Monday, September 15, 2008

September in Sonoma

And when September hit my hands were empty. I took a breath and watched the ash settle. Then took a week off work and drove the family up the coast, just in time for September sunsets, peak season produce, the yearly potluck with friends and
the samba party of the year. Everything went off without a hitch, other than two missing baby hats and the ten additional hours missing from each vacation day.
But Elias and Tino are perfect vacation buddies, my friends are incredible, and I am the luckiest girl ever.
This is how it went:

Our first time touring outside of LA, we stopped for breakfast and found a true piece of Americana for the boys. At a truck stop diner, we choked down some biscuits and eggs as the folks at the next table savored the newly announced nomination of Sara Palin for Vice President. I strained my ears a bit to get a inside perspective on Palin fever, and instead, got hit with the 'N-word.' McCain and Palin seemed like purdy good people, and at least they would keep that Nigger out of office.

Tino and Elias posed for a picture and we cherished the first leg of our trip.


We continued on up PCH and made a couple more pit stops:




Daddy kept telling me to get his baby away from the edge of that cliff.




We swung through Santa Cruz just long enough to pick up with fellow Peace Corps vet, Scott, and go to th Power to the Peaceful Concert in Golden Gate Park where we met up with other movers and shakers with the African connections (including two other PCVs from Tanzania *gasp*! that were randomly sitting directly behind us, my incredible friend Margaret who opened an eye clinic in Camaroon, and, well, Barack Obama no less.)




We returned to Santa Cruz, also known as 'Paradise' to my husband, and had more good times with the great Scott Pietka and the orange parasol:


Elias loves Scott.
Next stop was Pigeon Point Lighthouse. I think these hostels are such treasures, to be able to stay in beautiful places for a bargain. After a giggle fit with Elias, one of the hostel workers, Sparrow, convinced us to go in the private hot tub while she stayed with Elias. You could tell it meant a lot to her, and we were certainly glad to enjoy the outdoor tub at the top of a craggy cliff and listen to waves crashing. We stayed up with Sparrow for awhile and listened to her tell her own story: she was working at the hostel as away to life at a place she loved and was attempting to write a book. Her own son had died of cancer when he was twelve. It was a remarkable story and one of those reasons why its nice to stay in hostels, in close proximity to others. One of the downfalls of hostels, however, is the thin walls which meant that the next morning everyone was commenting on what a happy baby we had. They had heard his giggle fits.



Serious Elias.



Giggly Elias.





Pensive Alison.



Happy Family.

Monday morning it was breakfast at Tartine's! Tino was scared driving downtown San Francisco. Maybe he was remembering the earthquake he recently felt, and the history of San Francisco, but I think it was that he had never been right in the middle of so many 'skyscrapers.' He took more pictures of the streets from inside the car (it would be funny to post the plethora of pics that we have of a blurry landscape outside of a window that reflects our messy dashboard but here is one to give some flavor.)


They did show the silly paper flowers from Olvera St. in LA that I hauled up to give to Amy for her birthday. Silly silly.

Anyway! Tartine's, one of the tastiest bakeries and breakfast nooks on earth, was the meeting spot for the betrothed bride and groom, Lyla and Elias. And it was also wonderful to see Lucia and Shawn, an incredible couple.



I got an incredible massage from Margaret, we cruised around some more of the city,




and Shawn gave Tino a guitar. It cost ten dollars to repair, and is the perfect evening medicine to alleviate a fussy baby, Tino sits outside in the evenings and plays.

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Oh your mamas rich, and your daddy's good lookin!

Last night the family went downtown to watch a friends band, The Sugar Mountain Mamas, play outdoors. The night was warm, the moon was purdy, and kids splashin away in the fountains all around. So many kids and babies, yikes! Two of the band members have babies, a 6 mo. old and a 1 mo. old. Elias is such a late night partier, and ladykiller, it is ridiculous. Besides making the mamas squeal with his devious dimples, he shared a kiss with a doe eyed three year old named Chloe. Oh they were so cute, he just kept looking at her and smiling big and trying to touch her, which she liked, but bashfully pointed to the waterfall. Then she looked up at him and touched his cheek, ever so softly with the back of her hand. That was it. Elias leaned in for the kiss, and it was wet and sloppy and tongue and everything!
Mama would've taken her camera out if she hadn't been orchestrating the whole thing, smooth guy lean in and all. hehe.

Well life is beautiful, and short.

Eight years with an asshole for a president have gone by quickly, 14 years since I went off to college have gone, where have they gone?

Anyway, I'm not much in a philosophy mood, and no new pictures to post. I'm in no position to whine, and really, there is nothing brand new to celebrate. But there are too many things that happen and they happen quickly and I just want to get some of them down for myself.
In fact, it would do me well to re-read some of my old messages.

