Friday, January 7, 2011

We did it!

Two days after my Mum and Sis returned to Singapore and Lionel is back at work, I braved my greatest practical fear as a new Mum alone in Zurich -- bringing Gaby out on my own without a car (which would have served as a refuge for us if she decides to bawl and draw attention to us).

To maximise Gaby's happy time, immediately after a feed, I rushed to put on my socks, jeans, blouse, warm jacket and baby carrier. Forget the make-up, or even habitual eyelash curler and lip balm. This was followed hastily by putting Gaby in a thick snow suit and into the baby carrier. Darn, I forgot to wear my boots first. I hopped into them while holding onto the wall for support, grabbed the keys and the shopping bag, and rushed out.

Why the need for all that haste? Gaby our Singaporean baby cannot tahan the heat. She would not last more than 2 minutes in that thermal wear.

Outside supermarket Migros
I'm all smiles from a very successful outing. So proud of myself, thought I that I had to camwhore and quickly snap this picture of us. Achievement: We were out for half an hour doorstep to doorstep.

And the moment we stepped into the house
Talk about Gaby being kind to me. She held on to her tantrum long enough for us to enter the house and close the door. Mmmuack Gaby!

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

I want my Mummy...


Checking in 10kg over the limit (and too soon for me)

Mum and Sis left this morning for Singapore. I can't believe my days are going to quieten down again. Mum was here for three months, Sis for one. It has been so much like homely Singapore during the time they were here. I had forgotten the convenience and easy-to-take-for-grantedness of having everyone close by. 

The emotions related to moving out of my Mummy's home, and into my own lovenest in Strathmore Singapore wasn't anything like this. Mum was always a phonecall and four wheels away. In Schwamendingenstrasse Zurich, Mum is a trunk call, planning, a plane and some 20 hours away.

After Lionel and I returned from the airport this morning, and Gaby was still sedated from having a late night, I grabbed the rare opportunity to clear up the clutter. I don't like clutter, but this was something I had to deal with when there were so many of us living under one roof. 

Suitcases and coats -- all gone now
I must have been looking forward to this catharsis -- finally restoring my home according to my idiosyncratic need for order. Yet, as I started putting away Mum and Sis' few remaining belongings, I suddenly didn't want to -- didn't want the departure that led to this spring cleaning. And I started crying all over again.

I'm a weepy mess when it comes to partings involving my Mum. I cried pathetically just before I entered the departure gate some 4-5 years ago when I was going for a six-month exchange programme in UC Berkeley. I cried again at the departure gate when we left for Zurich. And here I was, all teary and nose-drippy as I saw Mum and Sis off.

It has been a crazy time having three women in the house, oh not forgetting Gaby the latest addition and the one contributing the most madness to the house. Poor Lionel was up against four females in our 2-bedroom apartment. Not that he complained. He had the best of two additional cuisine repertoires and loads of time while there were two extra pairs of hands to do the baby carrying/entertaining/diapering/consoling. Lionel the holiday-lover also had the perfect excuse to plan excursions, and even an overnight trip to Bern.

Mum calming Gaby to sleep
In the first two to three weeks after Gaby and I returned from the hospital, Gaby would not sleep so easily after her feeds at night. And still exhausted and aching from labour and intensive breastfeeding, there was little of me left to rock Gaby to sleep. My Mum would sacrifice her sleep for mine and comfortingly hold and walk Gaby to sleep. Then she would put Gaby in the pram with her in the other room, so that I get my quiet rest.

Mum would also make me a drink in the middle of the night in those early couple of weeks post-birth when I was ferociously hungry and ate as often as Gaby.
 
Gaby smiles the most readily with my Mum
Grandma spent so much time with Gaby it was no wonder she was the first to draw a smile from Gaby. Hence when I was playing with Gaby this afternoon and she was all smiles, it just made me cry even more, thinking of my Mum.

Two months after my Mum came, my sister, Cui, came to spend her summer holidays with us. She's a natural with babies! I was telling her how difficult it was to handle a newborn and how we sisters needed to plan the timing of our pregnancies so as to have Mum with us in the first few months after giving birth. But now, I think she probably doesn't need my Mum as much as I do. I guess her baby minding skills came from all those children's church camps she helped out in.

