Showing posts with label steve. Show all posts
Showing posts with label steve. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 25, 2018

29/52 2018

Week 29
16 - 22 July

A slightly bittersweet week. Jamie loves to "help" with vehicles of any kind and Steve includes him with the regular maintenance jobs like checking tyre pressure, topping up the washer bottle, and as pictured here, checking the oil levels. He stands patiently with the kitchen roll, and squints at the dipstick with intense concentration.

Motorbike maintenance

But in this picture, Steve and Jamie are checking the oil on Steve's beloved motorbike... and the following evening, after more than twenty years riding, Steve had his first crash.

Thankfully, Steve is a great believer in wearing All The Gear, All The Time, heatwave or otherwise. Helmet, jacket, body armour, Kevlar trousers, proper boots and gloves, meant he was able to walk onto the ambulance unaided with nothing worse than a broken collarbone and some spectacular bruises. The bike... it's obviously damaged, but until Steve is recovered enough to heave it up onto the centre stand (bearing in mind the handlebars were smashed) and inspect it properly, we don't know if it's reasonably repairable or not.

Jamie is doing better than we have any right to expect of him, when it comes to being gentle and careful and only having cuddles on one side of his daddy.

Wednesday, September 12, 2018

26/52 2018

Week 26
25 June - 1 July

Evening climbing

A lot of new housing has gone up around our area recently, and with it, new playgrounds. Access is bobbins and parking non-existent, so I've only seen this one on drive-bys. But Steve made a point of taking Jamie up there as many summer evenings as possible, and they always had a brilliant time.

Tuesday, September 11, 2018

23/52 2018

Week 23
4 - 10 June

Doormat

Daddy had just got home. Jamie scampered to the door to greet him and then lay on the doormat grinning at him.

21/52 2018

Week 21
21 - 27 May

Climbing

Jamie is good at climbing and is steadily gaining confidence. He's also good at recognising and testing his limits - going a little bit higher, then checking he can get back down, then a little higher again. Meanwhile I am getting better at a kind of meditation where I tell myself to give him space, and that if he does fall he will most likely just bruise and learn, and if he does need to go to hospital at any point, social services do not swoop down with child protection orders for parentally supervised kids falling off council-maintained play equipment.

There is a second picture for this week, because it was our wedding anniversary:

2018-05-21_08-23-51

I am so happy that we have kept up with the anniversary picture-within-picture thing. We have prints of the current year plus the original wedding picture stuck to our fridge.

Saturday, September 08, 2018

15/52 2018

Week 15
9 - 15 April

Following on from our visit to Fortress Recycling, this week we visited their neighbours on the industrial estate - Dennis Eagle, the factory where they make bin lorries.

Poor Jamie got a little bit panicked as we drove past several bin lorries on the way to the reception office car park, shouting "please! Stop! Look! Bin lorries!" but thankfully he trusted us that we were going to see even more.

He's probably the youngest visitor they've had, but they do give tours for school groups, so they had safety specs that were almost small enough. Jamie wasn't too sure about wearing them, but eventually understood it as the price of getting to go and look at bin lorries.

Safety first at Dennis Eagle

Steve carried him, partly for safety and partly so that he could see. The factory is laid out in stages with a vehicle on each "footprint" at any given time, so we literally got to see the whole build process from chassis to hydraulic lines to engine to paintwork.

The employee who showed us round was called Charlie, and he did an excellent job. He's more used to the school groups or representatives from councils/companies looking to buy bin lorries, so a serious-faced two year old with his parents was outside the norm. One good thing about me being so behind on my updates is that I confirm, five months on, as Jamie gains more language and ability to express himself in ways adults can understand, that he really did grasp a surprising amount of what he was taught that day and still enjoys telling us about it every time he sees one of "Charlie's bin lorries".