I was having a very hard time about a week ago. Tonight I heard Kate Winslet describe the feeling of a broken heart to Jack Black, (you figure out the movie.) Its not the first time a broken heart has been described. If I were to describe the sensation I was feeling all week, I wonder if I would be describing the feeling of longing, or regret, or geographical separation, lost time, or what, but I tell you its something akin to ants crawling around under the skin. This is going on in conjunction with being nauseous and unable to eat.
How could I have spent to much time trying to prepare for a job that I can't get?
A whole year of preparing, trying to set up a good future, when it may have been the last time to give birth and raise an infant under the banana trees, with my buddies still around in country??

Spent the year in preparation I did. Miss a good opportunity to be in Tanzania I did.
But I am sure that I would have gone through my usual swings of insecurity and not sure if I was doing all that I possibly could to set up a good future.
Anyway, I knew that the best way for me to end up in that situation was to come back to the States and really accomplish something first. That to go back and have number two in Tanzania, in 5 years, hopefully, was the plan.
Set up the house, and be chill.
I don't see how we will be able to be in a position to take time off in 5 years, but if I tell myself now that this is the goal, it doesn't hurt so bad.

I fell in love with Tino, and made the decision not to look back.
After we made it, after we spent a few years together and proved this thing could work, thats when I want the wedding.
Yeah, thats usually why people live together and wait to have kids. That and its ridiculous financially.
But I was afraid that if I didn't commit myself fully, then there would always be a way to escape, and I saw my dreams line up on this man. There was no reason in the world, other than being illogical! that I shouldn't be with Tino.
I know me, and I doubt too much.
Tino proves himself time and time again to be a steller lover, a fuckin good daddy, a loyal, cheerful and hardworking husband, and a spiritual rock. My commitment to him has redoubled.
My mom has continued to be essential perfection, and I am totally in awe of her, and frankly embarrassed that I haven't worshiped her more thoroughly and done everything I can to be just like her.
She is fun, funny, wise, forgiving, giving, loving and beautiful.
Elias is perfect.
I am the crack head in the house, o yes I am.
When it became obvious that a teaching job was not going to happen, I began to spiral downward fast. I lashed out at everyone with bitterness and hostility. I regretted everything. I missed Bjarke, I regretted the phone call I took from the Peace Corps, when the asked me when I wanted to go. I still didn't know where, but if I had said a different when.
IF IF IF.
It is so AMAZINGLY useless.
I had waffled, wanting to study ag, or education, or health care (and then the question was, public health or nursing)
o my god have I waffled for years.
That was why I WENT to the Peace Corps (if only I had gone earlier...! bah!) and came home with, of course! the same problem.
A Global Public Health course is not far from here, but I kept thinking of any excuse why I should do something harder.
The thing is, my decisions did what I suppose I had somehow hoped- they pushed me to a wall and when I realized that this was a good option that was still available to me, you wouldn't believe that physical feeling of ants, gone.
The feeling of shukurani, of appreciation, of gratitude swept through me like the golden sun of dawn, and it felt so good.
I hadn't felt that in long enough.
That day at work I made loads.


Oh my oh my, I have a lot of practice that I need to do on living better!

Thursday, August 7, 2008

Feed me Seymour!


I guess it started with ice cream at my dear friend's 80th birthday, when Elias was three mos. old. Followed up by a taste of yogurt, some watermelon, when mama wasn't looking.
But finally, mama had to give up on her ideas that keeping this eating machine from food until 6 months was the best way. He was undeniably ready to eat. Chomping down on those Yoda gums whenever we chomped down food, pizza, whatever!
I thought that sweet potatoe would be the best start, but Grammy bought oatmeal cereal, and, the same night that we had both decided would be his first spoon-fed dinner, he wanted out pizza so badly, that there was no time for boiling and mashing a sweet potatoe. Elias ate with chubby cheeked gusto and his daddy was so proud. Each bite has been preserved on video, so we will have a public screening of the big event soon.

Friday, August 1, 2008

Expressway





I am a slow reader and a slow writer. I type quickly but write slothenly.

I am also a disappointingly slow reader. As many books as I devoured as a kid, they were piled up by my bed, usually several going on at one time, reading in the dim light. Whereas one might have guessed that I would have ended up with glasses and book savvy, just the opposite is the case.
I am a painfully slow reader. But I enjoy it. Depending on the book. When I was young, I couldn’t stop reading a book until I reached the end. I now put down whatever book does not catch my interest. Especially now, it needs to be really sharp, else I am satisfied with halfastory.

