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Birthing Bennett

March 25, 2015 by lauren.anvari@gmail.com 3 Comments

Bringing Bennett into this world is the single hardest thing I have been through to date. And honestly, this surprised me.

You see, when I was pregnant with Asher, I felt like I was the poster child for pregnancy. I LOVED being pregnant, I didn’t have any morning sickness and the bigger I got the more comfortable I felt. In fact, I had never felt more beautiful.

Being pregnant with Bennett, was a whole different story. While, I readily admit that compared to what some women go through what I experienced was a walk in the park. Still after such a wonderful and easy first pregnancy I found this one much more challenging. The day I turned 6 weeks pregnant, I threw up twice and then was queasy for several weeks after that, in addition to experiencing strong food aversions. I was so tired, but since I had a super active toddler on my hands, sleep was not something I was able to get enough of, and the little I did get was terrible. I suffered from insomnia and charlie horses, not to mention I would wake up hourly to pee. And my skin! Oh my skin was terrible. My face broke out (which hadn’t even happened to me during puberty) and I had patches of dry flaky skin that just no amount of moisturizing or exfoliating could tackle.

I felt fragile, and uncomfortable nearly the whole pregnancy, so I was hoping for an early delivery. I was more than ready to get this baby out. She had other plans. At 40 weeks exactly I had a bloody show and I got excited thinking that this might be the start of labour, but my due date came and went and the days creeped by. I was becoming increasingly more and more impatient and I felt pressured by everyone to have this baby already. Several nights I had contractions that were fairly consistent for an hour or so and then would simply stop. I was quickly losing all confidence that I had any idea at all what my body was doing.

At 41 weeks I had a None Stress Test (NST) (which I found incredibly stressful), but it turned out that while my fluid levels were on the low side the baby was doing fine. I was only 2 centimeters dilated and about 50% effaced so my midwife stripped my membranes in the hopes of getting things moving and sent me home with instructions to come back in 5 days for another NST if I hadn’t had my baby by then.

So I went home feeling dejected. A part of me was really hoping that they would discover that the baby needed to come out right then and that I’d be induced. The bloody show that I had been having fairly consistently for a week already, picked up and the rest of the day I felt pretty achy. My mom and I went to the mall that evening and walked around but I was becoming increasing more uncomfortable so we headed home. I went to bed around 10:30pm thinking that this could be the night and I woke up at 11:30pm with contractions. I began timing them like I had done several times before during the past week and found that while they were fairly mild/moderate they were pretty consistent and close together. By about 2am the contractions, while still pretty mild were coming 2-3 minutes apart, so I decided to call my midwives to let them know what was going on. After speaking to the midwife on call, Alex, we decided that I should probably head into the hospital since this was my second baby and things could turn a corner quickly. I woke up Raf, finished packing up a few things into my hospital bag, informed my parents and off we went. I was fairly sure that we would be sent right back home, since my contractions were so mild.

We got to the hospital at 3am and Alex checked me and found that I was only 4 centimeters dilated, but that was enough to keep me at the hospital. So, feeling discouraged that this wasn’t going to be a quick labour I settled in for the long haul. Now that I knew this was actually labour I kind of felt like maybe I was a labour rock star. I was totally in control during every contraction. When I felt one coming on, I’d just breathe through it gently. There was no wailing or screaming or crying. It was peaceful, calm, serene. I labored in the shower, on the exercise ball, leaning over the bed and in a birth chair.  The whole time I was thinking to myself, ‘this is going to take forever, these contractions aren’t strong enough to be doing anything.’ I kept thinking about how tired I was and how easy it would be to just get an epidural and go to sleep until it was time to push at which point I told Raf that I felt like I may crack and ask for an epidural and that he was to talk me off the ledge.  Unless I was adamantly insistent, he was not to allow me to get one. He protested but finally agreed.