The best moment for me was probably when we got back to reception. Jamie went straight to the receptionist and started excitedly squeaking at her about how she had to come and see all these amazing bin lorries that she'd missed out on. It was extremely cute, and I think it confirmed to everyone that the Serious Face was concentration rather than boredom and he was in fact very impressed.

Saturday, March 17, 2018

11/52 2018

Week 11
12 - 18 March

Hat

This weekend we had a very special outing - we were invited to visit a local recycling firm so that Jamie could admire some bin lorries up close.

Inspecting bin lorry

Conditions weren't ideal - Jamie is on day 2 of a sniffle, and it was snowing - but from his safe vantage point on his daddy's shoulders he got to have a good look and he definitely did enjoy himself. He didn't quite feel confident enough to sit up in the driver's cab though!

Back of bin lorry

Big thank you to Fortress Recycling.

Tuesday, February 27, 2018

06/52 2018

Week 6
05 - 11 February

Foundry Woods

I wasn't actually present when this picture was taken. Steve took Jamie for a Daddy Outing to Foundry Wood, which is one of those rare places where I really wish I could go (it's a lovely outdoors natural environment community project with an interesting activities program), physically cannot go (there's only one entrance and that is a steep dirt track way beyond the capabilities of either wheelchair), and yet I can make my peace with the inaccessibility (natural environment, etc) as long as someone ensures that Jamie isn't missing out.

Also, not to put too fine a point on it, while I'm trying to soak up and enjoy all of Jamie's childhood it is also good for me to have a couple of hours OFF every now and again.

Anyway, Jamie and Daddy both loved it. They came home and showed me dozens of pictures of an absolutely idyllic time discovering all manner of interesting things. Choosing just one was difficult but I do love Jamie's happy little face in this one.

Sunday, February 25, 2018

03/52 2018

Week 3
15 - 21 January

Orange coat

Another cold, wet, yet cheerful morning at a park. Steve took this photo; I'm the blue and grey blur in the background. Jamie was running back and forth between the two of us laughing his head off.

Wednesday, January 03, 2018

51/52 2017

Week 51
18 - 24 December

Tech

Jamie is always interested in what other people are doing and is almost always interested in tech. Steve doesn't want to have to shut himself away every time he's using his laptop, so as a rather neat solution, Jamie now has one of Steve's old wireless keyboards enabling them to both happily clatter away typing together.

Monday, November 06, 2017

37/52 2017

Week 37
11 - 17 September

Duplo truck

Jamie inherited a significant Duplo collection from his now-teenage cousins, and this has been added to with new sets of his own. He loves building with it, and Steve enjoys helping... which results in creations like this enormous truck.

Bonus video footage:

Tuesday, July 11, 2017

26/52 2017

Week 26
26 June - 02 July

Bookshop

Jamie is still quite the bookworm and the highlight of any shopping trip is the run around Waterstones. Sometimes he spots a beloved favourite from his own collection, and we have to explain that his copy is still at home. The negotiations required to get him to hand over his chosen New Book for scanning at the counter are delicate to say the least. And the idea of waiting until we own a book before thrusting it at daddy demanding "read!" is just silly - what are parents for?

Monday, May 15, 2017

19/52 2017

Before Jamie, and before me, the great love of Steve's life was his motorbike.

Daddy's bike

It no longer gets the TLC it should, but after a certain length of time in the garage it's a roadworthy vehicle once more and this weekend Steve got to do the last little bit of tinkering to get it ready to take him to and from work. Plus, he finally got to sit Jamie on it.

Saturday, April 08, 2017

13/52 2017

Daddy and Jamie, going on a little adventure. We live not too far from Chesterton Windmill, and for years it's been a place Steve likes to go and take pictures. I can't get up there - impossible to walk and rather too off-road for my wheels - but with Jamie in his bright yellow raincoat, it's easy to spot them while I wait with the car.

Daddy and Jamie at the windmill

Jamie enjoys sitting in the parrot position but I think he impressed Steve with how much of the distance he was able to walk. The biggest problem is convincing him to stay on the path!