Not much else about me has changed since I have grown up. Still dorky and awkward in all the other ways I had hoped I would grow out of at 14.
Not too long ago I was listening to a radio program where a radical rabbi was being interviewed on his god out of the box theories. His point was to get folks in touch with their spirituality, beyond atheism and religion. He told us listeners to take our age and half it. 16. Now I am supposed to reflect back and spiritually advise my 16 year-old self.
So the first reaction of course is to look back and visualize that young woman, who she was and what was on her mind. I was convincing my parents it was a good idea, then saying good bye to friends and boyfriends (yes, in the plural) and going to Mexico for one year as an exchange student.
At 32, I feel like I need to take advise from her. Pre-adventure I think I am always at my strongest, and we always look back with nostalgia, but it is really tragic that, as spiritual as I think I may be, I can’t say that I have gained anything since that time. Philosophically I think I am probably about at the same level. I had left our family church two years before, and done the bulk of my ‘god’ search. In Mexico, smoking weed with a bunch of the European exchange students on a crowded bus out to some beach, I found I had come to pretty much the same conclusion as the rest of those blokes. There is no god.
Yet I still prayed. Dear Lord this and that. This masculine image that didn’t seem quite right, yet wasn’t shakable. Justifiably so. I had felt god strongly, and there was still the feeling that some an omniforce was on my team.
I no longer claim to be atheist, and where I called god a crutch I would now say that it isn’t god, but religion.
So I am a slow reader and a slow philosopher.
Half of my life has passed since I made these conscious decisions, one to abandon the religion of my youth, and the other to abandon my family and country.
Both decisions I embraced with a whole heart, and never ever felt an ounce of regret, no matter how complicated or lonely my situation got.
A few years after my parents divorce (also happened when I was 14…) we had to give up the house I grew up in. Later, the memory of lying in that bed, safe from any feelings of regret was achingly painful. I would never lay in that bed again.
Doubt is the greatest hindrance. Knowing the words doesn’t make the concept any more real to me. I doubt myself to the extreme nth.
I have spent so many years choosing so many paths that my resume either looks like circus confetti or swiss cheese. A colorful smattering of things, or an unaccomplished milky blah.
Sometimes I doubt, and that makes me regret the past, and that makes me needabetterfuturelikerightnow. I get pissy and to combine phrases my parents have offered me, I have a chip on my shoulder like I have something to prove.
Its true. I am afraid of wasting all the opportunities I have been given.
In that same childhood bed, I would often cry myself to sleep. I wasn’t comfortable being comfortable. I felt no guilt at my own doing, but guilt because I was born. Guess I could blame church for that one, but I really think it runs deeper than religious guilt tripping. It’s the human bond that doesn’t allow one to sleep while the other is hungry. When we are young, and we see visions of Ethiopia, it affects us deeply.
This is a good thing.
But somehow I got it in my head, and I am sure it was a direct result of images on the evening news combined with a soft heart, but it was in my head that I, as a young girl in Africa, had stood to the side while I watched my family suffer, and promised the dear lord our god whatever he is, that if I were given the opportunity, I would come back and help.
Bam! A child is born in Southern California with a purpose.
So I sometimes look back and wonder what took me so long to go there.
And then I see the answers. Justifiable they must be, because this is my life.
But I feel regret for being 32, with a ready to go family with nowhere to go.
What could the future possibly bring?
How is it that I am no closer to accomplishing anything at this age than I was at 16?
Lately, I have been looking around me and seeing that things are going too slow as far as building a life that suits my family as well as my own dreams. So I get impatient, ansy, bitter, quiet, weepy, hot-tempered, aloof, hyperactive and clumsy. To name a few symptoms of the syndrome.
But tonight, I took my medicine: the family loaded into the minivan and we jumped on the expressway, all the way to swing dance night, had a wonderful time and came back and made love.
I knew that I needed things to be a challenge for me. I needed to overcome a challenge in order to escape the torture of privilege. But at the same time, my devious self insists that if I were on the right path, everything would be very Tao and fall into place. So obstacles become cosmic omens saying WRONG WAY!
I analyze my pattern for making big life decisions. I find none, sometimes it is confident, sometimes I hem and haw into paralysis (my career!) and sometimes I jump right of the boat, headfirst without looking (my family).
Either way, when I am feeling anxious and embittered that I need to be moving a litter faster down the ol life path, I take a little southern California medicine and jump on the expressway, and totally enjoy the night, and the now.

Monday, June 16, 2008

LA Summary


Elias watches the Lakers vs. Celtics with Grammy. Tino plays basketball on Tuesday nights, but I still think that these two are the biggest sports fans in the household. Check out the intensity that Elias has for the game already.

