Sunday, December 9, 2012

A Show of Fours

We're heading into the final countdown. We have less than four weeks left until our due date, and we could not be more excited. Nor could we be more overwhelmed.

In honor of our four weeks, I am posting a few lists so as to further your invasive insight into our personal lives, which I inevitably and disturbingly extend to everyone on a regular basis.

Four things we look forward to losing in four weeks:
1. Beth accidentally bumping her belly into her surroundings.
2. Heartburn, muscle aches, exhaustion, sore feet, etc.
3. People randomly touching Beth's belly.
4. Sleep. Losing sleep can be a good thing.

Four things we look forward to gaining in four weeks:
1. A baby girl who will be as beautiful as her mommy is. Please see above photo.
2. Fun toys to play with (this will not be me. maybe.)
3. A captive (and immobile) tiny audience for storytime.
4. A family of three that will rock the world.

Four things we need within the next four weeks:
1. A way to ensure our baby girl looks NOTHING like her father. Ever.
2. A stroller, a car seat, a pack-n'-play, and a bassinet. Might be time for us to spend some dough...
3. Finish our birthing and labor classes.
4. To find a pediatrician and get insurance blech set up.

We're coming close to the end now, so stick with us.
We'll be back next time, same Bat-time, same Bat-channel...

P.S. A huge thank you to all who have been so generous in shower gifts! We appreciate your support and the gifts! And I promise that any and all toys given to us will only be semi-played-with by the time the baby girl gets here. Scouts' honor.



Monday, November 19, 2012

The Tragedy of the Third Trimester

Pregnancy is the perfect torture.

In the beginning, pregnancy is exhausting. It's like your wife has the flu for three months.

In the middle, hope springs eternal. There's a reason they call it the "honeymoon phase". Sicknesses subside and everything is sunshine, daisies and Pikachus.

But Pregnancy isn't over yet, and She is not satisfied with a happy ending. That's when the third trimester strikes.

Beth is a zombie again. She's exhausted. Today, she napped for two and a half hours, and she's still ready for more. She's a voracious sleeper once again, and the pains, nausea, and discomfort are back, like acid reflux after Mexican food. Only now her sole source of relief... lies in a delivery room and several helpings of extreme painkillers. The painkillers may or may not happen.

Needless to say, this is the shirt I will be wearing the day of Penelope's arrival:
I approve this message.
We're both still excited. For slightly different reasons, though.

P.S. Beth is having another ultrasound tomorrow. We'll post pics, cuz we're invasive and creepy like that.

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

A Good Father, or Something like It

I wrote this piece for an introspective writing class I'm taking. Felt as though I should share:


