A week off

All too quickly the final days of last year’s leave has ended, reality kicks in and I have to return to work.  It has been good to spend a week with the family, even though we didn’t get half the things done that we had planned to do.  Time just seems to fly past far too quickly, especially where there is a baby and a toddler involved.  Nevertheless we have managed to squeeze in a few things.

Amélie is still a concern to us.  She is putting on weight but seems to be encroaching on the 25th centile line (and not in a positive way) and, more concerning, her reflux is still severe.  You can change her a dozen times in a day (and yourself as least twice!) and she will seemingly be continously soaked through.  Doctors tend to dismiss reflux as a laundry problem but it is more than that.  Lucinda was wearing a new T-shirt on Sunday when she was caught.  The vomit bleached her top, that is not just bringing up a little milk, that is stomach acid.  If that is what it does to a T-shirt imagine what it must be doing to her throat and airways.  The drugs that we have been prescribed should be reducing the stomach acid, would dread to think what it would have done if it had been full strength acid!

Fortunately we have been able to both attend the appointments with the doctor and although he doesn’t seem to think that there is any cause for concern he has finally given us a paediatric referral.  Now that is another strange and convoluted procedure.  First you get the referral from your GP.  They give you a print out with phone number and reference number (among other things); Then you phone the number and quote your reference number and the triage goes through your child’s symptoms;  They then arrange a paediatrician to call you on a given day to go through your child’s symptoms in detail and then if they think the case is deemed worthy they will arrange an appointment to see you (and your child) in person.  Simples!  We will keep you posted!

We also saw the dietician this week, who suggested that we try weaning early but is reluctant to do anything drastic until we have been seen (or spoken to) the paediatrician in case they suggest something for the reflux.  Now Amélie has not shown interest in food in the way that Éowyn did. (Remember the infamous Coconut Macaroon incident?) Nevertheless we took heed and Lucinda gave Amélie her first taste of solid food on Tuesday 25th January: baby rice and water.  She seemed to enjoy it, opening her mouth on cue.  However, she soon had her fill and pushed the spoon away.  I call that a success, especially since she kept it down.

Amélie has achieved a couple of firsts since the last update.  The first first (so to speak) was to roll over.  She has done it twice, once with Lucinda and once with me.  However both times we both have missed it.  Lucinda left her on the bed was out of the room for a moment came back and she was on her front.  I was changing her on the floor, again left the room for a moment and came back and she was on her belly.  Either she rolled or the house fairies are having a laugh with us.

Amélie’s other first since the last update was to go swimming.  We asked Éowyn what she would like to do since we were all together as a family and she asked to go swimming.  It was a little surprising as she has been nervous of late since she had a bad experience at a pool.  Nothing major but it had put her off.  So when she suggested it we jumped at the opportunity.  Both of the girls loved it.  Amélie was just serene as Lucinda held her in the water while I was trying to teach Éowyn to swim, while at the same time being mindful that a false move could put us back.  I think a few more lessons are required but she did spend most of the time on her front kicking her legs (supported by Dad) so progress.

It has been interesting and a little upsetting to see how Éowyn is dealing with the experience of attending Playbox Playgroup.  Obviously, it is a new place with new people and so it will take her some time to get used to it, as indeed it did when we first took her to Jo’s.  However, now she is a little older and can talk to you it is harder to convince yourself that you are doing the right thing when she says things like: “Daddy, I don’t like school.” “I don’t want to go to school.” It breaks your heart, especially when you drop her off and she is crying and clinging to your leg.  This Monday though (her fifth day) we walked into the classroom and she wandered off.  I asked her for a kiss and to wave me goodbye and she did.  Again progress, although she did get upset in the last 15 minutes or so of the session, probably because she was tired after the weekend.

Lucinda and I just have to be strong and encouraging as well as learn to cope with the other things that happen to your children while they are at school.  Éowyn has seemingly begun to re-inact things that have happened at school with her toys.  She was playing with her toy monkey (Ok, strictly Amélie’s toy monkey but I think that Amélie has lost any ownership of that toy!) and although we only caught the end of the conversation (“…and that’s it and we can go home.”) but it sounded very much like something that the staff would have said to Éowyn when she is upset.  Then Monday she came home with a scratch on her face, only minor and the staff did draw our attention to it and I had to sign the accident book to acknowledge that fact.  They were not sure how she did it but think she caught herself with the end of a book, and it certainly looks feasible.  However later that day she was talking to her monkey “…It is not nice to hit people monkey.  It will make them sad…” We tried to get out of her whether she hit someone or whether they hit her, but we could not draw any conclusions.  Although I don’t like the idea of either Éowyn hitting someone or someone hitting her, a lot worse will probably happen just have to try and get her to talk about it.