Saturday, June 14, 2008

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Husband and Heavens

My idea of heaven:
(taken from an email to my sister)
Lemme tell you a little about my mother's day:
I went to Anthropologie.
Wow.
There were long sundresses, fabulous belts and orange and yellow and green all over the dressing room.
Anthropologie dressing rooms, AHHHH!
The only other shopping spree I had there was when I got the jean skirt. Which is, like, a family heirloom as far as I am concerned. I swore up and down after that day that Anthro pipes happy chemicals into the dressing rooms, because I had never had such a positive body image/fun experience in a dressing room before. Well, of course, add to that the golden light that makes even my skin glow, the skinny mirrors, and the fabulous gay fashionista serving us endless mimosas and the whole experience made me reevaluate my favorite places to be in the world:

An Anthropologie dressing room with a check in my pocket.


Heaven.

It was a good day. I love everything about being a mommy. We celebrated with my mom, then my brother, Marshall and sister in law, Jenny came up for dinner.


Husbands.

Such an awful, dirty word. Really, I did used to think that. I tried to avoid using the word in grammer school. Husband. It just sounded perverse, like saying penis. I only dreamt of getting married once, so I guess that would be my 'dream wedding.' It was somewhere in a white, institutional basement. Like an evangelical church without much financial support, shamed to the basement of some community center for sunday service. It had a yucky feeling inside. Nothing poetic, romantic or beautiful. I remember that at my 'dream wedding' I felt sick. People had come to see us but I didn't know who they were, and we were late, I had forgotten something, probably my dress.

Anyway, I didn't much fall for the idea of weddings or husbands till I had one. And the funny thing is, the wedding was a lot like the dream: an un-architectualy inspired strip mall library, that turned us down for being fifteen minutes late the night before, so I tied up my beauty salon hair and tied the knot in pants with Tino the next morning. I am so glad I did.
Then we got ice cream.
It was the best ever.

Tino is a fabulous husband. He just made me dinner of ugali and beans, which we ate at 10pm, which was so nostalgic it made me want to farm rice the next morning.

Thursday, May 8, 2008

Home is where


I am here because my family is here. If it weren't for them, I would be in a very different situation, somewhere, somehow. I can't imagine what it would be like to be without their umbrella, no matter how far I have gone to try it out. I may want to live on a cobblestoned, lamp-lit street somewhere with a boulangerie downstairs from my flat and a park across the street. Or to live in a warm town by the sea, where people surf in the day and salsa dance at night. There are a million versions of an exotic lifestyle that I can imagine, and I can curse myself for not setting it up to have the enviable career.
But if I had anything else, would there be a perfect little boy in my lap, breastfeeding in his fuzzy white sleeper, a husband who is cleaning up our dinner that I made, and we ate with wine while watching Sex in the City, the show we watched in our village, when the battery of my computer was charged and we lay together under the mosquito net, dark and buzzing all around? Would there be a community garden with chickens and eggs for us to harvest? Friends to go swing dancing with on thursdays? Mom cuddled up with her cat downstairs.
For four weeks, I once had the luck to go to Cuba. My luck to travel, my luck to see this country. Where did this luck come from and what did I do to deserve it. Cuba is picture perfect, gorgeous, and would be proud to be from such a country. The people I met, for the most part, admitted that they wanted to get out. By economics and geography and economy, they are trapped on the little island. It doesn't matter how great a place is, it is prison if you are trapped.
But we don't all get to chose our place of birth, and even having many opportunities that I have had, we may not be able to chose where to live.
I live in paradise in the concrete jungle. It feels good to be home.

Sometimes I have to remind mys

Monday, May 5, 2008

Daddy




Still processing to get Tino's status adjusted. If we had simply tied the not while I still had residence in Tanzania (which has become harder to get in the past year) he would already have a green card and driver's license. As it is, we have to spend $1,000 to change his status now, and it will take up to a year. That and he has to answer some very revealing questions about himself and his intentions in the states, such as the following.
Have you ever or do you intend to:
Knowingly commit any crime of moral turpitude?
Engage in drug trafficking?
Prostitution?
Polygamy? (just say no, Tino.)
Espionage? (some kind of reverse psycology?)
Genocide?

Did you, during the period from March 23, 1933 to May 8, 1945 associate with Nazis?

These are rather personal questions I think, and I am offended that the government meddle into our marital intentions this way.

Anyway, there may be some challenges (and some regrets I try not to focus on) but we are so extremely lucky to be together, that every single thing that Tino does for us is gigantic. He is champion of changing diapers, and soothes Elias daily with a bath. But he is mostly occupied with teaching Elias his first word: Daddy.

Sunday, May 4, 2008

What mountain??

