Dreams I have

Tears are streaming down my face as I jot down nine special dreams that I hope and pray can all be crossed off of the list in this lifetime.

1. To rehab, and live in, a Tennessee farmhouse

2. To work on-staff as a magazine editor

3. To choreograph a one-act ballet

4. To write a novel

5. To live in San Francisco

6. To re-honeymoon in Ireland

7. To take my shirt off at a festival

8. To see my children’s children grow up

9. To experience the ripples of a single act of kindness that I have set in motion

Dreams

Photo credits: 1. Tennessee Farm House, 2. Innocent Magazine – Letters to the Editor, 3. Enter stage, 4. I Wrote This Novel…, 5. San Francisco Houses, 6. Dublin, Ireland, 7. Hippy Hippy Shake°, 8. Three Generations of Nauerth-Curriden-Haynes Family, 9. Ripples

Of motherhood and demolition

I’ve kept pretty mum lately about personal things since Poppy’s birth [a period that is in fact still HERE and NOW]. I’ve shared a lot of photos, snippets of new motherhood, and the happy tale of the birth. As things appear around here, motherhood rocks. It seems full of adorable moments, quiet reflections, fun baby giggles, and refreshing walks in the park. And trust me, sometimes it is. Every day is a real, tangible blessing that I wouldn’t trade. So don’t hate. I know what miracle I’m living.

I have, however, been ruminating over the idea of sharing another side of the last three and a half months. I kind of feel like I give the wrong impression of what this whole thing is like sometimes. It’s one thing to say things are “crazy” or “out of hand” on any given day, but it is an entirely different thing to open up and say that sometimes, no matter how blessed or miraculous, motherhood is cataclysmic.

[cataclysmic ˌ\ka-tə-ˈkliz-məl\adj. a momentous and violent event marked by overwhelming upheaval and demolition]

When Jacob and I got pregnant the first time, a baby now lost, it was an accident. An overzealous anniversary celebration, if you will. We were surprised, speechless, and a little bit whatthefuck? We had been married just one year. I had a great job, he had the luxury of a freelance career, we had two kitty cats and no money. We were living the life! Our marriage was really strong. Prior to getting hitched, we always fought. Somehow when we got married everyone relaxed and we really liked being room/soul mates.

For the sake of brevity, I’ll skip ahead and say that two months after getting pregnant, our baby died. We were really, really crushed. The day of my D&C, we looked at each other and said that we still wanted a family. We were not really ready, but we WANTED it and it felt right. I still think that’s the best decision we ever made. I’m not kidding, there was no preparation, no real reason – just little Poppy-to-be knocking at the door.

Fast forward a year later and I give birth to Poppy Anne. The first four weeks of her life are a whirlwind. I can’t even remember them – seriously. I have only the photos to prove they even happened. Oh, and a bloody bra from the first days of nursing to remind me NEVER TO HAVE A BABY AGAIN. Kidding.

I can’t even begin to tell you the changes in my life, my marriage, my body since Poppy has come.

My body. My poor, poor body. My stomach is covered in stretch marks from navel to Neverland. My boobs pretty much decided to warp into giantly uneven, awkward torpedos of death. And let’s not even talk about the baldness or the fact that, because of permanent hip-widening, I will never again wear single digit jean sizes. Does that grieve anyone else?

The changes in my marriage? My life? Jacob and I were shoved into new roles immediately after Poppy was born. Mother and Father. Say what? I stayed home from work, he got a full-time job. I suddenly found myself folding laundry, making food, cleaning. Readers, I DO NOT CLEAN. I DO NOT COOK. I am notorious for being a bad housewife. Jacob married me because I tell good jokes, not because I know what pasta primavera is [I don't]. Since Poppy, I have felt very trapped by these four walls. Some days I wake up deeply depressed. I have cried several times late at night and rolled over to tell Jacob “This is not what I want – it’s boring. It’s hard.”

Jacob, in the same way, has struggled to try to fit into a new thing called fatherhood. I can’t speak for him, but I can say that similar feelings of futility and what-the-hell-are-we-done-with-another-stupid-pointless-day-already? creep up frequently. You might know the same sense, definitely not linked only to new fatherhood, that is the rat race, the rhythm of Western life. It can suck the spark right out of you.

