Monday, April 25, 2011

Easter: Pretty Bows or Dirty Feet?

Ahhhh Easter. Isn't Easter wonderful? Frilly dresses, pretty bows, boys in sweater vests and beautiful pictures of families against colorful springtime backgrounds. Yep, wonderful. Right. Unless you are in Texas and Easter falls in late April so it's 92 degrees by the time you get around to the egg hunt and the big family photos. At that point all bows are missing, sweater vests are discarded, everyone is sweating, chocolate is melting and who knows what happened to everyone's shoes?

I love Easter, really. I serve a risen savior and Easter is the biggest celebration of that amazing reality all year long. I love the spiritual celebration and I also love the less spiritual, candy-filled joy of spring. I love the get-togethers, the baskets, the egg hunts, the food, the family. It's great.

It's just that the reality of Easter as a mom, is that it's a lot of work. We didn't actually get a family photo of everyone dressed up and looking smart yesterday, even though at one point we actually were all in that particular state I promise. We all went to church yesterday morning clean, pressed and dressed. We worshiped and celebrated our Savior's victory and didn't take one picture to commemorate the event.

By the time we made it back to the house, Riley had to be changed because he had an accident and the rest of us altered our outfits for the remainder of the day. For me, that meant losing the dress in favor of capri pants, Scott and Tyler found shorts suitable for fishing at the lake and Scooter . . . Well, remember how every other little boy loses their sweater vest during the day? Scooter discarded his polo shirt and put the vest back on so that he was wearing a sleeveless shirt. OK, whatever.

We packed up the truck with fishing gear, candy, extra clothes (not that we ever actually touched those), the veggie salad I had prepared the day before and some cold drinks then headed to Cedar Creek Lake. It's Scott's year for the holiday so we were excited to spend the day at his Grandma's house with all the aunts, uncles & cousins. We started out on our hour and a half drive and 5 minutes down the road I realized I had forgotten the rolls, so I made Scott turn around. When we were on the way once again, I realized I forgot our camera too, but we weren't making another U-turn.

No camera, so I don't have lots of pretty pictures to show you of the three little boy baby cousins together for the first time in matching outfits or Scott fixing fishing poles over and over again for all the boys who wanted to try and catch something. Other people had cameras though, and I have already seen some wonderful shots of the day online. I spent most of the afternoon in a back bedroom stuffing eggs for the hunt with some of my favorite compadres. Scott wondered where I had disappeared to after we got there, leaving him in charge of all 3 boys. Cousin Theresa told him I had done all the work preparing the day before and it was his turn now. Thanks Theresa! The truth is though, now that the kids are older they want to be down by the lake with fishing poles so he has more to do than before. When they were younger, I spent most of the day caring for them while he got to visit with his cousins. It's just the way the world works, I guess.

It was a great day, and I would love to post some pictures here of my sweet kids in their sweet clothes with their sweet, scrubbed faces. That's not my world though. What I do have is pictures of the aftermath. Tyler changed as soon as we walked in the door. His shorts were soaked from playing in the lake and his shirt was covered in dirt. I would love to show you, but he cleaned up fast when we got home.

However, Riley found a new level of filth yesterday and he didn't care one little whit if he ever got cleaned up. At one point I was searching for his shoes with him down by the lake and I swear I could hear his thoughts 'hmmmm . . . I haven't played in that pile of dirt yet, it looks different so I guess I should squat down and stir it up and let it blow all over me' and that's what he did. That particular dirt pile was the remains of a burn pile last year so the sand was mixed with ash. Yes, ashes - all over him.

So, I give you Riley - covered in dirt and chocolate, and who knows what else.




Scooter wasn't quite as bad, since he doesn't like to actually PLAY in dirt. He even kept his shoes on all day. But, they were crocs and therefore full of lots of little holes. His feet were not much better:


And just so you know - I did try to commemorate their morning Easter basket fun, but by the time I grabbed the camera the enthusiasm had waned a bit, so this is what I got:


LOL! Seriously. I know I am not the only mother out there who didn't have the perfect, smooth, easy Easter she would like. Pictures don't always tell the true story. I think more people should post the REAL pictures, like me. It's more entertaining and definitely more realistic. I have 3 boys and perfect just NEVER happens!

