Showing posts with label Relationships. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Relationships. Show all posts

Monday, 15 December 2014

Who is holding you back?

It has been a massive leap for me to create this blog and make my life public. I have spent the last 18 months or so hiding any form of personal information I could. I had even deleted my Facebook account, made any other social media account private and cut off a lot of people I knew. In doing so I thought I was protecting myself, my relationship with Steve and more importantly, Alexander. There was so much negativity around I didn’t want it to weave its way through my life again when I had just used so much energy in eradicating it in the first place. What I realised was that hiding myself from the world was preventing me from doing things I wanted to do, keeping me from making my dreams and ideas a reality.

I had tried to write a few different blogs before, however when I created them I over-edited. I didn’t want people to know too many details about my life and I was a little scared of putting myself out there. I didn’t know if what I had to say was interesting enough, I didn’t know if I could write well enough and I seriously lacked self-confidence. Prior to my relationship with Steve, when it came to following dreams and achieving goals my support network was largely self-generated. I never really opened up to my family and being in a relationship that was emotionally abusive and manipulating eroded any self-confidence I once had. I was, in a way, ashamed of my life and how I had become so reliant on someone who did nothing but tear me down. The most difficult part was that to anyone watching on we looked like a normal, happy and healthy couple – he exuded a sort of superficial charm and for the most part appeared to be the doting, loving and supportive husband. It was behind the scenes where the damage was done. What started out as little snide remarks and subtle put downs eventually turned into outright denigration. I had so many ideas for businesses, ventures and hobbies, none of which came to fruition because I had taken from me the self-confidence needed to pursue my dreams. I finally built up the drive needed to escape this toxic relationship I was in, but repairing my sense of self and positive attitude towards my place in the world took some time.

The turning point is a complicated story, but a story nonetheless. I came into contact with a woman who inspired me, who had a similar past experience to me and who had overcome any set backs to put herself and her several successful businesses out there. She now uses her experience to coach others in making their business dreams come true. I thought to myself ‘if she can put herself out there, then why can’t I?’ I realised I was allowing my past to hold me back from creating a bright and successful future for myself. How can I let these people indirectly stop me from achieving my goals and following my dreams when the reason they are in my past is because they have nothing positive to contribute to my future? 

Past or Future - Which direction are you heading in? Are you allowing your past to hold you back from your future. Read about how I learnt to let my past go and embrace my future.
Which direction are you heading in?

Then it all started falling into place. 

The ideas started to flow… and kept going. I knew the stories I wanted to tell and I knew how I wanted to do it. I launched myself into learning everything I could about blogging and what I needed to do to get my site up and running, and running well. I am still learning, it is a whole new language and at times it makes me wonder why I am doing it, but then I see how many people are visiting my site or I see my site transforming and coming together and experience a massive sense of achievement. I couldn’t do any of this without the support I have from Steve and my family. Steve has been more encouraging and supportive than I could have ever asked for. He encourages me to keep going, helps me when trying to understand and writing html frustrates me, cleans and maintains the house when my head is busy buried in my laptop and tops up my glass of wine at night. I was a little hesitant in telling my family about this blog, I wasn’t sure how they would react. My Mum has been nothing but encouraging to me throughout my life, but she is also a realist and lets me know when she thinks an idea won’t work or if she thinks it may be a waste of time (she doesn’t realise she lets me know this however after many years I have learnt to read her body language and can tell when she doesn’t approve of something). When I told my Mum I didn’t know what to expect. I was so happy when she smiled and told me she thought it was a great idea. My parents and my brothers have been amazingly supportive, reading my posts and letting me know what they think. 

I cannot believe how lucky I am.

Reflecting on all of this I realised that I have had Steve and my family supporting me for quite some time now. The only thing that was holding me back was me and my hang ups on what I did or didn’t want people to know. It took an inspiring woman to make me realise that I couldn’t let my past hold me back from my future. I am wondering… how many people are letting someone else hold them back from what they really want in life? What are your goals? What are you dreams? Are you moving towards achieving them? If not… then who is holding you back?