Jacob and I have had huge, major fights in the last three months. Fights that end with “I’m not happy. I want something else. Are we even on the same page?” These are scary questions to ask your spouse. S-C-A-R-Y. Without further disclosure of our personal crap, I will just say that our marriage took a hit. Divorce is not an option. Neither is living forever unhappy. What we have concluded is that we need LIFE in our lives. We’ve got to do things we like doing, even if they don’t fit into “motherhood” and “fatherhood.” For example, I like music. So instead of folding the laundry this morning, I cranked up The Doors and rocked out with Poppy in front of the sub woofer. The laundry still sits in the dryer I think. [I'm kinda afraid to go in the laundry room ever again].

My point, since this is getting too long, is that having a new family member who requires every ounce of who you are to survive and thrive, is hard work. Motherhood is nothing like I imagined. No one could have even prepared me for it if they tried. Not the sleepless nights and constant feedings and all that shit. That’s easy and like, whatever. The hard part of all this is figuring out who I am. This little girl defines me. I am her MOM now. Our family has THREE – father, mother, daughter. But, our family also is unique and we are unique as individuals [alright, BORG reference over]. We dance to our own beat. We suck at some things [like working and cleaning and living beautifully], but we excel at others [like quoting movies, playing outside and talking shit about the government].

My entrance into motherhood, and Jacob’s into fatherhood, has been nothing short of cataclysmic. It has been a momentous and violent event marked by overwhelming upheaval and demolition. Just about everything has fallen apart since Poppy has been born.

And I wouldn’t have it any other way.

Sunday excursion.

Yesterday evening our little clan headed out to the National Park for a stroll. Daddy and Mommy holding hands and Poppy snuggled in her Ergo. We only lasted about 45 minutes before the peasant revolted, but it was a lovely time walking along the O&E Canal. The evening was topped off by a Mandy Patinkin does Sondheim sing-along. I just love my family.

Forbidden Broadway

For the past couple of weeks, Jacob has been in show mode getting ready for Forbidden Broadway at Huntington Playhouse. This is perhaps why I have lost so much hair lately. Show mode means long rehearsals for Jacob and even longer nights of Friends reruns for me and Poppy.

I took the little Peanut to the final dress rehearsal last night – her now second theatrical experience in her short lifetime. When she was 3 weeks old, we took her to see West Side Story and she slept right through it. Last night she was so captivated by the music and voices and sexy legs. She especially loved the Les Miserables numbers. That’s my girl.

The show was a real blast to watch. My husband is funny and the whole cast is really talented. If you’re a local reader, go see it.

Tonight Jacob is dropping Poppy off at my mom’s house so I can get a little time off. As of yesterday I was planning on getting some grocery shopping and housework done, but as the time draws nearer, I think I might stay in these flannel pajamas and watch movies while eating leftover Easter candy.

Happy Anniversary to my mom and dad. They’ve been married for 26 years today and I’ve never seen a better example of sacrificial, life-long love. They have done what it takes to make our family work. My dad has never complained about working as a pipe-fitter to provide for our family. My mom has given selflessly for the last 24 years to raise and educate all six of us kids. And all the while, they maintain their love for each other and their sense of humor. You guys rock!

Coffee + Falling in Love

basel_swzcoffee

Once upon a time there was a boy named Jacob. He liked a girl named Leanne. One rainy day, they found themselves lost in a bookstore on a little cobble street in the middle of Basel.

“Where is everyone else?” said Leanne.

“Hmm. I guess they’ve left for the train already. Want to go get some coffee?” said Jacob.

“Sure, ok.”

At the coffee shop, Jacob ordered his coffee black. “How do you take your coffee?”

“Black too,” said Leanne.

This is the moment when they fell in love for the first time. A walk in the most beautiful city in the world, a rainy day, a shared cup of the most delicious drink on the planet.

Love.

The end.

The tale grows and grows…

I wrote a short and to-the-point version of this epic tale a few days after Poppy was born. But now, almost three months later, I can’t stop thinking about the night of February 6th, when my whole world began to turn upside down as labor finally (and I mean finally) began. It seems like I can recount more details than I could before, and the story becomes more fresh and every detail more precious as time passes. So I am giving the telling another go – to see if I can more accurately tell the story of Poppy’s birth.

PART I
Anyone that follows me on Facebook, CrunchyCursive, or various other Internet portals, may remember the dreadfully long and agonizing weeks leading up to Poppy’s birth. My due date was February 2nd, but by mid-January, I was beginning to dilate and experience long bouts of contractions. Every week, my doctor said, “I’ll be surprised to see you make it to next week’s appointment.” Um, yes, here I am again. Just want to make sure my feet billow to the maximum before I end this blissful swelling.

