Thursday, October 17, 2013

Seven Months Down

Hello friends and family.  It has been a very long month since I posted anything, and since I felt like myself.  I've been slightly under the weather.  For a month.  After I recovered from my bug bites -- which were oh-so-fun, in and of themselves -- I got a sore throat, which developed into a cough, which -- over a weekend, naturally -- left me feeling like I couldn't breathe.  So, off to the docs I went, C in tow, to discover that I had some sort of pneumonia/bronchitis and a sinus infection and my little C had bronchitis and an ear infection.  Then, a couple of days later, C got the tummy bug from her father, which I mercifully escaped.  We've taken more antibiotics and other medications than I care to think about.  Took me a good 3 weeks to get over that bout of sickness, and it's only this week that I'm really feeling back to normal.  I know you're more susceptible to illness when you're pregnant but geez!!  Hoping this is the last of it for a while.... {knocks wood}


Speaking of pregnancy, this one is FLYING by.  I had heard that about second pregnancies and, guess what? It's true.  Sometimes I feel as though I'm not paying this pregnancy as much attention (or focusing on it as fully) as I did when I was expecting C.  That might have something to do with moving half way across the world, trying to make this house feel like home, and all while having an almost 4 year-old with boundless energy who is definitely keeping me on my toes!  Nevertheless, this baby is certainly making its presence known - I think it's already a tango aficionado, by the feel of things.  Sleep is getting more uncomfortable, and I think I have only a couple more weeks of being able to buckle my shoes.  Braxton Hicks contractions are in full swing - forgot how much fun those are!  But I'm thankful every day for this little peanut (actually, my book says it's as big as a butternut squash now) in my belly.
For those who have asked - this is me last week at 28 weeks.  Feeling rather large these days - larger much quicker than the first time around!

I'm currently 7 months (29 weeks) pregnant and due on New Years Day -- how's that for timing?! -- and I think that the time between now and then is going to fly.  We have decided to keep the gender a surprise, as we did when we were expecting C.  For us, it's the best surprise: that moment after all that hard work, when you find out what you've been carrying for all those months!  We flip-flop back and forth between thinking it's a boy and thinking it's a girl.  We have a list of names for both genders; we have one clear favorite for a boy and a top 3 for girl.  Picking a name is no easy task!  We're also not telling anyone what our picks are - we're all about the big surprises over here!  It drives our families -- well, certain members of my family for sure (ahem...R) -- crazy at times, but hopefully they don't really mind too much!

via


C seems to be very excited about the baby. She says ‘hi’ to the baby and sings to it and rubs my belly. She is also convinced that it's a girl; no question that it might be a boy, which reminds me of what my then-4-year-old brother said when we were awaiting the arrival of our littlest brother: "I want it to be a boy or a car."  Thankfully for my mother, it was a boy.  Well, we shall see soon enough if C is right!  She's going to be a wonderful big sister. She adores babies and I know she'll take good care of this one, too.
This also happened this week: "Look at my lipstick, just like yours".  Thank goodness for washable marker!
Another challenge: I haven't been pregnant in extreme heat before. We're not even in the Mauritian summer yet and already during the middle of the day I feel like I'm melting!  Anyone got any tips on how to stay cool, other than the obvious "stay inside”?  Thankfully my sweet, dear Mama-friend in Virginia shared her summertime maternity clothes with me and that has been a lifesaver, given that almost everything I wore when expecting C was for brisk Irish weather.  Between that and a couple of trips to Gap Maternity, I'm doing okay.

I haven't had any crazy cravings, and I didn't really last time either.  I eat more apples than I can keep track of, and - if I'm being totally honest - the fact that they have Cadbury's Dairy Milk chocolate here is NOT. GOOD. AT. ALL.  :Sigh:  Somehow I have managed not to gain much weight so far this time around.  When I was expecting C, I gained about 45lbs (can't believe I just admitted that).  I did lose almost 30lbs in the first week after I had her, so I know that most of it was water weight.  I don't know whether it's eating gluten-free that's helping me this time, but I've gained maybe 15lbs so far and I cannot understand how (see chocolate reference above, not to mention the copious amounts of Indian food we consume in this house).  My feeling is that if I'm eating well, healthily, with the occasional treat (or two), then it's all good.  Right?!


On a more serious note, the month of October is Infant & Pregnancy Loss Awareness Month (the day of remembrance was on October 15th).  If you are one of many, many Loss Mothers (or Loss Fathers), my heart is with you.  This terrible loss touches more people than you can imagine. Really, it does, but perhaps because that grief is so consuming and so personal, it's not something that is really talked about.   Losing someone you haven't met, yet love so much, is a real, heart-wrenching grief.  It's certainly something to think about (and think twice before asking someone when they're going to hurry up and have kids), particularly this month.  I never take this pregnancy for granted and always try to remember that, while I'm complaining about my sore back or getting up 3 times a night or any of the other 'joys' that come with pregnancy, I am so blessed and lucky to be able to have these complaints to begin with.  Remembering all those little angels who never had a chance to meet their parents, who love them and miss them every day.






