Saturday, October 10, 2015

word of the week #41



I have really enjoyed joining in with this project this year, and being given the chance to look back on each week and take a few moments to write about what has happened. Generally, as you may have noticed, I try to keep the posts short and quite positive. I like to keep this blog a record of happy memories, and although sometimes I worry it can be a bit superficial, and a bit one-sided to only show the cheerful things, I think it's important for me that I don't get into the habit of using this as a platform to moan! I also avoid writing about current affairs, or big issues, even when I have quite strong opinions on them, often because I don't want to feel like I'm opening this space up for debate, and argument. As much as I enjoy, and think it's important, to look at things from various viewpoints, I think the anonymity and immediacy of the internet can sometimes make those discussions a little more intimidating and intrusive, so I tend to steer clear. Additionally, and I realise this is always a somewhat bizarre comment for someone who chooses to blog to make, but I value my privacy, and am careful about what I choose to share here, in such a permanent, public manner.

There are some weeks, though, where you find yourself breaking the rules you have set for yourself, so apologies for the slight change of tone this week, and for the lengthy post ahead. I have been thinking about writing this for a long time, about how trying for a baby has been going on in the background of our lives for almost a year now. For The Husband and I, both intensely private about this, it is not something we had discussed with anyone until this week. I had often thought, though, if we got to twelve months, or perhaps to my thirtieth, I would try and find the words to write.

I was going to write about how, despite promising myself I wouldn't let it be all-consuming, within the first month I was convinced I had a metallic taste in my mouth, and was recording all manner of random symptoms on an app. I was also suddenly immersed in an online world filled with new and bizarre acronyms, and very quickly stopped reading forums about fertility and trying to conceive, when I realised just how much information was out there, and how it would be easy to get very involved, very quickly. I was going to write about how I became fixated on age, having arbitrarily decided that I wanted my first child before thirty, and then watching that possibility disappear as the months went past. Suddenly, every film, blog, news article that mentioned pregnancy, or children would result in some intrepid detective work to find out the mother's age, and then some rapid calculations to establish how old she was when she had her first child. 

I was also going to write about how hard it is to relax about trying to conceive. If, like me, you like to follow the rules, there are plenty to be found, long before you manage to get pregnant. Ideally you should take folic acid for three months before you even start trying, which means I have been on pre-natal vitamins for what seems like forever. Even better, they are pregnancy vitamins which are suitable for pre-conception, so for over a year I have been taking pregnancy vitamins for a pregnancy that hadn't happened. You also shouldn't drink, which means that for the majority of every month, nights out, meals, meeting up with friends all involve deep consideration of the small likelihood of being pregnant weighed against the worry that would be caused if I had a few glasses of wine and later found that I was. You should ideally be at a healthy weight, and although I have lost a stone in recent months, there is more to go before I have a BMI in the normal range, and there lies another constant reminder of our pursuit of pregnancy every time I step on the scales. Finally, particularly if, like me, you are not predictable, when it comes to cycles (I have PCOS which makes them longer, and irregular), you have less chances a year to get pregnant, and you need to do some committed diary-keeping to keep track of it all. All things considered, however casual I might try to be, it becomes very difficult to not think about it as a major endeavour.

As it was, we came home from New York in September with lots of happy memories, wonderful photographs, and somewhere buried in the suitcase, was a positive pregnancy test. I was, as is my nature, cautiously excited, The Husband was just plain excited. Within a few hours of being home, however, I started with some mild symptoms that made us a little nervous, and after a few days I ended up going for an early assessment. Things looked fine, their test confirmed I was pregnant, and it was just a case of waiting for a scan, which they would only do when my dates were roughly six weeks, all the while knowing that even then I could well be closer to five weeks thanks to my variable cycles. We told my parents, cautiously, but still spent a giddy night celebrating. Over the weekend, though, my symptoms worsened, nothing severe, but it definitely didn't seem like a positive sign. After days of uncertainty, scans and blood tests this week confirmed that the pregnancy had stopped very very early, and had never developed beyond a few weeks, so early that there was nothing to see on the scan.

We are consoling ourselves with the fact that for us, it never seemed certain. The lines on the test were always quite  faint, and by the time we had a digital test that was positive my symptoms had already started, so we were prepared for this almost from the start. We are also, in a small way, pleased to know that we are able to conceive, but I have to be in the right frame of mind to think of it like that. We are glad of each other, and my parents and friends. Only a handful of people know, but those that do have been incredibly supportive. We are having a quiet, low-key weekend, and I feel incredibly grateful for the relationship The Husband and I have, and the fact that we can come to the end of this week and still genuinely feel happy, and content, and hopeful.