I wasn’t very old when I began to notice that something about my life was different from those around me. Throughout school and the early years of my social existence, I slowly came to the realization that my parents were different from others. A friend I made in third grade brought this fact into stark focus. He lived with his grandparents as a stowaway child in the midst of a retirement community. The neighborhood’s regulations disallowed children, which forced him to stay constantly inside and subsist on television and video games. His mother was never to be seen, and I was never sure if she was still alive or just neglected him entirely. His father was, at best, an inconsistent and shady figure in my friend’s life, as he managed to neglect basic parental responsibilities such as holding a steady job in exchange for a hefty amount of smoking dope. More often than not, I found their father-son roles reversed, with a father that refused to be an adult. My friend grew up with grandparents that cared for him and in a home that loved him, but I couldn’t help but realize that something was different. My friend eventually moved out of my life, but I’ll never forget the lesson that I learned because of his misfortunes. It was such a contrast to my own childhood that it has etched into my mind the greatest purpose parents can achieve, merely to be there for their children.
            As I have matured, I’ve often felt that I knew how to be a parent, and it was always my dream to have my own family. While my musings and philosophizing about being a father may have been no more profound or correct than an ape contemplating the stars and galaxies, the fact remains that I always felt confident in the face of fatherhood. That all changed in May, when my wife received a positive result in a take-home pregnancy test. Immediately, doubt lifted its ugly head and let out a derisive snort. “You’re no father,” it chuckled. For a moment, I believed the idea. For only a moment, I sank into a fearful despair. Yet, in the darkened recesses of my mind, a timid voice cried out. “Yes, I am!” I believed that voice. I reflected on my own childhood, and on the examples that it gave through my own parents. At that moment, I realized an indelible truth. I know that I will be a good father, because of the love, support, and teaching that my parents gave me.
            My parents have never been perfect. They sometimes had to scrape and sidle by when it came to providing for my siblings and me. I saw many of the struggles that it takes for one human being to guide and raise another. On the other hand, I witnessed a great amount of unconditional love and caring, which nourished far better than material goods. One particular method my parents used to convey this love was by attention and quality time. During my early teenage years, my father would spend hours outdoors with my brothers and myself, both having a catch with us and hitting pop flies for us to field. Even though he had countless projects to pursue and a hundred other worries and concerns, he rarely hesitated to give me a large portion of his time, and by so doing, show outwardly his inward affection and love. Because of those times in my youth, I have never felt without love or concern. By remembering the importance of love and attention, I will be a good father.
            When it came to expectations, my parents were always very open and accommodating. They tried never to allow me to achieve less than my full potential, but did so in a non-invasive manner that allowed me free reign to seek out my own way of accomplishing goals. They allowed me to be a child, to have imagination and to seek for the Neverland, or something like it. One goal they did gently teach me to work for was to serve a full-time mission for my church. I sought for this goal, but in the summer of 2007, this goal seemed beyond my reach. I was nearly denied my ability to serve a mission; instead of outright denial though, my mission was merely delayed. Nearly a year would lapse in the interim. It was a very dark period for me, and I struggled in several areas of my life. I strangled most ties with old friends, and crept deep into video games to lessen the pains around me. I kept a shoddy job at a nearby bookstore, and wondered if I ever would really go on my mission. One dark, cold winter morning I reached a low point. I turned to my father and told him how I wasn’t even sure I would go on my mission and that I felt I’d missed my chance. I didn’t fear a violent response, but I did expect disappointment or something similar. Without missing a beat however, my father simply said, “Okay.” He responded in such a supportive way, and I found tremendous strength in his response. I felt okay for feeling this way, and I felt a strong support I had forgotten existed. In my vacuum of self-doubt and numb-mindedness, my father’s reaction was a beacon of light and rejuvenation. It helped me wake up, and throw off the weights keeping me bound. In spite of my fears, I did serve a full-time mission. I learned and grew during those two years in ways and depths that I would not have comprehended had I neglected my goal and stayed home. My father showed me that sometimes help is more important than right and wrong. By keeping me grounded in my roots, my father helped support my own fledgling growth.
            Finally, arguably the most important role for a parent to fulfill is that of teacher and mentor. Whether it is instruction on mundane grammar rules, or guidance that helps one to realize their purpose and joy in life, parents are required to teach and direct their children to those things that will bring happiness and fulfillment. Throughout my childhood, my parents bombarded me with lessons and learning opportunities. I can vividly remember watching my favorite movie, Star Wars. Just after Darth Vader chopped off Luke Skywalker’s hand, Vader offers his recently revealed son a choice. He can join him, live, and rule the galaxy with his father. Luke, however, opts to jump off the catwalk into an abyss. As he fell through the air, my mother suddenly blurted out, “See? Even though he could die, he still is choosing what he knows is right.” When she initially did this, I wanted to slap my face in exasperation. How silly of my mother to adhere a quaint, homemade lesson to this master epic of galaxies and war. However, I still remember that lesson to this day. In whatever way they found possible, my parents taught and instructed me to prepare me for life as an adult, in which I’d have my own tough decisions to make. To be a good father, I will teach my children as well.
            John Wilmot once said, “Before I got married I had six theories about bringing up children; now I have six children, and no theories.” I am in a similar pickle; I am full of theories, but no results. However, when confronted with challenges in the present, people instinctively look to their past for answers. In my challenge of being a good father to my child, I have a great past to draw upon. I have the examples of my parents, who raised me with love, support and instruction. I know to spend time with my daughter. I know to allow her to find her own way and to be supportive. I will cherish watching her fulfill her own dreams, use her imagination, and find her Neverland, or something like it. I will be a great father, and I can’t wait to get started.

Thursday, September 27, 2012

Of Bumps and Jumps and Things They Don't Tell You


Holy Santa Claus shirt, Batman!!!