At around 6am I got into the birth tub.  About 30 minutes later I was told by my nurse, Gabby that Alex thought I was entering transition. I remember thinking, ‘that’s odd because my contractions are still only moderate and isn’t transition the hardest part of labour?’ No sooner had I expressed this sentiment aloud than the next contraction hit me like a ton of bricks. A few more of those and I was begging for drugs and writhing about in the birth tub. All serenity had gone out the window. My student midwife, Michelle, suggested that I get out of the tub and have Alex check my dilation before making any decisions. I felt this was reasonable so I got out and Alex checked me, only to announce that I was 6 cm dilated. ONLY 6!

GIVE ME DRUGS!!!

I was a mess. I was crying and panicky. As each contraction ended I cowered in anticipation of the next, yet there was no escape. I later described it to my Dad like I was standing in front of a stampede of horses and I knew I would be trampled but I couldn’t move, I just had to stand there knowing it would happen, over and over and over.

Alex let me know that she heard my request for drugs, but that she thought I only had 2 or so more hours, which to me felt like she was telling me I would be stuck in this misery for the rest of my life. I kept saying that I couldn’t do it, to which everyone would reply, that I was doing it, which only served to have me scream that I DIDN’T WANT TO DO IT!! Alex suggested I return to laboring in the shower, so I made my way to the bathroom.

I first labored on the toilet for a while, when my body began bearing down on it’s own. After what happened in my labour with Asher I was deathly afraid of my cervix swelling, but I couldn’t prevent my body from pushing. I was reaching a point of total terror. I was utterly and completely terrified of the torture pain. I finally got up to walk the 3 feet to the shower, when a massive contraction hit. I immediately dropped to my hands and knees on the bathroom floor.

I needed drugs! I clung to this thought like a life raft, it was the only thing I could really think about. Alex told me I was doing great and that I was still in control of my contractions. No sooner has she said that, than I lost all control with the next one. My breathing was erratic, I started to bite Raf and probably would have come away with a chunk of his arm, before I remembered miraculously that I needed to relax my jaw. My body was still bearing down and at this point my water broke (although, I didn’t know it at the time).  I began insisting on an epidural. Alex called the anesthesiologist, but said she wanted to check my dilation again while we waited for him to arrive. I made my way back to the bed and she checked me and then promptly announced that I was fully dilated and it was time to push. I went from 6 cm to 10 cm in 20 minutes. I had passed the point of getting an epidural.

So I pushed with every ounce of strength that I had. I’m pretty sure I nearly crushed Rafaan’s fingers, I was gripping them so hard. I had no thought of meeting my baby, only of getting the pain to end. Tears streamed down my face, I was in total and complete agony but after 4 or 5 contractions I reached down and pulled my tiny perfect baby onto my belly.

Bennett Rose Anvari was born on February 27th at 7:25am after 8 hours of labor, weighing in at exactly 7 pounds and measuring 20.5 inches long. Just like her brother before her, she rocked her Apgar test, scoring 9 and 9!

I wish I could say that any thought of the pain of labour immediately vanished when I laid eyes on my daughter, but it didn’t. I felt utterly traumatized and in shock. I was pretty shaken up. While Rafaan cried tears of joy at meeting our little girl, all I could do was shake and sob over what I had just endured as they sewed up my small first degree tear. I slowly came around and was able to marvel at my little girl and what I had just done to bring her here, but it took me a good two days to no longer feel traumatized by the experience. It was rough to say the least, though I can honestly say I’d do it again and I definitely still want to have more children. I am proud of myself for having a completely natural, drug free labour, because ultimately that’s the best and safest thing for both mother and baby (barring any complications). Another one of my midwives told me the next morning that what I experienced she refers to as “transition trash talk.” I’m so thankful to Wisdom Midwifery and the GWU Hospital labor and delivery staff for assisting me and helping me have a natural labour, despite everything I said to the contrary at the time.