Helping carry the load

Experimenting quite successfully with new carrying positions to appease Gaby

Very willingly and adeptly taking Gaby during her colicky moments

Yet another funky carrying position

Mobile with animals representing all of us stitched by Cui

Insanely happy together

A family affair oo-oo-ing Gaby to poop
And Gaby amused with her favourite vowel sound "oo"

Cui's home-baked quiche
What parting gifts did they leave behind? Four of Cui's home-baked quiches cut and packed into individual portions in the freezer, over one kilogram of manually skinned and deboned chicken thighs, manually grated cheese, Mum's green bean sago soup, and two microwavable lunch boxes of homemade Oyaku Don. All to help me get by at least the first week on my own. (It can be quite impossible to take a pee, much less prepare meals on my own on Gaby's fussying days where she insists on being carried at all times.)

Of course there's a lot more other little things too, but it would be verbal diarrhoea and reader nausea if I write them all here.
So much love... All the intensive baking, deboning, grating, packing in the last few days before they left. How not to cry leh?

Monday, December 13, 2010

Mission Bottle Basics

My advice to all breastfeeding Moms: Don't let Baby survive completely on the breast. Alternate between bottle and breast so that you won't have this problem we are now faced with...

Moms-to-be have heard horror stories of how hospitals give the bottle to newborns, only to have them reject Mom's breast later on because it is much easier sucking the milk out of a bottle than from a breast. And much has been written about nipple confusion where baby doesn't know how to suckle at the breast because bottle suckling requires a different technique. But alas, I was not warned about the reverse -- breast affinity leading to bottle rejection.

Lionel and I have his workplace's Christmas dinner to attend this coming Friday. We have no intention to bring Gaby, just as we believe they have no intention to have a bawling infant at the nice restaurant. My Mum and Sis are here to take care of Gaby in her parents' absence. They can feed her expressed milk or formula in my absence. The plan sounded simple enough when we signed up for the dinner before Gaby was born.

But Gaby, as we have recently found out, absolutely refuses to take the bottle now that she has grown so accustomed to fresh milk from the warm pliable tenderness of Mummy's nehs.

Gaby had earlier been on the pacifier and bottle from the time she was in neonatal care shortly after birth, and even when we brought her home in her second week of life. However, so well was she putting on weight that the visiting midwife told us to do away with formula supplementation. And at the same time, I was getting more confident of my milk supply and proficient in breastfeeding, so Gaby stopped taking the bottle.

Since then, Gaby has had a good month without the bottle or the pacifier.

It was till we started making day trips and thought handling a bottle with expressed milk might be easier than breastfeeding in public when we returned Gaby to her bottle. It was then we found out that Gaby would retaliate with all her might, and volume, against any introduction of an imitation teat into her mouth.

With all our manufacturing wonders today, why couldn't they shape bottle teats they way nature moulded breasts, thought I. The answer came pretty immediately after the question arose. Such teats won't just be bought by parents of newborns for their newborns. They'd be a regular item in www.xxx.com kind of websites and dodgy shops I am sure. Come to think of it, I may just be able to find a pair of fake breasts at one of those kinky outlets.

Anyway, how how? I lamented. How can I go for my Christmas dinner when my baby insists that I have to be present at all her 2-3 hourly feeds? How how will she survive when the time comes for her to wean off my tired nehs? How would she survive if I am suddenly taken away from her? Aiyo Gaby, you'd have to go on the drip.

These concerns kicked off Mission Bottle Basics to get Gaby to reacquire the survival skills of a baby in these modern times.

Goal: Replicating this taken-for-granted act
The best part about this difficult mission for me is that I, the Mum with the smell and the voice Gaby can identify,  have been advised by books and midwives not to be the one to deliver the bottle. Gaby would be confused as to why Mum's nehs were there but tasted like rubber.

