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Saturday, March 24, 2012

Booty Buns Cloth Diaper Giveaway Event -- Win a full stash of cloth diapers valued at over $500!

Booty Buns Giveaway Event


Welcome to the Go Green ♥ Give Charity Cloth Diaper Giveaway Event sponsored by Booty Buns Cloth Diapers! Over 175 blogs have teamed up to present this amazing cloth diaper giveaway hosted by Daily Mothering.

Here's your chance to win an entire stash of one-size cloth diapers!


 

This amazing cloth diaper prize pack includes:


20 Booty Buns One-Size Cloth Diapers


(these true one-size cloth diapers fit 3-45 lbs!)


20 matching flannel/terry cloth wipes


40 microfiber inserts


20 cotton flannel liners


Booty Buns Cloth Diaper Giveaway

(picture does not show inserts or liners also included)



First, a little about Booty Buns...


Booty Buns One-Size Cloth Diapers


In case you haven't heard about them, Booty Buns Cloth Diapers are incredible one-size cloth diapers that truly fit from birth to potty training! They feature a snap-down rise with 5 different snap settings (most one-size diapers only have 3!) and a waist with 10 regular snap settings plus 2 crossover snap settings. The diapers have hip snaps to prevent wing droop on smaller sizes. The incredible size range of this diaper fits from 3-45 lbs!


Booty Buns One-Size Cloth Diapers


Booty Buns Cloth Diapers are pocket diapers and each diaper includes 2 snap-on microfiber inserts that can be stuffed into the diaper or laid on top with the included cotton flannel liner against your child's skin. The diapers have a waterproof PUL outer and a soft suedecloth inner with duel gussets on the inner lining to ensure everything stays IN the diaper! Booty Buns One-Size Cloth Diapers come in an assortment of bright colors and each diaper includes a matching handmade flannel/terry wipe. You can find out more about the diapers at Booty Buns, or check out the detailed Booty Buns One-Size Cloth Diaper Review at Daily Mothering!


Booty Buns Cloth Diapers


Booty Buns is dedicated to encouraging others to "go green" and "give charity." Shannon, the owner of Booty Buns Cloth Diapers, leads by example. For every diaper that Booty Buns sells, she donates one Booty Buns Cloth Diaper to a child in need in a third-world country. Shannon hopes to donate a lifetime supply of cloth diapers {20 diapers} to every baby in need around the globe. You can join in this effort by purchasing your own set of Booty Buns Cloth Diapers and telling your friends about Booty Buns!

Make sure to stop by and follow Booty Buns via Facebook, Twitter and Blog for news and giveaways!



And now for the giveaway!!


Booty Buns Cloth Diaper Giveaway


ONE WINNER will receive this gigantic cloth diaper prize pack valued at $546!


And, the winner will get to select their choice of diaper colors!


This giveaway is open to U.S. and Canada.


Use the Rafflecopter form below to enter.


Sign in using your Facebook account OR your name and email address.


Click "Do It" for instructions on how to complete each entry.


There is no mandatory entry. Complete as many entries as you wish.

The more entries you submit, the better odds you have of winning!




a Rafflecopter giveaway

Friday, March 23, 2012

Introducing Liesel Grace!

I feel the need to begin by giving props to all the amazing mommy bloggers I subscribe to who are capable of finding time to blog regularly -- seriously, you are wonder women!

That being said, the wait is finally over! I had convinced myself that this girl was going to be a toddler before making her debut, but at 7:26pm on March 3 (at 39 weeks, 6 days), Liesel Grace entered the world in all her squirmy glory!


Our little beauty was 6lb, 12oz and 19in long at birth...and I did it naturally (well, epidural aside...)! Honestly, I had fully expected the whole time that I would need a c-section. Not for any particular reason, really; I just happen to be surrounded by people who have had very complicated deliveries, not to mention the...ahem..."fun" time I had throughout this pregnancy. The one thing I hadn't prepared myself for was a picture perfect labor! I won't share the entire story here because, frankly, you would be reading for 6 hours and I would have been typing for 12, but how about a quick synopsis?