Tuesday, September 17, 2013

On Home

“Home wasn't a set house, or a single town on a map. It was wherever the people who loved you were, whenever you were together. Not a place, but a moment, and then another, building on each other like bricks to create a solid shelter that you take with you for your entire life, wherever you may go.” 
~ Sarah Dessen, What Happened to Goodbye

My homes, so far.
There's no place like...well, we all know how that ends, don't we?  And to be completely honest, that's instinctively how I've felt since I set foot on Irish soil two days ago.  It feels like I've never really left Dublin - perhaps I've just returned after a long weekend away somewhere.  As if I can hop on the Dart and return to our apartment on Pembroke Road, just as we'd did a million times before we left.  It's a strange feeling, this feeling of belonging to a place I haven't set foot on in over two years.  Strange, but comforting.

This feeling has left me contemplating home: the idea, the meaning of what and where and with whom home is.  I joke that I am a "global nomad", a moniker even more fitting given the new path we have taken in the last year.  I dread the question "where are you from?".  My childhood was spent straddling the Irish Sea -  each Summer and Winter was spent in the UK until I was 15, no matter where else in the world we called home for the remainder of the year.  The first home I remember, for the first 6 years of my life, was in London, in a flat in the North of the city.  I remember it as clearly as if I were there yesterday.  It had an interior courtyard with a small garden, with low walls that I used to walk as if on a balance beam, Sue gripping my hand tightly when I felt unsure of my footing.  My bedroom had multi-coloured star wallpaper, a bright window, and my beloved box set of Beatrix Potter books on the bookshelf.  The very same books that are on C's bookshelf, in her bedroom now.
Where I grew up in London.  via
When our family had grown from three to five (plus the addition of Sue, our family's wonderful nanny who lived with us for 27 years, and who we all miss every day), we hopped back over the Irish Sea to Rostrevor, Northern Ireland, where we spent the following five years in a big old Georgian house, painted rose pink, with sprawling gardens lined with daffodils in the early spring and roses in the summertime.  The house was nestled within rhododendron bushes the size of oak trees, and behind it was a dilapidated old farm, in which the ghosts of the animals once housed there captured my imagination and inspired many a play time with my siblings.  They were very happy years for us, despite the less than happy state of Northern Ireland at that time.

You can just about see our Rostrevor home in this photo, hidden in the trees.  via
In the early 90's, a drastic move brought my family across the Atlantic to Birmingham, Alabama, where my formative years were spent.  Again, for me these were most happy years, I was very fortunate to slip easily into schools I loved and make lifelong friends.  I was so fortunate to have a very happy childhood.  From there I went to Washington DC, Paris, New York, and North Carolina - all homes of varying duration for me as an adult.  And aside from holidays here and there, I did not return to live in Ireland until late 2007 - 2011.  All of this has resulted in some rather confused feelings about where, and what, I consider 'home'.

Vulcan, overlooking downtown Birmingham (or, the Magic City, as it's lovingly referred to).
I always - first and foremost - identify myself as being Irish, even though I'm a dual-passport carrying Irish and US citizen.  I'm Irish in my blood, it's the country of my birth, it's where my family reside.  It is home to many memories of my youth and subsequent years, and, as such, I think it understandable and fair that I call and consider myself Irish, although almost everyone who meets me (especially the Irish) identifies me as American.  An unwilling "accent chameleon", I truly cannot control the accent with which I speak - it's not something I have ever been able to do.  My first accent was a posh little London accent, quickly replaced by a Northern Irish accent, and then a sweet Southern (American) drawl for our years spent in the Deep South.  All of this was unwilling and unintentional.  These days, I sound almost entirely American, perhaps with an bit of Irish thrown in here or there.  It all makes for a very confused cultural identity, and lots of very confused looks when I tell people that no, I actually AM Irish, born and bred.
via
Having said all that, I have always felt very much at home in the States.  Perhaps that's because the majority of my closest friends live there.  Or the fact that I've spent the majority of my life living there, particularly during those important formative years.  But the conflicting notion of home is something I find very hard to explain to others - it's not something many people can relate to.  And all this moving - this uprooting - has resulted in my not being able to fathom the idea of living in one place for the rest of my life.  How would I do that?  Could I do that?  I'm not sure I could happily do that.  Unlike so many of my friends who grew up and now still live in the same place, my family (immediate and by marriage) is on two sides of a rather large ocean, not all in the same town or city.  P and I will always live with at least one of us being far away from our family.  It just doesn't seem to be our reality to put down roots anywhere.  Having DC as a home-base at the moment is about as close as we will come to that, at least for now.
P + I as newlyweds, outside the first place that we ever called home, in Fayetteville, NC, 2006.
As I grow older and - I hope - wiser, I'm coming to learn that home really, truly is where the heart is.  Could it sound any more cliché?  For me, at this moment in my life, the majority of my heart is here in Mauritius, with my husband, my daughter, and this little munchkin in my belly.  But I feel that I've left little pieces of my heart scattered across the globe: in Ireland with my family there; in London, my brother's home and a city I haven't lived in for over 25 years that still holds a connection for me that I can't explain; in Birmingham, a city I love so much, with friends and memories I hold dear;  in beautiful Paris where I spent six incredible but challenging and important months of my life, a city I connected with on a very personal level; in Washington DC, city of my college years, where I met the love of my life, the city that is our new home-base in this Foreign Service life.