Anyway, we gave the boys a much needed bath and waited for them to crash from their 6th or 7th sugar rush of the day so we could put them to bed. I am beat, exhausted. So happy there isn't anything written on my calendar for the day. I ran to the store last night to be sure we had plenty of fresh fruit on hand. I'll need it this week to counteract the demands of the candy in the baskets that are currently high up on top of the china cabinet so they cannot be plundered at will.

And don't worry - the Easter outfits that we began the day with were purchased two weeks ago and donned for family photos in the park on a less stressful weekend. Hopefully there is at least one decent shot of all 5 of us so that I can 'remember' Easter 2011 as a pretty picture.

When I'm a little old woman, which way will I remember it? Will it be the pretty picture or the dirty feet? I hope it's the dirty feet! It's so much more fun that way!

I hope your Easter was just as fun and just as messy as ours was! I also hope you were with loved ones and had a chance to worship our Savior.

Thanks and God Bless!

Friday, April 15, 2011

Figuring out this dentist thing . . .

We lost a dear friend in the middle of the night. It wasn't unexpected. In fact, we took the boys to see him a few days ago so they could have a chance to say goodbye. This man was a giant in their lives though and the boys struggled with the image of Big John sleeping and not talking to them. An uncle or a Papa or a friend, whichever they needed. I am dreading telling the kids this morning. They love him so much and I hate to tell them he is gone. My own grief is an ocean, overwhelming and I am not sure how I take on theirs as well, but I know that's my job and I will do it as best as I can. And as sad as I am, I know that our Big John is whole again this morning and is reunited with his two beloved sons, a fair amount of family and a few dear friends that went before him.

I am very sad today, there is no question. And I have a sad task ahead of me this morning, telling the kids. There will be things to do and people to comfort. There are hugs to give, and I go forth willingly to give them. But here's the thing about kids, their sadness will not permeate their day like it will mine. They will still be kids and do kid stuff, which is fitting and will bring me smiles. So for just a minute, I want to focus on something that wasn't sad, something upbeat. I had really wanted to share this story yesterday, but my schedule didn't permit.

First of all, you need to know that Scooter has an almost irrational fear of the dentist. There is no basis for the fear since he has never actually been through an appointment. He watches everyone else have their cleanings with no problem. He just absolutely refuses to open his mouth for anyone other than Scott and me. I have diligently tried to get him through his first official complete dentist appointment for 2 years. We have scheduled his own time slots. I have taken him with Tyler and myself and we've tried to get him in the chair at every turn. Late last fall, I finally got him in the chair on my lap for about 30 seconds but he clamped his mouth shut as tightly as he could and refused to budge.

My dentist told me to watch out for a few things that would signal a problem and keep trying. I started asking my doctor about the possibility of giving him some 'happy juice' like they gave Riley last spring before his adenoid surgery. Riley was so loopy from a half dose he would have let anybody do anything to him and just smiled right through it. I thought that would be effective to get Scooter in the dentist chair. I was serious too, I was getting really frustrated and this seemed like my only option - drugging my child.

I had so many talks with Scooter about the process. We read books, we watched tv shows - all about the fun of going to the dentist. No matter how determined he was beforehand that he would cooperate, once we were there it didn't happen. I considered taking him to a pediatric dentist, but since Scooter is better behaved in places he is comfortable, I really thought that our dentist was best for him. He knows the staff and has been going with me for appointments since birth.

In late January, I noticed a gray spot on one of Scooter's molars which by March had very obviously developed into a serious cavity that made it painful for him to chew on that side of his mouth. Being a smart little stinker, he just did all of his chewing on the other side. The ice storm delayed our first scheduled appointment to check it out, but I took him twice more in an attempt to let our Dr. get a look at the tooth. Nothing. They told me he would probably have to be completely sedated to do the work and I needed to take him to a pedi-dentist after all. Dr. S. in Garland had worked on Tyler for serious tooth issues several times and I love the staff, but they are 'out of network' for every insurance and therefore it costs me a big chunk of change to visit her. I started looking for other options.

