May
19
2013

28 & 29 Weeks

At 28 weeks pregnant, I flew eleven hours to London, took a three-hour train ride up to the north of England to attend my grandmother's funeral, then roadtripped another eight hours up to Scotland with my dad and sister to drop the latter back at university in time for her final exams. Somebody page Richard Curtis, because this sounds like a Britcom movie I'd pay to see. 

To say I was dreading the flight from San Francisco would be an understatement—not least because I was planning to write my Omi's eulogy during it, probably the only thing that could make an unpleasant experience even more unpleasant—but I have to give mad props to the world's kindest flight attendant, who went absolutely out of her way to make sure I was as comfortable as I could be. We're talking frequent and unexpected deliveries of large bottles of water so I didn't get dehydrated. We're talking unobtrusive drop-by visits to ask if there was anything I needed. We're talking blocking off my row so that I had three glorious seats to myself for maximum lie-flat sleeping. I didn't even tell her I was pregnant (although let's be honest, it's not exactly missable at this point); she just noticed during one of my endless treks to the bathroom and decided to make it her mission to help me out. I wish I'd got her name so I could write to United (I know! United!) and thank them for employing such wonderful angels. Thank you, kind flight attendant. Thank you so much for making a dreaded journey a lot more bearable.

The funeral was, you know, a funeral, which is to say it wasn't exactly fun or anything, but it was cathartic and dignified and I'm so glad I went. It was lovely to see family members I hadn't seen in a while—and hadn't really been expecting to see in a while—and the silver lining was the couple of days I spent with my dad and Susie in St Andrew's, Scotland, which is a town I recommend you put on your must-see list if you haven't already. 



(Actually, the silver lining to that silver lining was the stop we made at a roadside service station just outside of Newcastle, where my dad tried to pay for our coffees with a ten-pound-note that was summarily rejected because it was too old. The pimply teenager who took it looked at it curiously—as though it were, say, a loom or a quill—then disappeared for five minutes and came back with his manager who told us, somewhat awkwardly, that this particular banknote hadn't been in circulation for more than ten years. My dad, evidently, had taken it out of an envelope of British cash that he probably drew out of the bank the last time we lived there—as in, 1995—without even giving it a second thought. We all had a good laugh about it, paid with some more up-to-date currency, and then spent the next half hour saying things to each other like "Excuse me, my good man, could I pay you for this coffee with some doubloons? Will you accept a ha'penny, perchance, or a farthing? I've come from the past, you see, and I only have this handful of sheckels.")

While I've been enjoying my 28-week belly—which is now (I hope?) just a little less pointy—I have not so much been enjoying my 28-week butt, which I did not expect to grow with such......well, let's just call it exuberance. (When my sister took the picture above at the Scottish border, I said "don't make my butt look too big!" and she said "I'm not a miracle worker, Holly.") What I have really been enjoying, though, is the almost constant jumping around of my midsection, which appears to have taken on a life of its own these days, particularly when I'm lying quiet and still at night after a long day. 


Don't be silly, of course not! I meant on LSD. 

Hamish turned 29 weeks the day before I left Scotland—and can we all take a moment to remark on the fact that Hamish visited Scotland, which would have meant that if I'd gone into premature labor and given birth while there, I'd have pretty much been nationally obligated to actually name him Hamish—which meant I got to take my 29-week photo on the famed St Andrew's Pier with the ruins of St Andrew's Castle in the background behind me. 

Back in the US, I went to my 29-week doctor's appointment, where the excitement I felt upon learning I had passed my gestational diabetes test was second only to the excitement I felt in 1996 upon learning that I had passed my maths GCSE, and my doctor, while measuring my expanding torso, pronounced that she could feel the baby's butt.

The baby's BUTT. Does that not just blow your mind?  A BUTT. Growing inside me. THERE IS A BUTT GROWING INSIDE ME THAT IS BIG ENOUGH FOR SOMEONE ELSE TO FEEL. I know this should have dawned on me before—trust me, my sister didn't wait three seconds after finding out we were having a boy to text me "HAHAHAHA, YOU'RE GROWING A TINY WILLY"—but for some reason, the fact that the doctor could feel the baby's butt made everything suddenly seem that much more real. I mean, in eleven weeks, that butt will be here, out in the world, and it will want things. Like wiping and diapering and cute little squeezes on alternating cheeks. And I guess the question that's been running through my mind ever since the doctor put her hands on Hamish's squishy little tushie and said "yep, that feels like a butt" is.....am I ready for this butt? Will I ever be? 