Thursday, 4 December 2014

How I broke tradition in our relationship

What’s a traditional relationship to you? One where you met in a crowded room, locked eyes and that was the beginning of something wonderful. Or is it where there’s the stereotypical gender roles – the husband goes off to work as the breadwinner and the wife is the stay at home mum looking after the kids and house? What about the proposal – does he ask your parents’ permission before getting down on one knee and requesting your hand in marriage? There are so many expectations of a relationship – most of which is Hollywood hype as to what a ‘perfect’ relationship is.

Well, I can tell you, we have broken just about every traditional ‘rule’ and I couldn't imagine a more perfect relationship.

Steve and I met at work – admittedly I did see him from about 30 meters away and my breath did catch. I couldn't believe someone so gorgeous existed. Wow. I was a student paramedic at the time so I was a little worried that everything that came out of my mouth made me sound either awkward or unintelligent. I saw his wedding ring and I knew that was it – this would just be someone I would admire from afar. We worked together for four years, I had been married in that time and had a baby of my own. We became close as friends, as you tend to do when you see someone at all hours of the night and day, as well as work within high stress and highly emotional situations. Through this friendship we helped each other through our respective marriage breakdowns and separations. From that, our relationship grew.  It wasn't the traditional ‘courting’, our friendship just gradually became more.

Tradition says that couples date for a few years, then they get married, buy a house and then have a baby. Well, Steve and I already had children of our own so we knew that was never going to be a traditional part of our relationship. Buying a house is off the cards – the town we live in is not the place we want to buy a house at the moment – not because we don’t like the town, we do, but because the market is falling, and is likely to continue to fall. Then there’s the marriage.

We have both been married before but had spoken about getting married ourselves. My first wedding was rushed (planned in just 5 weeks), was an absolute disaster with us and all of the guests getting flooded in for 4 days, and really didn't have much personality to it. Steve’s first wedding wasn't even his idea – it was his bride’s family’s decision for them to get married, he didn't have any say in any of the arrangements and didn't represent him as a person at all. We both wanted to have a positive wedding experience. We wanted a wedding about us.

I was watching the news one day and there was a segment on about women proposing to their partners. At the time I kind of scoffed at the idea thinking it was a woman’s desperate plea to keep her man. Then I actually thought about it – why is it when a man proposes it’s romantic but when a woman proposes it’s desperate? I loved Steve, I knew I wanted to spend the rest of my life with him, I wanted to ask him to marry me. I started planning it straight away. We had a weekend away planned for a few months from then, I knew it would be the perfect time. We went shopping not long after that and I decided to do some sneaky research, we went into jewellery stores (I’m a sucker for diamonds, I’m always looking in jewelry stores) and I asked Steve to try on some rings to see what he liked – I told him that finding the right one can take a long time so we might as well start looking now. He didn't question it and tried on a few rings. Surprisingly he found one he liked within a few minutes and just to be sure I asked if they could get the size of Steve’s finger too – just so we could come back in the future and not have to go through the process again – of course. The next day I called the jewellery store and ordered the ring for him. Perfect.

A few weeks later Steve’s parents came to visit. I knew there was a whole lot of tradition going out the window by me proposing to him, so I wanted to keep some fundamental elements of tradition. I felt it to be a respectful thing to ask his parents’ permission, well more of me letting them know my plans. I was terrified. No wonder guys put this off for so long. It’s scary asking for permission to marry. I didn't know if they would think the idea was ridiculous or not. Steve and I had only been together for about 6 months. I managed to stammer the words out and they were over the moon. Phew!! From then on I had a new found confidence for what I was planning to do. Prior to that I was questioning whether or not I should go ahead with it or if I should just wait and let him propose. Now there was no question in my mind – I was doing the right thing.