Last Thursday night, Riley took a fall and loosened his two front teeth complete with purple gums and lots of blood. Our dentist and Dr. S were both closed on Fridays. I ended up taking him to another pedi-dentist out in Rockwall. Riley was a champ. He let them do x-rays and look at his teeth. It was so easy. The staff was awesome and they were in network so I didn't get charged extra for the visit. I asked them about Scooter so the dentist, 2 assistants and I wrangled Scooter for a peek. Very obviously a cavity, but he screamed bloody murder and fought us like a madman. They wanted to do complete IV sedation in the office for a full exam, cleaning, x-rays and filling the cavity. If they only had the one cavity to deal with it was going to cost us about $1200 out of pocket. For every extra cavity it would be another $100 or so. Right.

Talk about a quandry! It was a ridiculous amount of money, but I knew I was probably going to have to spend it so my son was calm and wasn't walking around with a rotting tooth that could make him sick and damage the adult tooth underneath. I had my own cleaning on Tuesday and we discussed Scooter yet again. They suggested I call Dr. S. again because she sometimes will do the sedation at Baylor Garland Hospital which would make the process (not the dental work) claimable on my medical insurance and cut down on the out of pocket expense. They also said that if it still came in that high, they would call the Baylor School of Dentistry downtown and get him in so maybe it would be a little less money for us and we could get the work done.

Dr. S. fit him in the next morning and I warned them ahead of time that they might not even get a look at the tooth, but they were prepared. Honestly, I headed out to that appointment prepared for complete and total frustration. It is so nerve-wracking when your child doesn't cooperate - ever! I was surprised to find they were planning on cleaning his teeth, not just an exam and with every new portion of the appointment they would say 'We can get it done, it's up to you if you can put up with the struggling.' Hmmmm. OK. I eventually got Scooter in the chair with me to watch Toy Story 3 on the tv in the room. Scooter struggled and gagged and had to have his mouth pried open, but he let them clean his teeth! Are you kidding me? Yay!

The worst part of the visit was when they did the x-rays and made me leave the room with Riley. They did the holding down themselves and he screamed through the whole thing, crying so hard that he was gasping and gagging when I came back to calm him down. He was then awarded 4 prizes from the treasure box (Riley got 2 for just being there and being supportive) and he settled back into my lap, calm and entertained by the movie. Here's the shocker though - when Dr. S came in to 'count his teeth', he just opened right up and let her do it! No tears, no big deal. Like nothing had ever been a problem, ever! The staff then ruined the good feeling moment by 'painting' Scooter's teeth with flouride which has a texture as well as a taste and my very sensory sensitive child thought he was dying for about an hour from that particular torture. When he ate some goldfish it got better and we were once again in the safe zone.

It was decided we could try to repair the TWO cavities (there was another one starting on the opposite molar from the first) without IV sedation. We are scheduled for early May and when we arrive they are going to give Scooter some Valium to calm him down and help him be compliant before they start. They will have to retake the x-rays of his top teeth because the first ones didn't turn out well thanks to his squirming. However, if there are more cavities they might not be able to fill them the same day. Evidently there are weight limits for novacaine and since everything is in a different quadrant, he can't have that many shots in one visit. Anyway - it will be a whole lot lighter on my pocket book than the original plan and I think Scooter will survive unscathed emotionally.

Scott had told me that morning that he had 'talked to Scooter' about the visit twice and he was sure things were going to be fine. So, when I called him to announce we had finally had a successful dentist appointment he said 'See, I told you it would be fine. I talked to him about it.' Right. Okay sweetie - so you are taking all the credit because of one discussion. The hundreds of talks I had with him coupled with over a dozen attempts at appointments had nothing to do with it whatsoever. LOL! I don't remember seeing him in the chair holding our kid down. Ha!

Anyway, I don't know what the turning point was for Scooter in the end. Maybe it was Scotty's talk with him. Maybe it was that after so many visits he finally got that we were serious about this and he wasn't getting out of it. Maybe it was like my sister said and he just liked the 'energy' of these people more than others. Maybe it was because he had watched his little brother survive an appointment a few days before with no visible damage. And maybe he was just ready, I have no idea.