By week 38, I was almost 3 centimeters dilated and fully effaced. Many women don’t get to this point until halfway through labor. I walked around in this state for another three weeks. We tried everything to get labor started – spicy foods, special herbs and teas, bouncing on the birth ball, hanky panky, exercise – you name it, we did it. By week 40, Jacob was dragging my huge, helpless body to every mall in the greater Cleveland area to make me walk for hours on end. Beachwood Mall was my favorite. Secret corridors made the fourth time around seem brand new. During that last week of pregnancy, I started false labor several times with contractions 2-3 minutes apart for hours. Hours. Had I let him, Jacob would have taken me to the hospital and kept me there until I spawned the child.

On the evening of February 6th (it was a Friday), we had just finished a quick walk around the neighborhood and were settling in for a night of Star Trek and junk food. I really, really wanted some Oreo cookies. Jacob ran out to the store and brought me back some Double Stuff Oreos. I ate about two-thirds of the box. Then I had BBQ chips for dessert. It was the perfect pregnant-lady dinner, really. I was totally satisfied and done feeling sorry for myself that I was 40 weeks, 5 days along and still pregnant. Actually, from what I remember, we had a super-relaxing day that day. Jacob worked from home Friday because he had a “feeling,” and he also knew that I needed his company to help me relax. I had been super worked up about having the baby on time. Our doctor threatened us with an induction if I was still pregnant by week 41. That meant by Friday the 6th that I had two days to birth the baby, or else I was going to have to give my doctor a black eye, and well, I was already not feeling very lady-like with my baggy sweatpants and hairy legs.

So Friday all day I was panicking about having to be induced and trying to formulate an escape plan, or at least find cheap plane tickets to Siberia. Star Trek and Oreo cookies were exactly what I needed.

PART 2
“I have diarrhea. Bad.”

Hey, if you had a meal consisting entirely of Oreos and BBQ chips, you would be hurting too. Halfway into our relaxing Friday evening, I started feeling like crap. I knew I shouldn’t have eaten all that junk. The ensuing intestinal circus just wouldn’t let up. I told Jacob I was having some contractions, but it was nothing to get excited about.

I finally ran a hot bath to help alleviate this “diarrhea” that kept creeping up every couple of minutes. I started moaning and rocking in the tub just to get by. At this point, Jacob mentioned that you know, I might be in labor.

Naw. No way. Just a stomachache from my chocolaty, spiced-up dinner. He did point out, however, that I wouldn’t get out of the tub because my stomach hurt so badly. It was about 10pm.

By 11pm or so, things were picking up. I was having contractions every couple of minutes and they were starting to hurt. I practiced that silly-looking breathing technique I learned from crazy yoga lady on my workout DVDs. I was still in the bathtub turning kind of raisin-y, but the warm water was very comforting. At this point Jacob was strongly suggesting that I was indeed in labor. He also mentioned that he didn’t care what I thought, he was calling our doula Angie and filling her in.  Angie tried to talk to me on the phone, but with every contraction, I had to put the phone down, grab onto the side of the tub, and focus so hard on not flailing by limbs as to cause a small tsunami. Angie was a couple of hours away and sent her backup to be with us in the mean time. Meghan arrived around midnight and sat with us in the bathroom, reminding me to keep calm. She also did the dishes. That’s about what I remember of that.

Labor. Ouch. For the next five hours, I was in and out of the bathtub with intense contractions. Let me just play snippets of conversation that I remember to help you follow the progression:

“Ow! Ow! Ow! Please don’t touch me.”

“Thanks for rubbing my back, but stop. Don’t touch me.”

“Where’s the puke bucket?”

“I peed on that blanket.”

“I want to be done. Right now.”

“OWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWW”

By 4am, I felt like things were changing rapidly. I was so focused and the pain was so intense. Angie checked things out and said it was probably time to go to the hospital if I was ready. Hell yes. Jacob packed up the car while Angie tried to convince me to put some pants on. I asked her to feed the fish.

PART 3
We arrived at the hospital around 5am. The car ride was a blur to me, but I do remember telling Jacob to run the red lights and avoid bumps. I was puking into a bucket as I stumbled into the ER. I walked ahead of Angie and Jacob right to the nurse’s desk and said “I’m in lab…. OOOOOOOOOOOOO…… I HAVE TO POOP!” The nurse wigged out a bit and informed me that she was calling the Birthing Center to come get me. Whatever lady. I’m just going to lean on this desk and scream that I have to poop. You do what you need to do.

Then HE arrived. No, not the baby – the intern of all interns. The gurney-wheeling boy. Poor kid looked like it was his first day on the job and he was scared shitless to have to wheel this screaming, vomiting pregnant lady all the way up to the third floor. He bumped me into the elevator walls with each and every contraction. I want to go back now and find him and hug him and tell him that with heroes like him, who needs Superman?

