Shagging!

The jetlag sabotaged my sleep today; I unwittingly fell asleep for three hours on the sofa and now I’m not tired.

Bella and I did get to watch the first half of a fun movie (on videotape! thanks Karen – I’ll get it back to you soon!) called Shag (1989). See, this is the kind of movie that I love watching with my kid; lots of dancing and relatively clean: a no-brainer. Even without having finished it, I would give it a B, but it only got a 5.2/10.0 at imdb. It’s fun too, to see actresses like Bridget Fonda and Phoebe Cates from almost twenty years ago.

Then when I was posting Mattias’ video, I came across this little 4-minute clip of the finals of a Lindy Hop competition. Each couple dances only for 20 seconds, so you really get to check out a variety of dancing styles. I had no idea that Lindy Hop had so much swagger and sass!

[googlevideo=http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-8289632208439269579]

Posted in Jeannie stamp-of-approval, movies, youtube | 1 Comment

Mattias in Joshua Tree

Don’t miss this sweet little 12-minute documentary movie Maya’s brother, Mattias, made during his visit to Joshua Tree. You get to see the homestead side of Joshua Tree – including Maya and Damian‘s abundant garden, the solar oven, and the National Park. You get to see Joshua Tree from the perspective of a visiting Canadian – nicely done.

If I can figure it out, I’ll try and post his movie (at google video) here directly tomorrow.

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Movies I Watched from Taipei to LA

Back home and back to watching silly rom coms with Bella, like Music and Lyrics (2007) with Hugh Grant and Drew Barrymore. I give a C+ and imdb gives it a 6.8/10.0. The plus sign only comes from the highly entertaining music video that starts the movie off – the rest is highly predictable and slightly irritating.

I did see an very good romantic comedy on the plane called Prete-moi ta main (2006) or in English, I Do: How to Get Married and Stay Single. I give this one a B+, although imdb gives it only a 6.9/10.0 (but only out of 304 votes). Despite just a couple cliched scenes (his The Cure phase), this movie is mostly refreshingly original and surprisingly funny. It’s about a guy with a heckuva lot of sisters and who is henpecked into trying to fake a wedding to get his sisters off his case. His would-be wife is played by the coolest of cool, Charlotte Gainsbourg. If I came back as anybody, I might choose to be her (Isabella Rossellini has gotten too old. sorry Iasabella.)

On the plane I also saw a lavishly beautiful, but essentially dull and depressing movie: Curse of the Golden Flower (2006). Talk about incest and misery and poison. That’s just a plain old C (imdb 7.0/10.0)- and I loved Crouching Tiger! Give that one a pass.

The third film I saw on the plane, (yes, three! and that’s not all…) was a decent one called Clean (2004), starring Maggie Cheung. This one takes place in London, Paris, and ends in San Francisco, and Cheung speaks English, Chinese, and French all (apparently) fluently. I give it a B (imdb 7.0/10.0): not very fast-paced, but well-acted. In some ways, it feels like a character study of a heroin addict. This movie was under the category “Favorites,” which was a surprisingly good list: True Lies, Minority Report, oops can’t remember the others.

The fourth – well, I didn’t finish this one but it was called Stomp the Yard (2007). It was one of those cheeseball looks at the hard-knock life of a guy whose brother gets shot in a gang-related fight. Very much like an after-school special, but the dancing was insanely hardcore street breakdancing. For those scenes alone, I plan to watch the whole thing again some time. All things considered, I give it a B- and on imdb it has a 2.4/10.0 rating. It is in imdb’s bottom 100 movies. Oops.

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Lingering Thai Thoughts

I wish I had more pictures of Nabi to post… I am still half in Thailand; I think I still have a half dozen Thai posts left in me. Here’s photo my sister took of another treacherous profession in Thailand.

Check out that “scaffolding” ! And look closely at their feet; they’re both barefoot!

This is a photo of a small mall right by the Ari BTS. It’s actually quite a swanky little mall with a waterfall cascading off the roof; you’d never guess from it’s current appearance that it was made with old-fashioned bamboo, string-tied scaffolding and monkey agility.

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American/British/Australian

Here is Noi Nah’s passport picture at seven days.

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BKK to LAX

The return trip has been surprisingly easy, baby scene in the airplane movie that made me cry not withstanding; Bangkok to Taipei was a short three hours, the two-hour layover passed quickly with free internet access, and Taipei back to Los Angeles is only eleven hours because of the trade winds. I have 1 1/2 hours before I arrive at LAX.

I have mixed feelings about being back. First, I am finding that I am really, really missing my kid; I think this is the longest we have ever been separated from each other. Has it been three whole weeks? I can’t wait to be reunited – and a mom and daughter team again. It’s going to be fun going through all the souvenirs I bought with her tonight.

I am also hopping about in my airplane seat, because I can’t wait to see Chad. I love knowing that he’ll be there… on time and happy to see me as well.