What I do know is that I was so relieved to have this milestone under our belts. I am very confident that we are actually going to get the teeth filled and he will be able to chew on both sides of his mouth again. I have been informed though that next time Scooter would like to not have strawberry toothpaste because he likes cherry and not strawberry. They didn't have cherry and I thought strawberry would be fine, evidently I was wrong. Next time he can choose between grape, bubble gum and (I am not kidding you) cookie dough flavored toothpaste himself.

I took the boys to Target for a toy as a reward because it was such a big deal. We grabbed lunch and headed home. I was exhausted! That night when I was putting Scooter to bed, he looked at me and whispered 'Mom, today was a really awesome day!' Yes it was! We chatted about how cool it was that he faced something he was afraid of and did it anyway so he doesn't have to be afraid of it anymore. He did tell me that the part that was NOT awesome was all the strawberry taste, and the painting thing. He'll survive though. He's really proud of himself and so am I. And in the mean time, Riley cannot wait to go get his teeth cleaned too!

Such a little thing, but it was such a big deal around here for a while. We've got a lot going on these days and I know the kids are feeling the strain. This was a big week though, figuring out this dentist thing. It was Awesome.

Love, and God Bless!

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Really Big Feet . . .

I think Riley might have really big feet for a little guy. This probably has something to do with why he can ride a bike like a pro, but occasionally falls while crossing the room. I might not have noticed but the kid loves to take a shower. Ok, it isn't like I don't bathe him all the time, but as he says 'Momma, I like to get wet!'. Lately, he has wanted to jump in the shower with me almost every day, whether or not he had a bath the night before or not. He will corner me mid-morning and tell me 'Momma, don't take a shower without me.' It's gotten kind of ridiculous, but this is how kids learn to shower.

Mostly, Riley stands at the edge of the water stream getting just slightly spritzed while I wash my hair. I will wash him up after my conditioner is done and then after I rinse him off and he can't open his eyes anymore from the water spraying all over his face, he's ready to get out. I'll wrap him in a towel, send him on his way and finish up my own shower.

He is so obsessed with this right now that when I actually have places to go during the day, I will often try to sneak in and out of the shower before he wakes up. This will usually result in a very plaintive 'Momma, did you take a shower without me?' followed by requests for me to shower again. Timing is everything, and this morning time was not on my side.

I had just finished the shower and still had head wrapped in towel while I sported my very stylish baby-pink terry cloth robe complete with yellow rubber duckies appliqued on pocket and trim. (By the way, I would totally love a new robe, but I can't make myself spend money on it since I don't NEED a new robe. You know, just in case you were wracking your brain for the perfect May-Day gift for me or something.) I had not made it out of the bathroom yet when Riley woke up and found me there. I was caught! Guilty!

There was a lot of whining and crying and attempts at ordering me back in the shower. It took me a while, but I convinced Riley he didn't need me to take the shower with him. I got the water started and got him in the stream and stood just outside the ring of water helping him get clean and then exited the shower, leaving the door open to let him play and experiment with being in the shower alone.

So that's how I found myself standing back and examining my sons body without realizing I was doing so. And let me tell you, from that angle - Riley's feet are huge! They are kind of too big for his body. They almost looked like frog feet because they didn't match his short little peanut legs. Maybe I was imagining things, but I doubt it.

This little realization means 2 things:

1 - Riley is probably about to hit a growth spurt. His big growth spurt last year was in the spring, so this isn't that surprising. Hopefully, he will soon grow into his feet.

2 - The kids shoes are probably too small - again. I always feel like the worst mom on the planet when I realize that my kids have been walking around in shoes that are 2 sizes too small. It's tough because they don't really start informing you when shoes are tight in the toes until they are over the age of 5. At least mine don't. Riley has been wearing his crocs an awful lot lately and maybe it's because his much-loved Spider Man shoes don't feel good anymore, but who wants to trade in Spider Man shoes for a newer model? Spider Man shoes are way cool.

I should have seen this coming. We went roller skating for Tyler's birthday on Saturday and Riley was brave, venturing out onto the rink with his mom and a 'helper' for the slowest turn around the floor ever. He was so darn cute. When I ordered his skates, I did it in the size I bought shoes the last time and we couldn't get his feet in them. He wore the pair I had pulled for Scooter, 2 sizes larger, I just kind of thought it was how the skates sizes ran. Guess I better check Scooter's feet too, but he never did try the skates on so I am not sure where he stands at the moment.

