Showing posts with label matilda. Show all posts
Showing posts with label matilda. Show all posts

6.24.2020

postpartum things


  • I started exercising for the first time in...um...I'm embarrassed to admit but it was well before I got pregnant. Anywho, I finished the WARM-UP and thought the workout was over because I was in so much pain. 
  • I cry at anything/everything. Like yesterday, I cried watching an episode of The Great British Baking Show. The day before that, I started sobbing when I discovered a photo of Matilda taken a few days after she was born.
  • I have looked at my incision scar twice, and the first time was to clean off the gunk before a doctor's appointment. It helps that a layer of pudge prevents me from looking down and seeing it straight away.
  • I get really nervous to take Matilda anywhere. We used to go on walks, but now it's 100+ degrees in AZ, so we stay in our lil' air-conditioned bubble all day. She's been to the grocery store once in her little life, and she was a month old (this was just before the pandemic struck). I think she's an extrovert (can you tell this early?), but she's not gonna know what to do when she sees another person's face NOT via FaceTime. 
  • I have a hard time watching movies or TV shows where people die, because now I think "Well that person probably has a mom." Probably.
  • I also cannot listen to true crime podcasts anymore. For the same reasons.
  • For a couple of months, my hair fell out in such large chunks, I probably could've made a rug with it. Now the shedding has stopped, but I'm growing back small tufts on my head in places I don't think even had hair on them before. I now relate to many of the male characters in the 90s smash hit, Ever After (Drew Barrymore forever):



Too real.

6.15.2020

deleting your instagram is the new black


when your anxiety outlasts the nail polish on your toes

So, I deleted Instagram last week or the week before. I can't remember exactly when it was. Maybe that's because I was relying too much on Instagram/social media to mark the time (and pass it). 

When you have a baby, a lot of things change about your life. A lot of this change is expected, like never sleeping normally again, or crying a lot at certain movies (I hate u, Goofy Movie), and ESPECIALLY (most importantly) going through more laundry than you thought possible. You know those huge gallons of laundry detergent you can buy at Costco? We had one of those when we were first married—it was actually a wedding gift, ha. It took us all of 2 years to finish it off.

Well, we bought another one right before Matilda was born and it's nearly gone. No, you didn't come here to read about the amount of puke I deal with now (wait...maybe you did? If you did, sorry, I think you have the wrong blog). The point is, I was expecting most of the change that's come with Matilda. And she's worth it all. But some of the change...a certain....virus....well, that was unexpected. 

I used to write a lot. I used to give myself time for other things, but with the baby and quarantine, every day kind of dissolves into the next. And it's summer in Arizona, which is basically just "stay inside for 6 months you sweaty pug." (I wish I identified as a better-looking dog, like a Golden Retriever, but no...I think I am 100% a pug).

Please bless I never talk about coronavirus again because I'm just sick of reading about it, talking about it, thinking about it, having nightmares about it, etc. Next thing you know, Swig is going to name a drink after it (wait, that would be bad marketing, and also....the beer? C'mon McKenzie).

So anyway, Instagram was the best way to escape these feelings of...being trapped. Whoops, got a little too real right there, but it's ironic, right? So instead of reading scriptures every night I would scroll, scroll, scroll. I don't want to know how many miles I have scrolled through Instagram but it sure isn't equal to the amount I've walked in the past few months (my dead FitBit just rolled in its grave). 

I've always been an anxious person, but in the last 5 years, it really began to flare up. I don't deal with change very well, and if I'm not doing what I should do to keep the crazy anxiety thoughts from spiraling down the McKenzie Brain Drain, it starts to manifest. In lots of scrolling. Lots of scrolling and feeling sorry for myself because...my inner dialogue be like:

  • Why don't you have a house?
  • Why haven't you paid off your student loans already?
  • Why are you using your Master's degree to write about freaking mattresses? (this one depresses me the most)
  • Wow they already have 5 kids at your age, you just have 1! (this one...particularly dumb, but I know I'm not the only one who has thought having children is some kind of race) (LET ME TELL YOU THERE IS NOTHING FAST ABOUT THOSE 9 MONTHS)
  • Why don't you read your scriptures more?
  • Why don't you exercise? You need to lose weight.
  • Why don't you cook more? 
  • Why do you still have adult acne? *cue the tears of irony*

And on and on! Exhausting. Not to mention, boring. 

No, really. Nobody talks about how boring anxiety is. It gets your heart pumping and you can't breathe, much like feelings you'd get on a roller coaster or somewhere actually fun, like a theme park, but no. It's boring as hell. You're just sitting around (or my preferred position for an anxiety attack, flat on my back in bed with a pillow to muffle my crying so Houston can't hear me). 

And instead of these really awful things happening to you, which would be awful, but also, would be SOMETHING HAPPENING, you're just imagining it all! That's right! It's all in your head. But logic doesn't work, either. See, I'm writing all this down and it sounds stupid, but that won't stop my brain from making me feel lame.

So, conclusion. Instagram made everything worse. I know there's plenty of studies showing the correlation between mental health and social media, and it's still inconclusive, but this is my experience. Instagram just made me feel like a speck of dirt. 