After having fairly-mild-but-getting-stronger contractions all throughout the night, at around 9am the hubs and I made the journey (ok, we live 5 minutes away, but it's my blog, and if I say it's a journey, it's a journey!) to the hospital. After getting to walk the halls for an hour, it was determined that I was in active labor, and I was admitted. Yadda yadda contractions, yadda yadda blessed heavenly jacuzzi, yadda yadda epidural. So we're at about....1-ish o'clock now? Hey, I'm in labor, I don't know what time it really was, we'll call it 1:00. For the next few hours we danced the Pitocin Jig until my contractions were coming nice and close/regular again. Fast forward another couple of hours of twiddling my thumbs waiting to dilate fully and OH! -- for that stupid water to break! If you've read my first post, you know that I had been on bedrest for four months because (among other things) my amniotic sac had been weakened by my dilating prematurely and could rupture at any time. Well, in reality, this thing was apparently made of thick, high-quality leather, and could have probably carried the weight of a lonesome hobo looking for a warm place to sleep (wow...that is really bad imagery...I'm so sorry...). Anyway, that thing stayed sealed up nice and tight until the doctor came in and broke it. Within, say, 10 minutes, it was time to push.


It took about 10 minutes of pushing, and this little person popped out! Well, I say "popped;" in reality, they helped her out with the forceps a bit at the end there. The moments of and immediately following her birth contain some specific thoughts I will always remember vividly:

1) The absolute WEIRDEST feeling I have ever experienced thus far in my life is the moment when Liesel was (again, pardon the imagery) "out" from the waist up, and "in" from the waist down, and every one of her 6,300 limbs were flailing around. It is like birthing a squid. After sharing this thought with a couple of close mommy-friends, it may be that I am alone in this experience...
2) As I said, this girl was only 6lb, 12oz, but upon laying eyes on her for the first time, my first thought was, "HOLY MOLY, that is a HUGE baby!!!" I was fairly certain the scale would prove her to be a Thanksgiving turkey.
3) Of course I wanted her, but it was somewhat pointless for them to give her to me right away, as the second my giant squid-baby was out I burst into tears & became unable to see her.


So that's the abbreviated version of my labor and Liesel's birth. She will be 3 weeks old tomorrow, and things have started settling down a little bit. I will say that in those first few days I think I cried at least as much as her (breastfeeding issues+no sleep=hysteria); everyone says nothing can prepare you for having a child...they weren't kidding! In just this short time it is the most difficult, frustrating, frightening, tiring, wonderful, exciting, biggest blessing of my life.


Also...my husband. I could not have made it through these first few weeks without him. He has already saved my sanity too many times to count, and getting to watch him transform from a man into a father has touched my heart almost as much as the experience of having a child itself. The day after we came home from the hospital, he got "new daddy brain" and forgot to wash his hair when in the shower (...maybe you just had to be there...). The first Sunday we brought Liesel to church, every time I turned around my baby was missing -- Daddy had her in his arms and was proudly showing her off to everyone and everything that stayed still long enough. They're funny anecdotes, and I've had a good time laughing at him, but I'm also storing these things up in my heart so I can share them with our daughter someday. This kid is so lucky...


Tuesday, February 14, 2012

The Light at the End of the Tunnel! I wonder if the baby sees it too....? Plus, Itsy Bitsy Bums has stolen my heart...

The stitches came out yesterday!  

After 15 weeks, 6 1/2 days, the cerclage (sir-CLAWSHHH....such a French-sounding, fancy name for such an awkward thing...) keeping my cervix shut & this kiddo safe inside was removed.  Honestly, I was hoping she would just kind of slide out like a fish once the doctor snipped the stitch, but no such luck.  Guess we will have to wait and see when she decides to arrive -- I'm so ready!

We (the hubs and I) picked up our newborn rental package of cloth diapers from Itsy Bitsy Bums Monday evening.  There aren't many cloth diaper retailers here in the Kansas City area, so we are very fortunate that what we do have is as high quality as IBB.  Abby  Flores, the shop's owner, is as friendly and helpful as can be, and IBB carries just about everything you could possibly ever want or need for diapering your little one (I foam at the mouth whenever I peruse their online store, much like my dog does if we are within even a half-mile radius of the park).  