Anyway - here I am again, one or two steps behind instead of ahead with a kid that has monstrously large feet for his little frame. At least for the moment.

Oh well!

God Bless!

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Scooter has a birthday . . .

Wow, I'm running behind on this post! It's been a crazy couple of weeks and I haven't had the time to sit down, much less write. A week and a half ago, on the 27th, my Scooter-Rooter-Pooter turned 5! FIVE! Five is so big. Even though Scooter's elementary school adventure is still over 4 months away, once your kid turns 5 it feels like they have already officially left preschooler-ness and moved on to big kid.

It's an awesome thing, like a switch is suddenly thrown and your little one isn't little anymore. Technically, I know the growing and maturing have happened gradually, but on the morning after his birthday Scooter suddenly appeared 'bigger' to me. Every few days since as he has come to tell me good morning, I have felt like he is rapidly changing into someone more mature, more aware. The baby-ness is leaving his face and his body is longer and leaner. Maybe it's just because I've been here before. Tyler will be 11 this Saturday and I know just how fast the time has flown since he turned 5 himself. It was just yesterday!

I have shared the other two boys' birth stories with you before, but not Scooter's. I guess it's time. And the thing is, it was my favorite birth for a variety of reasons: I was married and had someone to share it with, it was fast and it had a few humorous qualities (at least to me), and I think also because it wasn't my first I was way more aware of what was happening to me and around me.

When I first discovered I was pregnant, it didn't take me more than 5 minutes to find out that my doctor from having Tyler was not on either Scott's or my insurance plans. I had been visiting my internist for the past couple of years for the basics but I didn't have an official female doctor anymore. I asked everyone I knew for recommendations and that's how I found Dr. P, through a friend. I wasn't sure if I would keep looking or not, but I did get in for an initial pre-natal exam and I ended up loving her so much that I kept her! Just a side note here - Scott came with me to that appointment, but before we met at Presbyterian, he sent me flowers at work, roses. That was the first and last time he had flowers delivered to me, but it was so sweet! Later that night he took me to III Forks to celebrate our new life together as a family and he 'officially' proposed. The ring was supposed to come out with dessert, but the waiter messed up and so it came on a covered dish with our bill, or instead of our bill (I can't remember, but I did have pregnancy brain). Anyway - it was wonderful and romantic and I sobbed like an idiot. Scooter didn't change our plans, but he most certainly accelerated them and I spent my entire first trimester planning and executing a wedding (which I could not have done without sister Asheley and dear friend Mandy who made everything easier and smoother!).

I tell you all this because the whole experience of being pregnant with Scooter was so different than with Tyler for me. It had only been a minute before that I was sure life was just going to be Tyler and me forever. I wasn't going to get married or have more kids, I was just going to be the best mom I could for him. Then I fell in love, got pregnant and married in about a heartbeat and my whole life changed course into something I could not have imagined. I got to share the whole experience with someone that I loved more than anything. I got to share it with Tyler too. I was surprised by both pregnancies and definitely happy both times. My family had been super supportive with Tyler, but I was also a little lonely too, not so with Scooter.

And I had much clearer ideas about what I wanted for the birth experience, more realistic expectations. I was so much more prepared mentally and physically for Scooter to enter the world than I had been the first time. Part of this preparation was thanks to my sweet son, Tyler. When we told Tyler he was going to be a big brother, he was at first a bit unenthusiastic, maybe because he had a little sister at his dad's house and wasn't very impressed with babies in general at that point. However, Tyler is Tyler. He's a thinker. So about an hour later, while we were still in the process of telling our families the news, Tyler came to me with a question: Can I be with you when the baby comes out? Hmmmm. I did the appropriate mom thing and told him that he would probably be with Grandpa in the waiting room, but he could be at the hospital, etc. That would have been enough for most kids I know, but not my Tyler.