Instead, I'm just gonna blog again because that's fun. And it's not an echo chamber (well, it is, but it's just MY voice, so that's fine) (insert sunglasses emoji).

Now here's some pictures because mom always said never post a blog post without pictures!

(No, my mom didn't teach me that, because I came of age in the 90s, where the highest form of technology I used was a Tamagotchi)

I gave birth to... an extrovert?

her halo 😍😍 (Houston says emojis are for teenagers. I'll show him!)



here my designer eye bags are on fine display (and the reason they exist)


4.05.2020

part I: the beginning (and the end of me labeling these posts as "parts")


I realize that nobody, absolutely nobody, really wants to read someone else's detailed pregnancy diary. Especially on a blog where it's labeled in "parts." That's like being on a 1,000 mile road trip and passing a sign every few miles that says "990 miles left....970 miles left....960 miles left."

No. No thank you.

This is the only pregnancy post I'm going to write, but I feel like I have to leave it on my blog somewhere because for years I emo-blogged about completely insignificant stuff... And this is the most significant thing that's ever happened to me. So I better blog it, ya know?

So, when I found out I was pregnant, Houston was in the throes of finishing his last semester. He would often come to bed at 2 or 3 in the morning because of a big project he was working on, plus he was a TA for a few classes. Houston had accepted a job in Arizona, so I was job-hunting there. Loots of changes happening at once.

I took six pregnancy tests before I told Houston because I was in heavy denial. For someone who really wanted a baby, my subconscious sure was like, "Uhhh, no, you do not want this. But what if??? Nah. Unless????"

Right at the beginning of week 5, my pregnancy app informed me that I might begin to feel "morning sickness." It also reminded me that the term "morning sickness" is a farce most likely invented by men because it doesn't come close to describing the actual thing. And yes, it was a thing. The Thing. An alien monster chasing Kurt Russell around some snowdrifts, except one hundred times worse because it was real.

I've never been hungover, but apparently, that's what morning sickness is like. As a joke to keep myself sane, I began to keep track of all the "novel" places I threw up (places besides my bathroom):



  1. In the left turn lane on Scottsdale Road on the way home from work during rush hour traffic (technically, I was in the car and I puked in a bag, but I had to pull over in the middle of the road because I couldn't get off the road fast enough).
  2. Behind a church in downtown Phoenix, Arizona. I'm pretty sure the janitor or someone saw me barfing. After the first or second time doing this in public, you start to shed all sense of shame. You're just like "Yep. I'm doing this. There's puke in my hair and I'm doing this."
  3. In a gas station parking lot in Marble Canyon, AZ. This one is funny because Marble Canyon is a popular spot for river rafting, and there was a huge group convened in this particular parking lot when I lost all the red Gatorade I'd just drank. In the flowerbeds, no less. I took a picture and sent it to my best friend saying "All of these people just saw me throw up." Smiley face?
  1. In the Target parking lot, after which I ran inside to get like 5 bottles of Tums. Of course, when I got to that aisle, there were a bunch of people congregated right in front of the antacids. I remember the nausea-induced rage I felt then, but I forgive those people now. They didn't know. Actually, I miss them. I wonder what they're doing now. I wonder if I'll run into them at Target again. Maybe I'll hug them if I see them next????? CORONAVIRUS IS MAKING ME INSANE
  2. Outside a pizza place. I did not quite make it far enough away from the people who were eating outside and a girl walking by said matter-of-factly, "I think you drank too much." 




So, after nine straight months of vomit hell, I managed to birth the most beautiful baby I've ever laid eyes on. The birth story was nothing like I'd imagined and I don't need to re-tell it here, but just know, anybody who says the words "JUST WAIT" when you complain about being pregnant....is truly dumb. Babies are hard, yes, but 1,000,000 times easier to deal with than being pregnant. Amen. And Amen.

3.30.2020

mom, what's a quarter teen?

^^Things I imagine my children asking me in 10 or 15 years when I talk about that weird time that was March 2020 (and April...and let's be honest...probably May).

Before we were confined to our apartment, I was still mostly at home all day. I've been working from home since December and before that, I was pregnant and I did not have one of those pregnancies where you post glowing selfies and wear cute maternity clothes. Honestly, I was miserable for all 9 months and I seriously considered burning my maternity jeans after it was all over.

Reading the news right now is only helpful to a certain degree. It motivates me to stay inside as much as possible, but it also stresses me out (lit'rally everyone is experiencing this, I am not unique). So then I escape to Netflix, audiobooks, or some kind of craft.

Right now there's lots of memes circulating sayin' stuff like "I was an InTroVeRT before this, my life is no different." But, like, yEAH it is. I'm an introvert but I still miss going to the store or talking to our friends or going to church. You can't say that staying holed up inside all day is normal for you.

Anywho, I've come back to blogging because writing has always been an outlet for me and I ignored it for a year because #PREGANANANT. I have never spent so much time being horizontal, f'real.

Matilda is almost 3 months old now, so I need to catch up. Hence, the resurrection of Will Write for Tacos (lol).