Since Ryan and I are cheapskates, we really did not want to purchase a whole newborn set of diapers.  Logically and financially, renting a package for the first several weeks seemed like the way to go for us.  I spent a lot of time looking and comparing packages -- prefolds, fitteds, Fuzzibunz pockets, Bum Genius AIOs, mix & match your own package, etc.  There are a ton of options out there!  When I saw Itsy Bitsy Bums' Preloved Newborn Rental Package, I knew I had found "The One."  It may not have been love at first sight between Ryan and me, but with IBB, I was sure (aww, look, Valentine's Day is making me all nostalgic-like!).  Let me highlight for you briefly just a few of the awesome features of this package, as well as Abby's rental policy:
  • Price -- Since this was one of the biggest driving factors for us, I should really talk about it first.  The Preloved Newborn Rental IBB offers gives us 25 Kissaluvs fitteds (size 0) and 4 Thirsties Duo covers (size 1), plus a small sample of Grandma El's & CJ's BUTTer (i.e. Miracle Gook) for a total payment of $195.  $125 of that fee is a refundable deposit -- if you return all the dipes/covers in acceptable condition, that money comes back to you.  Meaning you've only spent $70 to diaper your newborn for the first 12 weeks of his/her life.  Opt to receive your refund back in store credit (and why wouldn't you?  IBB has EVERYTHING!) and receive an extra $30.  For those of you keeping track, that's FORTY DOLLARS for TWELVE WEEKS of diapering joy!  That's less than $0.50 a day!  I defy you to find a cheaper option.  
  • Flexibility -- Being a high-risk pregnancy, there was a lot of uncertainty surrounding when our daughter might come.  Abby made it so easy for us by allowing us to pick up our diapers a month before my due date, even though our rental period won't officially begin until I give birth.  What a blessing!  That went far in helping alleviate pre-delivery stress, and just shows again the amazing service IBB provides.
  • Simplicity -- We live within driving distance of IBB, so setting up a time for pickup was nothing.  However, for those who live farther away, all orders over $35 are shipped for free within the US.  Returning the rental is as simple as sticking the (clean) items into a box and shipping it back via your favorite method of package transport.  Bing-o, bang-o, you're done & will soon be ready to shop for even more delightfully addictive goodies, from AIOs to wet bags!
So that's my shameless advertisement for Itsy Bitsy Bums.  Being a cloth diapering noob (that's novice, for all you non-nerdy folks out there), I don't have any practical experience yet, but look forward to sharing my adventures (and, I'm sure, woes) with you once we get this show on the road!

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

And So It Begins....(i.e. Post #1)

It's been a lonnnggg year.

My husband, Ryan,  undoubtedly in an attempt to redirect my need to yammer in his ear when he gets home from work each day to a different outlet, has been suggesting I start this blog for a while.  I've been resisting because, frankly, I'm a bit wishy-washy in the follow-through department when it comes to writing/journaling/blogging/yadda yadda...but, last night I finally decided, why not?  So we'll give this thing a whirl.  And first I think it's important to share with you briefly (or, more likely, rather long-windedly) the events of the past year which have led to the birth of this blog...

After a year of trying, filled with plenty of stressing and praying, at the end of January 2011 we (finally) got a positive pregnancy test (well, actually two, since the hubs didn't think that a very faint blue line was definitive enough, so I had to make a Target run to buy the "seriously-this-thing-is-HOW-MUCH-I'm-just-going-to-pee-on-it-for-goodness'-sake" digital test).  Unfortunately, after four weeks, three sonograms and more blood hormone tests than I care to remember, it was determined that the baby had been lost pretty much right after conception.  Insert anguish, tears, and lots of questioning God.  We opted to have the D&C to put the experience behind us as quickly as possible.

