Saturday, December 27, 2014

Our 1st Christmas in Holland

I went a little crazy preparing for Christmas this year for two reasons: 
1. I have never had a baby so close to Christmas.  I wanted to have everything ready before hand so I wouldn't feel the need to run around and get things done with a newborn.
2. I have never celebrated Christmas in a foreign country before.  We didn't bring any of our Christmas stuff over, because I always anticipated going home for Christmas.  I needed to search high and low to try to make our Christmas here as traditional as possible.  We tried to do all of our same American traditions.
First off, when Bennett was about 2 weeks old, I had my friend swing by after church and take snap some photos for our Christmas card.  We still sent them out to a lot of our friends and family back home, ordering everything online...
Image
Image
I don't know why I didn't take more pics of all our decorations...oh yeah, I was busy taking care of a newborn!  You can get a peak at my dollarstore-type Christmas makeover in the background of these shots.  We made and decorated sugar cookies early on the day before Christmas...
Image
Image
Image
My kids are finally old enough to get into the production of our Christmas Eve Nativity.  They came up with their own costumes and I was pretty impressed...
Image
Joseph, Baby Jesus, Angel, Mary, and Sheppard
Image
Mary and the adorable makeshift Donkey they created
I loved the Christmas Eve PJs I found this year - they are all onesie style with hoods...so cute!
Image
This was actually taken Christmas morning because I forgot the night before.
Here's the setup after we laid everything out.  I seriously had almost everything wrapped by Thanksgiving.  That was awesome!  Our poor tree looked awesome right after we got it...the only problem is we aren't quite accustomed to having a live tree.  We should have cut the bottom or drilled holes in it before we put it in water.  We realized that after we had it all decorated.  A few days later, Ryan finally got around to drilling some holes near the bottom of the trunk so the tree could drink.  By that time, it was too late.  It died a slow and painful death, and was pretty much completely limp by Christmas morning... 
Image
I took lots of video on Christmas morning, but hardly any pictures!  Our kids woke up at 2am thinking it was Christmas morning.  Ryan woke up when he heard some partying downstairs, so he sent them all back to bed until 6:00.  Crazy kids!  Here's my favorite picture of our Christmas morning...  
Image
Bennett slept through most of the excitement.
And here's to keeping it real, with a middle of the day shot on Christmas...
Image
Since the kids have a few weeks off for the Christmas holidays, Ryan really wanted to do some traveling.  I just wasn't up for it.  I hated to waste the time off, but I just wanted to hang out in Rotterdam and try to catch a nap every once in a while - which is exactly what we did.  We did some fun things on our city passes, and two days before Christmas I was persuaded to go to a Christmas market in Brussels.  It's just not Christmas time in Europe unless you go to a Christmas market...
Image
Image
Image
Image
It was pretty crowded this close to Christmas...
Image
The kids loved the Santa's village section...
Image
Image
Image
Image
We even got to take our traditional Santa picture with this weird Eastern European Santa who didn't speak English or Dutch...
Image
 Christmas in Holland went off without a hitch.  We missed our families and some of our familiar things, but for the most part it didn't feel as different as I thought it would.  It just goes to show that it's the people that make your holidays special!

Friday, December 5, 2014

Sinterklaas 2014

We love, Love, LOVE celebrating Sinterklaas around here.  Here's how it looked for us this year:
Image
As always, we went to the Intocht at Rotterdam Harbor with friends.
Image
It was a happy occasion.
Image
Kaydree & Holly ready to catch some pepernoten.
Image
The "zwarte pieten" or black petes were met with added criticism this year, due to some pressure from the international community to make this Dutch tradition a little more politically correct.  A movement was made to paint the piets with rainbow faces - this random kid is the only one I saw with a rainbow face.  Frankly, he looks like he's supporting quite a different cause to me.
Image
Here's a tradtional piet handing out treats to our group.
Image
This is the only shot I got of the kids at the pwc party before my camera died.  I'm sure some extra pictures are stuck on Ryan's cell phone somewhere.  We had a great time, as usual.
Image
This was Kaydree's second year to make a "surprise" (pronounced the Dutch way surPREEZ).  She drew the name of a friend who loved the color pink, so she designed this pink crayon to hide gifts in.  It turned out great!
The actual evening of Sinterklaas landed when I was still in the hospital after Bennett was born.  It was part of the reason I wanted to checkout early and head on home - we love this holiday and hate to miss it.  It is definitely part of our lives now.  My kids look forward to it every year.  So here we are on the evening of Sinterklaas, me with a sleeping baby in my lap and hospital bracelet on.  It was a little overwhelming, but still fun.
Image
Image
Image
Image
Image
 Till next year, Sint!