I made it into the delivery room and the nurse immediately asked me to lie still while she checked my progress. I was 9.75 centimeters dilated – and it was time to push the baby out. I was somewhat relieved at this news because I thought if I had to labor any longer, I would die and it would have to be known on my tombstone that here lays the lady who is eternally pregnant.

The nurse tried to strap an external monitor to me to keep an eye on the baby’s heartbeat, but I refused. I had to agree to some legal crap saying that I was in full awareness when refusing this monitoring. Like WTF nurse lady? I’ll sign anything at this point, just don’t make me lay here while you try to strap a big belt around my writhing belly.
At first, I was relieved to push. After about 15 minutes though, I realized that this was indeed the worst part of the whole thing. Dilating your cervix to a nice 10 centimeters is no biggy compared to the task of forcing yourself to push out the biggest piece of poop one could ever imagine. A human head pressed against all the entrails and extrails below the bellybutton is by far the worst thing God could have thought up.

Jacob and Angie had to plead with me to push because my progress had really slowed down. I got too comfortable on the bed and just couldn’t force myself to push her little skull against the now forever shut Spout of Glory. I tried pushing in the shower. No luck. I asked Jacob to pray with me. I begged for five more minutes. I cried. I even tried to explain to Jacob, using some very choice words, how much pain I was in. Finally, by around 7am, the doctor came in and broke my water in hopes of moving things along for me. If I didn’t start pushing, Angie said, the doctor would want to take some more drastic interventions. Ok fine. There’s no time like the present, right? For the next thirty minutes, I pushed like nobody’s business. I screamed and pushed and pushed and screamed.

Woosh! Poppy Anne came flying out it one gigantic push at 7:37am on Saturday, February 7, 2009. She was stunning beyond words. Jacob’s eyes were filled with tears as he leaned down to kiss us and touch his daughter for the first time. I looked at him and said, “We did it.”

The moments after Poppy was born were blurry, to say the least. I remember asking if she was a girl. I remember the pain of the torn flesh being sewed back up. I remember the doctor praising my bravery then scolding me for refusing even more medical interventions. I remember tears in Angie’s eyes. I remember looking up at Jacob’s bright face. I remember looking out the window and seeing that the sun was just starting to flood in the room. I remember my pink, slimy, warm baby and the way she felt in my arms. I remember love.

Looking back on that day, I wouldn’t have changed a thing. Everything happened just in the right way, time and place. I am so grateful for the support we had. I felt like the queen of the world for being brave and calm (for the most part) and in-the-moment every step of the way.

Eleven weeks later, I look back at Poppy’s birth and think what a miracle. Truly, the most brave, most spectacular thing I have ever done. Now if only I could pop her back in there for a minute so I could drink this coffee with two hands.

Keeping you in the loop, Internet

I really hope everyone had a beautiful Christmas. I hope you got to be with the people you love (and the ones you kinda don’t) and share meaningful and happy memories together. 

We told our families the baby’s name this week. It was received with joy, thank God. So Happy New Year from the almost-newest-member of the Wadenpfuhl clan,

Poppy Anne

Big and Little

A list of big and little things I am thankful for this year…

1. A record non-fighting, more-time-spent-being-best-friends year with Jacob
2. Burt’s Bees honey chapstick
3. Healing after losing our tiny baby bean in March
4. Having a BIG family with lots of brothers and a pretty cool sister
5. Pre-packaged applesauce
6. A beautiful apartment and thoughtful landlord
7. A job for Jacob
8. Friends who care about my happiness and comfort
9. 3 camping trips
10. A whole year to better myself with teaching, writing, reading and graduating
11. Food in the fridge
12. The continuing development of understanding and empathy in my heart
13. The miracle of a baby daughter

Happy Thanksgiving!

In this post, I admit that my dad my have been right about something, so watch out!

Growing up in a family of eight and living on one pipe-fitter’s income made Christmas time very unusual in my house. I remember one year, we had no presents. Nada. My mom filled six stockings with some candy, but there were no presents waiting under the tree. I remember another year when to our wonderous delight, a mysterious minivan showed up and a married couple, maybe in their late 60s and still unidentified to this day by even my parents, unloaded bags of already wrapped presents for our whole family. I got a generic barbie doll and a minnie mouse sweater. It was amazing.

