epidural doesn’t work 100% :S. I could still feel most of the pain of the contractions.
[Movie myth busted – in the movies when the doctor checks how many cm dilated the poor gal in labour is, the female actress never ever shows how painful/uncomfortable the check actually is. It is, oh it is.]
At 2 in the afternoon, I was fully dilated and the pushing process started. Here, I must say that I surprised myself (and Jason) by not swearing at all, but I think I was pretty noisy. I kept apologizing after screaming/moaning though. The pushing process is really not as simple as people yelling “Push!” at regular intervals and you pushing. There were so many instructions being yelled at me simultaneously by the midwives “Push!”, “Think of Baby”, “Look at your tummy!”, “Spine down”, “Pull the bars on the bed!”. It was havoc. Once I was able to process all the things I had to do when pushing, the midwife tried to encourage me by saying that I was doing a great job and that a few pushes more I’d be done. In all that havoc, the eternal optimist in me was reawakened and I literally told myself, “3 pushes and I’ll see baby!”. I was wrong.
After half an hour of pushing, my doctor told me that we weren’t progressing as well as I should and so he’d be using a vacuum to assist the delivery, Felix arrived not long after that. He was a screamer. The midwives immediately placed him on my chest, and he stopped screaming or crying, and just looked at me with his massive eyes, and he had me, I was in love. His face as he stared at me is burned in my memory.
The vacuum, and I mean this so much, sucked. Though very grateful that Felix arrived safe and sound, it resulted in a burst blood vessel for me. I was in excruciating pain, and couldn’t sit or lie flat.Since it wasn’t visible, nobody knew why I was crying and moaning and just thought I was being a baby about the usual aches and pains from giving birth. After I begged Jason to ask the midwives to give me something to knock me out, they finally got it that I wasn’t just being a baby and that I was in serious pain. The doctor was called and he discovered the burst blood vessel. He then (Hallelujah!) gave me something to stop the bleeding and to help with the pain
I was then taken to the maternity ward. We stayed for 3 nights. An extra night cause I was still in pain, and an extra extra night cause Felix had slight jaundice. A lot of it is a blur now, but I remember being so comforted by the fact that our loved ones were there to see us and how incredibly happy I felt when Felix was brought to me later. Whenever he was taken to the nursery, I would listen for the sound of the baby cots being wheeled cause I’d be hoping it was Felix for me.
