So that has left Lionel, my Mum and Sis the arduous and ear-piercing task of getting Gaby reaccustomed to the bottle. I hear her angry screams and pleading cries while I take that time as my break. In fact, as I write this entry, my Sis is trying to bottlefeed Gaby.

We celebrate tiny achievements.
  • Achievement 1a (5 days ago): Dad holding the pacifier in Gaby's mouth, and her not crying
  • Achievement 1b: Gaby keeping the pacifier in her mouth herself, even if it is for just half a minute
  • Acheivement 2a (yesterday): Dad getting Gaby to accept the pacifier first, and then quickly switching it over to the bottle when Gaby's caught off guard
  • Achievement 2b: Gaby having the bottle teat in her mouth without crying, even if she is not sucking
  • Achievement 2c: Gaby sucking clumsily at the bottle, but not swallowing the milk
  • Acheivement 2d (just today): An unsuspecting sleepy Gaby finishing 15ml from the bottle fed by my Sis
Friday's dinner is four days away. Will we be able to accomplish this mission by then? Stay tuned.

Update:  We went ahead bravely for dinner and Gaby finally drank half a bottle of milk out of hungry desperation just before we returned home. However, we have not been able to replicate that miracle since.

Random Assortment of Photos

Nehspray on Gaby's face
And her bath toy that has an uncanny resemblance to her




























Gaby's very own supermarket loyalty card

Gaby in her different moods with Grandma

Gawking time with Dad

What happens when you ask Uncle Jo to take care of Gaby

Gaby on her playgym

My sleeping angel

Short arms that don't go past her head

Friday, December 3, 2010

Winter has Arrived...

White Christmas coming right up!

You can tell whose cars haven't been moving...

Well-salted roads

No more BBQ


Braving the snow to bring Gaby to the pediatrician


How Gaby spends her 'mun yue' (first month birthday)


My China apple all bundled up

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Neh-Spray

This entry is dedicated to all mothers past, now and future who have breastfed, who are breastfeeding and who will one day. You have my utmost sympathies and admiration.


My life these days

I thought with Gaby out of my belly, the problem I had with tossing and turning in bed to comfortably balance the weight of my heavy middle section would disappear. Well, that problem did go away, but a new problem arose -- Heavy *nehs that gravitate to the side I lie on.

One night, Gaby slept through 6 full hours. Any exhausted mother would have gladly enjoyed the same length of uninterrupted sleep. Unfortunately for me, I woke up at the third hour because my nehs were calling out to me. They were engorged -- hard and painful. And because I like sleeping on my side, that meant that either neh would be squashed against the bed in any of my favourite two positions.

Furthermore, while sleeping, Gaby expresses air in a variety of pigeon-coo to baby-dinosaur sounds that are grossly loud relative to her tiny body. Cute as they are, these sounds keep me alert for the next moment when they would grow into an unmistakable loud cry to summon the nehs.

Having been flat-chested my whole life, I never thought my two mosquitoes on a wall, as my mother would matter-of-factly call them, would be able to bulk up enough to contain sufficient to sustain life. Afterall, my Mum (where the flat-chest gene came from) did say she "couldn't" breastfeed. Of course, she did come from the era when women were pulled from the domestic realm into the work force, and formula milk was all the marketing rage and practical solution before Medela breastpumps got so popular.

Anyway, to my very pleasant surprise, my nehs are currently producing enough such that Gaby is putting on more weight per week than the average babe. At just 22 days, she put on 300g from the previous week. (The expected weekly weight gain at this stage according to the midwife is 150-200g.) Gaby's now 4.08kg.

Protecting Mummy's modesty

Not to my excitement though is how these new assets have grown so heavy that even a bumpity bus ride makes it bouncingly painful wearing them.

The first day I returned from the hospital, stood in front of the mirror and gawked at the nehs in their full glory, they felt like strangers to me. New breasts, I called them. Each was turgid and symmetrically round (a neh usually has a natural sag that gives it an asymmetrical natural look) -- as if I had had some surgical enhancements made to them.