Not a month after our loss, we were sitting in Sunday church service when the announcement was made that the work & witness trip to Jordan/Israel that summer still had a couple of open spots left.  I had never before felt such an overwhelming sense of God nudging and saying "THIS is what I want you to do."  Ryan and I talked about it, and decided to try to be part of the trip, though to pay for just one of us to go would take more money than we made in a month.  Within a month of making that decision, both of us were paid in full.

In June, we boarded the plane for that miserably long flight that would take us to Zarqa, Jordan for a week of helping to fix up/build onto a school, then a week of sightseeing in Israel.  Now, let me say that, had the decision been left to me, I would have of course chosen for my baby to live.  God is infinitely wiser than me, however, and those two weeks, especially our time in Jordan, were absolutely the best and most life-changing of my life.  And while we were in Israel, we discovered...we were pregnant!

Upon returning home, we were all nerves as we went in for that first sonogram.  When the screen revealed a gestational sac and a yolk sac, but no visible baby, nerves turned to downright terror.  Six days later we returned for a second sonogram.  There, on the monitor, was the most beautiful sight -- an itty bitty, Gummi Bear-looking baby with a tiny, fluttering heartbeat!  I couldn't stop looking at that giant, perfectly wonderful alien head!

Things went really well throughout the first trimester.  I was lucky to not have any real morning sickness to speak of.  The one aversion I had was to coffee.  I don't think you completely understand -- I COULD NOT DRINK COFFEE!!!  Being a human who subsisted on copious amounts of the liquid gold, most often in the form of venti iced caramel macchiatos, this was awful!  Obviously I know this was completely trivial, but I was still quite thankful when the arrival of my second trimester brought back my ability to frequent Starbucks once again (decaf, I promise!).

At 21 weeks, we went in for our "official" sonogram, where we would learn the gender of our baby.  I had been waiting for this day for weeks!  As the sono technician squished all that cold goo over my belly with her magical-baby-sensing-doodad (very technical, try to keep up), I again saw my little miracle, now looking much less "fruity alien-esque."  After taking all the measurements, the tech informed us, "It's a girl," and she was perfect!  Then we heard, "Wait...what's that?"

Upon closer examination of whatever "that" she was referring to, the sonogram tech simply said "Don't move!" and hurried out of the room.  Joy turned into panic -- what was going on?  A couple minutes later, she returned with our doctor.  He dropped the bomb: "You have what is called an 'incompetent cervix.' Your cervix is too weak to withstand the weight of your growing baby, causing it to prematurely dialate and thin out, and the amniotic sac is beginning to bulge into the cervix."  Before I knew it, I was being whisked to the hospital side of the building, where I spent the night slightly inclined head-down, and more than slightly afraid.  The next morning, a cerclage was performed to....well...."put things back."  They gently moved the amniotic sac back up where it belonged & closed my cervix back up with a couple of stitches.  Any number of things could have gone horribly wrong during that time, but, by only the grace of God, everything went perfectly (I should also take the time to mention that an incompetent cervix is usually not discovered until after a baby has already been lost; had we not had that appointment when we did, things may have turned out much differently).

After the cerclage was placed, I spent a couple of days in the hospital, then was sent home on strict bedrest, only allowed up to use the restroom.  Because emergency cerclages have many risks, and there is no "typical" case, our doctor couldn't provide much hope as to how long she could stay in.  Definitely a boring & frustrating time, but each day that went by without our daughter making an untimely appearance was a miracle.  Our first goal was just to make it to 24 weeks, so she would at least have a fighting chance of survival.  That day came and went without incident.  Then we hit 28 weeks.  Then 32.  Each time we went for our next appointment our doctor became more excited, and so did we!  Weeks before, we could not even conceive that we would make it relatively close to full term, yet now here I am, reclined on my couch, 36 weeks & 2 days pregnant, and the stitches come out in 6 days -- God is good!

So that's our story.  From here I look forward to sharing my experiences as I learn to be a mother, maybe sprinkling in some giveaways & other bits of fun as I'm able.  I also look forward to reading your stories & insights, so please don't be shy! <3