When hiking up a steep mountain, it helps endurance to look just a few paces ahead rather than straight up to the top. Of course, looking around and taking in the view is the whole point, but that is not always possible.
So this past week I have been trying to be conscious about meeting deadlines, but taking baby steps and staying in the moment.
So I took the baby steps while Elias had huge leaps in development.
I have so much fun being around him. This week he began to reach out and hold and even shake a toy, and he loves to hold long conversations. It is absolutely delightful to reach this stage in development, when he still coos and cries and twitches like a newborn, but he responds to us with smiles and conversation, and sleeps through the night like an adult (still). I love to dream of him as he will be as he grows, and at the same time feel like there should be someway for me to bypass nature and not let him grow old. Elias is seven weeks, and for those of us with years on us, thats a flash in the pan, but at the same time, its a lifetime.
I often feel like we communicate perfectly and that we are both ageless.
Then I suddenly realize how in love I am and I want to preserve the moment forever, and thats when I go into a tailspin and cannot fathom that this little guy, and this moment, may change. He is serene about it so I try to be too.
Going back to work was a lot easier than I thought it would be. Tino and i have a great schedule: he goes to ESL in 8-12, comes home and we have lunch, I go to work in the evening, and come home at 6.30 and he goes off to class again.
Amazingly, I had the foresight to leave him with emergency contact numbers. It must be the new mom side of me. So I explained to him the bit about 911.
Later in the day, I called home. So, I asked, do you remember the emergency number?
Yes, uh, 119?
Well, it just sounded funny considering how ingrained into us it is.

The first week back at work was fun to see old clients, hear how much I was missed, and slide right back into the old gossip. Already I was beginning to line up some private massages.
I also started running this week, not a lot, not far, but it feels good, with some yoga. It feels good to be healing and to be finding a healthy schedule with Elias.
Tuesday I found out I had the highest test score again.
Wednesday I was able to work all day, cook dinner and get Elias's feedings all perfectly timed that he didn't need a bottle.
On Thursday, Tino and I sped out after work to Pasadena and went swing dancing with Elias in tow. It was great fun for me.
However, if anyone has ever seen The Jerk, my African husband is Navin when it comes to rhythm. But I will be patient and hope that his desire to be there, and to dance like the studs on Dancing with the Stars, is enough to make a sexy dancer out of...such a mover.
On Friday, we went to take a family shot with ourselves and two other couples who we are trying to do the Zero Emission Lawn Care business with. Our plan was to print out a brochure that could be passed around at Saturday's local Folk Music Festival.
When we went downtown to see if we could get tickets for the night show (of Jackson Browne, Ben Harper, and Taj Mahal) we ran into a friend who offered us what I was hoping for: two volunteers had just backed out, and we were needed to sit at the Food Not Lawns table, talking about our new community organization, while promoting our new business. So we were in.
Saturday, I gave a massage to a woman who was also a Spanish major in College, who also lived in Puebla, Mexico, and who wants to start a Spanish lit. book club this summer. From there we went to the show, where we saw a bunch of new friends, I was interviewed about our business for the local cable channel, and we danced it up, Elias loved the music and all the attention.
So my week was good. But always at the cost of:
studying biology or french, so I log off to do that now,
feeling however that the mountain is more of a path, with a rainbow at the end.

Monday, April 28, 2008

Things Fall Apart (so what?)



Oh, let me say it again! Thank god for friends and family. Tonight I specifically thank my mom, and the cool girl in my Biology class whose daughter is named Elia. Sometimes, I just need to break. To fall apart. Yet the fear of doing so was making it all so much worse.
Today the mountain seemed less like we are climbing Kilimanjaro, and more like a brick wall that I am slamming my head on. Today was sweltering hot as we buzzed around in the car, trying to get things done, but failing. It felt a lot like my mental state, pressurized heat, desperately trying come up with ideas to figure things out and getting nowhere. In my low state, I get tired of calling all the shots for the little family unit, and I doubt my abilities to do so.
It is late, my only hour for blogging, or for much of any computer work, although I feel like I am on this thing all the time- too much!! trying to make some headway.
Let's see, what is silly me up to that keeps me away from myspicemountain? Elias sleeps so well, I feel obliged to be sleep deprived like other mums, and so I stay up late studying Biology, or French, researching business plans, and looking for a job.
Tonight was Biology class. Yes, two weeks before Elias was born, I started the semester at the local JC doing basic bio and I am proud to say, birth and baby aside, I am top of the class. There are far less Spanish teacher positions than Science teacher, so I figured the course would not only prepare me for the test to certify me in science, but its also a prerequisite for other science classes (which are prerequisites to a FNP program... who knows?!) Then I found that schools often want a Spanish teacher that can teach French as well, so there's that, then starting a zero emissions yard maintenance biz, Tino wants to do tourism in TZ, I've wanna increase massage business, and find a teaching job for Sept. 2008. That and work, Tino learn English, prepare for assessment tests, change status with the Dept of Homeland Stupidity...