Thursday, December 4, 2014

I had a baby in a foreign country

It's true, I birthed a baby in a foreign country.  I detailed my prenatal experience here, so a few words about my labor and delivery.  I had been having some of the obvious signs and symptoms that my body would go into labor at any minute.  I was fully effaced (as is usually the case with me in the coming weeks before delivery) and dilated to nearly a 5.  I lived in fear everyday that my active labor would come on strong and suddenly, and that I wouldn't make it to my hospital in Belgium - about 1 1/2 hours away.  What if I can't get a hold of Ryan and have to drive myself?  What if I don't make it and my Dutch midwives make me give birth right here in my house on my new couch?  What if it's rush hour and it takes us 3 hours to get there?  Seriously, the paranoia was real.  In reality, being the neurotic planner that I am, I had several sets of plans in place - including a few supplies gathered in case I actually delivered IN THE CAR, which I was also terrified of.
Then, on the evening before my due date, I had a scary symptom - bright red blood.  I called the hospital, tried to hurdle all the language barriers quickly, and explained what was going on.  I don't know if she even understood, but she didn't seem alarmed by it.  She said she would have the doctor call me in the morning.  The next day, the doctor called to see if I wanted to schedule an induction 2 days later.  He too was concerned that I wouldn't make it to the hospital if I waited to go into labor on my own.  I asked him about the bleeding, and sure enough he never even got the message.  He told me I could go ahead and come in today if I wanted to.  I jumped at the chance, not because I was done being pregnant or wanted to get it over with or any of the typical reasons for wanting an induction - I knew I could easily make it to the hospital with Ryan before rush hour, and that was a huge relief to me.
So we did it - I delivered the children's overnight bags to my friend Annie who would pick them up from school and let them stay the night, and we headed to Brasschat to have ourselves a baby!  Of course, induction is not at all commonplace at this hospital.  I was expecting the typical pitocin drip, a quick epidural, bottabing bottaboom, baby.  So they tried their best to make the induction a natural thing - which it's just not.  They gave me cervadil (sp?) to help soften my cervix.  Ok, so that seemed pointless since I was already 100% effaced, but whatever.  They repeated that 3 times with 1-2 hours in between each time, just to see if anything would happen.  It didn't.  I found out later that I'm pretty lucky that I wasn't hurling by round 3, I guess that stuff can make people pretty nauseous.  By this point, I'm starting to get tired and restless.  Finally, they gave me an iv of their brand of oxytocin on the lowest teensiest tinsiest drip possible.  I started to feel a few contractions, but nothing serious.  Then the nurse came in to break my water and turn up the drip.  "Finally," I think, "let's get this show on the road."  When she matter of factly informs me that there's no way I need an epidural and that I probably wouldn't have time for one anyway.  Um, I just drove over the border to get it - so that infuriated me.  I told her to go ahead and get my doctor on the phone, because I WOULD be getting an epidural, end of story.  The next thing I know, my contractions pickup and were only mildly painful.  I started breathing through them and was doing ok - but ready for the relief of discomfort and pain so I could maybe get a little rest before I had to push the baby out.  A middle eastern guy with zero bedside manner comes in to give me my epidural.  "I don't really have time for this," he says, "so we're going to have to make this quick."  Just what you want to hear before getting stabbed in the spine with a gigantic needle.  He did the deed quickly, and I waited for relief.  Pretty quickly, within 15-30 min, I felt a little tingly and less aware of my contractions.  I was happy for a little relief, but sort of waiting for the real deal to kick in so that I really felt relaxed.  The next thing I know, I feel horrific intense and awful pain.  My eyes pop out of my head and I tell Ryan he needs to get the nurse, something is wrong and the epidural is definitely not working.  A couple minutes later, before the nurse even came, the pain subsided and I was ok again.  That whole scenario repeated itself several times, and I was pretty terrified.  The nurse checked me and explained that the baby's head was engaging with every contraction, then moving back up when my body relaxed in between contractions.  So, if that was just pressure from the baby's head, what would it feel like when I pushed?  Because I could feel EVERYTHING from about my hip bones on down.  I frantically explained to the nurse that we needed the anesthesiologist to hurry back here and adjust my epidural, that it wasn't working right and I wasn't ready to push.  The nurse was like, "Welp, sorry, too late, here we go."
Long story short, I pushed the baby out and felt every last bit of it.  I was exhausted and terrified, and my regular 2 or 3 pushes to get the baby out just wasn't happening.  I felt like I was outside of my body watching.  I was screaming like in a movie.  I remember one moment in between pushes when I looked the doctor in the eye and barked at him "Get it out!"  He gave me an episotomy, which I probably could have done without when recovery came around, and the baby was here.  We went in at 2:00pm and baby B was born shortly after 10:00pm.  Longest 8 hours of my life.
I know this isn't as bad as it could have been, but for me - the whole experience was horrifying.  I was pretty upset about it and didn't want to think about it or talk about it for weeks.  Weird, since I'm not one of those people who has some perfect experience in mind.  It was just excruciating and I still don't like thinking about it.
Good thing I have a perfect little baby to show for it!  The aftermath of the delivery was even more concerning than the delivery itself - no tests, vaccines, heal pricks, not even so much as a suction of the nose and mouth for that baby of mine.  I am so relieved that he was perfectly healthy, because if something was seriously wrong I don't know how they could have possibly figured it out.  Also, they don't believe in bathing the baby until the next day.  Gross.
After 2 days in the hospital (of my maximum 5 day stay I could have), I was ready to get the heck out of there.  It wasn't a typical hospital experience - the baby stayed by my side the entire time (which I prefer, but still - having a nurse offer to take a screaming baby so you can sleep is a nice gesture).  I had no, ABSOLUTELY NO painkillers postpartum.  I had to have Ryan bring me some advil from our american drug stash at home.  The whole thing was just surreal.  And now it's documented so if anyone ever wants to hear about it - I can point them here.  And I never have to think about it again!