Our weekend away came around quickly and before I knew it we were in our hotel room sipping on Moet and looking out at the gorgeous views of the Gold Coast. I told Steve that I wanted to go down to the beach and watch the sunset, he had no objections. I managed to hide the ring in a small pocket in my jeans, I was so scared of losing it. The weather was perfect, the beach was gorgeous, I couldn’t have wished for a better evening. We sat in the sand for a while, talking about our future. I kept an eye on the time, the official time of sunset was 5:11pm, that’s when I wanted to propose. At 5:10pm I said that we had better head back to the hotel and get ready for our dinner out. Steve stood up to go and I fumbled in the sand for a little while. Steve was looking off to the surfers getting their last waves in before the sun disappeared, I stood up, managed to get the ring from out of my pocked, and knelt on one knee. He looked back to me and with a massive smile on my face I asked if he would please marry me. It took a few seconds for Steve to register what was going on, I could tell the second it clicked because a smiled his gorgeous smile and knelt down to cuddle me. He still hadn’t answered me! ‘So, will you?’ I asked. ‘Oh, yes, yes of course’ he replied. Steve’s smile radiated to his amazing blue eyes. This was the man I was going to spend the rest of my life with, I couldn’t believe how lucky I was.




Steve told me the proposal was perfect, I thought so too. It’s unique for us to our relationship. It’s our kind of perfect. There are so many traditions in relationships and so many other people telling you what is considered to be the ‘perfect’ relationship. It’s up to you to find your kind of perfect. Do what you feel is right, do what makes you happy and most of all, do what suits you both. Be happy, have fun and smile. 

Wednesday, 26 November 2014

The Story of Alexander (part 1)

Every pregnancy and birth is a beautiful story unto itself. No two pregnancies are the same, no two birth stories are the same. Alexander’s story is quite unique. It was both the most amazing and hardest time of my life. The story involves 12 months of trying to conceive, a wedding, a concerning medical diagnosis, intense medical observations, a very negative marriage and relationship, a stay in Ronald McDonald House, the amazing birth of my son, surgeries, an extended stay in NICU, the breakdown of my marriage, the support of my family and friends, finally being able to bring my baby boy home, a separation, moving my son and I to a new home, the beginning of a new relationship and the discovery of love greater than I have ever known.

Alexander at 17 weeks - photo courtesy by Matilda Beezley Photography

This isn’t going to be a quick, short post. Nothing about this is simple. So here it is. Here is the Story of Alexander.

I had met Peter* when I was working as a Paramedic. One of the jobs I was on had us cross paths, he worked for another service that we had contact with and we had seen each other a few times. I had thought he was a little cute but didn’t think much more of the situation. A few weeks later I received a message on Facebook – he had asked a co-worker for my details and they led him to my Facebook page. We met up and hit it off. Things were great at the start, we went on holidays overseas and throughout Australia, we got along really well and had fun together. An opportunity came up for me to transfer to a small country town, around half an hour from where I currently worked – it was a great increase in pay and would also give me a different level of exposure for my career. It was too good to pass up. We decided rather than renting, we would buy a house together. This idea quickly grew into renovating a house together and the hunt was on. We found a house and spent every spare moment we had working on it.

During this time things in our relationship started to change – just little things at first, the way we spoke to each other, things that never bothered us before started to be an issue. And I noticed that Peter started to withdraw from me. I never got a kiss hello or goodbye anymore, hugs were rare and just a general decline in affection. I’m a very affectionate person so I just put this down to stress of work and renovating the house. We would talk about it and things would change for a week or two, then settle back down to how they were beforehand. I was quite taken aback when Peter suggested for us to have a baby. We had spoken about it before, I had always said I wanted to have kids in the future, as in a few years away still, but Peter was concerned about his age (he was 8 years older than me) and wanted to start trying soon. I figured our relationship issues would go away once the house was done or once he was happier at work. I agreed and within the next month ceased my contraception.