But its not the tasks that disrupt my peace of mind, but the guilt of feeling like, at 32, with all the opportunities I've had in life, I should have set myself up to be financially stable, and a million more 'should haves.' These tasks that take up my to do list are peanuts compared to what we will be taking on once I begin full time work and Tino full time school.
The real stupidity however is how all of this sounds. It takes up one boring paragraph in a blog, but has commanded far too much mind space.
So my goal, as always the goal is to be in the present moment as much as possible, playing and enjoying and connecting, while still managing to set aside smart time to accomplish my tasks, instead of time worrying about them. We'll see how that goes, on alisonisabsorbedwithherself.blogspot.com

Thursday, April 17, 2008

Journaling

Once upon a time, my nights were empty, long, insomniac nights. Ironically, now that the baby is here, my nights are filled...with...SLEEP! My bed is also filled, and so is my little heart, and these small details, along with Elias's insanely grown up sleep pattern must be why.
However, it seems that in my experiment with journaling, I became a bit addicted. I expected to be chronicling our son's milestones online, which is a good intention, but I also miss the downright self absorption that is what an online diary is all about.

The days time is absorbed by a painfully boring to do list of phone calls, forms, letters, to slowly slowly cut away at red tape. Already time consuming as I wait on hold, get improperly filled out forms back, etc. All this continuously interupted with diapers, nursing, rocking, the tasks that already took me a long time take even longer. I am still totally not over the joy of changing diapers and being consumed by a new baby.
Sometimes I feel that my position is miraculous, every detail a stroke of divinity.
Othertimes I feel that I am somehow working on borrowed time, borrowed luck.
How could I have so much good and keep getting more? I have put to much trust in 'the universe', I didn't do enough to prepare, sooner or later my luck will catch up with us and we will be screwed.
These are good thoughts and they encourage me to try even harder.
Of course, it is not always this way,
and though they may be fragments of various dreams that have flittered through my mind, sometimes I see signs that show me that, everything is, in fact, divine.

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Beautiful, beautiful boy


Everyday you are a song, usually a Beatles song, but always its always a song to see you. I am thrilled to watch you grow, and enjoy every moment, every challenge, every joy. While at the same time, I get tearful that I can't keep you this size for longer, perhaps forever.

Elias, 5 weeks old.

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

Chuchu


Look at me. This is all I do. I am a perfect angel and my mommy has no excuse not to have posted all these adorable pictures of me before now! Shame on her!
She says that now that picture posting is easy, and she can be SHAMELESSLY liberal about posting ALL the cute ones, beware: she is also about to get shamelessly raw about her nipples, married life, and other observations and torments of life.

Thanks for staying tuned.

ps-chewchew is what I do all day on my mama's nipples. That must be why they call 'em "chuchu" in swahili.

Elias Easter Sunday, 12 days old.

Thursday, April 3, 2008

The apology for 3 1/2 weeks of silence.

So many minutes, days and weeks have gone unrecorded. I tick things off in my mind-'Must write that down later,' yet here I am, grasping for the time to keep up with my formerly disciplined journaling sessions. Now that all the real juicy stuff is coming to head. (sorry for the zit imagery)
Elias is starting to get cuter and cuter, and somehow, deeper and deeper into my heart. It may be directly related to the fact that in the past two days, he has been playful and smiling in the morning (only three and half weeks old!) doing baby yoga with me and delighting in kisses and massage. That and he is no longer snapping at my nipples, and I am starting to feel a good sensation when he latches on and breast feeds, that and I am learning how to breastfeed and do other things at the same time. Which is highly satisfying considering he likes to suck away for hours on end. Another boob guy.
As for Tino, there are so many ways that I have fallen in love with him all over again, there are so many cute stories of a Tanzanian experiencing America for the first time, and plenty of stories of shock and frustration as well.
Then there is the ghastly list of accomplishments that we have risen two in the newborn days. It is all fun, and I don't actually feel over worked and over tired, though sometimes frustrated and wanting my nipples back. I am proud and excited about the challenges we are meeting together, but my mind still drifts to wonder, what would it be like to be following the Tanzanian tradition of staying at home for 3 months with my mother in law cooking bananas and coconut stew for me everyday.
Let us simply say that I hope to record as much as possible. Posterity can be ignored or deleted if need be, but in the meantime, for the sake of my family, I will be frequently posting.

Thursday, March 20, 2008

The Birth Story (The extend-o version)



As Elias was finally pushed past the pubic bone, I sang Johnny Cash defiantly to myself,
Go down down down, through the burning ring of fire,
It burns burns burns, that ring of fire, that ring of fire!