Tyler spent my entire pregnancy asking questions and watching birth shows (mostly A Baby Story, so it was pretty G-rated) and repeatedly badgering me about being there for the birth. We read books and I did the best I could to appease him. I had of course read countless accounts of home births and birth center births where siblings were present, but I didn't actually know anyone that took their kids with them into the birthing suite at the hospital. After a while though, I realized Tyler wasn't really going to be put off easily. I talked to my parents and my doctor and my husband. It was finally agreed that as long as Tyler had his own advocate in the room, my sister Asheley, to remove him in an instant if he was uncomfortable or things got scary, and as long as he wasn't a distraction - he could be there. The last few weeks of my pregnancy were filled with Tyler making comments and asking questions about when 'the squeezing' would start since that was how he referred to contractions. It was pretty awesome to me to have Tyler as a distraction. His 'need to know' kept me upbeat and light-hearted about the impending birth. Remembering to accept Tyler for who he is and do what was best for MY kid, helped me deal with the astonished comments and questions from others regarding his planned attendance.

I took a natural birthing class for Scooter as a refresher for myself and as major preparation for my husband. I had caved and gotten an epidural with Tyler which I didn't regret under the circumstances, but I really thought I might be able to go without this time around. The instructor was a little nutty, but she very sweetly volunteered to meet me at the hospital on her day off and give Tyler a private tour of the facilities and birthing rooms as well as a very informative and age appropriate talk about what to expect on D-Day. I am not a martyr. I knew that I could very well decide to get pain meds again if things went a long time, but I also wanted to prepare myself to go without. I am so glad I did, since in the end I couldn't have gotten them if I wanted them. Things just happened too quickly.

Scooter was due on a Sunday, March 26th. I had been having contractions for weeks, and I don't just mean Braxton-Hicks contractions. There were times that I was timing contractions and giving my mom a heads-up that things might be happening soon. I was already making progress and my doctor kept thinking Scooter was going to come early like Tyler had. She did not want me going over 40 weeks at all, so when I hadn't had him by late the week before, she scheduled an induction for Monday, the day after he was due. I was doing everything I could think of to get Scooter moving, but he was not cooperating. On Sunday night, my parents came over for a big steak dinner. What I could eat and when was going to be sketchy the next day so my mom was making sure I was prepared.

Monday is the busiest day of the week in L&D. This is when most emergency inductions and scheduled C-sections happen because they try not to do them over the weekend and very rarely schedule those types of things in the evenings. I guess Doctors like their weekends too. Because of this, I was basically 'on-call' for my induction. I wasn't high-risk and I wasn't two weeks overdue, so I was low on the priority list. I got a call from the hospital during our Sunday dinner telling me that I wasn't going to be in the earliest time slot, but to stay by the phone, don't eat breakfast and they would call me by 7 a.m.

So this is how my day went. The hospital would call and tell me that I was put off again and I should have a small snack right away and then not eat or drink anything for another 2 hours when they would call me again. This is really not how you want to treat a woman who is fully term pregnant and irritable. By the time they called at 1:00 and said this yet again, I was ticked off. I decided that I was going to eat a full lunch, not a snack, and the hospital could kiss my butt. I think at that point I was convinced we weren't being induced that day and it would be the next morning. That might have even been what the nurse had hinted at, but I can't remember. Scott was working from home on the computer and I told him I was leaving and getting lunch. I got myself some McDonald's and drove to the park by my house. I sat in a swing and ate my filet-o-fish sandwich and tried to find some serenity. When I got home, I wasn't mad anymore, just sad. I was pretty sure that we weren't having a baby that day after all, but I knew he was coming eventually so it would be fine. The problem was, I had to keep reliving those same emotions as family and friends kept calling and texting for updates on the situation. I put a movie in the dvd player and I laid down for a rest.

As will commonly happen with a woman in her 100th week of pregnancy, I had to stop the movie for a bathroom break. This was between 2:00 and 2:30, but I don't know exactly. What I do know is that I swung my legs around to try and heave myself out of our couch and as soon as I stood up, my water broke. I yelled for Scott and he had the very predictable moment of shock that something was actually happening. He asked me if I was sure. Ummmm, yep. Pretty sure, see the big circle of wet on the carpet and my drenched pants. I ran to the bedroom to change, grab some pads and towels and was ordering him to grab bags. 'Should you call the doctor? Are you sure it's time?' I did call the doctor who told me to come right in, but we were already on our way out the door at that point. My water had broken with Tyler too and I knew that they were going to tell me to come in right away. Still, I think my attitude and comments were more along the lines of 'Ha! Now the hospital has to let me in!' or something kind of like that.