For me, home isn't necessarily a place.  It's with the people I love and care about.  It that feeling of being flooded with a sense of peace and comfort and security as soon as I am welcomed through a door and into the embrace of a person I love and hold dear.  It's the safety of not having to explain yourself, letting any walls slip away and so you can just be you.  It's a place where, although the people who once lived there with you may now be gone, the remaining friendships and memories are enough to make me feel completely at ease.  I feel fortunate to have felt at home in quite a few places.  But most importantly, it's comforting to know that I am at home when I am with the people I love.  And as our global adventure continues, I think it's something I'll cling to more and more.

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Sunday, September 15, 2013

Ma Vie Mauricienne

C on "our" beach
Three full weeks have passed since we touched down on Mauritian soil.  It's hard to believe that we are approaching a full month of life here, yet here we are.  It seems the last three weeks were a bit of a whirlwind, we hit the ground running, you might say.

My first glimpse of our new home, flying in over the North of the Island.
We arrived one Wednesday noon-time after what seemed like an endless journey.  True, we only traveled from Ireland (I write that as if it's no distance, which it is, actually, but at least we had the six hour distance from the States behind us already), but it was a long time of being in planes and airport layovers: an hour and a half to Paris, almost 6 hour layover in Paris, followed by an 11 hour flight to Mauritius, 8 hours of which C slept, mercifully.

C had a particularly difficult departure from Dublin - lots of tears and crying, which translated to lots of frustration and stressing on the part of her parents (and lots of bewildered and annoyed looks from fellow travellers, which only infuriated me more).  She clearly knew we were leaving her grandparents, aunts and uncles for a while and I think all the change over the last couple of months has been very difficult for her to process.  Our almost month-long visit in Ireland was wonderful, but also very difficult in that C didn't settle into any semblance of her routine the entire time we were there.  We began to worry that it was a change in her routine that would stick, but since we've been here, in our own new house, and she has her own room with her familiar bedding and toys, thankfully things have been much better.

P began his new job at the embassy the day after we arrived, while C and I explored "our" beach and enjoyed a nap to try to catch up on the month of terrible sleep we both had prior to our arrival.  We got together with some of the other newly arrived families from the embassy on Friday evening at a local restaurant whose dining room is open to the beach.  We watched the sun set, ate fresh, local food and enjoyed getting to know the families who I hope will become our friends during this tour.  It seems like we have a really great group of people here!

The next week brought more changes - C started preschool.  French preschool, no less.  They take their preschool seriously here.  The little ones go every day - 3 full days and 2 half days.  It's a lot, and there are no naps.  A HUGE adjustment for our girl, given that I've been lucky enough to have her home with me her entire 3.5 years until now.  She wears a little uniform and looks awfully adorable, if I do say so myself....
C in her other uniform option.  But she's a skirt girl, all the way.
The first week was rough. I  mean really, really rough.  She has always expressed a desire to go to school, but I'm not sure whether it was just too many changes at once or the language barrier (though thankfully she has another little American friend in her class and her teachers speak English and do 2 days a week with some lessons in English), but she panicked, big time.  All those stories you hear about kids screaming, crying, clinging to their parents - that was my child.  I was so surprised because she always been fiercely independent and not shown too much worry about me leaving to go anywhere in the past.  So naturally, as I'm drowning in pregnancy hormones as it is, I became a big crying mess, too (albeit after I'd prised myself away so as not to upset her more).

Thankfully, after the first week things have improved - some days she is so excited after her "such fun day at school, Mama", other days she says "but I don't like my school".  This morning, she looked at me very seriously and said "I'm not going to say 'I don't like my school'.  I'm not going to say that, Mummy".  I was very proud of my big girl!  I know I'm not the only mother out there who has had their heart broken when their child is distraught about going to school, but nothing quite prepares you for it when it actually happens.


Emotional milestones aside, it really does feel like paradise here.  We are so lucky and blessed.  We love it here so far.  Especially C:

There's so much more to tell but I'll save that for another post, or two.  For now, I'll leave you with some photos of "our" beach, as we've come to call it.  We are lucky enough to live across a dirt street from the beach you'll see in all the photos below - it's a small beach - mostly private and rental homes and a small hotel on the opposite end.   Here's a glimpse of why we love it oh so much.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Ok, who's coming to visit?!