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May
14
2013

Nobody Needs A Wipe Warmer (And Other Things I Hope You'll Tell Me)

A few weekends ago, I sat down to make a baby registry. Wait, let me just rephrase that sentence: a few weekends ago, I sat down to make a baby registry and did not get up. For the entire 48 hours. Call it anxious first-timer nerves, call it "generally unable to purchase anything, eat anywhere, or make any other kind of decision for myself without first reading seven hundred reviews from other people," but I found the idea of making a baby registry more than a little daunting.

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May
06
2013

27 Weeks

At 27 weeks, my pointy belly and I went down to San Diego to see my parents. (Also, I dyed my hair, as you may have noticed by the faintly Elvira-ish shade it seems to have turned since the last weekly photo. Apparently, L'Oreal and I have very different definitions of "dark brown.")

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Apr
29
2013

26 Weeks

First of all, thank you so much for your lovely, kind words on my last post. I hope it doesn't sound too cheesy to say this, but each one of your comments meant so much to me and really did go such a long way to helping me feel better. I'm trying to write back to everyone properly to say thank you for your thoughts and condolences, so if I haven't got to you yet, rest assured that I will. 

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Apr
18
2013

This Is How You Dance

Last week, my friend Anna emailed me to tell me that her parents were cleaning out their house in Hong Kong and had sent her two large boxes of her stuff to sort out. Because I have known Anna since 1987—which is the longest I have known any of my friends and, actually, anyone who is not technically a family member—I was fairly sure I knew where she was going with this, and I was right. 

"Pretty much everything in those boxes," she said, "is a letter from you." 

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Apr
04
2013

23 Weeks

Twenty three weeks, as far as I can remember—it happened a whole week ago, which means my new and fuzzy pregnancy brain has little to no memory of it—was fairly unmomentous. The twentysomething weeks, in fact, are whizzing by super quickly in a blur of super-quickness, much like my actual twenties, although I don't even have alcohol as an excuse for it this time. 

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Apr
03
2013

Five Things I Like Right Now

I feel like we've got to the point where a person can't write a post about the things she likes without someone wondering if it's a sponsored product review, so I just want to say before I begin that this is not sponsored, or a product review, or a sponsored product review. I'm not trying to sell you anything here, I just miss the days when you could read about something you liked on a blog and think "ooh, I think I'd like that thing too!" and maybe go out and buy it, and neither party would feel a little weird about it.

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Random Flashbacks

Aug
13
2009

So You Think You Can Dance? No, We Most Certainly Do Not

Sean and I took a dance lesson yesterday, which is a sentence I never thought I'd write. Seriously, a dance lesson: can you imagine? In our normal everyday lives, we are the people who sway like Junior High paramours when forced onto a dance floor together, feet shuffling awkwardly, hands clenched sweatily, grimaces firmly in place until the song finally ends three million years later. 

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Nov
09
2005

Ask the Ethicist

While I wish I could pretend that I get my caffeine fix at a local coffee house where the owner bakes fresh flaxseed muffins every morning and her domestic life partner plays Joni Mitchell covers during open mic night, I've got to admit that more often than not, I am guilty of feeding the Evil Starbucks Machine. This is primarily because it's right around the corner from both my apartment and my office, but also because the only other place that's directly on my route to work is Whole Foods.

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Mar
30
2007

Because I Don't Know About You, But I've Always Been Successful At Picking Up Dates In The Street

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Nov
16
2007

Second Time Around

I think I may have fallen half in love with Detroit. The strange thing is that I feel I've been here before, although I haven't, of course, I've just seen pictures. These pictures feature my newly-married parents at their youngest and most untethered---even as the first child, I wouldn't come along for a few more years---and the quality is grainy and blurred, the colors washed out, the edges rounded in the way drugstore-developed pictures from the 1970s often were. In this cache of pictures, my parents range from 24 to 27.