In addition to swimming, trips to the doctors and hospital and dropping Éowyn off at Playbox we managed to squeeze in a photoshoot for the girls and a trip to Nanny Fran’s for a Bagnall family photoshoot.  The photoshoot for the girls was a freebie session (to entice you in) for Amélie at 3 months.  It includes a free 10″x8″ print, so we thought we would go for it.  Obviously when you see the other photos you are tempted to buy extras.  Yes, we were suckered into that but thought that the price that we were quoted was reasonable and so the credit card made an appearance.

Nanny Fran’s photoshoot, on the other hand, seemed to be jinxed.  We (her children) bought her the photoshoot as a present for Christmas 2009.  When we turned up at the photographers it was closed and he couldn’t be raised on the telephone.  He called back a couple of days later to apologise but wasn’t prepared to offer compensation and so we decided against using him.  So we found another reasonable studio and booked for the beginning of December.  A week before my sister Mary slipped on the ice at work and broke her elbow, so we decided to push it into January.  So Nanny Fran re-booked for last Sunday.

The southern side of the family, Mary and us four headed up the M40 on Friday for the weekend.  On the Saturday morning we jokingly suggested that she ‘phone them to ensure that they had our booking.  Never a truer word spoken in jest.  Sunday morning we all get dressed up and manage to keep Amélie puke-free so we would all look nice for the photos.  No booking.  Apparently the previous booking wasn’t cancelled properly so the re-schedule shoot was not in the diary.  We have agreed to give it one more go before deciding that it is well and truly jinxed and give it up as a bad job.

Despite that we had a good weekend at Nanny Fran’s.  Éowyn has finally grown too big for her travel cot and so Nanny Fran bought her a ready bed and pink tent to sleep in.  Obviously it takes a little getting used to but she seemed to love it although the excitement meant that she didn’t get to sleep until after 10pm on the Friday night.  Poor Nanny Fran offered to look after Amélie on the Friday night so that Lucinda and I could get some uninterrupted sleep.  On Saturday night Éowyn went to sleep early (as she was tired from the night before) and we took Amélie in with us, however Éowyn who sleeps in the room next to Nanny Fran woke at 0400 and kept her awake.  I bet Nanny Fran was glad we were going so that she could get some sleep.

So now I am back at work and the 1500 e-mails all need reading, some of them as long as this write up!  Thus I will leave you to enjoy the photos.

Peace and Love

Baggie

Off to school

So the decorations are down, Christmas is well and truly over and the New Year feels like the Old Year already.  January always feels like a long month.  Probably due to the fact that the weather is still awful, the nights are still long (although getting shorter) and there is nothing to look forward to; for February is just as bleak.  Also due to the hangover from the overspend at Christmas and the fact that we get paid early due to the Bank Holidays over the Festive period, pay day seems a long way away and you really have to make those pennies stretch.

The other side of the January period is that it is the last chance for me to use up the surplus holiday from the previous year’s entitlement.  Hence I have had a long weekend (5 days!) and will be off for another week before the end of the month.  I feel like a part-timer!

With the New Year comes a new adventure and a new step in Éowyn’s development.  She has begun playbox pre-school playgroup at the local primary school, Shortwood.  With everything that Éowyn does she took this new stage completely in her stride; more so than her Mum.  She is only booked for 2 mornings a week at the moment to ease her (and us) into the idea of going to school and she is still going to Jo, her childminder, three times a month.  This will give Lucinda more time with Amélie and allow her to give Amélie the attention that Éowyn received when she was that age.  With the added benefit of preparing Éowyn for the big wide world of school in a slow steady build up.

Shortwood (and Playbox Playgroup) has a high teacher to pupil ratio but it is under threat of closure and/or merger for that very reason.  There has been a campaign to save the school because it is deemed not to be economically viable in the area (although it is more economically viable than compared to other schools in other areas of the country).  The high staff to pupil ratio is one of the factors that attracted us to Shortwood.