Sunday, October 02, 2016

40/52

Nap time!

Nap time

Steve took this picture and I love it, as it's something that happens fairly frequently (even if never quite as frequently as a mummy might wish) but something I never get to see.

Also, it features our two best blankets. My grey one was a gift Steve gave me when we first started seeing each other. And Jamie's rainbow blanket was hand-knit especially for him by his honourary auntie Clare, given to him at the hospital on his first day, and wrapping us both up in love while we got used to being two people. I'm so pleased that the weather is once again cool enough for blanket-snuggling.

Saturday, July 02, 2016

27/52

Another Jamie and Daddy week.

a man with a baby on his lap, both smiling, reading a Haynes manual

We are having rather a bumpy ride these last few weeks, and for Steve that turned into a literal bumpy ride when his car started acting up. It was purchased on price rather than reliability - in fact it cost less than my powerchair, although by now it's cost more in maintenance (to be fair I haven't driven the powerchair several thousand miles so it's not really a good comparison).

Jamie really likes being read to and apparently sees no difference between the Haynes manual for a Honda Del Sol, and Dr Seuss. It's clearly not quite as good as The Very Hungry Caterpillar, but then nothing is nor could be.

Saturday, June 18, 2016

25/52

With Father's Day tomorrow it seems appropriate that this week's picture is Jamie and Daddy.

a man looking over his shoulder at a baby in his backpack


We had a sling consultation as a family when Jamie was just one week old. I ended up with the ring sling, and Steve... well, he was confident about *me* having tiny Jamie strapped to my front but never quite got there for himself, opting instead to use the pushchair.

At 8 months old though, Jamie is stronger and heavier and a lot more awake than he was at that first consultation, so we finally revisited the idea of a baby backpack. As you can see, it looks like it will work - he is comfortable enough to fall asleep in it and when awake, he likes the novelty of being tall. We don't plan on him spending hours in it, but hopefully an occasional walk around the block for some fresh air and father/son time will be achievable over the summer.

Tuesday, May 24, 2016

21/52

Slightly late again, this time for reasons of choosing and cropping the favourite photo from a shoot which only took place on Saturday. Because Saturday was our fifth wedding anniversary, and one of the things we do on our anniversary is take a picture of ourselves holding the previous year's picture, which shows the picture from the year before that, and so on, all the way back to our wedding photograph.

baby with daddy on one side and mummy on the other, both kissing his cheeks

This is Jamie's second year in the photograph; last year of course he was present in bump form, and then Steve printed out one of our scan pictures to "actual size" on an iron-on t-shirt transfer.

We wondered whether to have Jamie in the anniversary pictures as we're quite sure that, over the years, we will have anniversaries where he isn't present - perhaps with a babysitter, perhaps being a grumpy teenager who refuses to participate because he thinks his soppy parents are sooooo embarrassing, perhaps at university, or away with friends on holiday, or any number of other possibilities. All that is fair enough, time passes and things change. Right now, though, Jamie is at the absolute centre of our lives and our relationship, so to create an image featuring both of us and not him... it wouldn't be real.

Saturday, March 05, 2016

10/52

If there were ever any doubts about Jamie's paternity...

Eyebrow

... I am declaring them quashed.

Saturday, January 16, 2016

3/52

This week's photo is of Jamie having a cuddle with his daddy.

Cuddles with daddy

In the mornings, the Jamie-shaped alarm clock wakes up and has his overnight nappy changed, followed by First Breakfast (of breastmilk). Then there's a lovely sleepy interlude during which a much more comfortable Jamie chases the last of his zzzs, while mummy and daddy see about a slightly more adult First Breakfast (of tea/coffee, biscuits and ibuprofen). This photo was taken during that time.

I like this photo because despite both of them being really quite sleepy, neither of them are fully asleep and Jamie is genuinely cuddling Steve - in fact he was stroking him. I love that although I'm the stay-at-home parent, the two of them have a bond like that and that I get to watch it.