In retrospect I think the reason I had such a hard time, was because I had lost confidence in knowing what my body was doing. I didn’t trust myself or my body and labour is such a mental battle in addition to a physical one, that not being in the right head space really had a huge negative impact on how I was able to handle the pain. I also needed to be pulled out of my head more. The first 7 hours were so easy that I don’t think Raf (despite his best efforts) was really prepared to coach me through the last hour like I really needed. Those are two things we definitely need to work on and prepare for next time.

We are so proud to be the parents to not only our beautiful little pistol of a son, Asher, but now to our sweet and cuddly perfection of a daughter, Bennett. We couldn’t have asked for a better addition to our family!

Bennett: 8 minutes old

Bennett: 8 minutes old

Filed Under: My life Tagged With: baby, birth story, child birth, daughter, hospital, labor and delivery, labour, midwife, midwifery, midwives, Natural birth, perineal tear

Introducing: Bennett Rose Anvari

March 15, 2015 by lauren.anvari@gmail.com Leave a Comment

Born: February 27, 2015 at 7:25am.  We are over the moon and settling into being a family of 4!!  Birth story to follow, but here’s a look at our precious bundle, and don’t you just love the look of pride on Asher’s face in that second picture?!  He is totally rocking the big brother thing and is constantly wanting to hug AND kiss the Bennett, never just one, always both.  Be still my heart.

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Filed Under: My life Tagged With: baby girl, birth announcement, daughter, new baby

Anvari Family 2014 in instagram photos

January 12, 2015 by lauren.anvari@gmail.com Leave a Comment

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QGWu9RCU3D4

 

Filed Under: Anvari Chronicles, My life Tagged With: 2014, family, flipagram, instagram, pictures

Asher’s Second Birthday!

December 13, 2014 by lauren.anvari@gmail.com Leave a Comment

My baby is a full on toddler now!  No longer will I be counting the passage of his life in months, but rather YEARS!  How did this even happen?!  Seriously, this is not a rhetorical question.  There is just something about having kids that puts your life in hyper speed.  I feel as though I’ll blink and he’ll be moving out.

We opted out of having a first birthday party for him, but this year, with an impending sibling we decided that we wanted to make a bit of a fuss.  True, he won’t remember it, but he did enjoy it while it took place and that’s what we wanted for him.  We invited 4 other toddlers in his age range and only 3 were able to make it and let me tell you, they were running around having a grand old time.  I honestly, do not know how parents who have massive toddler parties do it!  Our toddler, who has one week of potty training under his belt (more on this soon), wet his pants 3 times with nary a word about it, because he was 1. too distracted to tell us he had to go and 2. having too much fun to care that his pants were soaked.  Oh boy!

I wanted to keep it simple, so I put out a couple of toddler favorite toys, some chalk and chalk board and an aqua doodle and let them run free.  We tried to keep the food all toddler friendly, while also appealing to the adult palate.  We served: cucumber sandwiches, mushroom pâté sandwiches, pb&j sandwiches (cut into dinosaur shapes), vegetable cups with artichoke arugula bean dip (recipe to come), grapes, strawberry banana smoothies, tater tots and vegetable pot stickers.  Everyone but especially the adults, really dug the tater tots!

I made this vegan banana cake (I omitted the rum) with butter cream frosting, and it was pretty good!  It was Asher’s first cake with sugar in it and oddly all he wanted to do was eat the chocolate chips and the cake, which tasted more like banana bread than actual cake but he wasn’t at all interested in the super sweet frosting.  Go figure!

Asher is so lucky to have all these wonderful little friends in his life, and I for one, would lose my mind without their moms!!

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Needless to say, capturing a good photo of multiple toddlers is practically impossible!

Filed Under: Anvari Chronicles, My life Tagged With: birthday party, second birthday party, toddler birthday, toddler birthday party, toddler party

Colds, Sinus Infections and Fevers Oh My!