What an amazing experience. I feel so lucky, so lucky. Perineum ripped to my anus, but what a lovely birth. Every one of my needs have been met. The three of us spent our day in the hospital, and everyone was quite satisfied to spend the day eating, napping and go to the bathroom.
We got to the hospital last night at 10pm and Elias was born this morning, March 11th , at 6:16. Things went incredibly smoothly, just a couple of kinks, but this was just about the best birth I could have imagined. There were also some things that surprised me. More about that later.
The night before, Tino and I had been reading about the role of the father in Birthing From Within, and he even read over my birth plan. Being together for only 10 days before the big day, we didn’t have much time to discuss these things. His openness and grace continue to impress me, and I could not have asked for more love and support, more massages and caresses from a man. My birth is the first time that Tino has ever been in an American hospital, and even compared to the top expatriate hospitals in the Tanzanian capital, this little community hospital is truly elegance. He is also the only man he has ever known to go into the labor room with his wife Now, before I came to the hospital, I was happy as a laboring clam at home.
So, after another night of honeymooning and discussing birth, I started having mild contractions. They were more exciting than painful, more like a cramp than the huffing and puffing of a TV labor. I slept on and off, awake more in anticipation than discomfort.
We spent all day the next day (10th) planting flowers in the garden and cleaning up the house. Tino laughed at me while I hobbled about, not buzzing around like my usual self, and doing more directing and supervising than actual planting (I could blame it on the early stages of labor, but was really just preparing him for the laws of our matriarchal household, as he mopped the floor, I sat on my yoga ball and ordered him about! Ha! No better way to get what you want out of a husband than to go into labor with his son,) My doula showed up at 4pm, my mom came home early, and we sat around chatting over tea and quesadillas until my doula insisted again that I stop doing and start resting. I was gonna need it. So Tino and I went upstairs to listen to some guided relaxation. My contractions had been about 5 min. apart nearly all day, but after I got out of bed with Tino, I don’t remember feeling them. From there I got into a hot candlelit bath, Juanita, my amazing doula, counted my contractions, the rest of our cargo was put together, and when the count reached 411 (for minutes between, lasting a minute, continuously for one hour), I decided it was time to check my progress at the hospital. (I had missed an earlier doctor’s appointment to labor at home.)
The whole memory of the day was completely happy, comfortable and calming.
I waddled into the hospital feeling confident and communicative. I had a huge support group gathered in the triage room, my husband, my two mothers, my father, and my doula. The nurses checked me and told me I was already 7 centimeters dilated. I knew I was a bout to transition and go to the hard part, but somehow, I equated the last 3 centimeters with like, three short hours, the first 7 were just so easy. Quickly after arriving at the hospital, I lost any desire to chat. I went deeply into myself and I barely remember walking down the hall to my room. It was a great room however, spacious, pretty comfy, and with internet access! It didn’t take me long to turn on the hot water in the shower and sit on my yoga ball as my back was soothed with the hot water stream. Tino and I had brought one of those plug in Himalayan salt crystals that emit such a lovely pink glow. So that is how I remember the first half of my labor at the hospital, pink and wet with pretty music. At 1am, I was checked again and told that I hadn’t progressed at all. This was extremely discouraging. The pain had seemed tolerable because I had known that it wouldn’t last forever. Suddenly my time frame stretched indefinitely out before me, and the pain was constant. I started to doubt my ability to do this. But that quickly changed. That is where I went from ‘Ahh- natural process’ to ‘This is labor and I have to work to get Elias out.’ They told me his head was turned and that was why I was so slow to progress. There was constant pain and pressure, and surges of intensity that made me feel like I was going to vomit or pass out. Juanita, my doula, Tino and my dad alternated shifts of pressing on my back. But if they moved even the slightest bit, I would snap at them. It didn’t really matter how they held the pressure, but when it lifted, it hurt more. Change was bad because I was trying to take my mind off of it. But everytime a shift occurred, my attention would go back to the intensity of my back labor, rather than the soothing wave of my breath. When contractions would hit and I might start to whimper, Juanita was always right there to tell me to breath. That coaching helped. The pain made me feel like I deserved to whimper, but whimpering didn’t help the pain, breathing did.
I don’t know what time I got the ok to start pushing, but I was tired. I asked them to tell me when to push, and I would fall asleep between times. I had righteously laughed at how every labor info pamphlet says that laboring on your back is the most painful, inefficient way to deliver, and I had set myself up with the necessary gadgets for my imagined squatting birth. When it came down to it though, it was too tiring to hold myself up. I did some squatting pushes, but I couldn’t squat for hours. When I lay down on my back, I felt I had a pretty powerful push (from my cheering squad) and I could sleep in between. The nurse told me that when he starts to crown I would feel a ring of fire. So I pushed and looked forward to that burning ring of fire. The doctor was a wee late, and I just think that after all that work, waiting to push is a bit cumbersome for one guy to get all the glory, so I paid the price and pushed. In my right ear where Juanitas whispers of encouragement en espanol, ‘go ahead, push if you feel the urge.’ And in my left ear I could hear Tino sniffling with emotion as he whispered encouragement and endearments in kiswahili and held my hand.
I felt the ring of fire, so much so I didn’t realize it when I tore my perineum and labia.
A smooth creamy baby suddenly slipped out after all that, and I will never forget, the feeling of our skin touching, and he simply looked at me, and I looked at him, for what seemed like forever. I saw the dark eyes of the being who agreed to let me raise him. There was trust, there was a calmness in not knowing. In his little tadpole body that trailed behind, I felt his active future spread out before him, and I felt so excited for him, and so thankful to be allowed to give it all. I gave him a nipple and he took it. It felt so graceful. Tino cut the cord and Elias was whisked away to the unnecessarily bright lights.