Sunday, December 13, 2015

Caesarean

Jamie was born by planned caesarean.

It was an odd decision to try to make. My condition isn't such that the medical professionals involved were insisting that a c-section was the only way to go, but the option was on the table from the outset. The decision, however, was entirely down to me, which helped me feel a lot more in control of things.

Surgery is never something to take lightly. As operations go, c-sections are pretty safe, but they ultimately involve a slice through your abdomen big enough to haul out an entire wriggling baby - there's a lot of risks to be considered and it typically takes longer to recover from than a complication-free "natural" childbirth. But we felt that, for me and my body and what I know of my condition for the last decade, an attempt at "natural" labour would be likely to end up in an unplanned c-section anyway, that would happen while I was exhausted to the point of incoherence - and then I would have to recover from surgery AND labour simultaneously, instead of one or the other. Therefore the best way of ensuring things went smoothly, that I recovered as soon as possible, that I understood what was happening and was mentally present for the birth of my child, was a planned c-section.

A secondary factor was that if I attempted "natural" birth and failed, that failure would be very upsetting. I would feel that I'd let the baby down. If I'd been so exhausted that I couldn't understand what was happening when I went into theatre, then my consent would have been a fuzzy issue, and I would feel like my hoped-for "birth experience" had been taken from me. It seemed more emotionally sensible to set my expectations at an achievable level.

I have to admit that even now, two months post-partum, I'm still not entirely reconciled to the c-section on the emotional side of things. There is so much information out there about the many and varied reasons why a "natural" birth is better for both mother and child, if there are no other factors to be taken into consideration, but pretty much all the information leaves out that caveat. Pregnancy magazines cheerlead expectant mothers along with soundbites like "having a baby is what your body was designed to do!" and (quite apart from the feminist and anti-creationism problems I have with that statement) this approach really excludes those of us whose bodies struggle with certain things. Every magazine I read gave me exactly the same feeling of "this isn't for you; you're not our target audience and we'd rather not have to consider you" as a shop or service building that has steps out the front. Goodness knows what it does to women who need c-sections but aren't already used to finding themselves outside the dominant paradigm.

Anyway. A planned c-section it was. The planning extended to the date, but not the time of the surgery. The way our hospital runs it is: people scheduled for c-sections that day arrive at the labour ward at 8am, and then the day's theatre schedule is created in order of priority, to include the women who are already in labour and for some reason need or are likely to need an unplanned c-section. I think this is a really good way of organising it. Not only does it mean that the women most in need are prioritised, but also, it was nice having some unknown elements in what was quite a medicalised version of having a baby.

On the day, we turned up at 8am and I was given a theatre gown straight away and told there were only two of us in for surgery that day so we'd likely be meeting our baby quite soon. Unfortunately emergencies started to happen and after a while our midwife came back and told us to get my socks back on and bundle me up in our coats to keep warm during the delay.

A while after that we were moved to the post-natal ward to wait. It had been agreed ahead of time that the best way to deal with my mobility needs after the birth was to place me in one of the side rooms, which had solid walls rather than curtains and a bit more space either side of the bed than the cubicles on the ward. I think perhaps part of the reason we were moved was to make sure that the room the ward manager had felt would be most suitable didn't end up being reassigned to one of the emergency cases. It was a lovely and unexpected bonus to get the chance to relax and acclimatise to the post-natal environment while still being pre-natal. I think the only downside was that being pre-surgery I had to keep declining the offers of breakfast, tea, elevenses, lunch, more tea... Mostly we were just being thankful that we weren't an emergency.

I did have to send Steve to go and eat something. He'd been too nervous to eat first thing in the morning. By mid-morning he was hungry, but didn't dare go to the cafeteria in case we were called for theatre while he was gone. Eventually around lunchtime I convinced him that I'd rather have him be two minutes late into theatre, than risk him passing out while I was lying there immobilised on the operating table.