December 4, 2014 by lauren.anvari@gmail.com 5 Comments

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Asher, Raf and I have all been sick pretty much none stop since the week before Halloween.  It has been a snotty mess around these parts let me tell you!  Asher and I got colds, then Rafaan got a cold and laryngitis (which took weeks to clear up).  Asher was better and snot free for about a week, before the nose faucet and coughing started again,  turns out he had a sinus infection.  The poor guy’s sinuses were so backed up that he actually had mucus coming out of his eye…yea, HIS EYE!  A couple weeks later I promptly followed suit with a cold of my own, which was directly followed by a yeast infection and all this time I’ve been having pretty bad round ligament pain (I’ve ordered THIS puppy, let me know if you’re interested in hearing how it works out), so much so that I’m left hobbling around after a super active albeit sick toddler.  HOW DO TODDLERS HAVE SO MUCH ENERGY WHEN THEY’RE SICK?!

So yea, we clearly have not been having much fun around these parts.  Asher’s sinus infection affected his sleep and caused him to wake up often during the night, which resulted in little sleep for sick and pregnant mommy.

Well, this last time, I said enough is enough, and I took to the web to research ways to kill a cold.  I found something about taking “apple cider vinegar with the mother” that seemed like something I would be willing to try, although I was highly skeptical, but since I was sick of having colds that lasted 10 days I was pretty desperate. This stuff works!  Or at least it did this one and only time I’ve tried it.  I can’t speak to the how well it works in general, but people seem to swear by the stuff.  I haven’t looked for any evidence based research about it but you better believe I’ll be taking it at every hint of a cold from here on out.  I took 2 tablespoons twice a day, morning and evening (roughly 10 hours apart) and after the third dose I noticed a DRASTIC change!  My symptoms were all but gone.  Granted I didn’t start taking it on the first day of my cold, but still, the change was so sudden, I couldn’t help but notice.

Here’s the blog post where I learnt about using this kind of vinegar.  The key is to get Apple Cider Vinegar with “the mother” , which “is made up of the yeasts and fermentation byproducts that are produced when the cider ferments to vinegar, and you should shake the bottle up to evenly distribute it before you use it. The big commercial companies filter it out, because it makes the vinegar look like it’s growing something–which indeed it is.”

Have you had any experience with home cold remedies that actually work?  I’d love to hear about them!

Filed Under: Health, My life Tagged With: apple cider vinegar, cold, fever, home remedy, natural remedy, sick, sinus infection

Announcing…

October 6, 2014 by lauren.anvari@gmail.com Leave a Comment

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Asher’s getting a brand new baby sister and we couldn’t be more thrilled!

From the moment we found out I was pregnant Rafaan was adamant that we were having a girl, so much so that he would refer to me/us as his “girls” and he would tell Asher that he was getting a baby sister.  It was adorable, however I wasn’t convinced.  But slowly he started to wear off on me and I started to think of the baby as a girl, which I would immediately feel bad about because I didn’t want to get attached to the idea of having one over the other when there was a possibility for disappointment.

But lo and behold he was right!!  That makes him two for two and he has even predicted that our third child (should we have one) will also be a girl, but that’s a whole different story.

Filed Under: My life Tagged With: baby girl, baby sex reveal, pregnancy announcement

The Hug

September 17, 2014 by lauren.anvari@gmail.com 1 Comment

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Asher, my sweet, 21 month old boy hugged me tonight UNPROMPTED for several minutes!

My son, is peculiar about touching.  He gets this from me.  Sometimes when he wakes up crying in the middle of the night I am not allowed to touch him, but I can lay beside him and sooth him, it’s the hardest thing for me.  He pushes my hand away when I rub his back, I usually have to force hand holding, and any hugs and kisses that he gives me are only given after I ask him for them and even then are over before I can really relish them.  Don’t get me wrong, he’s an extremely loving and happy child and I can hold and carry him and even cuddle him (sometimes) but he doles out physical affection sparingly.