It took us 12 months to conceive. By the later stages of that 12 months I was having weekly acupuncture, taking 11 supplements a day, had totally excluded alcohol, was eating the healthiest I had ever eaten in my life, was exercising 3 – 4 times a week and was becoming increasingly worried that there was something wrong. Peter hated needles and refused to be ‘checked’ to see if the issues we were having were stemming from his side so I had no choice but to continue with what I was doing. One night I was called to a job at work – a delivery. The dispatcher told me the patient was 14 weeks pregnant. I checked the information again. I was being sent to the delivery of a 14 week foetus. I prepared myself mentally as best as I could and set off on the job. I met the other paramedic on scene and we headed to our patient. We entered the house and met the young girl, around 18 years old – she was sitting on the couch in the lounge room smoking a cigarette. I asked her what happened and she told me. I moved the towel she had covering her and saw that she had delivered her baby – she was 14 weeks and 3 days. At this point my ‘work mode’ usually has kicked in and I just deal with what is happening, then think about the emotional side of it all later. I assisted the girl to the stretcher and asked her the usual questions. This was her third pregnancy. She had delivered one child who was now 6 months old, and had a previous miscarriage. She heavily smokes, heavily drinks, and uses recreational drugs. It was what she said next that shocked me the most. I must have been looking quite sad or something because she looked at me and said ‘it will be okay – I’ll just get pregnant again in a month or two’. I felt my heart shatter. Why was it so easy for her to fall pregnant and not me?? I carried on treating my patient, gave the handover to the hospital, locked myself in a room and cried.

Two weeks later I found out I was pregnant.

While we were rushing to finish off the renovations of our house, and finalising plans for the house we were planning to build (while I was battling with Hyperemesis Gravidarum and losing weight fast) Peter said to me ‘perhaps we should get married’. Wait… what?? I had mentioned to Peter prior to getting pregnant that it would have been nice to be married before we had a baby but I didn’t mean like this. Peter explained that he wanted his family to be complete – and by that he meant for us to all have the same last name. I was shocked. I didn’t want to have a big baby belly for the wedding. Peter’s resolve to that was for us to get married soon. As in, in a few weeks. I had never really wanted a big fuss of a wedding so I went along with it and said yes. He seemed quite passionate about it all. I had told him I would take care of the wedding plans if he just looked after the plans for the house. Although he agreed to this I knew it would never actually be the case.

We were married 5 weeks later – a simple wedding? It was anything but. We were married on Australia Day 2013 – it was predicted that we would have around 90mm’s of rain that day. That’s a lot of rain on any day, let alone your wedding. We actually received 380mm’s of rain on our wedding day. Not only did we have torrential rain but we all ended up flooded in. Us and 40 guests were stuck for 4 days. Our photographer managed to get out of the main area we were in but had her own issues on the way home – almost being washed away in a quickly rising river, being taken in by a nearby family and preparing to be air rescued. It was full on. Peter and I barely saw each other during that time – he wanted me to spend all of my time with his family (he didn’t like me spending much time with my family, I never really understood why, and this was a real eye opener for how much he was trying to keep me from my family). We argued, a lot. I couldn’t wait to get out of there. Again, I chalked it all down to stress. We finally were able to make it home and pack for our Honeymoon to Fiji. We were at dinner with some friends a few nights before we left and Peter was joking around with a friend of ours about how we argued after the wedding – he then told our friend, in front of everyone, how he would rather take him to Fiji than me and proceeded to put me down in front of everyone. I was mortified. He had always had little stabs at me before but this was the first time he really had a go at me in front of everyone. I started to wonder if I was really as bad as what he made me out to be.

After our Honeymoon (we were evacuated from one of the islands due to an impending tsunami) and another little camping holiday (of which we had to leave early due to heavy rain and flooding) we came home and settled back into our lives. It was coming up to our 20 week anatomy scan and I was getting very excited. We were going to find out if we were having a girl or a boy and more importantly, find out if they were growing properly and all healthy.

The day of the scan came, our appointment was at 9am, nice and early. We were called into the room and the sonographer introduced herself. She put the doppler on my belly and within seconds we heard the gorgeous sound of our baby’s heart beating. She asked if we wanted to find out the sex of the baby and we both said ‘yes’. ‘Congratulations’ she said, ‘you’re having a boy’. My eyes started welling with tears of joy. I had a feeling from the moment I found out I was pregnant that this little bean would be a boy. I was overjoyed. The sonographer explained that she would now take a series of measurements and photographs to ensure everything was tracking well with our son. I let her continue pressing the Doppler into my tummy, and started to notice that she was taking a lot of measurements of particular areas, and paying a lot of attention to the lungs. She had a puzzled look on her face. This was taking a lot longer than I thought it would and I was starting to worry. She explained that she just needed to go and speak to one of the obstetricians and left the room. My heart sunk. What could be wrong? I did everything right. I don’t drink, I ate well, I exercise as directed to. What did I do wrong? The Obstetrician came into the room with the Sonographer and said that they had found some abnormalities and wanted to talk to us more in private. We followed him into his office and answered a barrage of questions. I asked him to explain to me what they found. The baby’s bowel was slightly distended and they had found a small amount of fluid on the baby’s right lung. There was no clear answer as to what this could mean, but he explained he wanted to refer us on to the Maternal Foetal Medicine unit at a specialist hospital in a city a few hours away. He wasn’t sure if they would want to see me immediately so I had to wait to hear. I was directed to the waiting room and I sat there, thinking, waiting, over thinking, scared… for four hours.