We drove around the corner to pick Tyler up from school. His teacher was very excited, a grandmother herself and Tyler was one of her favorite kids. I had to go into the school myself, leaking all the way, because Scott had never done a pick up before and had no clue what to do or how to do it. It would have taken longer to explain it all. I didn't care, I was grinning from ear to ear. I was having this baby! Woohoo! The doctor's office wanted me to come to them first (they are in the same building as L&D) to verify that my water had actually broken. This cracks me up since if this has ever happened to you, you know that it's pretty obvious. I know, leaks happen and sometimes you need the verification, but when it's a big gush there is absolutely no question in your mind (happened to me twice), and the thing is, you keep leaking for a while especially if you are having contractions, which I was.

I texted the whole world on our way to the hospital and my phone practically blew up in my hands with the excited responses. It was a little after 3 and most people were planning an arrival at the hospital either after work to await the baby or just wanted to be kept informed. I was having an occasional contraction at this point, but they were not timeable and they were still pretty minor. They were the same kind of contractions I had been having for weeks, annoying but not uncomfortable. We did our check in at the doctor and were sent downstairs for the main show. We spent a while in admitting despite the pre-admission paperwork that had been on file for months (what is up with that - happens every time?!?). By the time we got into the room and I got gowned up and monitored out, it was after 4 and my parents had arrived. I think at that point I figured things could take a while because I still hadn't started active labor. I convinced the nurse that I could really be out of the bed and in the rocking chair in the room which is where I was sitting when my first real contractions hit. This was around 4:30.

I liked being in the rocking chair for labor. I rocked and breathed through my contractions and it was not very long before they were coming very quickly and lasting a long time. I stayed in that chair as long as I could. I know I made a bathroom trip at one point and then the nurse decided that I needed to be back in bed. I was checked and things were pretty far along. And this is where all the details kind of blur together.

I don't remember exactly when everyone arrived in the room, but by the time the baby came it was a packed house. My mother-in-law, mother, sister, Tyler & Scott were all in the room. I do remember that my doctor had come to the room and checked me again just before the contractions started and decided to go home and get a bite to eat before things got rolling. She lives 10 minutes from the hospital and this seemed fine at the time, but we didn't really know what was about to happen. I also remember that I was handling labor just fine until I hit transition and then I wanted drugs, or thought I was not going to make it through a long labor without them. Mom told me I was just in transition, but I thought she was crazy because I had just started labor. She was right though, a couple of horrific contractions later and all I wanted to do was push.

At one point my phone started to ring, I don't remember if it was during transition or after, but I do know that I was thinking and saying 'Who is calling me right now? I am kind of busy!'. It was a well meaning relative or friend who was calling to verify the hospital so they could come down and wait for the baby, they just didn't know that I was already HAVING the baby. Who could have known it would happen so fast?

A couple contractions past transition and I heard my nurse tell my mother that I could not push yet because the doctor wasn't there. I REALLY needed to push so I started arguing with her, because that's just the kind of person I am. I told her she should get the doctor. This is when I found out that Dr. P. had gone home for dinner, thinking she would be at the hospital for a while. 'Get her back here!'

'She's on her way, but you need to wait.'
'I can't wait! Ok, there must be an on-call resident or something - get them in here! I need to push!' Insert lots of moaning as I tried to NOT push.
'The resident is in an emergency C-section, he can't come either'
'What?!!!!?' Insert more moaning and gasping as I start to feel the 'burn' of baby crowning.
Said to nurse:'OK - you're going to need to catch because this baby is coming now!'
Said back to me, very calmly 'I can do that, I've done it before. Dr. P. is right outside the hospital, she's on her way in.'

I calmed down a bit and breathed a bit, but then I was pushing and I couldn't stop.

The doctor flew in and was giving me my prudendal block shot between 2 contractions while the nurse tried to get her scrubs on her. She never did get her mask or goggles on, she barely got her gloves on and the scrubs were not secured over her shoulders. From my first real contraction until Scooter's birth was about 1 hour and 20 minutes, a total of 3 hours from water breaking until birth. Fast.