Every year, because my dad usually got laid off in the winter months, he would sit us all down in December and say this was the year for a “spiritual Christmas.”  We would all roll our eyes and complain because we knew spiritual Christmas meant very few presents. It meant we would wake up on December 25th and have to sit around the living room while my dad read our family’s copy of the story of Jesus’ birth. A spiritual Christmas meant we would hear a lecture about having everything we need in the gift of Jesus and the gift of each other. But to a ten year girl who just wanted a Skip-It, spiritual Christmases sucked. My dad still suggests his idea every Thanksgiving. He would like to do away with presents all together.

This year, Jacob and I find ourselves facing our own spiritual Christmas. We have not a drop of room in our pathetic budget for even a Christmas tree. No presents. No fun bakery to wake up to on Christmas morning. Nada.

I am so grateful to be together, and actually, the gift of one another and the gift of our baby daughter is enough for me. I never thought I’d say that I’ll be glad for a spiritual Christmas. I think I am finally understanding what my dad meant all those years. Having nothing is far better than having no one. Jacob and I can still have wonderful memories of this Christmas season even without the trip to the tree farm and the presents.

But I get ahead of myself. First things first – turkey and mashed potatoes!! And pumpkin pie and sweet corn and green bean casserole and….

Tech week

I am a theater widow. For the past week, I have lost my dear husband to the mystery that is musical theater. When Jacob does a show, tech week is the lonliest 7 days of my life.

Many women can call themselves golf widows, hunting widows, video-game widows or football widows. For each new season, a new diversion takes a man far away from his loving wife into the wild adventures of male recreation.

If only I could be so lucky. I am alone here while my husband is at the theater singing scales and applying his eyeliner.

Ego boost from Indiana

This is why my brother rocks….

Patrick Breslin wrote at 12:39am
i love your blog leanne. it makes me smile all the time. you should write more, its in my interenet routine every time i log on. (you know, facebook, email, espn, crunchycursive, in that order)

Even while away at college, he has time to think of me and read me after ESPN.

Just Because

I made this video for my hubby yesterday.

Mean-hearted, yes. But oh, so cute.

I love going to visit Jacob’s grandpa and grandma. They are so wonderful to me and remind me a lot of my own grandparents, except of course they use actual silverware during meals.

No joke, the following statements were made by various family members last night while we ate curry and played Ludo…

-Your mom wasn’t actually born. She was invented.

-He watches that Google too much.

-My poop was so big that I had to cut it up with a hanger just to flush it down.

[And my personal fav...]

-You are a mean-hearted person, Leanne. You fit right into this family.

Of course I fit in. I also would have thought to CUT UP MY POOP WITH A HANGER.

Gushing.

v. gushed, gush·ing, gush·es

v. intr.

  1. To flow forth suddenly in great volume: water gushing from a hydrant.
  2. To emit a sudden and abundant flow, as of tears.
  3. To make an excessive display of sentiment or enthusiasm

This gushing has come suddenly, so if I’m rambling it is because I am writing faster than I am thinking. If I have poor subject/verb agreement or if I lack consistency in my tense, I apologize. Gushing requires breaking the rules.

First, my husband. I love him and today I think he needs to know it. When I was single, lonely and poor I dreamed of the day when I would be with him forever. I remember our wedding day as – not just because EVERYONE says this – but as the happiest day of my life so far. I could see happiness, smell happiness and feel it all around me that day. It was like pure joy finally had physical form. That’s how my husband makes me feel. Sometimes we are at each others throats. In fact, we probably fight more so and with more passion than any other couple. You can ask anyone of our family members or friends. Fighting all the time. But we are a good match. We can stand up and fight, and then sit down and laugh our hammocks off. He makes me so happy. He is my best friend. Today, I gush over you. In tears and words.

Second, my baby. I miss you so much. Pregnancy is scary, and even though I worried about you every day of those 10 weeks, I knew you would be in my heart forever. Letting you go was very sad and it broke my heart. I’m sure you would have been a superhero kid. I will tell all your future siblings that you were the smartest and prettiest of them all. And you will get first dibs on our pad in heaven.

I cannot say how grateful I am for my life. Mercy is astounding. Everything, I mean EVERYTHING, I have is a result of goodness and kindness. I am not one to say, Why me? Why now? But I admit, I have asked these questions in recent months. I could not be more grateful for all the good things I do have in my life. I could not be more grateful for the beauty and the strength that I have because of the rough things, the ugly things. Life is so real, and I guess that’s what makes it beautiful. Sadness, joy, love – these things make life tangible, real. I am grateful for all of it.

Gushing terminated.

I have no words.

grandma-jacob-leanne-gramps-3-26-2007-6-24-30-am.jpg

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