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Feb
19
2007

People Are Strange

1. We live on a fairly busy city street, in an apartment on the first floor, and the bedroom is in the front of the building. As such, we fall asleep to a certain number of fairly expected noises: high heels tapping on the pavement, ambulances whizzing by, pimps shouting at their prostitutes, you know the sort of thing. A few nights ago, however, my slow slouch into sleep was curtailed by a weird, breathy, lilting sound, as if someone was playing a bootleg record of a Jethro Tull concert and kept getting the needle stuck.

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Mar
06
2011

How To Make Scotch Eggs

Do you like eggs? Do you like sausage? Do you like things that are fried? If you like eggs and you like sausage and you like things that are fried, I think you would like Scotch Eggs, if you have not already tried them, because a Scotch Egg is a wondrous, wondrous thing indeed. It's an egg, wrapped in sausage, coated in bread crumbs, and fried to within an inch of its life. I am afraid that it is basically the Turducken of the British culinary world.

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Oct
05
2008

Call Me Martha

I had a rather overzealous goal this weekend of painting the front hallway, and even though I knew it was a rather overzealous goal, I kept it on my to-do list anyway, just in case. "You're not going to do it," said Sean, and I said "I might! You never know!" and then I went to two different hardware stores to get paint samples in various shades of dark red.

And......yeah. That was as far as I got, incidentally, with the painting of the front hallway. Whoops. Better luck next time! Play again soon!

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Recent Comments

Lesli
May 23, 2013
You and your family are awesome. Today I feel awful, stressed and sick, but your blog is always such a pleasure to read. You're just so NICE. And funny. Anyway, you are not ready and won't really be ready and there's not much you can do about it, and yet, as someone else said, you are totally ready and you'll fall in love with Hamish and his tiny butt. And you'll wonder what you did with yourself before he came along and nothing else will be as important. It's life-changing, in the best possible way.

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始めますて、どうぞよろしくお願いします弊社はトリーバーチ工場があります,人気バッグ

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Pretzel Thief
May 22, 2013
I'll keep it short since I'm at work: your posts give me the warm fuzzies. You're the best! Beautiful post, beautiful photos. Wishing you health and joy, dear Holly!

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Sara
May 22, 2013
We absolutely loved the Baby Bjorn bouncy seat. Our daughter used it until she was 3, as it turned into a great seat when pondering board books. Bonus: no plastic or batteries; packs easily; great to pass on to other new parents. As far as other things -- I wish I hadn't thought I needed so much! Buy nicer items that will last longer, or for more stages. Always keep extras in the car, that way you can quiet the paranoid "what if I need 6 extra outfits" voice without carting it around on your shoulder. On the other end of the spectrum, I had some ideas about what kind of (and how many) toys I would purchase for my daughter. And I...broke some of those rules. I am okay with it, and wish I hadn't been so strict with my expectations! You'll do great!

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Sarah
May 22, 2013
Oxo makes a wipe dispenser. I know this sounds about as important as the wipe warmer, but I got SO frustrated with the plastic boxes that came with the wipes and didn't release them ONE AT A TIME but rather in a big string...and wipes are the last thing I wanted to be messing with when I had bigger "messes" to contend with. So, yeah. Get yourself one of those. But really - a breast pump. Bare none, that is the one single thing I could not have lived without. And still can't (I'm pumping as I type, for my 4 mo. old boy to eat). Get the good one and name it (mine is Nelson, as in Nelson Mandela...get it? HA!) because you'll be spending a lot of quality time together as you prepare to go back and then actually do go back to work. But it can be useful, even necessary in those first few weeks. I didn't get mine until week 4 and wished I'd had it sooner. Didn't need: So many blankets. So many swaddles. The Bjorn or any of the slings (there are better carriers). Baby shoes. Maybe the swing.

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Meetzorp
May 22, 2013
I'm glad that your visit in the UK went so smoothly and that you were able to play catch-up with your extended family. It's sad it couldn't have been under better circumstances, but it sounds like the opportunity for the family to rally together and share comfort was just the right thing. It is kind of fun to watch one's belly fidgeting of its own accord. I'm about half a week behind you in gestation. The other night, when some bit of my future child was poking up, I got the notion to give him a little prod back. That foot/elbow/prehensile-tail/dorsal-fin pulled back, and some other bit of him poked up a few inches to the left. I think it might actually have been hands, but who knows, right? I considered it to be a rudimentary form of playing with the baby. I expect it will be a lot more fun when he's an outside baby.