On the other hand, I can’t believe that it’s already been almost 24 hours since I’ve had a good long whiff of that newborn baby smell: that aphrodisiac I’ve been getting drunk off for the last week. Nabi will be so grown and different by the time I see her at the wedding! And I’ll have to compete with everybody else who wants to hold the baby. Some friend of Sue’s said laughingly, “Don’t let the baby steal the spotlight at your wedding!” I think the problem will be more that I will be so bedazzled being with Nabi again that I’ll forget to chill the champagne or to serve cake. I miss her already. Then after the wedding, when will I see her next? Sue and Joss would like to have Christmas in Bangkok this year – but even then, I despair that I will only see Nabi a couple times a year as she grows up. With Bella entering high school this year, I know how fast a childhood races by.

I also feel a small measure of dread at all that waits for me in Joshua Tree; especially renting out my house and going back to work. The renting my house bit is overwhelming because I need to redo the flooring in my house. If I am going to redo the floor, it makes sense to do it before the wedding – but then again, it also makes sense to do it after I move out of the house, which will be after the wedding. I would prefer installing a fake wood floor (called targo? pergo?) with help from my friends, but I may end up going the traditional landlord route and get cheap carpet installed. In either case, it’s putting my stomach in twists to think about moving all my furniture and packing up all my stuff. Would it be better to find a rental in Orange County starting in June? That way we could move more slowly over the course of the month and my JT house would be emptier for the wedding.

Surprisingly, I don’t feel particularly stressed about the wedding or about finding a job. The wedding has its own momentum now that the invitations are out. I do still need to find a dress, order food, and buy booze, but I did get that yummy personalized candy ordered from Australia. It took a little finagling too; Sue’s parents-in-law are picking up the candy in Melbourne and bringing it to Bangkok at the end of the month, and then Sue and Joss will bring it to the wedding. It’s a big favor – as it’s 20 pounds of candy, but it saves us $200 Aus in shipping. We got Kahlua flavor. And in two weeks time, Chad and I will drive out to San Bernardino together to get our marriage license (!!)

As far as finding a job, things are just starting to budge. I spent a lot of time floating in the pool chewing on that nut; whether I want to commit to finding work in the magazine industry even with the likelihood of a steep pay cut. As Songbae said to me, “If you’re gonna make that move, make it now. You’re going to have to take the pay cut whether you do it this year or next, and it’s not going to get any easier.” Plus, he pointed out that I just have to prove myself and work my way up. I also thought about a question my friend John asked me last year when I was beginning to ponder a career shift: he said, “Whom would you rather work with?” I’m not going to answer that one where teachers I work with can read my answer! By July, we will be a two-income household and it will perhaps be my first real opportunity to look for a job without worrying about having to cover all the bills by myself.

In any case, I have sent out a couple inquiry emails to magazine editors I know (friends of friends) and I have had one response so far. Songbae’s friend, Jimmy, who was an editor at KoreAm, has agreed to meet me for lunch. When we meet, I hope to get a better idea of what kind of a job I am even looking for. He also passed along a link to a website, ed2010.com, that specifically posts magazine jobs.

And only five more weeks of this old job left.

Posted in life changes | 1 Comment

Sue is a Hero

I came to Bangkok a week early because Sue had been having lots of Braxton Hicks contractions, which now she believes was related to all the fresh pineapple she was eating at the time. Much to my jet-lagged dismay, when she stopped eating so much pineapple the contractions subsided and all but went away.

My second week here – the contractions began to pick up with barely perceptible increasing frequency: Sue would never mention a contraction until after the fact, and sometimes she might lean over momentarily and close her eyes; at which point Joss and I would begin wringing our hands and asking, “Was that one? Was that one?” We continued to go for brief daily jaunts out on the town: a quick run to MBK to pick up a few more fake Le Sport Sac bags, or to have lunch at a restaurant around the corner, or pick up yet more Western food at the Villa Market (cheese, bread, yogurt, cheese puffs…). Throughout all, we walked very, very slowly, and let Sue pause when ever she needed. Still, there was never any pain, and never any regularity to the contractions. Sue’s due date, May 5, came and went.

The next evening, May 6, we were chilling on the king-size, watching another movie from my drug-themed movie queue that Chad packed for my trip (Half-Nelson, Candy, Pusher). The TV screen flickered to black and Joss and I looked over at Sue; she was leaned over her legs. Joss and I began our chant, “Is that one? Is that one?” Apparently she had had six or seven during the course of the movie – now we were finally getting somewhere. Within an hour of the end of the movie, the contractions merited gasping, breathing, and more concentration. Sue labored for another couple of hours at home, which meant lots of pacing up and down in the bedroom between contractions, Joss and I rushing about and doing last-minute packing, and sending a few quick text messages to family. After a particularly painful and long contraction, Sue stretched up and said, “I think it’s time to go to the hospital. What do you think?”

