nostalgia

34, Excited for More

As the temperatures cool and my wardrobe becomes more layered, I am in disbelief that the summer is over and that my birthday is here. Wow, another year around the sun and I can’t quite wrap my head around it. This birthday came up fast. I swear it was July yesterday.

Let’s see - what did I do in my 33rd year…I traveled to both coasts with my child and we made it home in one piece; I started taking sunscreen more seriously; I tried herbal supplements, Xanax, acupuncture, hypnotherapy, and craniosacral therapy for my panic attacks; I treated myself to a week-long retreat sans husband and kiddo; and I progressed with my anxiety and health in ways I didn’t think possible.

I’m typically very sentimental this time of year, nostalgic for what has been. But this time, I’m finally feeling appreciative for the chapter I’m in right now and excited about what’s to come. As my cloud of anxiety and depression clears, I am optimistic - a word I haven’t used to describe myself since before I was pregnant. I’m enjoying my not-so-little Bub and excited to try for one more - something I thought I’d never say. Having one is exhausting enough. There is no rationale for wanting another. It’s not reason that makes me want another baby. It’s purely emotional.

Not too long ago, I wanted everything to be perfect before having another kid: perfect house, second car, Bub in daycare, a trusty sitter on speed dial, a few career projects checked off my list. It’s been a journey this year to realize that there is no perfect time to have kids or to do anything big in life. You do the thing and trust that you’ll adapt. I’ve been doing it all my life. I can do it again and again and again.

Instead of being just fine, I want to thrive. I want 34 to be more of what I’ve been doing, more of what I want. More prioritizing of health! More physical movement! More ways to fill my soul! And maybe, just maybe, one more kid.

Return to Wicker

Steve took Bub to a birthday party today, which gave me an entire Saturday to myself. A luxurious treat for any parent. Wanting to take advantage of gorgeous September weather (when it’s finally pleasant in Chicago), I invited a dear friend to explore Wicker Park with me.

Wicker Park, the place where it all began. Where Steve and I finally committed to becoming adults together. That’s a weird way to put it. What I’m trying to say is that Wicker Park is where Steve and I made some major adult decisions: it’s where we bought out first condo, where we lived when I found out I got my first corporate job, where we lived when we got married, where we lived when we got a puppy together. We spent hours walking the 606 talking about our hopes and dreams. We watched Sunday night football games at the Blue Line, scarfing chicken pot pie and wings. I spent many a lunch perusing the salad bar at Goddess and Grocer. I purchased life-changing secondhand books at Myopic Books. I remember sitting at the window of Stan’s Donuts on a cold winter afternoon, people-watching while dunking my cinnamon roll into a hot cup of coffee. I miss the farmers’ market on Sunday mornings and the chaos of Six Corners.

What I miss most of all is that chapter in my life when I lived there. Young, full of hope, trying to figure out what being an “adult” means.

Four years later, I’m finally back in my old neighborhood. Thirty-three years old. A mom. And while I’m not sure I’m any closer to figuring out adulthood, I’m absolutely sure that no one else is either.

It was wonderful to be back for an afternoon with great company, a seat right away at Big Star, a stroll down the 606 as the sun set. How strange yet familiar to be back in a place I used to live - as if nothing has changed and yet, everything has.

Got Milk

Breastfeeding. One of the most stressful aspects of having a baby. Produce too little and I feel like a failure. Produce too much and I feel obligated to pump and store it. Produce just enough and I worry about whether it is, in fact, enough.

Breastfeeding has been a long road for me. I struggled with low supply from the very beginning. Born a mere six pounds, Bub was constantly hungry and I couldn’t produce milk fast enough. I would nurse him and think he was full only to watch him chug five ounces of formula an hour later. I felt like I was starving my baby.

When I looked for advice, I was met with a barrage of opinions:

  • “Pump every two hours religiously.”

  • "Don’t bother pumping. Just nurse around-the-clock.”

  • “Eat lactation cookies.”

  • “Take fenugreek supplements.”

  • “Eat animal protein.”

  • “Drink lots of almond milk.”

  • “Get eight hours of sleep.”

How one gets eight hours of sleep while pumping every two hours is beyond me. Needless to say, the advice out there can be confusing and conflicting.

The endless counsel was fueled by pressure from parenting books to breastfeed:

  • “Breastfeed for a year and you’ll have a healthier, happier, smarter baby.”

  • “Breastfeeding is the best thing for your baby.”

  • “Every mother should be able to breastfeed.”

  • “Your baby should drink only breastmilk for the first six months of life.”

And lastly, there was self-induced pressure unintentionally brought on by friends and family. Breastfeeding seemed so easy for everyone else. Producing milk for my baby quickly became an obsession. I set alarms to wake up and pump every two hours throughout the night. I would sometimes pump for an hour, hoping it would help the supply and demand. I would feel guilty and stressed when I didn’t pump on time. I felt like a letdown when my baby clearly needed more milk than I could make.

A few weeks after Bub was born, I discovered that I was a formula baby. My mother didn’t even bother breastfeeding because she went back to work three days after I was born. My aunt struggled to breastfeed her children. She tried for months and was never able to. Maybe low supply is genetic. My mother taunted me for not being able to produce enough milk and yet, she didn’t even bother to try with me. The audacity. The hypocrisy. The cycle of shame needs to end.

Six months into breastfeeding and I started to have symptoms of postpartum depression. They were triggered by my period and showed up as uncontrollable rage. Right before my period, I would experience the most intense mood swings and get angry over the smallest things. The rage felt like an out-of-body experience.

In the back of my mind, I knew stopping breastfeeding would likely stabilize my hormones and my mood swings. And yet, I was determined to provide whatever milk I could for my baby. Even if it meant only 3 ounces a day. I kept trying to nurse, trying to pump.

Then one Sunday in February, my supply dropped significantly. Down to droplets. My period came. No mood swings. Physically, I was feeling more like myself. Emotionally, I was mournful over not being able to produce anymore milk. My goal was to do it until his first birthday.

And so at the end of February, my breastfeeding journey comes to an end. Almost 11 months of obsessing over milk supply, taking breaks throughout the day to pump, washing fiddly pump parts. Suddenly, I don’t have to think about it anymore. I can eat and drink whatever I want. I have time back in my day. I can let Steve feed Bub with formula. My hair can finally have a chance to grow back. I’m. Free. But why does freedom feel so bittersweet?

Because I’ll miss feedings with my baby, that special bonding time. I’ll miss watching YouTube videos during my pumping sessions, the only break I had throughout the day. I’ll miss having an excuse to consume extra calories. Breastfeeding was my connection to those early days - as painful as they were - when we first brought him home and I was figuring out this whole ‘feeding my baby with my breasts’ thing.

What I’ll take away from this experience is just how incredible the female body is. The fact that I would feel a letdown when I heard my newborn cry. The fact that there is a feedback loop between my baby and my breasts that tells my body how much milk my baby needs. When nursing or pumping, I could feel the nutrients being drained from my upper body. Mothers literally give their all to their babies.

I am so proud of my body for taking care of my baby.

My breastfeeding journey in numbers

  • Months I breastfed/pumped: 10.75

  • Hours breastfeeding/pumping: 900+

  • Number of hours spent washing pump parts: 300+

  • Times Steve or I spilled a bottle of breastmilk: 4

  • Times I’ve cried over spilled milk: 4

  • How many ounces I pumped the first time: 2

  • How many ounces I pumped the last time: .25

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