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I was in a pretty serious car accident back around mid May. I'm just now getting things together again. Hope to catch up with everyone soon! XOXO Sam

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I got a new job back in February (the month before I had baby #2) and it sounded like the dream job, specifically since I am able to work from home. So many people tell me "gee ,you are so lucky you can work from home and stay with your kids". Trust me, it's not all it's cracked up to be. Have you tried putting in a full 8 hours of work with a 5 year old and a newborn in the house. It's next to impossible. I swear I get less housework done now than when I was working from an office five days a week. Not to mention I get NO BREAK from my kids. I love them to death and want to be around them but literally 24/7? Holy cow. I miss going into an office sometimes. I miss the adult interaction. (no, not that kind of interaction you pervs! LOL) Anyways, starting next week both kiddos are going to my mother in laws three days a week. We are going to pay her of course. I just can't deal with it anymore. Some of my friends think I'm nuts for wanting to send them away a few days a week while I work. I don't think anyone can judge until they have walked a mile in my shoes.....

I had my baby!

Well I have to say that either eggplant parmesan really works or it was a super super freaky coincidence. Friday night (February 29th, her due date) we went to an italian place around the corner and I had eggplant parmesan. That was around 8:30. I woke up halfway around 2:30 or 3 thinking that I was feeling some lower abdomen pains but didn't think it was contractions since they are typically suppose to start at the top of your belly. Finally at 4 am I decided that they were probably contractions since they were beginning to get stronger and a little more painful. At 5am I told my hubby that we needed to start packing things up because I was pretty sure I needed to get to the hospital. We gathered everything up and packed the things and our 5 year old in the car and headed to the hospital. I checked into a room at 6:15 and at 6:30 when they checked me I was 4cm. At that point they broke my water and my contractions went from slightly painful to unbearable. LOL I told them to get me drugs. When they broke the water they noticed there was meconium (sp?) in it already and that had them just slightly concerned. They wanted to be sure the baby didn't breathe any in when she took her first breath so they explained that they would bring her head out and suction her well before they pulled the rest out. About 30 minutes after they broke my water they put me on oxygen. They said the little one was a bit unhappy and I needed to be on it? I didn't argue. 30 minutes after that I finally got my epi. I guess that was around 7:30. It was easy sailin after that. I could feel my contractions but they didn't really hurt. They were just uncomfortable. At 10:20 the doc came in and said it was time to start pushin. I pushed a total of nine times and her head came out. That's when things got a little dicey. Not only did they need to suction her because of the meconium but her cord was wrapped tightly around the neck. They suctioned her good and cut the cord and unwound it. The nurses rushed her off. The doctor started to do the whole deliver the placenta thing and I noticed she wasn't crying. I started to freak. The nurses told me she wasn't breathing but not to worry! WTFEver! They stuck a tube down her throat and started breathing for her. Finally after about 5 minutes she started breathing on her own. Probably the scariest moment of my life. I couldn't even speak I was so scared. I just had tears streaming down my face and Luis was just wide eyed and teary. He didn't know what to do or think either. After she started breathing on her own all was hunky dory! She was 8lbs 1oz and 20.5 inches long, so considerably larger than my other daughter was. I got a second degree perennial tear and a small vaginal tear while delivering her. It sucks ass. lol I also had something really weird happen to one of my eyes. I don't remember the medical term but basically one of my muscles in my left eye isn't working properly now and it's imparing my vision. I was seen by a specialist yesterday and they are going to keep an eye on me. They think it is some type of palsey and are hoping it will go away on it's own. If it doesn't get better or gets worse in the next two months then I will go in for an MRI to see if it's specifically something neurological. At least, I think that was how the doctor described it and what he said. Scarlett has also been to her pediatrician as well.She has a "twitch" and the doctor thinks it may be seizures. last Friday we had tons of tests done at the hospital. An EEG and a sonagram on her brain as well as tons of bloodwork. So far all tests have come back negative. She has an appointment with a neurologist on the 17th of this month. Please say a prayer for us. Anyways, she slept from 1am to 8:30 this morning and I was VERY happy about that. Let's just see if it was a one time thing or if she will repeat the process.
Well folks, I'm coming to the end of my pregnancy. It's a bit bittersweet. I'm ready for it to be over but at the same time sad, knowing that this is the last one. I've got a lot going on right now. I put in my resignation at work yesterday because I have accepted a new job offer that will allow me to work from home full time. It's a little scary to be doing all of this in my last few weeks of pregnancy but at the same time very exciting! I'm one of those people that pretty much just closes my eyes and jumps in hopes that I land on my feet. lol Anyways, I've tried to be on a little more lately and hopefully I will be back a lot more after I start the new job and have this baby!!!! Hugs and Kisses to all of you that don't forget about me.~ Sam~ BeerQueen forever! lol
This pregnancy has really taken it's toll on me. I am on partial bedrest from here on out. I still have 8 weeks left! I can't stand it but I have to be careful. This kid keeps trying to make an early entrance. She needs to stay in there just a little longer. :o) My other kiddo is sick as well an has been since Christmas Eve day so things have been a bit chaotic here. If you get a chance,send some get well and stay put vibes my direction. I could use them. lol

19 Weeks today

Almost at the halfway point! _______________________________________________ Your baby weighs about 8 1/2 ounces, and he measures 6 inches, head to bottom — about the length of a small zucchini. His arms and legs are in the right proportions to each other and the rest of his body now. His kidneys continue to make urine, and the hair on his scalp is sprouting. This is a crucial time for sensory development: Your baby's brain is designating specialized areas for smell, taste, hearing, vision, and touch. If your baby is a girl, she has an astonishing 6 million eggs in her ovaries. They'll dwindle to fewer than two million by the time she's born. How your life's changing: You're just a week shy of the halfway mark. You may notice some achiness in your lower abdomen (perhaps extending to your groin) or even an occasional quick, sharp, stabbing pain on one or both sides, especially when you change position or at the end of an active day. This is round ligament pain, and it's caused by the stretching of the muscles and ligaments that support your growing uterus. It's nothing to be alarmed about, but if the pain is persistent and continues even when you're resting, or is severe or accompanied by cramping, call your practitioner.