Beth has popped.
See? Told ya. Her baby bump is no longer a meager paunch, it is a full-blown bump. We're both grateful because before it was hard for outsiders to tell if she was actually pregnant or just gaining weight. Now there's no argument. At least, no argument among those more observant than a dead sea cucumber.

In the midst of this bump, there've been some jumps. And some kicks. Oh, have there been kicks. Sometimes they come about as a response to my voice, which is kinda cool. I speak, and my daughter roundhouse kicks my wife's uterus. Goal achieved. Even without my help, Penelope is seeking to establish a reputation as an amazing pre-natal soccer star. And Beth probably has internal hemorrhaging from said kicks. The "guilt trip your child" list grows ever longer in Beth's favor. And these things are to be expected.

What I didn't expect were all of MY changes. And I don't just mean gaining ten pounds. Let me see if I can illustrate...

I've never been one to cry or get emotional. I mean, like anyone, there are times when I would be touched, especially by emotive music or spiritual things. But today I realized that I've been getting choked up quite a bit over the past few weeks. Over silly, trivial things.

I choked up thinking about taking my daughter to Disneyland. I choked thinking about her first Hallowe'en, or her first Christmas when she knows about and believes in Santa Claus. I choked up hearing the Star Wars theme and a Jason Mraz song I associate with Penelope now ("I Won't Give Up"). And I got choked up when I saw a little girl and her daddy at the Fiesta Olive Garden. I even wanted to use the word "cute" to describe her, all wrapped up in pink and frill. She was so tiny and cute. I felt like a estrogen-laden, tree-hugging sap. And that's putting it fairly mildly.

As it turns out, what they don't tell you about pregnancy could fill a few dozen books. One of these hidden facts is that when you are a guy living with a pregnant woman, you start to... change... Hormones and chemicals re-align. Your body starts pumping stuff it really shouldn't, estrogen being a case in point. These chemicals and hormones serve to forcefully calm down the macho manly man within said guy, and make him into a blubbering mess. It's possibly a process to help the man acclimate to being nurturing to an infant, rather than trying to play four-square with it.
Not, in fact, a sport involving newborns.
So now the slightest thing can choke me up. The Disney castle sequence before films. The Indiana Jones theme. Seeing a toddler babbling and hopping through a restaurant. Things that make me realize that I'm becoming a father, and that not only do I get to raise a child now...

I get to be a kid myself again.

... except, with more crying involved.




Saturday, September 1, 2012

Meanwhile, one month later...

So we're having a girl. At once I'm validated, ecstatic, exuberant, and...

Scared the hell out of my mind.

A girl. How in the world do I raise a girl? It's a daunting task for a guy who has only brothers and very few cousins growing up.

Well, to be honest, I know how to raise a girl. I just love her mother completely. And her, of course. But it's still a daunting task for a man whose every problem or obstacle in life can be dealt with by a Star Wars quote. Now, as several keep reminding me, she will be her own person (I am EXTREMELY excited to see who she will become) and like her own things. BUT they will probably be girly things. And girly things and I don't get along so well.
This may not bode well for my sanity...
Her name is going to be Penelope Mae Mosey. It's an amazing name, Beth and I are extremely proud of it, and anyone who says otherwise is a git. I keep reminding Beth that I do actually have a chance to change that name when she is blessed. However, I fear for my life should I go rogue and name my baby daughter something to the effect of Door. Or Leia. Yeah, I'm fairly certain I'd lose an eye or an ear for the name Leia Kenobi Mosey. Bad idea.

At this point, Beth is doing pretty well, considering the horrors Penny has put her through thus far. On average, she voids her stomach contents (that's a fun way for saying something nasty) about once a week. So that's good. Oh! and she'd hate for me to say this, but she's also actually gained weight. And I've lost a tad. Huzzah!

We've begun to feel Penelope kicking. Or clawing. Or headbutting. It's really hard to tell what she is in reality doing because she moves a LOT. Apparently Beth has a trapeze installed in her uterus for our little acrobat. When we were in the midst of the latest ultrasound, Penny was upside down. Not only that, but she refused to show her face to the camera. She could be shy. Or the biggest drama queen ever. Come to think of it, that is a lot like Beth when she doesn't have any makeup on...

Little Penelope Mae Mosey.