We dropped Éowyn off, on her first day as a family (Lucinda, me and Amélie!).  There were a number of other parents there in the same boat with children whose first day was the same as Éowyn’s.  I think it was harder for Lucinda (and me) to leave Éowyn than it was for Éowyn and I think she picked up on our vibes and became very clingy.  Although in fairness it was also probably due to the fact that it had been a while since we visited Playbox and there was a lot of hubbub with parents saying goodbye to their children, and it was all a bit overwhelming (although she did have the presence of mind to give Amélie her monkey that she had brought along).  However, according to the staff when we picked her up she had been a bit teary for about 10 minutes but then forgot all about it and got involved with the activities.  When we came to pick her up, she didn’t seem bothered to see us and had sat down to lunch (which she is not entitled to, only being there for a morning session), she is a Bagnall after all!

Amélie, feeding is another matter.  She is still taking her concoction but we are still to be convinced about it’s effectiveness.  She still brings up a lot of milk, and will still, at times, struggle with her feeding.  Although she is clockwork with her hunger pangs, every 3 hours on the dot.  Which equates to not a lot of sleep!  After discussing with Kate (the Health Visitor) we will be getting her weighed tomorrow (Wednesday) and see how her weight is doing.  From that information we will see whether the medicines are helping keep enough food down to put on weight or whether we should now be taking the next step and see the paediatrician.  She is also hoping to bring the appointment we have with the dietician (mid-February) forward so that perhaps we can start weaning early.  As they say: ‘Watch this space’.

And it is there I will leave you with this week’s photos.  Although before I go just a quick story.  As I was putting Éowyn to bed last week she suddenly said:  ‘Knock, Knock.’  I replied ‘Who’s there?’ ‘Happy’ she said. ‘Happy Who?’ ‘Happy Birthday!’  Not sure who has been teaching her Knock, Knock jokes but the fact that she remembered it and thought it was funny took me aback.  Interestingly I have been trying to teach her other Knock, Knock jokes and she just looks at me as if I am stupid. ‘No, Daddy, it’s Happy!’

Peace and Love

Baggie

The turn of another year

And so we are here at the turn of another year (that has a certain poetic quality – I like it).  It is just over a fortnight since the last update (the Christmas message notwithstanding) and it seems like an eternity since then.  Obviously there has been the snow, Amélie’s continued feeding issues and the little matter of Christmas.

This update is a little belated and becomes the first in 2011 rather than the last in 2010 due to the fact that I have been struck down with ‘flu.  Now a lot of people say that they have a touch of ‘flu but from my experience over the last couple of days there is no such thing as a touch of ‘flu.  I basically haven’t managed to get out of bed for days, I haven’t eaten a meal for 5 days, every single part of my body has ached.  If the house had been on fire I do not think I would have had the inclination to have got out the house, I have been that lethargic.  Even the sound of Lucinda playing with the girls wasn’t enough to make me want to get out of bed.  My fear has been passing it on to the girls and Lucinda.  Lucinda did develop a heavy cold but managed to shake it before it turned into whatever I had, and so far the girls have colds but again relatively mild.  Let us hope it stays that way.

Back to the update:  The Saturday after the last update the UK got hit by another deluge of snow (we should be getting used to this by now).  About 4 inches or so fell in about an hour in our little corner of the country, far more in other parts.  Due to the speed of the deluge Heathrow airport struggled to cope with the de-icing of the planes and the clearing of the runway.  This was unfortunate for the people trying to catch a flight and the people that work at the airport as someone that lives not that far from the south runway the fact that there were no flights for the best part of 4 days was bliss.

We took full advantage of the snow on that Saturday and introduced Éowyn to the joys of building snowmen and having a snowball fight.  She seemed to thoroughly enjoy herself, which is in stark contrast to the snows at the beginning of the year when she was perhaps a little too young to appreciate it and just complained that it was cold.  Unfortunately the snow prevented two pre-Christmas meet ups that weekend due to the icy roads and the weather stayed below freezing for over a week, which meant that the snow that fell on the 18th was still about on the 25th.  For the most part it was ice which meant that it was quite often safer to drive than try and take your life in your hands on the pavements, especially around the village.

This meant we spent more of the time in the house in that week leading up to Christmas which meant that Éowyn spent a little more time watching DVDs.  One day she sat a watched Toy Story, followed by Toy Story 2 and Toy Story 3, then said “Toy Story 4 please, Mommy.” Lucinda explained that there wasn’t a Toy Story 4.  “Then go to the shops and get one!” So Mr Disney and Mr Pixar if you are listening there is a little girl who wants another Toy Story film.