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Claudia
May 22, 2013
Thank you for sharing this with me!! My dad turns 70 next year, and while it's easy to think of 'every year' gifts for Birthday and Christmas, I've been struggling to come up with ideas for a meaningful gift for that milestone... well, until I found this. I hope you don't mind being an inspiration to people all over the world (I'm writing this from Switzerland) and will be sure to bookmark this blog in case anyone asks how I came up with that - credit where credit is due! Greetings, and may God bless you! - Claudia

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Sensibly sassy
May 21, 2013
I'm so sorry for your loss-she sounds like she was such a wonderful person to know and love

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Courtney
May 21, 2013
Ha! About the only thing I was good at identifying when the baby (babies!) moved around was the butt. And sadly at first they're usually kind of scrawny, but they fill out pretty fast and they're very squeezable. My son is 3.5 and I still can't stop myself. It's so cute!

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edj
May 20, 2013
You're not ready and never will be. No one is. It will be fine. Heck, it'll be fantastic.

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Leah
May 20, 2013
Ah, St. Andrews! I spent two years there but that was almost 20 years ago. Looks like it hasn't changed much, happily. Such a beautiful place.

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Shelley
May 20, 2013
YES! As soon as you have him you'll know just what to do and never want him out of your arms. It takes exactly one second to get comfortable. : ) I laughed so hard at the story about your dad! Dubloons! You are all funny. : )

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Sheila
May 20, 2013
Not only will you be ready for the butt, you will wonder how You ever lived without it.

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Marcheline
May 20, 2013
First, Scotland is my favorite place in the world. I have stood in the exact spots where you took both photos, and now I am extremely homesick and have a craving for haggis and single malt whiskey. Second, I thought you really WERE going to name him Hamish. How could you not? Seriously, after calling him Hamish this entire time, I don't think "Albert" is really going to fly, do you? Hamish ROCKS. TEAM HAMISH! Third, the photo of The Burns Himself in front of Burns Chocolates is freakin' awesome!

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gina
May 20, 2013
I will have a butt of my own in five days (or whenever she makes up her mind to come out.) That last sentence you wrote struck me to my core, considering last night I had a complete and total meltdown about NOT being ready and wishing gestation would last four years. This, despite the fact that my husband and I have worked tirelessly to prepare her room and our home for the past few months and we are so excited. BUT...there is always the but. I don't think we will ever be really ready for the butt.

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Meghan
May 20, 2013
You're ready of you can imagine yourself saying things like "look at that tiny little butt! It's just the cutest little butt and I just want to pinch it. goo goo gah gah" and on and on, and you wonder what the actual hell? Am I really losing my mind over this butt? Yes. Yes you are. Expect the same with baby bellies. My 17 mo old is probably a little sick of hearing "I told you, don't let me get that belly! I told you I was gonna eat that cute little belly!"

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Amy
May 20, 2013
Is it weird that upon reading the last line, "Bootylicious" popped into my head? I don't think you're ready for this jelly, Holly.

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Twice Five Miles
May 20, 2013
A video baby monitor. Worth every single penny we paid for it, and then over again. It was invaluable when we were brand-new parents and didn't know what different baby sounds meant; it kept us from rushing in to check on the baby every time he sighed or cooed. We used it for 4 1/2 years on our first - long after he was in a big-boy bed - and now use it for our new baby. Can't recommend it enough! Ours is no longer made but here's what appears to be the next generation: http://www.google.com/shopping/product/7636393353520074795?q=summer%20video%20baby%20monitor&client=safari&rls=en&bav=on.2,or.r_cp.r_qf.&bvm=bv.46751780,d.dmg&biw=1268&bih=983&sa=X&ei=0DOaUbmeFvPD4APA6ICwAg&ved=0CI0BEOUNMAM

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Anna Louisa
May 20, 2013
I'm jealous of your pregnant backside! I may or may not have been called "the a**-less wonder" by my track team in college... www.anna-bird.com

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