In other news, Beth has been... growing. Her belly, yes. But also her ankles and her feet. She likes to call them her cankles, as they can become one conjoint mass. Admittedly, she really shouldn't have worn heels the other day, and she paid the price. It was almost a week before her feet deflated to their proper size and shape. Boy am I glad for small favors. Like a Y-chromosome.

Mommy is great. Baby is great. Daddy is... rocking back and forth in the corner.

Sunday, July 29, 2012

Of Magic Pills, Beasts, and Weight Loss

I haven't written in a long while, because I've felt there hasn't been anything really worthy of a blog post. I have been convinced otherwise, by a surprising fan base (who knew a guys' view on pregnancy would be enjoyed by anyone?) and a persistent voice in the back of my head that sounds suspiciously like my wife. Thus, here I am, writing an entry on what has transpired in the past three weeks.

Remember those magic, overly expensive pills I mentioned in my last post? Well, we ended up acquiring said pills. They really do help. On our trip to San Diego, they worked wonders in helping Beth retain not only her energy, but also her food.

... oh. I forgot to mention! We took a four-day trip to San Diego, and we definitely splurged a little bit. We stayed at some illustrious hotels, and ate at some splendid restaurants. We walked the streets of San Diego, and I let out the amateur/wannabe photographer within me to play. I didn't end up getting as many shots of San Diego as I would've liked, since we actually had to buy the camera our second day in the city.

We visited the beach.

On our way to the Grand Central Cafe.

View of the city from our FIRST hotel room.

SeaWorld!!

A mammal after my own heart.














Our trip was a lot of fun. And it was only possible because of the amazing pills Beth has.

Anyway, about those pills. Apparently, one of the side effects of these pills is constipation. Hard. Core. Constipation. And this does not mix well with my wife. It brings her some intense pain and anguish, which she says it's just "pushing practice". Or maybe that's what I say.

Now Beth is confronted by a choice. Either she can vomit and be extremely tired, or she can be constipated. Pretty lame. We've decided we'll have a LOT to hold over Scrump's head in guilt trips.

As another update, I'm changing my diet, and my goal this week is to start running again. Why? One of us is pregnant. The other has gained twelve pounds in the past three months.

Not good.

Sunday, July 8, 2012

Day Number Ninety-nine

I cannot believe that we've been pregnant for nearly one-hundred days.

Yes, I said "we've". For those of you uninformed, pregnancy is a two-person job. I'm not talking actual conception here, I mean pregnancy itself. I have absolutely no idea how some women can do this on their own (any women who have - you have my utmost respect).

At this point in our pregnancy, things are just beginning to settle, in a myriad of ways. Some days, we can believe we're going to be parents. Other days, not so much. But that fact does seem to ring more true now. Especially since... Beth is getting a belly! I have to keep reminding her that she is, in fact, pregnant and not just getting chunky. I also have to constantly remind her that this is, in fact, worth it.

Other than these things settling into our psyches, we've really begun to settle into a routine. Beth's routine is to sleep and rest (vomiting is hopefully gone, thanks to the 6 dollars-per-pill miracle drug our OB/GYN prescribed her. which she plans on using sparingly. thank goodness.).

My routine is, apparently, to lose sleep, clean, and gain the weight Beth is losing. Joy.

Sunday, June 17, 2012

A Study in De-Fooding

"I might actually upchuck while you're writing this. Just heads-up."

My wife just said these exact words to me. We're sitting on our couch, and I just finished finding an appropriate title for this entry, thanks to slangdictionary's thesaurus.

Indeed, these past few weeks have been rather "urpy". As hormone levels and body functions are scaling off the charts at both ends, my poor wife has been voiding her meals at an increasing rate. But I'm getting ahead of myself. Let's start at nearly the beginning...

First off:

Pregnancy = super powers

     Beth has changed. She's... different. During the day, she works as a mild-mannered teacher/makeup designer/babysitter. At night, however, she becomes... Expecto-Woman! Able to sleep long naps in a single stint (also able to sleep pretty much anywhere. really, anywhere. trust me.). Her superpowers are amazing.

     Like her sense of smell. When I do dishes, or make fragrant foods... she knows. When you pass gas, chances are she knows that you have before you do. Walls, doors, air fresheners... these barriers to the olfactory process are no match for Expecto-Woman and her radioactive nostrils of justice and pre-natal power.