Well, tonight, after his bath I was getting him ready for bed and I had just put his diaper on and stood him up on the bed so I could help him step into his pajamas, when he pushed them away, leaned into me and pressed his soft chubby cheek to my chest, wrapped his tiny arms around my body as best he could and sighed contentedly.  For a second I wasn’t sure what he was doing, because this LITERALLY has NEVER happened before.  Once I realized it was a hug it then took me another second to relax and enjoy it because I was expecting it to end almost instantly, but it went on and on for MINUTES.  My heart nearly burst.  It was perhaps one of the sweetest moments of parenthood that I have experienced yet.

It’s an interesting thing.  You bring a tiny human into the world, and you love them fiercely, but it seems very one sided (especially at first during the blob stage).  You love and love and love and they take and take and take.  You don’t mind because the love of a parent is selfless love, but a small part of you is desperate for their approval.  To know that you’re doing a good job and that they love you too.  Then one day this perfect little soul will show you that they love you, completely under their own initiative.  It is the sweetest thing.

It’s moments like these that make all the hard times, the sleeplessness, the exhaustion, the I.just.want.to.wring.my.hair times, the I’m.at.my.wits.ends time all melt away.

I always want to remember these moments.

Filed Under: My life Tagged With: 21 months old, affection, hug, hugging, hugs, love, parenthood, son, toddler

Hand, Mouth and Foot Disease – Our Experience

July 24, 2014 by lauren.anvari@gmail.com Leave a Comment

As a parent to a toddler I have experienced my fair share of illnesses, everything from the common cold to pink eye and OFTEN.  It seems like Asher gets sick every other month or so and the next thing I know he has a snot river running down his face.  Well none of that prepared me for Hand, Mouth and Foot Disease (HMFD).

On a play date Asher came in contact with his little friend who was running a fever due to teething (or so was thought) and 2-3 days later he was burning up with a fever of his own.  I wasn’t too concerned, bc he was still running around full of energy.  He was a hot baby, but he didn’t seem like a sick one.  Well, the next day, I got a text from my friend telling me her son had HMFD and immediately I got a sinking feeling in my stomach.  I grabbed Asher, pinned him down, and while he screamed in protest I shone a light into his mouth and was aghast to discover that the entire roof of his mouth was COVERED in blisters (I didn’t get any pictures, but if you’re really curious, a quick google image search will do the trick).  A trip to the pediatrician confirmed that he did in fact have HMFD.  There was nothing to do, but give him medicine for the pain, keep him hydrated and to wait.

It was awful.  I felt like I was losing my mind.  The poor guy couldn’t eat, would barely drink and would sleep so badly it was like having a new-born again.  I resolved myself to giving him pain medicine every 3 hours, alternating between Ibuprofen and Acetaminophen, all through the day and night.  I made him popsicles that he could suck on, I let him have apple juice, I made sure everything was ice-cold and I would let him eat anything he wanted, which was only bread.  And yet, he seemed that he felt little relief. The medicine was keeping his fever down but his mouth and throat were in such pain that he was drooling like a faucet because it was too painful to swallow.  He would wake up from naps howling in pain and shoving his hand into his mouth.  I was helpless.  His feet and hands and bottom broke out in tiny red dots that I felt sure would turn into blisters of their own, but thankfully only a few did.

After 5 days he finally slept through the night again and many of the blisters in his mouth had gone away.  He was finally getting back to his high energy, fun-loving self again. Except, Raf was now 2-3 days into having it himself.  The only saving grace, was that at least I didn’t come down with it too!


HMFD is a highly contagious illness that is caused by a few different viruses.  It presents as a fever accompanied by blisters or a red rash in the mouth, on the hands and feet  and sometimes on the buttocks.  Once you get it, it is unlikely that will ever get it again, UNLESS you either contract is from a different virus than the one you got originally or the virus hides in your cells and resurfaces from time to time (which is extremely rare).  The vast majority of people only get it once and it primarily affects children under 5, but adults can get it if they haven’t been exposed to it before.  Full recovery usually takes 7-10 days with the first week being when a person is most contagious. It primarily spreads through coming in contact with bodily secretions (saliva, nasal mucus, blister fluid, stool) of an infected person and the virus can live in and be transmitted via the stool for a few weeks after the symptoms have gone away, so extra care needs to be taken when changing soiled diapers.  Everyone exposed should be washing their hands often and thoroughly to help prevent the spread of the virus.  The main concern is making sure that anyone infected stays hydrated, which can be especially hard in young children, who may refuse to drink anything.  So get creative, popsicles, ice cream, sorbet, jello, pudding, juice, whatever it takes.