What a journey the nehs have brought Lionel and I. In the early hospital stay days, the colostrum (thick yellowish liquid high in protein, fat and antibodies that comes in the first few days after delivery) I produced was extremely scarce. So precious was it that Lionel had his face close to my neh with full concentration to collect every single drop for Gaby using a syringe. Collections were in single digit millilitres. Even 2ml was an accomplishment!


Syringes used to collect colostrum

Now, the milk comes so generously it has become a bane requiring breast pads lest they shoot an unwitting passerby with Nehspray.


The speed at which hormones work amazes me no end. Just the sound of Gaby's cry near feeding time sends my nehs leaking. The right one is particularly troublesome, and even shoots a fine spray. I would say its current projectile range is around 10cm. Even without Gaby's cry, should she oversleep, the nehs would start tingling, granting me some grace time to get my tissue and pads in position, before the shooting begins.

My bosom buddies -- breast pads

Gaby with Nehspray on her cheek

I am almost certain that Nature had engorged breasts planned for a reason. The infant's suck is akin to a snake's venom. It is both the poison that causes the pain, and the antidote to relieve it. This is probably Nature's cruel but necessary means to secure nourishment for a helpless baby from a severely fatigued mother. As Nature has it, I only like my nehs the way I best like my fruit juices -- freshly squeezed.

All that said, breastfeeding is an arduous task. It is back breaking, sleep depriving, pain causing and hence requires a lot of determination. That is why with my new motherhood have I found a new admiration for all breastfeeding mothers. I hope Gaby's nutritious diet with antibodies that no formula milk can ever replace, and I, can last at least 6 months.


*Neh neh aka. Nehs are understood most affectionately by most Singaporeans and Malaysians as breasts in the dialect Hokkien.

Monday, November 15, 2010

My New Fascination

Dear all,

Thank you for your patience with my updates, and for sharing our joy with the birth of Gaby.

Both Lionel and I have been busy trying to journal Gaby's entry into our life. The moments come and go so fast! And I really want to have my journey recorded because the learning and discoveries we make with our firstborn is always a once in a lifetime experience. And it is always humbling to return to these memories years later...

While I am more of a words, details and emotions auto-/biographer, Lionel's the photo journalist. So to get updates on what's going on in our lives, you have both my blog and Lionel's Phanfare photo website.

Here are some of my favourite and latest visual captures of our two-week-old darling:
Eyelashes!

That's most of the view I get when I'm breastfeeding her. I am so fascinated that she has eyelashes at such an early age. I keep showing them off to my Mum. However, her eyelashes are nothing compared to those of her ang moh counterparts here -- they have those flip-flap doll-like or liondance lion kind of eyelashes!

Showing some neck
Most of the time, babies are pretty neckless with their lack of head support and all that lovable layers of fat.


Whenever Gaby is awake, in a fussing mode, and I am exhausted, I just can't wait to finish breastfeeding her and putting her back to sleep. But when she's asleep, I enjoy just staring at her and all is forgotten. I find it impossible to resist the urge to kiss her lightly on her cheek, and by so doing, recklessly risk waking her up. It is so hard to let sleeping dogs lie.

Going-out gear
We've started bringing Gaby out! She had her first outing when she was 13 days old. It was a Saturday and Daddy was around. So we could afford the muscle to bring her 4-wheel-drive-solid pram down the stairs. And among the three of us (the other Mum included), we had enough arms to manage supermarket shopping, a pram and a crying baby.

Gaby enjoyed the outing. Well, actually Gaby's mum enjoyed the outing more. It wasn't until we walked out of the apartment that I realised I so badly needed to get some fresh air after a week in hospital and a week at home.

On Sunday, Lionel and I took Gaby out for a walk in the hilly foresty area opposite our home. We were trying a new route and Lionel ended up pramming her uphill for what seemed like a long time, and over lots of bumpity rocks, twigs and earth. Gaby probably had nightmares of motion sickness last night.

And finally, how can I not leave you with this? It is tempting and instinctive to only put up all the positive bits in public, but blogging, and any piece of recount (especially of motherhood) I believe, should always include the good, the bad and the ugly.

Double dose
Stinking the house down and every bit nonchalent about it