15 weeks yesterday

At around 4 inches long, crown to rump, your baby now weighs about 2 1/2 ounces. He's busy inhaling and exhaling amniotic fluid, which will help develop the air sacs in his lungs. His legs are growing longer than his arms now, and he can move all his joints and limbs. That means his hands are more functional, too. Sweat glands are appearing, and although his eyelids are fused shut, he can sense light. If you shine a flashlight at your tummy, he's likely to move away from the beam. There's not much for your baby to taste at this point, but his taste buds are beginning to form. And if you have an ultrasound, you may be able to find out whether your baby's a boy or girl! (Don't be disappointed if it remains a mystery, though. Nailing down the sex depends somewhat on how clear the picture is and the position of your baby during the ultrasound; he may be curled or turned in such a way as to keep you in suspense.)

14 weeks today

Today is a huge benchmark for me and my baby! I am officially in my second tri-mester and can worry a little less now that the chances of misscarriage are a lot less significant. Thank goodness! 14 weeks: Head to bottom, your baby's 3 1/2 inches long — about the length of a lemon — and weighs about 1 1/2 ounces. Her body's growing faster than her head, which now sits upon a more well-defined neck. By the end of this week, her arms will have lengthened and will be in proportion to the rest of her body. (Her legs still have some growing to do, though.) She's starting to develop an ultra-fine, downy covering of hair all over her body (called lanugo). Her liver starts secreting bile this week, a sign that it's already functioning properly, and her spleen starts contributing to the production of red blood cells. She's also producing and discharging urine into the amniotic fluid, a normal process that she'll keep up until birth. You still can't feel your baby's movements, but her hands and feet (which are now half an inch long) are more flexible and active. Thanks to brain impulses, her little facial muscles are getting a workout as she squints, frowns, and grimaces. She can grasp now, too, and she may be able to suck her thumb
http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/meast/08/22/iraq.boy/index.html BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) -- Five-year-old Youssif is scarred for life, his once beautiful smile turned into a grotesquely disfigured face -- the face of a horrifying act by masked men. They grabbed him on a January day outside his central Baghdad home, doused him with gas and set him ablaze. It's an act incomprehensibly savage, even by Iraq's standards today. No one has been arrested and the motive remains unknown. In a war-ravaged city torn by sectarian violence and marked by acts of vengeance, this attack's apparent randomness stands out as an example of what life has become in a place where brutality -- even against young children -- is a constant. "They dumped gasoline, burned me, and ran," Youssif told CNN, pointing down the street with his scarred hands where his attackers fled. See photographs of Youssif before and after the attack » As he sucked his thumb, he repeated, "I was burning." He tried to put the flames out himself. It looks as though this boy's face melted and then froze into rivers cutting through swollen hard flesh. It's hard to see the energetic outgoing child his parents describe beneath the sullen demeanor that defines Youssif today. "He's become spiteful, I am not sure why," said his mother, Zainab. "He is jealous of everyone. If I say the slightest thing to him, he cries. He's sensitive." Watch the mother describe how she cries at night wracked with guilt » Even things like eating have become a chore. His face contorts when he tries to shovel rice into his mouth, carefully angling the spoon and then using his fingers to push the little grains through lips he can no longer fully open. He has also become jealous of the baby sister he used to dote on. "I sit sometimes at night and cry," Zainab said, her voice heavy with guilt. "If only I hadn't let him go outside, if only I hadn't let him play." It was on January 15 that masked men attacked her boy, their identities still unknown. Zainab said she was upstairs at the time. "I heard screaming. I thought someone was fighting or something," she said. She ran downstairs, saw her son and fainted. When she came to, she barely recognized her child. "His head was so swollen, you couldn't see his eyes, and his nose was pushed in." "There was blood," she added, shuddering slightly. "The skin was melted off." He spent two months in the hospital recovering from the severe burns. These days Youssif spends most of his time indoors, in front of the computer. It's only then that traces of the 5-year-old in him emerge. "He can't play outside with the other kids," Zainab said. "The other day they were playing, and he came in crying. I asked him, 'What's wrong?' and he said, 'They won't play with me because I am burned.'" She said he once wanted to be a doctor and he loved kindergarten. "He used to be the one who would wake me up every morning, saying let's go to school," Zainab recalled. She coaxed him to tell me the few words he knows in English. "Girl, boy, window, fan," he said, his voice barely audible, the words barely intelligible. Doctors told the family there is little more they can do to help Youssif. The family can't afford care outside Iraq. So Zainab has taken a massive risk by telling her story to the world. Her husband works as a security guard, and it's too dangerous for him to talk to the media. "I'd prefer death than seeing my son like this," Zainab said. All she wants is for someone to help her little boy smile again. Helping Youssif No aid organizations have taken up Youssif's cause at this point. CNN and CNN.com will keep you updated if this changes.
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