And then suddenly, mid-afternoon, our midwife appeared in the room wearing scrubs and asked if we were ready? We took the coats and jumpers off me, I got into my wheelchair, and we followed her to the corridor where the operating theatre was. At that point, Steve was directed to go put some scrubs on, and I went into the theatre. There were windows and natural light as well as the electric lighting, which I hadn't expected but quite liked. I was in my chair right up to the operating table.

First I had to sit on the table to have the spinal anaesthetic. The anaesthetist(?), who I think was called Scott, stood behind me, while another person (doctor? nurse? other? I think his name was Trevor, everyone introduced themselves to me by first names rather than titles) supported me to try and bend forward enough that the needle could go in between the correct vertebrae. This didn't work so well - I think my back muscles had tensed from sitting in slightly awkward positions and also from being suddenly cold, plus of course I had a massive baby bump to try and bend around. Another person joined in, and the combination of being manhandled, but so very carefully, and at such an emotional moment, meant it was a weird halfway point between wrestling and a group hug. Eventually the spinal was in, though, and I lay down on the table and realised that I had, after all, forgotten to take my socks off.

At that point Steve was allowed in, although his first job was to return my wheelchair (and, I presume, my socks) to the post-natal ward. It can't have taken him more than two minutes but it felt like a very long two minutes. Meanwhile, probably-Scott was adjusting my drip based on what I was telling him. I did feel a bit silly and complain-y saying things like "I feel cold," and "I don't think I'll throw up but I feel a bit nauseous," but since his response was invariably "okay, we'll take care of that," followed by whatever it was being resolved, I guess it's what I was supposed to tell him. Finally a can of spray was squirted first at my arm (where I felt it as freezing cold) and then all over the rest of my body (where I didn't feel it at all), and we were ready to go.

Steve came back in and was told to sit at my right shoulder, and probably-Scott was at my left shoulder. There was a sheet suspended over my chest, and everyone else was on the other side of the sheet. The people in the room did do a quick run-through of names and roles but my mind was otherwise occupied.

I did not feel the incision, but I could feel the baby still moving inside me, and I could feel that my lower body was being moved about, although I have no idea what position I ended up in. It's not exactly a delicate operation and there was a whole lot of pushing and tugging - sometimes enough that my upper body on "our" side of the sheet was visibly moving. There wasn't any pain at all, but having the rummaging-about sensations meant I didn't feel detached from what was happening. Steve kept talking to me, and I kept breathing and trying to relax, and then there was the sound of a baby crying, which seemed so... scripted? clichéd? but of course it's what happened, and then someone said "oh, he's gorgeous!" followed by "erm, did they know if it was a boy or a girl?" which Steve and I couldn't help laughing about.

Steve took pictures with my phone of Jamie being wiped off, weighed, en-nappied and wrapped in warm towels. Then as per our birth plan, he took the first cuddle while the various wires and monitors around my chest were moved to allow Jamie to be placed on my chest for skin-to-skin contact. Probably-Trevor came round the sheet and joined probably-Scott for this bit but I really wasn't paying attention to anything at that point except Jamie, who didn't yet have a name. He was just Baby, all tiny and warm and fragile. He looked so very much like a complete and individual person that I could hardly believe that just a few minutes previously he'd been inside me, effectively one of my internal organs, growing out of the things I ate. I was aware, on some level, that the operation was still continuing, but I couldn't feel a thing any more. We kept cuddling all the while that I was being sewn back up, and he even stayed on me while the two of us were transferred from the operating table to a hospital bed and wheeled through to the recovery room, where the midwife helped us with our first attempt at breastfeeding.

It was a lovely birth experience. I don't have a Natural Childbirth Top Trumps card (hours in labour, number of stitches, etc) but in many ways that's a relief. I just have the care and friendliness of the NHS helping us transition to being a family of three with a minimum amount of drama.