Éowyn has also developed a penchant for opening the front door to visitors.  In fact she can get quite upset if she is not allowed to open the door.  Obviously we have to watch her to make sure that she is not just inviting any Tom, Dick or Harry in but most of the time we let her do so.  I assume that is it some kind of control, that she is controlling her environment and I have no problems with her being our little gatekeeper.  She also likes to open the door when we are leaving the house.  So one frosty morning before Christmas it was not unusual for Éowyn to insist on opening the door for me.  As I stepped outside, she shut the door.  As I was halfway down the path I heard her little voice say ‘Bye, Bye Daddy.’  I turned round to return the farewell but also to tell her to shut the door as it was bitingly cold but the door was shut.  However the letterbox was open and a pair of blue eyes were looking at me through the gap.  I waved goodbye and went to work with a smile in my step.

Amélie is still causing us worry.  She seemed a lot happier on her artificial milk and we thought that all was going well however when Kate (the Health Visitor) came to weigh her, she still had not put on the correct amount of weight and was still concerned about the amount of reflux that she has.  So Kate got us a prescription for another artificial milk, Neocate (as opposed to the Nutramigen that she has been on) and suggested that we see our GP to obtain a referral to a Paediatrician as it is possibly more that just Cow’s Milk Protein Intolerance.

So Christmas Eve we saw our GP who has prescribed a dual concoction of Domperidone and Ranitidine as this would be the first point of call for the Paediatrician it would save us a couple of weeks of treatment.  So that is where we are at the moment.  Domperidone is given help keep the entrance to the stomach closed to prevent reflux, it also promotes emptying of the stomach contents quicker.  Ranitidine is used to inhibit stomach acid production.  We are yet to see if this is the winning formula.

Despite her obvious discomfort Amélie is still a happy baby.  She is very alert and enjoys sitting on your lap looking around at what is going on.   She will hold your hand and coo and gurgle at you.  Nothing is a heart-warming as when you little one first smiles, and although Amélie has been doing that for a while now when she returns your smile the feeling is not diminished.  Let’s hope we can sort this reflux out so that we can see a lot more of them.

Now to the big event.  Éowyn woke on Christmas morning to a stocking full of pressies hanging at the side of her bed and two piles on the floor.  Obviously Santa thought that she had been a very good girl over the past year.  Although she is beginning to understand the notion of Christmas the good thing was that she still doesn’t have the excitement factor and so was still asleep at 0900 Christmas morning.  How many more years is that going to happen?

Christmas lunch was around Lucinda’s parents with Lucinda’s brothers and their families, so all the Grandchildren were together on Christmas day, which is lovely to see because they all get on so well together, even if Éowyn is a little bit bossy with them.  It was a nice Christmas present from Lucinda’s parents, too: cooking Christmas dinner for us, so we could concentrate on the kids without having to juggle kitchen duties!

Boxing day I was back at work, so the festive break for me were a little short, but then we are used to that as a family, working in two of the industries that don’t stop for holidays.

Then it was Christmas number 2.  Up to Nanny’s Fran’s for a more presents and more Christmas dinner.  Nanny Fran gave us a nice Christmas present too, which was a night off as she looked after Amélie (and Éowyn) overnight.  Both my sisters were at Mom’s so it was the Bagnalls together for a couple of days.  Éowyn loves her Nanny Fran and aunties and kept them entertained (and busy) even though it was such a short visit.

As I have mentioned in an earlier update.  My sister Mary has broken her elbow.  During the first bout of cold weather at the end of November she slipped on ice and landed on her elbow.  This means that, among other things, she is unable to drive.  So she hitched a lift back home with us.  Now although I have a mid-sized car, with two car seats in the back it doesn’t leave a lot of room for passengers.  Luckily we squeezed her in and headed home as my body started to succumb to the symptoms of ‘flu.

Considering my deteriorating condition and the patches of fog we made it home safe and in good time only to find a theft had occurred.  OK, perhaps that it is a little over-dramatic but when we left there was a covering of snow on the grass and at the edges of the paths when people had cleared cars and tracks through the snow, yet when we got back you would have never have know that it had snowed at all.  The snow had been taken and replaced by mucky rain.  Makes it all look a little dirty and dreary as opposed to the snow that tends to make everywhere look bright and pretty.  Turn your back for five minutes…

The remainder of the year saw me in bed ill, and on New Year’s Eve myself and Lucinda Lemsiped up and went to bed at 2100.  Fortunately the few fireworks that were in the area were not enough to rouse Éowyn and we had a relatively peaceful night.

So maybe a little belated but an epic so apologies and all there is left for me to do is to wish you all a very Happy 2011

Happy New Year

Baggie