The obstetrician finally came back out to see me and told me that the specialist hospital would be in contact with me and I would expect to see them in the next few days. I have never known a feeling like this before. Absolute helplessness. I cried. It was all I could do. I hoped, I wished and I prayed that my little boy would be okay and it was just a mistake. I went on to see the specialists at the Maternal Foetal Medicine unit. They explained that they could no longer see the fluid on the lungs that was initially found and that it seemed to just correct itself. They did however see the distention of his bowel and that it was of considerable concern. It seemed that there was something causing a blockage but until he was born they weren’t able to tell what. I was to continue to see the specialists at Maternal Foetal Medicine at the Mater Hospital until the baby was born, and that I would also have to deliver him at the Mater Mother’s Hospital – an hour and a half away from my home. There were more meetings with nurses, midwives, counsellors, specialists and they were talking about staying near the hospital, surgery after he was born, perhaps having to have him early. My mind was racing.
Over the next few months I had several more appointments, scans every two weeks and prepared for being away from home for who knows how long. I was told that I would have to be in Brisbane from 36 weeks in case I had the baby early. We were going to be staying at Ronald McDonald House, right near the hospital. We were also told that our baby would most likely have surgery straight after he was born, then have to stay in the NICU (Neonatal Intensive Care Unit) for some time. Time was a concept, I quickly began to realise, that no one really had any solid understanding of. Nothing was able to be measured definitively. It all changed, day by day, depending on the circumstances at the time.


35 weeks pregnant, I was still so tiny - photo by Matilda Beezley Photography 

Once I reached 36 weeks, I stopped work (yes, I worked on road as a Paramedic right up to 36 weeks) and moved ourselves into our room at Ronald McDonald House. There I waited, and waited. At 37 weeks and 3 days I started having excruciating back pain. The only way I was comfortable was standing, sitting on an exercise ball or laying on the bed with my knees tucked in under me and my head down. At 37 weeks and 4 days my membranes ruptured. I was so excited to meet my little man. We called the hospital and they told us to head over. My contractions were difficult to measure as I had been having Braxton Hicks since I was 16 weeks pregnant. I called my mum and she and my brother jumped in the car to come to see me – driving the 3 hours to get to Mater Hospital from where they lived. After 11 hours of labour I was finally at the stage where they would allow me to push. They had taken the gas off me and I had no pain relief. Because they didn’t know what to expect when the baby was born they had a barrage of people there waiting in the room for him to be delivered, the midwives, obstetrician, NICU nurses, neonatologists, neonatal surgeon… a lot of people. The midwife was encouraging me, telling me everything was fine. I knew it wasn’t fine. I had been listening to the monitor of my son’s heart beat for the last 11 hours – it had sat at a steady 140 beats the whole time. I was now ticking along at a very slow 30 beats per minute. I know that’s bad. I knew I had to get him out but I was exhausted. The midwife realised I knew what was wrong, she looked at me and said ‘you need to get him out now’. It took every ounce of energy I could possibly muster but a few seconds later I heard my son cry for the first time. I didn’t get to cuddle him straight away. They took him over to the resuscitation area to be checked over and ensure he was okay after having a heart rate so low. The finally carried him over to me and I had my first cuddle with the little man who owns my world. He was perfect. I was allowed to cuddle him for a few minutes before they took him away to the NICU.

