21st
January
2008
Posted in: Blog: Life with Lucy, Local Shop n' Dine, Sweet Sites, babies n' kids, baby gear, breastfeeding, crafts, events, family, labour&delivery, labour&delivery, local, mind madness, moms&dads, play, pregnancy, pregnancy, resource, restaurant, shopping, the outside world, unique, work
I’ve spent an eye-crossing amount of time updating and adding to the links section the past week or so. They desperately needed to be done to preserve my sanity, and also in response to what Mr. Google says people are looking for (namely: stuff to do, places to go, and birthday party centres — all for Durham).
Things are now split into what I hope are easier-to-navigate categories for y’all:
Durham links: The main entrance, also found on the right-hand toolbar over there, and directly above, under the logo
Places to play: Municipal recreation programs, indoor gyms, dance, birthday party centres
Stuff to do: Get out of the house with grown-ups (including, of course, Durham Mom’s Night Out!), Early Years Centres, public libraries, event listings, travel/tourism links
Durham daycare/nannies: Places to find childcare, resources
Safety and support: Recalls, breastfeeding, car seat safety checks, postpartum depression, parenting etc.
Local businesses and mompreneurs: List of consignment stores, baby gear, online sales, local entrepreneurs
Health: Labour, fitness, beauty
Fave Canadian retailers: The Eh! online stores we love the best
Coming soon: Baby shows, crafts and photography. Got any to add?
Have a site you love you want listed? A category to suggest? Business to add? Leave a comment or drop me an email. These are ever-expanding.
Enjoy!
21st
June
2007
Posted in: Local Shop n' Dine, Product Reviews, Sweet Sites, labour&delivery, labour&delivery, labour&delivery, moms&dads, pregnancy, pregnancy, pregnancy
Like most new-parents-to-be, Eric and I took a pre-natal class at our local hospital.
(I wrote about it here and here.)
I remember being entranced by the other bellies in the room, all about the same rotundness as mine. And being in complete denial about how the baby was going to come out of me — more specifically, how a watermelon was coming out of an area most definitely not watermelon in size.
I was absolutely, 100% terrified. And my legs were crossed vey tightly.
And not once did I ever entertain the idea of giving birth without drugs. Because I am a wimp with ZERO pain tolerance. But at least I recognize it (which is why I waddled into the birthing suite panting for them. Eric hadn’t even put my bag down yet and I was huffing to the nurses to page Dr. Druggie, and when that needle slid into my back it was like the best
piece of food my lips had ever touched, the best glass of wine except it washed over my whole body like I imagine an orgasm would feel, but not like I know what that’s like because my father reads this site. Hi Dad!).
Even with the knowledge that I’d be numb from the waist down as soon as medically possible, I still greatly benefited from Valerie’s exceptional class. You can only glean so much knowledge from other moms and the scary Internet, so learning about the different labour stages and breathing exercises and contraction positions was excellent.
It took some of the fear away, because it was mostly fear of the unknown.
And even though my drug plan worked out, we all know how unpredictable labour can be, so I’d have been prepared for the worst. And the worst in my books was delivery with no meds.
Val also covered C-section and home deliveries, natural childbirth, recovery, what to bring to the hospital, birth plans and more — it wasn’t the stereotypical hee-hee-whoo stuff from TV.
The Durham Lamaze Association runs all kinds of public and private classes throughout the Region. Check them out at www.durhamlamazeassociation.com. Val and I are still in touch, and she’s a fabulous resource for before and after birth. Reach her at sandv@sympatico.ca or 905-723-7373.