I Thought it Would Get Easier

Things progress and change but in my experience this single parenting lark doesn’t get easier!

I know some people will agree and some won’t, but I can only say what’s happened to me, and as time goes on I’m finding doing this on my own harder and harder.

I never got a quiet newborn who would happily lay in his crib, infact I could probably count the nights he spent in his crib on my fingers. I started off determined that he would, but quickly realised that I was fighting a losing battle and he came into my bed from a few weeks old. He’s still there. He helps himself to milk throughout the night, and apart from me sleeping a little lighter (that’s nature to stop me rolling on him) it doesn’t affect me.

I spent the first few months dispairing that I couldn’t put him down. Whenever I did he woke up screaming so for the first few months he was attached to me. I bought a carrier and started baby wearing so I could atleast do SOMETHING! Talking to other mums this isn’t unusual, but I think that being on my own intensified how little I managed to do!

Jackson was early rolling over and although I had never been able to leave him without him screaming I could at least rely on him being there when I came back, however as soon as he started rolling there were no such guarantees. Almost from that moment on he couldn’t really be out of my sight. If I left him it had to be on the floor and downstairs in case he accidentally rolled downstairs or something ridiculous!

At 6 months he started crawling and pulling himself up and since then I have to constantly watch him like a hawk. If he’s not crawling after the cat he’s pulling plugs out of the wall, sucking on chargers or climbing the stairs, eating cat litter or pulling the CDs off my shelves. It’s a nightmare, however much you baby proof your house it will never be baby safe, the only way to do that would be to put him in a pen, something I am loathed to do.

I really enjoyed his newborn days, sitting on the sofa having baby snuggles and feasting on ready meal after ready meal, though I regularly felt like I wasn’t getting much done I revelled in every second of it, just the two of us against the world, for some reason expecting it to get easier, but it’s only got harder. Admittedly I now have my hands free as I no longer have to carry him around, but I have to watch him constantly. I can’t Hoover as he pulls the Hoover over and plays with the wire, I can’t cook because he kicks up a stink sitting in his highchair for too long and I can’t let him crawl around the kitchen. My house has only been properly hoovered once or twice in 9 months and I could probably count the proper meals I have cooked on your fingers.

Don’t get me wrong I love him so so much, I am enjoying every second of him, but I am constantly aware of the list of things that aren’t getting done getting longer and if I’m honest I can’t see much getting done before he goes to school!

Single parenting is a full time job, and I mean 24/7/365. You get no off days, no sick days, and no time to yourself (unless you can rope someone in to babysit for a few hours.) and it’s hard. So so hard, but totally worth it. (Just don’t comment on the fact my washing up isn’t done, and the floors need hoovering!)

Photographs

99% of the photos taken of Jackson have been taken on my phone. Does this matter?

No, not to me.

I charged up my camera before he was born, but he was 4 weeks old before I even remembered to use it. It comes as second nature to me to use my phone – it’s never far from my hand and is so quick to use I can capture little moments that would otherwise be lost if I had to go and hunt down and turn on my camera. Honestly though I think my phone camera is as good if not better than my actual camera!

In Jacksons 8 months I have taken a staggering amount of photos. I filled my phone in 2 months and had to download them! I have captured so many images that I’ll never get a chance to capture again. Unlike previous generations with film cameras we can snap and snap to get that perfect shot and not just shoot and hope.

I have taken some photos that I am incredibly proud of. Photos that capture Jackson at his quietest, happiest, naughtiest, messiest moments, moments that cannot be recreated in a studio, but am I a photographer? No!

20140904_0906482 20140818_213151 IMG_0065IMG_4367 IMG_0587 IMG_3533

I have so far taken Jackson for two shoots with a professional photographer, once at 4 weeks old and once at 8 months. I am planning a future shoot at a year old and then atleast once a year until he’s 18 (and maybe more) these photos are so different to those that I am able to capture, they’re in a totally different league! They are a bit more staged but they capture a different side of him.

Photo By Simon Watson Photography Photo By Simon Watson Photography

I feel that by having fairly regular photo shoots with him and capturing every single thing with my phone camera I am capturing as much as possible of his life. Barely a day goes by that I don’t take a photo and I am periodically printing out a selection of these to put in an album.

I really love looking back at these old photos and remembering when they were taken and marvelling at just how small he once was. I also cannot wait to have some professional photos up on my walls, all I need to do is choose some frames!

Life Decisions 

Every so often it is necessary to stop and consider your life, and today is one of those days for me.

Ever since I was little I imagined being a stay at home mum like my mum was, giving my children all the love and time in the world.