There have been tears, at night, in the quiet, when I realise that, however briefly, for a few nights I drifted off wishing a silent goodnight to a baby that was never to be. When I got ready for the scan, and felt stupid putting on lipstick, knowing in all likelihood I would be going to stare at an empty screen, but wanting to look nice just in case. When we came home from that scan, and did a test, and saw the words not pregnant, confirming what we knew, and saving us one more night of uncertainty waiting for the blood test results. As we sat together and realised that in just a few days we had made so many plans, had so many daydreams, and the nicknames that we had for our growing baby suddenly sounded silly and hollow, and that I had probably spent many days talking to it, trying to convince it to stay, when it had already been long gone. I have never been more grateful for Millie, who has spent every morning curled up on the bed with me, watching films and being cuddled. She has been my shadow, and has stopped those long days at home from feeling empty, and distracted me from my thoughts on innumerable occasions. 

The truth is, that we are doing ok. For us, it was so early and so soon, and gradually became expected, that we were accepting of the news almost before we had received it. We both said that we never felt like we were "properly" pregnant, because there was such doubt almost immediately, and so it feels like this was a pregnancy that never really got started, rather than a baby that we lost. It's easy to get caught up in how you should feel, and what is the right response, and instead we are just being sad when we need to, talking about it when we need to, and also feeling reassured that after months of wondering, we now know we can conceive. While I obviously wish things were different, and I am hoping beyond hope it will change in the future, for now, it is back to being just the two of us; we are happy, and two is enough.

Sunday, October 04, 2015

word of the week #40



In the last week we have covered lots of ground indeed! We sailed across to Staten Island, the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island. We walked miles around Manhattan, through Little Italy, down Fifth Avenue, and through Times Square. We went in an incredibly grand lift in Tiffany's, rode the subway, and took a yellow cab across the city.

There was the long flight home, followed by a few days commuting to work on the train. Then this weekend there has been a good few hours in the car travelling to Cambridge and back for a friend's birthday.

Now, the passports are away, the bags are unpacked, and after a fabulous week of planes, trains, automobiles, and some boats too, we are home, and enjoying the prospect of staying in one place for a while.


The Reading Residence

project 365: week 40



270. A shot of the smoke rising over the streets, with the skyscrapers behind as we walked through New York.




271. We spent our last day taking an early morning ferry to Staten Island, followed by a walk down Fifth Avenue, and the most incredible meal of our lives at Jean-Georges restaurant near Central Park. I was worried that the last day would be a bit of an anticlimax as we waited for our evening flight, but this turned out to be the perfect end to the trip.




272. Home and lovely to see our parents, and Millie recovering too. She was very settled at their house, having firmly established herself in front of the fire!




273. The photos go a little downhill, as I'm afraid it's a series of bedtime shots now - a rather uninspired bunch after the holiday pictures!




274. I bought this book at the airport, but didn't actually read it on holiday. I got stuck in on the commute this week and it is already finished, completely gripping!




275. The old, make it black and white to try and make it look interesting photograph! We were supposed to travel to Cambridge for the weekend for a friend's 30th, but decided to only travel on the Saturday morning instead, and I was very grateful for the extra night at home.




276. This waffle felt more like an NYC portion than a Cambridge one! Wandering around the city centre in the afternoon we came across a market, and couldn't resist tucking into a waffle from one of the stalls, even if there was a bit of a sugar rush afterwards.



project 365: week 39

A week late with posting these, so apologies for the back-to-back posts tonight, I am just catching up! 



263. I did actually bake the tennis cake over a week ago (as you might be able to guess from the picture the net was problematic!). The cake was beautiful, and I will get the posts up here eventually - how long can I get away with blaming my tardiness on jet lag I wonder!




264. A slightly random picture taken as I walked home from my parent's house, and then I forgot to take any others, hence lots of overprocessing to try and make it look arty! I'm not altogether sure it worked.




265. This poorly puppy at the vets just before she got admitted. That face was very hard to leave behind, some tears were shed.




266. Pottering about at home, waiting to hear news on Millie, and trying to get ready for the surprise trip to New York, roses in the kitchen were a pretty distraction.




267. Our first taste of the iconic city that is New York, yellow taxi cabs queued up outside JFK.




268. Friday night wandering through the city, and the Rockerfeller centre lighting up the skyline.




269. This was The Husband's choice of breakfast to start his 30th birthday celebrations! A classic American diner, and a mammoth portion. We were up before dawn, and wandered down the street watching the sky lighten after breakfast, which was a good job as it gave us plenty of time to get our appetite back in time for our tasting menu lunch later in the day!

