I'm pretty sure everyone who reads this blog follows me on Facebook and thus knows that my babies were born a month ago on February 17th. I had taken my 30 week pregnancy picture and was going to write my blog post after I got home from my doctor's appointment.
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30 weeks measuring 37 weeks. I had no idea my babies would be born that very night. |
Unfortunately, at the appointment my doctor told me that I would need to be in the hospital for the rest of my pregnancy, and that wouldn't be very long, maybe a couple of weeks at the most. I went to the hospital for monitoring, and after several hours my doctor told me that me that it was time for the babies and I to part ways. So, at 10:15 that night Jensen was born, and at 10:17 Everett was born. If you want to hear the whole tale, just ask me next time you see me. This post will be ridiculously long as it is. Jensen was born at 3 lbs and Everett was 3 lb 6 oz. There was a big team of people from the NICU ready to work on them. Jensen was in respiratory distress and needed to be intubated. Everett was doing much better and only needed a cannula (the oxygen tube thing that goes in the nose.) I am so grateful to live in an age where babies born at 30 weeks can survive and thrive. I am so grateful I had a OB that helped me give them the best chance possible. Jensen and Everett were soon transferred to the NICU and I was able to briefly see them before I was moved to my room in postpartum. That was Tuesday night, and it wasn't until Friday that I was able to see them again and hold them for the first time. That long wait was one of the hardest parts of everything.
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Jensen, several minutes after birth |
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Everett, a while after birth |
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Dad with Jensen |
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Everett's isolette home in the NICU |
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Tiniest baby feet |
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My whole family (and my cousin who works at the hospital) came to see me and keep me company in L&D while Blake was with the babies. |
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My brief meeting with Everett |
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Admiring my tiny baby |
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Saying hello to Jensen |
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Holding Jensen for the first time |
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Tiniest fingers |
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First family photo! I'm holding Everett for the first time |
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Precious time with Jensen |
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Holding Everett |
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Hi Everett! |
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Everett smiling at my dad on Facetime |
I have said all along that I'm glad these guys were my first. I think it's a good thing that I haven't experienced how awesome it is to hold your baby right after birth and bring them home with you. I feel like that would make this so much worse. Not to mention the difficulty of having kids at home while being in and out of the hospital while pregnant and visiting the babies in the NICU every day.
So, what's it like to be a NICU mom? It's frightening, hard, strange, yet somehow wonderful at the same time. Well, the NICU part isn't wonderful, but the mom part is. I do admit I don't feel much like a mom yet, especially since I have to ask their nurses permission for everything I do with my babies. They are hooked up to so many wires and tubes. It was hard to see them with IVs stuck in their hands, feet, and heads. Luckily they don't have those anymore. It is scary hearing the monitor alarms go off all the time and feeling helpless because I'm not a nurse and don't know when I really need to be concerned (although I'm picking up some things.) It was shocking to see them the first couple times because they were literally the smallest babies I had ever seen. Now that they have gained some weight I think they are chubby and am shocked when I see 'enormous' regular babies. I have spent 3-9 hours a day at the NICU since they were 6 days old. I feel so lucky that I have been able to pump milk for them and even though it's hard to spend many hours every day (and night) doing that, it feels great to contribute to helping them grow and become stronger. Plus I see it as easing me into having to feed two babies all through the day and night.
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Everett's monitor screen |
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Jensen's monitor screen |
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Jensen, 6 days old |
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Everett, 6 days old |
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Everett |
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Jensen |
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Everett |
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Everett, 10 days old |
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Jensen, 10 days old |
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Chilling in the tanning bed under the phototherapy lights |
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Awesome shades |
In one month, my boys have made great progress. Jensen is 4 lb 1 oz (3 lb at birth), and Everett is 4 lb 7 oz (3 lb 6 oz at birth). Jensen is 16.7" (15" at birth) and Everett is 17.7" (16" at birth.) They have moved from their isolettes into 'open cribs,' aka plastic tubs with little mattresses in them. Everett has been off oxygen since his first week of life, and Jensen was off for a few days before going back on. Everett was always a little bigger in the womb, and had less respiratory problems at birth, so I'm not surprised that he's having an easier time. But Jensen is doing great and will be caught up with his brother before we know it. They spent plenty of time under the phototherapy lights for jaundice, but they haven't had to do that for quite a while. They have both moved from using IVs to get most of their nutrition to being able to use their stomachs to eat through feeding tubes. Everett is working on learning breastfeeding, and Jensen will get to start trying soon as well. They get caffeine to help them with the apnea of prematurity (basically, they sometimes forget to breathe because of their underdeveloped nervous systems) as well as fortifier to give them extra protein, vitamins, minerals, and other things that they need to help them grow faster. People always ask me how long they'll have to stay in there, and the answer is I don't really know. However, they do say that you can expect them to stay until around their due date, but it's not uncommon for them to go home earlier. So, my guess is that it will be sometime during April (their due date was April 27th.) It seems like it will be difficult to juggle having one at home and one in the NICU, so I hope they won't go home too far apart from each other.
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Reading One Fish Two Fish to Jensen, one week old |
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8 days old |
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Jensen |
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Jensen and his furry arms :) |
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Dad and Everett, 11 days old |
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Everett and his sweet hair style |
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Dad with both boys! |
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Nuzzling Everett |
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Everett and his bink |
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Mom with both boys |
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Two weeks old! |
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Sweet little Jensen |
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Adorable little Everett |
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Jensen has big eyes! |
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19 days old |
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25 days old |
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Twinners! 24 days old |
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Everett, 27 days old |
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Everett, 26 days old |
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Jensen with pen to compare size, 17 days old |
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Everett, 24 days old |
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Giving Everett a bath |
I love my babies so much and feel so lucky to get two of them! They are so adorable I can barely handle it. I am obsessed with their red hair, chubby little feet, tiny hands, the little noises they make, I could go on and on. It's hard to imagine getting to actually bring them home, and it's a little scary as well. Without the monitors, how will I know if they are breathing and their hearts are beating??? I guess I'll have to trust that they wouldn't be sent home unless the doctors are absolutely sure they are ready for it. Plus their underdeveloped immune systems will be much more vulnerable than a full-term baby's, so I will have to be extra careful not to expose them to anything. I'm so excited to bring them home and actually feel like a mom and get to spend lots of time with them!
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Little fatty :) |
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Everett |
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Jensen |