When I found my ex we shared that vision and he could afford to support it and with the belief that I could give my children the childhood I wanted to give them we tried for a baby. Sadly that relationship came to an end almost a year ago when I was 7 months pregnant with Jackson leaving me heavily pregnant and unemployed!

I have enjoyed the last 9 months, watching Jackson growing up literally before my eyes, but with all my mummy friends now considering returning to work after maternity leave I am now questioning what I want to do.

Honestly though, I hadn’t really thought about it up until now. Not practically.

I’d been assuming I’d stay at home until Jackson went to school and then I’d find myself a job or study, but I’d never looked into what I could do or what was expected.

All I want is to do what’s best for my son. I don’t want to rely on his grandparents to look after him, even part time, as their time with him should be fun and a choice not a necessity and they have their own lives too, but I’d never be able to afford enough childcare to do full time – nor would I want to because honestly I want my son to grow up knowing me not a nursery.

So here I am, torn between wanting what I believe is best for my son, and what I can afford, and needing to do a lot more research before I finally decide what I want to and can do.

Weaning

I approached weaning at 6 months with excitement and enthusiasm, planning meals for him and buying in lots of random, fresh ingredients, but in the last 3 months that excitement has faded and now gone.

It started positively trying babyled weaning, finger foods and an entire range of food, from carrot to avocado to brioche. But I slowly realised that he was barely eating anything, not having got the hang of swallowing, just mushing it up and throwing it on the floor.

I then tried spoon feeding him which again started positively, but he soon got fed up of that and started refusing food. I varied the range of food I was feeding him making more purées and porridges but he would just clamp his mouth shut and turn his head refusing food, I was still offering him some finger foods and it seemed that after the first few days of spoon feeding that he had got the hang of swallowing so was actually getting something from his finger foods.

This placated me for a couple of months, I kept up with finger foods, though not quite the variety of those first few weeks, but I started to notice that the amount I was giving him wasn’t increasing, and he still wasn’t eating much of what he was given. I then started making the purées again he started off eating whole pots of them but quickly lost interest again. At this point I was dispairing, making new meals for him each day to only have them refused.

I didn’t know what to do to get more food into him, so my mum tried to feed him and HE ATE THE WHOLE BOWL! I tried the same food the next day and he refused again! Mum tried and he ate it – what was going on?! She fed him for the next couple of days, and I was considering hiring my mum as official baby feeder, when I tried him the next day he opened his mouth and ate for me!

This has continued for the last few days, he seems to eat 1/2-whole weetabix for breakfast then a pot of purée with baby rice for lunch and some kind of mash for tea. Now I’ve said this he is going to stop, I can just tell, but if it continues I can see my enthusiasm for weaning coming back again as I just love to see him enjoy his food!

Breastfeeding Backlash

Some of you may have seen my tweets the other day about a photo I sent my friends and the comments that they replied with.

Here we are just incase you missed it:

I had always just assumed my friends were OK with breastfeeding, I mean I do it infront of them without even thinking, but maybe not? I hadn’t even really registered that I was feeding before I sent the picture, I saw me having snuggles with my son, and I expected oohs and awws now ewws, and their comments both shocked and upset me.

Since seeing that I was upset by it one of my friends has apologised and said that it was only a joke and taking the mick. I get that, don’t get me wrong, I do still have a sense of humour, I promise! And I knew right from the start that some of the comments were exaggerations on a point, but, and I think this is the crux of my argument, the point was still there! The point that my friends saw boob, that that was what shone out of that picture instead of my son snuggling with his mummy.

At what point scrolling down the following pictures does your mindset change from ‘aww natural’ to ‘hehe boob’ or maybe worst of all ‘eww put it away’.

Image from TheBovine.Wordpress.com

Image from SheKnows.com

I was terrified to breastfeed to start with. I wasn’t scared of the pain (though I should have been to start with!) I was scared of what people would think, where they would look and what they would say, where I should do it, and who I should do it infront of.

I went out of the room to latch him on (and then come back once he was on) for the first month or so – more because he had latching issues and I waved my boob around for 20 minutes each time – yes, if I wasn’t in pain and frustrated I would probably have thought ‘hehe boob’ at that point! But as soon as he got the hang of that I was able to latch him on and feed him in the same room as people, often feeding him for a long time before anyone even noticed!

I took lots of pictures of me feeding him to start with – it was new and exciting and I wanted to show it off and remember it, but as it has become more normal for us I take less photos – I have found the same with weaning – I no longer take photos of every meal!

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I am now at a stage where I don’t even think about it any more. I am surrounded by breastfeeding mum friends and we all just do it like its normal, and as long as baby isn’t playing silly beggers it’s so slick that noone sees anything!