     In addition to an amazingly developed sense of smell, she's acquired some rather random "kryptonites" in the food world. One prime example is her sudden, and rather violent, distaste for bell peppers. Even just the thought, or the smell, of bell peppers sends her stomach into barrel rolls that would make the Blue Angels jealous. Much like our dear Superman, Beth's kryptonite is familiar. Though not shards of her previous homeworld, bell peppers were once a nearly-daily staple of her diet. Unfortunately, they are no longer such. Also unfortunately, because I, in fact, live with Expecto-Woman, I cannot partake of said kryptonite...

     Which is why I've had lunch at Chipotle every day for the past week.

We still refer to the fetus (or the parasite, as I prefer to call it) as Scrump, sometimes to a fault. It's hard to maintain a non-gender specific nickname. Scrump seems masculine, yet I insist that we're having a girl.

Names! Random, I know, but these are the names we've been pondering and thinking on.

Pink = Penelope Mae Mosey
Blue = Christian Alden Mosey

They're solid names, and I think we've settled on them. I was trying to convince Beth that, should we have boy-girl twins, that we should name them Luke and Leia.

She said no.

I tried my darnedest to be the bigger person and go for a compromise, like any sane human being would. I said, "What about their middle names? Luke and Leia as middle names?"

... she said no. Again.

I'm beginning to think she doesn't like Star Wars. Alas, however, we are not having twins. There is but one fetus.

But I digress...

Beth vomits. A lot. What more can I say? She vomits at night, she vomits in the morning. She vomits before eating, she vomits after eating. To be honest, she hasn't been "disturbing the waters" as often as some expectant mothers. She keeps telling me, "I don't like throwing up," yet I find myself wondering if anyone really does...?

Anyway, her digestive system has taken a kick to the pants, and she's having a hard time coping. All I can do is worry and work on this ulcer that my mission started. I feel utterly helpless. Apparently, my only job is to try to feed her when she won't eat, clean up her puke, and hold her while she falls asleep. It's like Daddy Boot Camp.

Maybe I'll be more ready for Scrump than I thought.

Sunday, June 3, 2012

Eight Weeks and Three Days (or My Journey in the Land of Estrogen)

I am fairly certain I was the only official Y-chromosome in the entire building. Nurses, receptionists, patients, etc. and I was the only member of the "Pee While Standing Club". One needed to merely walk into the waiting room of the Arizona Women's Care to feel the flowing and ebbing tide of estrogen. From the beige-slathered interior walls to the nondescript, existential artwork mechanically gracing the fringes, I felt that even the office itself was female.

I was alone. Horribly outnumbered. Even my wife was against me.

I suppose that's a natural occurrence in an office where all five of the lead practitioners are women. I can only hope they don't cycle together. That would be an interesting time of the month in that office.

Smack-dab in snooty Scottsdale.
Anyway, awkwardness aside, the experience Beth and I enjoyed yesterday was amazing. We arrived early that morning, bright-eyed and bushy-tailed. Then we waited, though not for long. Beth went off to give various fluid samples, both from voluntary and involuntary ( AKA very pointy) means. After a lengthy discussion with a nurse practitioner on Pregnancy 101, we were finally ushered into a room with a large, flat-screen television on one wall, a slightly startling set of instruments and cables on another, and a small bed in the foreground with telescoping stirrups. As we waited, our nervousness was palpable. And tangible. And perceptible. And a whole lot of other descriptive words which I leave to your imagination.

Dr. Heathcott rushed in. She was very intense, but also slightly dormant. Her intensity belied a sense of being hurried through a day fraught with appointments and agendas; her dormancy indicated, at least to me, that this was nothing to get her excited. And I felt slightly sorry for her. Sorry that such a jaded attitude is a natural product of someone in her profession. And that she wouldn't share in our sense of wonder and amazement.

Without wasting time, violations of personal privacy were made (which Beth assures me wasn't nearly as invasive as other things women are subjected to in those offices. but i digress.) and there, on the screen was...