In the first 6 hours of Alexander’s life he had more tests and scans done than most people have by the time they are adults. At the 6th hour Alexander had his first surgery. He had a complete bowel obstruction, they removed 8cm of his small intestine. He would have to have another surgery in the future (again there was no time frame given) to rejoin his intestine – they were unable to rejoin it initially due to the complications from the obstruction. Alexander was intubated and sedated following his surgery. I cannot being to explain the way it feels to see your newborn son lying sedated with machines assisting him to breathe, knowing you cannot cuddle him, you cannot feed him and you cannot do what it is that comes natural to a mother. I stayed with him as long as I could, the nurse that was looking after Alexander sent me back to my room at around 11pm. She told me I was no good to him if I couldn’t even look after myself and that I needed rest to be strong. I was back with him at 7am the next morning. The following night I received a phone call at 2am – Alexander had pulled his own intubation tube out. They were going to let him have a go at breathing on his own as he seemed to be quite strong. There were no issues and he kept getting stronger. The next day he was moved to another ICU room, one with babies that were still critically ill but a step down from the initial ICU room.


Cuddles with Alexander before his first surgery.

We stayed in this room for the next 8 weeks. We met the most amazing people during this time. Day in and day out I stayed by Alexander’s bed side. I read Roald Dahl to him each day and told him stories of all the people he would soon be meeting. I had cuddles with him late into the night and let him sleep on my chest. Alexander wasn’t allowed to be fed because of the obstruction he had and complications from it. I pumped breastmilk every 3 to 4 hours. I had a very good supply and the nurses joked that they were going to have to get another freezer just for me. I met some wonderful people while Alexander was in NICU, other parents who were going through their own nightmare’s, nurses who became friends and family and who helped me through the days when things didn’t go so well with Alexander or when they could tell Peter and I were fighting badly.


Alexander's 'room' in NICU

Alexander’s stay in NICU was the hardest time of my life. There is so much more to this story and I do not want to do it any injustice by skipping through it. So this is Part 1 of the Story of Alexander. It is a difficult story for me to share – baring myself and sharing our story takes a lot of courage. Part 2 will come in time. I hope this has given a little more insight into our world and why it is perfect enough for us.


Tummy time spent on mummy's chest.


*Name has been changed for privacy purposes.

Saturday, 15 November 2014

The Honesty Policy

WE HAVE MOVED
You can now find this post at

With such crazy, hectic and downright busy lives how do we make our relationships work? We are told repeatedly that communication is the key but what exactly is communication to you? I'm not talking about just getting through the day with a 'welcome home honey, the child needs a bath while I cook dinner' kind of communication. I'm talking about what YOUR expectations of communication are and if they marry up with your significant others.
Now, I'm no expert on relationships and mine certainly isn't a perfect one, but it works well for us. We both have relationship experience, most of which was negative and it has taught us what we do and do not want out of our relationship. Steve was with his teenage girlfriend turned wife for 16 years in total and married for 13 years. I've been married and had my fair share of medium length (2 - 5 years) relationships that were very involved as well as a few shorter ones that ended as soon as I started to see things I did not like. We both learnt a lot about what is important to us in relationships and even before we were dating and when we were both still married to others we had conversations about our basic relationship expectations. Steve and I were friends and colleagues for almost four years before we started dating and we saw in each other the negative effects our relationships had on each of us.
So what did that mean for us? Not long after we started dating we were talking about our expectations of a relationship, simple things like being able to talk openly with each other and not be criticised, to be able to speak positively to each other and one of my big expectations is to never be sworn at. It was during this conversation that we came up with the 'honesty policy'. Put simply, what it means is that we will always be honest with each other about everything including how we feel because we promise to never be negative towards the other. It took us both some time to be able to realise just how massively this impacted our relationship, and only in a positive way. We slowly noticed just how much we had shut down lines of communication in previous relationships because of negative reactions from our previous partners. Now, whenever either one of us brings us a topic that we feel is sensitive or something that we may not have bought up otherwise we usually have a conversation that goes along the lines of... 'honesty policy... When you said.... this morning it made me feel like.... because I thought you meant....' The honesty policy has served us well and has seen us through times of meeting each other's families, moving in together, going through divorces, custody battles and blending our families. I truly believe it makes us stronger and we have no fear of communication because of it.
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So when was the last time you were truly honest with your significant other?

 
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