Lastly, HMFD can affect everyone differently.  Some children get blisters all over their hands and feet, yet their mouths hardly have any (if this is your child, count yourself lucky), which generally means they have an easier time eating and drinking.  Other children have the blisters concentrated in their mouths.  While still others may have a nasty breakout on their bottoms as well.

Filed Under: Health, My life Tagged With: Hand Mouth and Foot Disease, HMFD, illness, sick toddler, virus

The Anvari Chronicles: Vafa & Aleah’s Michigan Wedding + Chadwick Cabin

July 4, 2014 by lauren.anvari@gmail.com Leave a Comment

Happy Birthday America!

A couple weeks ago we spent a lovely weekend in Michigan celebrating the union of two dear friends, Vafa and Aleah.  This was another BWC reunion wedding and it was such a joy to spend time with our extended framily.  My older brother Jared, sister-law Sholeh and niece Lua were there and watching Lua and Asher interact was a definite high light of the trip.

Vafa is one of the last in our group to tie the knot and we couldn’t be more happy with who he has chosen to spend his life with.  It is wonderful when your friends marry people who feel like they’ve always been a part of the gang and I just feel so blessed to say that about all the spouses that have joined the gang.  Instant family.  It’s amazing!

After the wedding we drove up to the Chadwick cabin and spent a few days on Lake Clear Water…or is it Clear Lake…either way, it is aptly named.  I have never seen a lake with water so clear, it was literally like looking through glass.  The Chadwicks were so warm and welcoming, we definitely felt adopted!

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Filed Under: Anvari Chronicles Tagged With: BWC, clear lake, family, family trip, friends, Michigan, wedding

The Anvari Chronicles: Sarasota, Florida

June 11, 2014 by lauren.anvari@gmail.com 1 Comment

We recently took a minication to Sarasota, Florida with our BFFs (we lovingly refer to each other as Beefers), Dana, Mike and Kelsey.  In general, we just love being with our Beefers no matter where we are, but Sarasota was just wonderful! It was so beautiful and such a great vacation, perhaps the first truly relaxing trip we’ve taken as a family.  We spent time at both Lido Beach and Siesta Key Beach and both were spectacular!  The sand was super white and really fine and the water was a lovely sea foam green color.  The surf was really gentle and perfect for toddlers at both beachs.  We rented a condo at the Lido Islander that left a little to be desired, but provided everything we needed and was walking distance to the Lido Beach.  We also visited the Big Cat Habitat in Sarasota and the Children’s Museum in Tampa, both of which were awesome and I highly recommend to anyone in the area.  We ate a bunch of delicious food while we were there, but my favorite was the Taco Bus in Tampa, I got the butternut squash quesadilla and it was mouth watering good!  For good eats (with plant based options) in Sarasota I recommend Pho Cali, Isan Thai and Sub Zero Ice Cream.  Asher LOVED the beach, he kept dashing into the surf and then running back out.  He spent his time collecting shells, destroying sand castles as fast as I could build them and putting his head and face directly into the sand.  It was also really fun to see him interacting more with his third cousin and BFF Kelsey, their personality’s are so different, but they are adorable together.  I mean how cute is that kissing video?!

For anyone looking for an awesome beach vacation in the continental US, Sarasota will not disappoint.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5PieZmSNY5k&feature=youtu.be

Filed Under: Anvari Chronicles Tagged With: Lido Beach, Sarasota Florida, Siesta Key Beach, vacation

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