Wednesday, April 17, 2013

37 Weeks

Nothing to see here, folks. Everything's still exactly as it was, save for a slightly larger belly which only serves to make my legs look skinnier.

Me in jogging shorts is an absurd sight. It amuses Ian greatly.

"You should see yourself, " he said. "It looks like you stuffed a basketball under your shirt so you could make fun of pregnant women." And so he snapped these photos.



Two slight variations of the exact same photo is seriously all I have to offer. 

I hear the human brain shrinks temporarily during pregnancy, which might be why I have trouble stringing more than a few sentences together for each new post. 

Me write words. Me have baby. 

I don't suppose the baby's kicking habits in the womb indicate much about personality, but if they did, I'd call our baby "placid." 

She spends most of her time squirming or sleeping and only occasionally kicking. I've heard many a woman describe insomnia in the third trimester due to fervent baby kicks. I don't have that problem. 

I'd call her rather sloth-like which we can probably attribute to genetics. She's a child after my own heart.

Monday, April 8, 2013

36 Weeks

It's all been very quiet over here at the Winiferd house, which is exactly how I like it. There are only a couple things worth mentioning.

1. Living with Ian is like living with the paparazzi. He records every nap, so I now snatch up his phone after each nap to view the latest snaps. Mostly they appear double-chin-like and gape-mouthed. 

I've posted the more attractive (and I'm really stretching it with that word) examples of these in the past, and frankly, that was enough. I mean, Ian thinks these photos are cute and darling and adorable but he also married me.  

He also documents my movements when I'm awake. And completely oblivious.

I am now fifty percent baby.


2. Winnie and Ian love each other now. Or something.

It took Winnie three or so years but she has finally warmed to Forever Daddy. Either that, or she needs the extra emotional support during this trying time of new life and the next generation and all that horrible stuff.

Hold me, Daddy. For I cannot handle this baby shit. I can not.



Thursday, March 21, 2013

33 Weeks

I would have updated sooner but...you know.


Ian takes great delight in snapping photos of me looking like Jabba the Hut while passed out on the couch, with the dog firmly wedged into the crook of my knee. 

Which happens every evening.  


Look at the baby grow.


 It's all very exciting.


 Winnie finds pregnancy beautiful.


Occasionally, I do leave the couch and venture into the real world. It's shocking, I know. 

At my latest appointment, last week, my doc determined the baby is in the 48th percentile for weight. Neither Ian or I can remember the exact weight he gave, but I think it was 4 pounds, 4 ounces. Or something. 

Based on that, she's projected to weigh around 7 pounds, 6 ounces at term. 

My doc also announced I had lost two pounds. 

I have no idea how such a thing is possible since I consume about 10 enormous meals a day. Breakfast is definitely my favorite meal of the morning. 

By my calculations, I have gained about 22 pounds total so far. 

Baby is also head-down, like the nice, obedient child we know she will be.

Pictured: delusional future parents


And with that, it's nearly time for my pre-bedtime nap. Good night, everyone. For lo, it is almost 6:30.

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Dogs are Dumb; Oh My God, So Dumb

ER Vet: "Hello, this is the Animal Emergency Center. How may I help you?"

Laura: "My dog just chewed up a roach motel. I'm not sure how much poison she ate. Will she be okay?"

ER Vet: "What brand is the roach motel?"

Laura: "Hey, what brand is the roach motel?"

Ian: "I think it's Combat."

Laura: "I think it's Combat."

ER Vet: "Combat should be okay. Let me look it up, just in case."

Laura: "Okay."

ER Vet: "All right, she should be fine if she ingested a little poison. The plastic is the dangerous part. Did she eat any plastic?"

Laura: "No. She just chewed on it."

ER Vet: "She should be fine." <Giggles>

Laura: "Thank you. I just wanted to make sure. Bye bye."

Ian: "So she's fine, right?"

Laura: "Yeah. I was Googling while she talked. Apparently a dog would have to eat like eighteen roach motels to really run the risk of anything toxic to the mammalian system."

Ian: <Giggles> 

Laura: "What if she had told us to induce vomiting?"

Ian: "I'd have told you to have fun."

Laura: "Do you think she'll get sick?"

Ian: "Nah. She's really hyper right now. We should feed her another roach motel."

Laura: "Winnie, you ate poison. You're the laughing stock of the Emergency Vet.  And you might get sick to your stomach. How do you feel?"

Winnie: "Awesome."

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

The Third Trimester

Holy crap, I'm pregnant.


Holy crap, I'm in the third trimester.



Here's an awkward photo of my third trimester belly. Also pictured: my work shirt paired with my fat pants. 

Look fast; I'm liable to delete this soon.


And here's a third trimester photo of Winnie, whose world will be rocked in three months. That's the face of a dog mentally preparing for emotional trauma.


Here's an obligatory prom style belly photo:


Hang on to the memories; hang on to the moments. 

The Snowflake Formal

Winiferd High School

 February 2013

Here's a creepy photo, as Ian clings to life and leers at the camera while Winnie examines Ian's butt. 


I sent Ian off on a daycare tour this morning at my top daycare choice since he had the day off. As he looked through the infant room window at six babies, he was greeted by six gummy smiles.

He sent me a text: "Place looks fine."

Saturday, February 9, 2013

Lots and Lots of Updates

Howdy. I took a little break from the blog. This was an "I'm tired and have way too many things to think about right now" type thing. No biggie.