I am slightly wary doing it infront of young children I don’t know, not wanting to cause awkward questions for bottlefeeding mummys, and more sadly infront of the older generation, who I worry might want to put a blanket over my head! That said, I may turn away, but I won’t move away. But I generally assume that my generation is OK with it, that it’s almost normal now, the way it should be, like a cow feeding its calf, but maybe I was wrong in thinking that other people think the same as me, maybe I am forcing it on other people and maybe they would rather I didn’t do it infront of them. Maybe I should think harder about who I feed infront of?
I see it as a perfectly natural thing to do, and have always been determined to do it, but that doesn’t mean I wouldn’t be upset if I was confronted about it. I suppose that the older Jackson gets the more unusual it is for me to still be breastfeeding him, so maybe the more odd looks and comments I will get, but I have also grown in confidence and met some amazing and supportive people along my breastfeeding journey.

I wouldn’t change my decision to breastfeed for the world, and would encourage any new mums to atleast try. I know its hard and it doesn’t suit everyone, but there are so many benefits to it that it is totally worth everything, but unfortunately there are people out there that will challenge you, that will think its wrong, that will make you feel awkward and upset you, but as one of my friends on Facebook said to me:
“I make milk, what’s your superpower?!”

9 Months of Hell for 9 Months of Heaven (and a Lifetime to Go)

Jackson is now 9 months old!

Blimey!

He has been outside as long as he was growing inside me! (I actually had him at 38 weeks 3 days)

When on earth did that happen?!? I’ve been blissfully carrying on and it’s not until milestones like this are reached that I realise just how far we have come!

I had a worrying, stressful, eventful pregnancy, but throughout it all I had an end goal, to hold a breathing squirming, kicking baby in my arms. I hadn’t really thought of much beyond that!

People told me before he was born that it would all go quickly so to cherish every second, but I think like most people I didn’t know quite how fast time would go. It seems 5 minutes since I had him, yet it also seems like he’s been here forever!

But now I look back at photos of him as a newborn and I can no longer remember him being so tiny, I can’t remember him not rolling over and crawling. He’s changing so fast and my brain can’t keep up, it can’t archive everything it’s seen fast enough so it’s all being overwritten, or at least that’s how it feels. I just hope those memories are still in there somewhere and I can find them again when I have long enough to sit down and think! I hope I can remember this amazing 9 months. I have watched my son grow and develop and I have even changed myself in unexpected ways.

We are still at the beginning of this adventure, but we have come so far already, and I can’t wait to discover the rest of it holding his hand.

Keeping to Arrangements

Not keeping to pre-planned arrangements is one of my pet hates.

I was raised to arrive on time, to leave extra early if you’re not sure how long a journey will take. (Even going so far as to take test journeys to things like interviews so I didn’t get lost and arrive late, or arrive ridiculously early)

My ex doesn’t keep to arrangements, infact he turned up almost an hour late to our first date… start as you mean to go on I suppose. So I should really have cut my losses then.

Since we broke up he has been meant to see Jackson regularly, but it has been anything but. He works shifts, meaning he works 4 days and then not the next 4, so unfortunately he can not arrange to see Jackson every Tuesday for example, however, he tends to arrange atleast one day of his 4 off to come and see us. Now the times he agrees to arrive have varied from 8am to 4pm and you can bet that he will be atleast 10 minutes late every time, sometimes 4 hours and sometimes just not show up at all.

If he says a time the day before I will set my alarm, get up, get Jackson up, we will get breakfast and then we will sit and wait. I can’t start anything because he might arrive in the middle of it, and we can’t go out. We sat in waiting for a whole day last week, unable to go out and enjoy the sunshine because every hour or so I was getting texts saying he had dozed off again and was coming in a minute, then at about 4pm he finally decided not to come because he was too tired. I was fuming at this. We lost a whole day to him messing us around and I couldn’t do anything about it. He rearranged that visit to today, and after turning up 20 minutes late without an apology he was in a snappy mood, argued with me over something stupid and left an hour and a half later. Thankfully it is still early enough to do something today, but he has just requested that he sees Jackson tomorrow. 3 days out of my week because he’s been either too tired or too angry to spend time with his son as arranged. I am in two minds as to what to say about tomorrow now, though I know that if I say no he will just hold it against me.

I don’t know what to do anymore, I’m trying so hard to be reasonable and calm for the sake of my son, but it’s dragging me down. We arranged a way we both agreed to co parent Jackson, but he doesn’t seem to have taken to arranging things a month early, nor turning up at 8am to do breakfast as agreed. I’m totally at a loss as to how to handle this. He has gone weeks without seeing Jackson in the past, being ill one time then tired, then something else another, yet for both his and Jacksons sake I want to keep contact up and as regularly as possible, but right now, trying to be the grown up in this situation is getting old fast and I just want to throw my toys out the pram and scream, but I must be the adult here!