Thursday, October 01, 2015

first things first



The first of October.

The first day back in work after our wonderful holiday to New York, for me anyway, The Husband went back yesterday and I didn't envy him at all.

The first day in a week that The Husband doesn't have some kind of birthday celebration. After New York we got home Tuesday morning, and there was a final gift waiting for him that I had managed to keep secret. Then last night we had a family gathering, complete with a cake and candles - I couldn't let his 30th birthday pass without cake! As I was off work I managed to decorate the house with some balloons and banners, and so we ended the celebrations in style.

The first day where it feels like Millie is completely back to normal (fingers and paws crossed). My parents looked after her devotedly while we were away, with fresh chicken and rice for every meal, and regular photo updates. I took her back to the vets yesterday for a check up, as she still wasn't completely back to normal, and he added in a few more tablets, sachets, and jabs, and today we seem to have our giddy, bouncing beagle back. I've never been quite so happy to have that little nose nudging me the whole time I'm trying to eat my dinner.

The first week I didn't join in with project 365. As you might imagine, I definitely took more than a photo a day during our trip, but the lack of internet at the airport scuppered my plan to post it last minute. I'll hopefully post a double whammy this week! I also have two bake-off attempts to post too, and the ingredients ready to try the mokatines, and the chocolate soufflĂ©! 

Also the first month I didn't do a year in books post. I didn't read any new books in September! I did however get a book at the airport that I've been desperate to read, The Kind Worth Killing by Peter Swanson, so hopefully I will have a new post to write soon! It is the first book I have bought on the basis of a poster alone so I'm hoping it turns out to be a decent read. My stepdad also got The Girl on the Train recently so I'm hoping to to borrow that soon too.

The first sense today of the coming seasons. I noticed one of the shops on my walk home from the train station had already filled the window with halloween props. Someone at work also brought in mince pies today, which felt very early, but also very tempting! Despite it feeling slightly premature, it has made me start to feel a little excited at the start of the countdown to winter and all of the celebrations ahead. Happy October to you all.


Sunday, September 27, 2015

word of the week #39


A very quick entry for this week's word of the week, because we are in New York!! After literally months of planning with endless help from my fabulous parents and some incredible secret keeping from The Husband's colleagues, on Wendesday night The Husband found out that we would be spending his 30th birthday in America!!

He somehow had no idea (and is now rethinking his notion that nothing gets past him!) and was a little gobsmacked to realise that we would be leaving early the next morning. Never without drama, Millie decided to get very ill on Tuesday and ended up being admitted to the vets and I genuinely thought I might have to cancel the trip but luckily she was home by Wednesday evening and is currently back to mischief and being pampered by my parents!!

I'm so glad it all came together, and now we are off to see the Statue of Liberty and indulge in some cannoli in Little Italy!

Sunday, September 20, 2015

project 365: week 38

This was the week I finally forgot a photo!! With 100 days to go as of last week, I'm afraid that on Friday night The Husband and I started watching a film, and I completely forgot. I scoured for anything that could feasibly count as a picture, a screenshot, an emoticon, and alas I didn't have a thing. I'm resisting the urge to declare the whole thing cancelled now that I haven't got a perfect record, and instead think it is probably a bit more realistic for me to get to the end of the year without all 365 days! And it give's me a reason to join in again next year!




256. Oh Great British Bake Off and the mystery flaounas. These were actually quite fun to make, but I really didn't enjoy the flavour. More on that when I write them up (which I will do soon, I promise!!).




257. The train station roof, including the reflection of the lights from the train carriage, lined up perfectly. Lots of early starts this week, and I've been quite enjoying the early train. In fact, on Friday, which shall forever now be known as "the missing day", I tried to take a picture of the sunrise but got thwarted as we pulled into a station and the view got obscured. So I can console myself with the fact that the intention was there!




258. The roses from my Grandad still in full bloom, long outlasting the flowers I got myself a week later. I shall have to switch allegiance to his supermarket!




259. A trip to my Auntie's to see some family, including my cousin's beautiful sons, who are always such fun to be with. I had a great time playing trains and boats, then a fish and chip supper, and this gorgeous sunset over the sea too.




260. Thursday night snuggles with The Husband and the beagle, catching up on Great British Bake Off, having managed to avoid finding out the results beforehand.




262. Please avert your eyes from the toes much in need of a pedicure, and instead gaze in sympathy at the poorly foot, and the fact that I missed the chance to run my first 10k race, although the injury perhaps suggests I wasn't quite ready for it. I'm not sure if the home-made strapping really helped all that much, the temptation to peel it back off was too strong to resist, so it didn't last all that long!