But someone did ask what happened to Winiferd so here's a slew of updates:

1. Spottswood's a late bloomer. 

The cat we considered physically perfect came down with a raging case of zits a few weeks ago.

Ian thought it was flea dirt but I'm a champ at detecting fleas and flea dirt (God almighty, Winnie, stop traumatizing your poor mother), and I knew it couldn't be fleas.


After 1.5 seconds of Googling, I realized it was feline acne. Our little boy has become a man.

And that's the story of why "Spottswood's acne medication" now sits on our grocery list.


Harvey has been calling Spottswood "Pizza Face." But Harvey has no room to talk because...

2. Harvey is gross.

And Harvey keeps urinating and defecating on things. And I don't know. I guess it takes too much energy to walk 15 feet to the litter box room. And life is tough.  And walking makes my feet hurt.

Update: Yesterday, Harvey had an accident-free day. He was rewarded with a smiley face sticker. We also crowned him king of the potty.


3. Winnie has declared herself my faithful watchdog. 

It's wildly annoying. Ian started a new job ages ago that keeps him out of the house later in the evenings.

So Winnie protects my life and limb by barking loudly at the wind blowing and cars driving and butterflies elegantly gliding by in perfect harmony with the universe.

Because, damn it, these things might disturb my human, and I will bark so hard the world will fear all eight pounds of my poofy ass.

Face of a killer


In return, Winnie gets a lot of time-outs when Ian's away from home. It does help to quell the barking. Yay for gentle, life-affirming doggy discipline or whatever you want to call that hippie crap.

4. I'm one week shy of the third trimester. 

Yesterday was the first day that strangers realized I was pregnant. The mail-lady, who sees me everyday, was shocked.

Mail-lady: "Oh my goodness! You're pregnant!"

Laura: "Yeah!"

Mail-lady : "How many months are you?"

Laura: "A little over 6."

Mail-lady- "Six months!?"

According to my doctor, I've gained 14 pounds so far.

The baby kicks and squirms with vigor. So vigorously that Ian once got nauseous and had to stop feeling the miracle of life since it made him feel like barfing.

I felt the first fetal movements at 18 weeks, at 5 in the morning, the sensation of a butterfly flapping around in my left side.

Now, at 27 weeks, the child does some sort of intense gymnastics routine in the early mornings, as I can feel bizarre ripples against my stomach again and again and again and you get the picture. 

I'm sorry but I have no pictures of me lately because I never think to take any. We're working on it.

Thursday, December 27, 2012

The Winiferd Family Leaps into the '80s: The Dishwasher

I'm generally pleased with the house Ian bought before I ever came into his life. It's sturdy and cozy and isn't a McMansion, so it's my type of house.

The only real problem I had with the house was the lack of a dishwasher. It's 2012, man. Where's the dishwasher? 

I first suggested the idea of a dishwasher last Christmas, when my parents offered to give us one as a joint Christmas present. However, I hemmed and hawed over the expense and logistics of it.

Ian remarked, "It doesn't take that long to wash dishes by hand."

Thus, we declined the offer. And of course, dirty dishes were always there, never-ending piles of dishes, a rancid, festering landfill of perpetual trash and garbage.

Our kitchen counters


No matter how much you wash the dishes (and I hated washing dishes), when you lack a dishwasher, that crap is always there. Fast forward one more year:

Laura: "My parents want to know what we want for Christmas."

Ian: "I don't know. I can't think of anything."

Laura: "That's good. Because we're getting a dishwasher."

Ian: "It really doesn't take that long to wash dishes by hand..."

Laura: "We're getting a dishwasher. My dad's going to rip out the cabinets and put in a dishwasher. That's what we're getting." 

Ian: "Sounds good."

My dad did indeed rip out the cabinets and install a brand-new dishwasher. I looked into his kind face afterwards and truly saw Santa Claus. Or maybe God. A dishwasher god.

Don't tell anyone but the dishwasher is currently my favorite family member.


What true love looks like

Saturday, December 22, 2012

Twenty Weeks

I'm now twenty weeks pregnant and have gained 7 pounds total. I keep forgetting to take pictures of the baby bump because I prefer sleeping.

Luckily, my boss demanded Christmas photos of everyone right before the holiday break and I got these:

Check out that baby bump! 


Co-workers patting the baby bump


Comparison of Laura at work:


versus Laura at home:


Here's Ian so he won't feel left out. This was just before my company Christmas party. The dress code was "fancy" but Ian insists khakis make him look like a douche. Which they sorta do. Those pleats, man...


So when he emerged wearing a 5 dollar thrift store suit, vest, and fedora, I met the ensemble with applause. 

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

A good while ago, I went online and used a morphing website to show how our child would look. The result was so horrifying, I promptly dumped the photo even as Ian howled with laughter. 

We are hoping the Baby Morph predicts the future as accurately as the Mayans.

Here are baby photos of both of us. I was a fat, bald baby and often warn Ian that his baby might suffer the same fate.

The baby who never met a doughnut she didn't like


Ian, on the other hand, was a sexy baby and we hope his genes inject a healthy dose of magnetic good lucks into our child:


Don't hate me 'cause I'm beautiful.

You could try putting those two images into the Baby Morph machine, but don't blame me when the results give you nightmares.