A bright little lump. A misshapen, jelly bean-sized lump.
The lump in question.
Thus far I was impressed, but slightly confused. I knew that fetuses are not quite... human? But a jelly bean? A blob? I don't wish to sound ungrateful; I was very happy we found a blob and not blank space. But it was a lumpy little thing, wasn't it? So lumpy, in fact, that I soon thereafter gave him or her a decidedly unflattering nickname: Scrump. (for those of you who are sadly uninformed on Disney movies, Scrump is the misshapen and decidedly ugly little doll that Lilo carries with her in Lilo and Stitch. i have posted a picture for those of you who are thus ignorant.)

From left: Scrump, then Lilo. Go watch the movie if you haven't seen it, ruffians.

I got used to it, I promise. Our doctor pointed out different landmarks in our Scrump, and I began to feel better. She identified the head (which looks rather large), the nubs that will become arms and legs (which look rather diminutive) and the heart (a small, bright seed in the center of the blob). Thus far, the experience had been one of discovery and happiness, but I still had yet to be awed. I was waiting for the goosebump-laden, thrilling moment I was promised.

Then, I saw the heart moving. Pulsing. A glowing beacon shouting to everyone (like Horton's dear friends in Dr. Seuss' story) "I am here! I exist!" Once I was struck by that thought, everything meant something spectacular. Beth and I are going to be parents. This miraculous blob of flesh, tissue, and blood is something we have been privileged and blessed to create together. And though we really have very little involvement or say in the actual physical building of this little Scrump (much to Beth's nauseous dismay), we were able to see, and even listen to, this miniature, frantic heartbeat and respond with joy and wonder.

I'm very excited to meet our Scrump.

Sunday, May 20, 2012

Day Eleven - "Tales of Happiness and 'Whoa!'"

Hard to believe it was eleven days ago that we found out. That's nearly two weeks. In that time, there have been exciting times, scary times, teary times (never by me), and frankly some kinda gross times (mainly caused by my making a big deal out of normal pregnancy things).


My wife and I had decided at the beginning of April that we were going to start trying to have a baby. Embroiled in visions and fears of lengthy processes, fertility clinics, and (literally) swimming in circles, we were never prepared for how easy it would be. Or how fast. Apparently, as my father-in-law puts it, Beth and I have "fruitful loins".


Anyway, all that I have witnessed of pregnancy thus far is:


1. It makes women really tired.


   I mean truly exhausted. Beth has never been much of one to take naps (though she is in constant need and want of one). But recently, she has been exhibiting an amazing ability to sneak in any number of naps in her day. Thus far her record is three naps in one day, which occurred on Saturday. And I don't mean any namby-pamby catnaps. I mean each nap is at least an hour long. It's amazing, and I find myself sometimes being jealous.


2. It makes women very nauseous.


   We all know the phrase. "Morning sickness". First of all, it isn't relegated to just the early hours of the day, so I haven't the foggiest on where that came from. Second, calling it a "sickness" is far too kind, and I feel sugarcoats the true nature of the malady. I don't believe I've ever watched Beth NOT eat this much. Which is saying something, considering her typically dainty appetite since I've known her. I literally have to force breakfast down her throat, an activity that she often finds annoying and I find empowering in an odd, possibly sadistic way. Perhaps it's because I feel forcing her to eat checks off several items on my "caring husband to-do list" (didn't know there's a checklist? there is. it's rather demanding.) I suppose it can be categorized somewhere under my "Take Good Care of My Wife" section.


3. It breeds questions.


   "When are you due?" "How far along are you?" "What gender are you hoping for?" "Have you picked out any names yet?" Blah blah blah. (apparently, it also inspires a veritable cornucopia of "congratulations" or, my personal favorite, the "congrats". i would much rather prefer if people would say "good job" or be genuinely excited.) These are all questions that everybody asks just to seem interested. I should know; they're my standard questions to ask an expecting couple. They're "cotton candy" questions; they're sweet, but without substance. Still, cotton candy questions are preferable to the alternative: the questions I ask myself. "What kind of father will I be?" "Can I teach my child to be righteous and amazing in a world full of vices I fall prey to on a daily basis?" "How can I set an example for my child?" and, the most meaningful question of all: "Will he/she love the important things in life, like Star Wars?"


These thoughts keep me up some nights. Like tonight. And this is only day eleven.


I can do this... I can do this...