Sam and Ellie can clap now! Abby can't clap yet, but she's willing to try the one-handed-clap! 🙂
(note if you're getting this via email subscription, you probably need to go to the blog to see the embedded video)
Posted in milestones on November 9, 2008| 10 Comments »
Sam and Ellie can clap now! Abby can't clap yet, but she's willing to try the one-handed-clap! 🙂
(note if you're getting this via email subscription, you probably need to go to the blog to see the embedded video)
Posted in J-Man on November 9, 2008| 7 Comments »
This post is otherwise entitled "The only political post I ever plan to write." Though I have much to say about the political environment today, I just don't have the will to stir up that much controversy.
The J-man's school was used as a polling place, but they didn't close the facility, because the polling area was relatively small in comparison to the facility. It was great, because the kids got to see what a polling place looks like and they held a mock election in the class. First, they voted on what snack they would have that day so that they could learn what voting was all about, and then they had a mock presidential election. All the kids got to vote for who they wanted for president.
So we asked J who he voted for:
J: John McCain
Me: What made you decide to vote for John McCain?
J: All my friends were voting for him.
Me: And what made them decide to vote for John McCain?
J: He's the coolest.
Me: Oh! Well, that's a very good reason. Do you know who actually won the election?
J: Who?
Me: Barack Obama.
J: Oh yeah! Our whole class voted for him!
Me: Sure, for varying degrees of "whole."
J: Why did he win?
Me: Well, 52% of the registered voters who actually voted on election day voted for him.
J: Who did Abba vote for?
Me: Well, you'll have to ask him, but he doesn't have to tell you if he doesn't want to; we have anonymous balloting in the United States.
J: Abba? Did you vote?
Seth: Yes, J, I voted.
J: Well, did you vote for John McCain?
Seth: Er, No.
J: Did you vote for Bark Obama?
Seth: Yes, I did.
J: Oh, that was a very good idea, all of my friends voted for him, and my whole class voted for him, and half of the class voted for John McCain.
Seth (aside): Coming soon? Fractions!
Me: So, who did you vote for, exactly?
J: Well, some of us voted for John McCain and some of us voted for Bark Obama.
Seth: Did any of you vote for Ralph Nader?
J: I don't know. Is he president?
Me: He was a presidential nominee.
J: Well, we didn't vote for him.
Seth: Did any of you vote for Dr. Mellow?
J: Who's that?
Me: He's a friend of ours who ran a write-in campaign on a single-issue platform of abolishing Daylight Savings Time.
J: What's a platform?
Me: It's what you say you will do if you become president.
J: Well, you know what I will do when I become president? I will have lots of toys.
Me: Oh, that's an interesting platform. And what will you do for the American people?
J: I will play with the toys!
So there you have it, folks! When J becomes president (of course, he won't be qualified for another 30 years, since you have to be 35 to run for president), he will have lots of toys. And he will play with them. That ought to solve the world's problems.
Posted in blogarama on November 5, 2008| 5 Comments »
One of the best things about blogging is that I've gotten to meet all sorts of really amazing women, both online and in person. I have built relationships that I never would have had the opportunity to build otherwise – I have made friends that I never could have hoped to have made otherwise. I first started making new friends through the infertility blogosphere, and let me tell you – the infertility blogosphere is made up of some of the most incredible, strong, supportive women on the planet. They are funny, they are intelligent, they are empathetic, they are generous and they are kind. I never thought I could be more blessed with such a strong sense of community within the blogosphere.
Then I found myself pregnant with triplets, terrified and alone. I found Jody's blog first and she helped me wade through some of the first scary weeks and decisions and concerns. Jessica found me next and she's become one of my closest, dearest friends ever. Then Cherie emailed me, and gave me lots of good advice and told me about all the other great blogs of lots of other local triplet mamas and we eventually formed a google group to keep up with one another, and have even had a picnic together last summer. I quickly discovered that the triplet community was every bit as supportive and wonderful as the infertility community. We reach out to each other and share a common bond and it is a beautiful thing. I love that when I meet someone with triplets we instantly connect and we can talk as if we've known each other our whole lives.
Even as I've started writing more about the J-man and his ADHD, I've had people email me and support me in ways I never could have anticipated- locals and non-locals. Women who have been where I am and who can tell me that there is a light further down in the tunnel. People who support this parenting journey that I'm on. People who haven't been there, but who want me to know that they respect what we're going through. It's astounding the level of support that the blogosphere is bursting with. I am ever so grateful for my friends inside the computer, and if I don't say so often enough – THANK YOU for everything you do for me, for each other, for everyone each and every day.