He’s Beautiful. He’s Mine. 

I should be asleep but I find myself just lying here staring at my son!

This isn’t a rare occurrence either! I regularly find myself looking at him, totally unable to believe he came from me! That this tiny human who is half me (though looking at him you’d think I performed a magic trick with my DNA and he’s all me!) who is growing and developing so quickly is my son, my responsibility, mine!

I’ve spent 99.9% of the last 9 months with him! And when I haven’t been with him I’ve been in the same building (apart from two evenings out) in the last 9 months of my life he has become my life so completely I can’t imagine life without him! I can’t imagine a second without him!

This is a love you cannot describe, you cannot imagine until you experience and a love that still catches you unaware every so often and takes your breath away!

You Can’t Be Precious

I bought my house before I met my ex, and well before I’d even considered children, luckily I bought the biggest house I could afford at the time so therefore it is plenty big enough to accomodate Jackson as he grows, and possibly even a sibling (or two at a squeeze!).

I did everything to my house, it needed rewiring, new central heating, replastering, new woodwork, new kitchen, new bathrooms, and even walls building, and it was incredible to do. I saw my house rise from the dust and I have loved finally getting to live in it for the last year.

I am a total perfectionist, and I had planned for white walls and minimal ‘stuff’, however, there have been some things that I have had to accept since Jackson came into my life.

Firstly, ‘stuff’ and babies just go hand in hand, it’s just a fact. If it’s not a first bath to clutter the bathroom, it’s a mountain of toys to rival Everest. Baby clothes litter many rooms and socks disappear under the sofa to be found weeks later (after I have given them up for lost and bought more) by an inquisitive cat!

Worse than the ‘stuff’ which, given adequate cupboards could be cleared away, are the little accidents – my walls have gained knocks and marks from health visitors carrying large scales and they’ve been kissed on occasion by little mouths. Nappy leaks have led to slightly yellow patches on my carpets, and snot trails on my sofas are just the norm now, I don’t even notice them anymore, much to the horror of guests I am sure! My woodwork has had things knocked into and I’ve had to just suck it up, knowing that my nice fresh house is just being lived in, and that this is what it was for.

I have mellowed a bit, wanting pictures of Jackson on my walls, meaning drilling – shock horror, though I am yet to actually put these up – searching for the perfect frame, oh come on, I haven’t mellowed that much!

But the bits that have hurt the most was putting up stairgates – how stupid is that! They’re totally necessary and I can’t not have them, but drilling into my fresh plasterwork and most painfully my woodwork did make me cringe!

I love my house, and honestly, with every little thing that we do to it, necessary or cosmetic it is feeling more and more like mine and Jacksons home, so I wouldn’t have it any other way!

Cloud Baby

I’ve pondered for a while on what to tell Jackson about his sister.

I’m not religious so telling him she was an ‘Angel Baby’ never really fitted in with my beliefs or what I want him to think, but it’s the most common way of explaining the death of a baby so I went along with it.
Some people say their baby is among the stars, but I couldn’t work out how to describe that to him very well either.

Then I watched CBeebies!
On there there is a program called Cloudbabies, which the title in itself intrigued me, but as I watched I was overwhelmed by how perfect it was!
These babies live in the clouds and they dust cobwebs off the moon and paint the rainbows and put the sun to bed. They play around in the clouds with their cloud baby friends.

It’s not religious, it’s not anything, but it’s nice. It gives me something to say, and it seems right.
When we see a rainbow I can tell him that his sister and the other cloud babies painted a rainbow for us because he’s a Rainbow Baby. I see it as a way to include her in every day life.

It’s not so far removed from the ‘Angel’ idea, so if he does talk about her to other people they won’t think he’s crazy, but the main difference is that I don’t believe it. I know it’s a story made up as a preemptive answer to inquisitive questions.

Maybe I am wrong and she is an angel, but I’ve never been religious, we didn’t give her a religious funeral, and we won’t raise Jackson to be religious so it didn’t seem right to use this religious reference.

Things have a funny way of jumping out at you as ‘right’ when something fits, and this did just that.

Our little Babba Pink is playing in the clouds right now, putting the sun to bed and waking up the moon for bedtime, and who knows, maybe she will paint us a rainbow tomorrow!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ppu4oAqpSSQ

 

 

  • An 'Angel Baby' is a baby lost during pregnancy or early childhood, who sleeps in the clouds instead of our arms.

    A 'Rainbow Baby' is a baby born following the loss of an 'Angel Baby', a beacon of hope after a storm, while not denying the storm happened.

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