It would have been easy for my dad to video tape the birth, and sometimes I wonder why I asked him not to. That would have allowed me to get a glimpse of all those who agonized as they witnessed me labor, hour after hour all night long. My parents’ was the most impressive labor, to stand by silently and watch me labor, knowing that I could do it and not jumping in to try to save me from my pain. I’m blessed that they were there, and so is Elias.
Now however, as I finally finish this birth story that had been started while I was still laying in the hospital bed, I realize that although I was fully aware for the birth and many details have been played and replayed in my mind, the whole experience has ended up in a smoky bubble of pink tinted magic. The salt rock glow, the whispers of my family, the dark shining eyes of my son. There isn’t anything that I need to see. Tino brought pictures from home, and the youngest picture that he has of himself, at all, on the planet, is a picture from high school. No baby pictures, no childhood photos. Sometimes I feel cheated by this. I want to be able to see this a young daddy Elias that I never knew. What will the connections be between father and son? Then I enjoy the opportunity to love someone who hasn’t had every phase of his life documented for posterity. The memories and the feelings and the stories remain, allowing the visual obsession to rest.

Because the circumstances allowed so many different possible birthing scenarios, I still am often transported to what would (or what will?) birth be like in Tanzania. Tino’s sister in law had a baby a month before Elias was born. At this point, we were still unsure when Tino would arrive, and I was beside myself with longing to be there for her, with her, to go through it together. She had gone to the government clinic to give birth. The government hospitals are free, except for the ‘donation’ for supplies like rubber gloves.
Things like this I would remember as I tossed in the Biohazard Waste Bin another one of the gazillion disposable pads, and all around me, disposable, disposable, disposable. A victim of a wealthy consumer society, I was drowned in more ‘gift’ sacks complete with formula samples, diapers, crappy baby wash and a bunch more that irritated me to have to find the space and opportunity to use. Bu my eco-righteous cynicism was fleeting, and leads my first point: I surprised myself. I was very thankful for during this experience to have been giving birth in the hospital. My first instinct was to stay in the States and give birth in a hospital, thankful for what resources we have, and convinced that the pain or beauty of a hospital birth largely depends on your communication and perspective. After reading a pile of natural birth books, I had all but come to believe anything short of a water birth at home would be icy cold. In reality, I was thankful to have every luxury of knowing nurses were constantly checking to make sure that anything that could go wrong, would and I could relax my mind and focus on a natural birth. I still wonder if there will be a next baby, and will the next one be conceived in the States and born in Tanzania? I will be older, I will have scar tissue from a hefty tear. That and you never know what else. But it is too soon to allow my mind to wonder very far: it still hurts to sit down or stand for long periods of time, and it I am currently still basking in having a wonderful magical birth.

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Patchwork process






Blogging has become has become cerebral rather than cyber. And it isn’t Elias’s fault! He is, of course, the perfect baby. And Tino, a classically adoring father, “He is so strong already! Look at how he holds his head and looks around! He is already smiling!” Our baby is so advanced, bien sur. This of course is the time to be posting pictures like mad. But the contentment of nursing in front of the fireplace, and soothing my baby with little songs is too tempting. No one has ever loved my voice so much. And I’ve never loved singing so much. It is quite a lovely feeling to be able to soothe my little baby with a poor rendition of John Lennon.
Besides emailing, phoning and blogging every detail of a incredible family dynamic, sending thousands of ‘thank you’ notes to all the thoughtful supporters of Elias and his family, I am, all on Elias’s first week birthday, going to a job interview (gotta do it!), teaching about Africa with Tino at my mom’s school, learning how to pump breastmilk, and taking a Biology test at my Bio class. But I feel so in love. And still sometimes a little fearful, though, its sort of just like an old habit that is losing its power. There is so much that I want to write, my falling in love all over again story, cute details of Tino’s adaptation to the US, reflections on parenting, and most of all the hearts and fireworks that are going off all over the house. I hope you all are well, and I miss all of you as dearly as I love you. Here are some photos to satiate.