I love having the opportunity to meet my friends inside the computer in real life, so when the beautiful and charming Helene emailed me and said she'd be in town this week, I knew I couldn't pass up an opportunity to grab a cup of coffee with this delightful mother to triplets plus a bonus baby! I picked Helene up at her hotel while her kids were napping and we went over to Starbucks to grab a cup of coffee (she grabbed something that wasn't remotely coffee, but what EVER, give a girl some literary license here, okay?). We had such a delightful time just chatting away about our kids, babies, time passing, NICU days, blogging… It would have been the perfect way to spend some time, if we weren't for the conspicuous absence of our triplet mama, blogging partner in crime, Jessica. Oh sure, Jessica had the world's best excuse, what with her husband being in the hospital with meningitis and all, but come ON! This was a couple of bloggin' triplet mamas! It was a pretty piss-poor excuse to miss out on THAT kind of fun, don't you think? Seriously, next time you don't want to have coffee with us, you might want to come up with something a LITTLE less dramatic, dear. Anyway, we missed you, but we still had a good time.
Fortunately, Helene remembered to bring her camera (me? Not so much). Unfortunately, neither of us remembered to bring our life sized cardboard cut out of Jess to pose in the picture with us, so the picture is just of Helene and myself. Ah well:
Posted in Current Affairs, Ellie Bellie, Infertility sucks a giant black hole of suckiness on November 4, 2008| 6 Comments »
Anniversary
Today is the sixth anniversary of the day after I got married to the sweetest man in the world. We celebrated by going to see Cirque du Soleil on Sunday and leaving all four children with my mother. Can you imagine? It wasn't so bad, actually, the babies were napping most of the time we were gone, and the J-man was meserized by the computer the whole time we were gone. I think my mom even squeezed in a nap. Good for her!
Get out the Vote!
I voted today. That shouldn't sound so monumental, but I'm ashamed to admit this is only the second time in my life I've voted. I intend to change this. I believe very strongly in the civic duty to vote, and yet, I'm a big slacker. I think it's such a powerful right that we have. Truthfully, I find the rest of the ballot – the bits AFTER the presidential question far more empowering, because those were the parts where my vote might make an impact. My state is a blue state, you see. It wouldn't have mattered who I voted for in the presidential election today, it wasn't going to change the fact that my state would fall out as a blue state. But there were several questions on the ballot that did matter that I had a more direct ability to affect. The thing is issues appear on the ballot every year, not just every four years. And I owe it to my children to set a good example. So I am making a personal resolution to vote next year – a non-presidential election year. (Update: as I was writing this, they called the election for Obama. I'm not stunned at the result, but I *am* stunned that this election was called at 11pm… I expected to go to bed tonight without knowing who our next president will be)
Sick Baby
Ellie-bean is sick. All three babies had a cold about three weeks ago. And the cold hasn't really gone away. And last week, Ellie got a cough on top of the cold. It was a horrible seal-barking cough – yep, croup. And the seal-barking cough calmed down, but a milder cough persisted. So I called the doctor yesterday and asked if I was overreacting by thinking maybe this had gone on a little too long. He said for sure I should not let this continue through the week, and to bring her in if I felt like she wasn't getting better. So I brought her in today. Double ear infections (mild, but there nonetheless), lots of goo in her nose and throat. All clues point to secondary bacterial sinusitis. Bleh. And I think Abby has it too, but I didn't realize that until too late. So my bet is that in a couple days Abby will be heading to the doctor also. And heck, if I take Abby, I might take Sam too, because his nose is all gooey still too, even if he's not coughing yet. Better safe than sorry, right?
Toddlerhood
Sam is totally a toddler. He doesn't crawl anymore if he can help it. He's all about the walking. Mommy is traumatized by this development, because her little baby boy is turning into a big boy and … oh! no one gave him permission for this!
On Infertility
To answer some of your questions: Nothing changed in Seth's insurance that meant that I used to have coverage under my old clinic and don't now. I used to be covered under my own insurance, but I changed employers after the triplets were born and my new employer does not have fertility coverage. But Ms. Perky, you might ask, Isn't Maryland a mandated coverage state? Why yes, yes it is! But there are loopholes to that whole "mandated" thing… specifically, my employer "self insures" which gets them out of the mandate. Several of you asked if there is any other clinic closer that my husband's insurance will cover and the answer, simply, is no. He works for a major hospital system, and they will only cover fertility treatment done through their hospital system.