Everyone was counting for me and let me tell you the image I remember most - it was of my sister and my son, standing behind doctors and nurses beyond my feet and slightly to my left. Tyler was on Asheley's shoulders and they were holding hands. My son was smiling so big that I thought he was going to fly away in happiness and he was counting to ten, just like on the baby shows, waiting for his brother to be born. My sister ended up using Tyler for support instead of the other way around, and I think that is super duper special!

I only pushed through 3 or 4 contractions before Scooter arrived. My doctor almost missed the whole thing but at that point I didn't care one bit. Later she told me that she could hear me arguing with the nurse when I felt the baby crowning through her phone and she was at a light right by the hospital. She was going to run the light since no one was coming but there was a cop next to her and she knew if she got pulled over she wouldn't make it at all. Once Tyler had seen the baby was here, he was pretty much done with the experience and ready for his grandpa to get him a snack from the vending machine in typical 5 year old fashion. People were still en route to the hospital to sit in the waiting room and instead they got to go up to the nursery and watch my baby get his first bath. Scooter was wide awake and rolling around while the other babies around him slept off their doses of epidurals. My prudendal block didn't take effect until after Scooter was born, but it was nice to have the novacaine-like relief in that area for all the after-birth stuff.

The whole experience was kind of like a party really. When I was induced for Riley I joked with the doctor repeatedly to not leave the hospital. She didn't, but my nurse was pretty green and didn't call her right away when I was in transition and she came close to missing the birth again. If there's a next time I am going to make sure my nurse knows right away that chances are once I hit transition, the baby is going to come pretty quickly and she had better take me seriously on that. I was absolutely starving after the birth and all I wanted to do was eat. I was so wired after the natural birth I didn't think I would sleep all night, but after we got Scooter in our room and all the visitors had left, I was exhausted. I was out by 10:30, I think.

Scooter was such an easy baby. My milk came in the second night in the hospital and after he ate, he slept for almost 6 hours. My nurse kept wanting me to wake him up to eat on schedule, but I refused. I explained that he had eaten every 10 minutes for 2 hours and then my milk had started and he had eaten fully on both sides. He was full and this wasn't my first rodeo, thank you very much. She kept waking me up though and asking me to wake the baby. Crazy woman. I finally told her that if he didn't wake up by 6 (he had gone to sleep around midnight) that I would wake him, but he was up and eating by then like a champ. After we got home, he would eat repeatedly between 10 and 11 and get all filled up. Then I would swaddle him up and as soon as he was warm and cozy, he would just zonk out and sleep for 6 hours. It was amazing and so different than my first time around.

The day after Scooter was born, when they came to take his picture, he actually smiled at his daddy. A full smile. I've never seen a newborn do that before. We caught it on film. Smiley (Scott's nickname in college), Junior. At first I thought Scooter looked more like me and my family, like Tyler probably, but as he grew he has looked more like his dad all the time. Occasionally though, I will catch a look on his face that is pure EASTMAN, reminding me specifically of my cousin David - they have the same forehead and eyes.

Anyway, Scooter did his birth just like he has done everything else, ever since. Not until he is darn good and ready and then when he is - he is fully committed and does it fast and furious. I can't believe it's been 5 years already. Most days, it feels like just yesterday we brought him home. Having Scooter naturally made me way more confident about trying Riley's induction without an epidural. I have done it both ways and naturally is very definitely better. It's more intense, of course, but afterward you feel so much better and healing is so much faster. Still, I am no martyr and if those labors had been a lot longer I know I would have probably gone for an epidural again in a second.

So that's it - my last birth story. Scooter had a great birthday, we combined his party with Tyler's so we could just have all the family out once. Big bounce house with slide, hot dogs and Transformer's cake - everything a 5 year old could want!

I asked Scooter the other day if he grew overnight because he looked bigger to me. He said 'Momma, are you crazy? (Idiom that he hears from his dad daily) When I got up this morning I already grew taller in my sleep last night! I told you I grow every day.' True enough, he grows every day whether I can see it or not. So happy I get to watch it happen! What a blessing!

Thanks and God Bless!

Scott Sherwood Barrow III, 'Scooter', March 27, 2006, 5:54 p.m., 8 lbs. 2 oz., 19 3/4 inches.