Mostly, right now, I feel a little bitter, and I feel like my hand is being forced on this. The clinic I have to use does quarterly "batched" IVFs. All their patients do their cycles all at the same time and they only do them quarterly. So we're moving forward with a consult now, rather than waiting until the first of the year. Which means I'm weaning nowish, rather than at the end of the year. It also means that I'll have no control over timeline. The insurance situation means I'll have no control over my doctor, my clinic, my geography, my timeline, and quite possibly, my protocol. More frustratingly, the clinic I'll be forced to go to performed zero elective single embryo transfers in the last year that they reported to the CDC. I gotta tell you… that worries me. I know that I should reserve judgment until I've actually met this doctor, but I admit, I'm skeptical, and I'm angry that my choices have been taken away from me. Infertility is so often about losing control, and I feel like I've lost even more control over this situation, which aggravates me to no end.
I'm sure once we start moving forward, I'll be over it. But until then, I remain irritated, anxious, frustrated. I find myself paralyzed about the whole thing, unable to even so much as make a phone call about the whole thing – I even punted off making the phone call about setting up the consult to Seth. I told him that since he worked there and he knows his schedule and I want him there at this appointment, I'd rather he schedule the appointment, but the truth is, my frustration about the whole situation just has me unable to even deal with it. Yet, I don't want to waste more time and lose more control. I have another birthday in January and I hear the tick-tock in the back of my head all the time.
I appreciate that I received so many supportive comments on my last post – I know I'm crazy, I know not everyone would make the choices I'm making, but it's nice to know that I have support here. That being said, I'm still torn about blogging about the whole infertility-thing here. Blogging about it in the abstract like this is one thing. But if I do start cycling again? I'm not sure how I feel about writing about the specifics. There are just enough people reading here who know me in real life that I don't love the idea of posting about it. So I don't know how candid I'll be. Perhaps I'll post privately about it, and then share those posts after-the-fact. I'm not sure. I haven't figured out what the right answer is yet. Just letting you know what's going on in my head.
Posted in Infertility sucks a giant black hole of suckiness on November 2, 2008| 28 Comments »
It seemed like such a simple request from my five year old: "Mommy, could you please have another baby?"
He's been asking more and more lately. You'd think with three little siblings taking time and attention away from him, the J-man would be just about babied out, wouldn't you? But he has the biggest heart possible and he seems to have no end to his capacity to love these babies and to want more babies to love. He tells me that these babies are so much fun and that he wants more babies to love. Me too, J-man, me too. If only it were that simple.
Friday, my cleaning lady said, "Don't you think it's about time for another baby already?"
After the triplets were born, I started having regular periods for the first time in my life. Every 29 days like clockwork. All signs pointed to the likelihood that I was ovulating for the first time in life, right down to the little slice of hell called PMDD. All this, despite nursing triplets. Go figure. I admit, it did leave me with the teeniest little bit of hope that maybe, just maybe, I'd have the slightest possibility of a "happy accident" along the way, but no such luck. As I near the point that I'll be weaning Sam and Ellie (I've already stopped pumping for Abby), my body has already shifted back to its "normal" anovulatory, amenorrheal self. Isn't this a little backward? So I'm left realizing that the only way we're going to have another baby is to return to Ye Ol' Fertility Clinic. (Admittedly, I knew this all along, but you can't blame a girl for hoping, right?)
So. Where does that leave me? Normally, I'd say that leaves me making an appointment with my old fertility clinic, but there are two problems with that. The first is I'm pretty sure they're still pissed at me for not reducing the triplet pregnancy. The second is insurance coverage. I don't have insurance coverage for fertility treatment through my employer, but we do through my husband. But his coverage only covers me at the clinic at his hospital, not any other clinic (including my old clinic). This is a real pain in the neck, by the way, because my old clinic? is fifteen minutes away from my office. And the clinic that is covered? Is in Baltimore. An hour from my office. And the coverage includes an ENORMOUS deductible (several thousand dollars). So it's going to suck.
I know it seems ridiculous that I'm even thinking about having another child. I know it seems ridiculous that I have three one year olds and I'm already thinking of having another child. But the truth is, I know I want another and if I weren't an infertile myrtle I wouldn't have to justify myself. I'm so tired of justifying myself. Yes, I'm crazy. Yes, I'm greedy. Yes, I want more than I deserve. Yes, I want more than I'm entitled to. Yes, there are women in this world who haven't been blessed with even one baby, and here I am with four blessings, and I'm asking for one more miracle. And why now? Because the honest truth is that I don't know if I'm going to be granted another miracle. And I don't know how long it's going to take to achieve that miracle if I make it there. It took five years, twenty thousand dollars, and a vast error in judgement on my doctors' parts to get the triplets.
So how do I answer my five year old's innocent question? "Mommy, could you please have another baby?"
I hope so. I just wish I knew how.