Well, at this point, Joss and I were willing to go with whatever Sue wanted. True, the contractions were still about five minutes apart, but not that regular. I suspected that we were still in for a long haul, but the doctor had wanted us to come to the hospital when contractions were ten minutes or less apart, and Sue had been dribbling a little amniotic fluid and mucus plug-like stuff for a week or so. We had the doorman call a taxi. Boy, folks really jump into action when a woman goes into labor. The doorman, the taxi driver, everybody was dead-serious and very focused on getting Sue to the hospital as soon as possible.

Of course once we got to the hospital there were admittance papers and a check-in exam, all of which probably took about 45 minutes. Sue was in the hospital bed having contractions, Joss and I took up the positions that we would later keep for the duration of the labor and birth: Joss standing by Sue’s head, so she could bury her face in his shirt and hold his hand, me at her feet, massaging her legs and talking her through contractions. We finally were brought to the natural birthing room. It was 2 am. The efficient nurse who led us in, took a look at the fetal heart monitor scan and smiled. Sue was only one centimeter dilated; she thought that Sue would be another ten hours at least. There was no rush – she closed the door and left us alone. I dimmed the lights and we made Sue as comfortable as possible. After another hour of about the same, Sue began to doze between contractions. The contractions were not more painful nor more frequent – I crawled over to the sofa and passed out for a couple hours.

When I woke, we were still in about the same place.

When the doctor came in at 7 am, Sue was only 3 cm dilated – and more than a little panicked in view of the pain and work it had taken to get there. He said he would be back at 11 am, and that if she had not made considerable progress that he would ask to break her waters manually. I let Sue know that, yes, this would likely speed up the labor, but that the pain would also intensify. Also, that her water would break eventually on its own. Sue was absolutely against anything that might add to her pain. In the end, her water didn’t break until the baby was minutes from emerging, and I believe probably provided a good deal of cushioning support until then.

The next four hours passed in an intense, meditative way. Sue’s contractions were between 3-5 minutes apart; they never got very much closer than that, but just increased in intensity. We kept a damp washcloth around to wipe down Sue’s forehead. Although early in the labor she had been more comfortable standing during contractions, by this point she was better on the bed, propped up against many pillows. Occasionally, she would try another position; on the floor on her knees leaning against the bed, or laying down, but she would always return to sitting up – and breathing through her contractions with her eyes closed.

The hospital was great through this; they left us completely alone. Every two hours, a nurse would come in and hook Sue’s belly to the fetal heart monitor for half an hour; that and bringing us bottles of ice-cold water were our only interruptions. And since Sue was not moving around too much during contractions, the fetal heart monitor (like a stethoscope) did not get in her way. We actually found the information on the monitor fascinating (and later had them make a xerox copy of the whole thing), because then we could measure the contractions in a quantitative way. It appeared that the first time a contraction reached a particularly high peak was the most difficult for Sue. The following contractions were more bearable, until a new peak was reached. The doctor kept waiting for the contractions to get closer, but they didn’t get closer than three minutes apart until the very end.

This is of course, just measured from her expressions and sounds. She was clearly in a lot of pain and working very hard. We all cried a little.

But most impressive was that Sue never once even considered asking for any kind of relief. She was fully committed to giving birth naturally and just went straight through with it – even though when Joss and I prematurely guessed she was in transition because the contractions were so painful and long. (This meant we told her that pushing, and hence a little relief, were around the corner for over an hour…I don’t know that what we said mattered at that point anyway. It was our presence that mattered, and our focused attention.)

By the time the doctor came back in, I was crossing my fingers that Sue had made some measurable progress. She had already been up all night and drinking only water and a little Gatorade. I knew that she would start running out of energy sooner or later. Plus despite all our talks that numbers didn’t matter and each woman dilated at her rhythm, Sue needed the mental recognition that her work was producing tangible dilation. When the doctor proclaimed she was 7 centimeters dilated when she was in the middle of a contraction, we cheered! Almost there! At this point the doctor said he didn’t think it was necessary to break her water, winked at me and Joss and said to call him if she felt like pushing.

I think she began pushing before the doc came back. And I’m glad we didn’t call him earlier, because once he was in the room, the atmosphere quickly became a medical one, poised for intervention. There were five or six attendants milling about, carts with surgical instruments, bright lights, the whole works. Good thing Sue’s eyes were closed, because it was intimidating to be surrounded by so many medical personnel.

Even with so many people around, the doctor respectfully let us alone. At this point the contractions were extremely powerful, and Sue screamed if either Joss or I tried to shift our position in any way, so we just stayed put, leg cramps and all. While the rest of the staff seemed confused why we would want to stay (on the bed), and would make motions to ask us to move, the doctor said it was fine for us to stay. I was in charge of Sue’s left leg. We did shift Sue over towards the center of the bed at some point.

We reminded the doctor that Sue did not want an episiotomy (because he had already forgotten at several previous visits), and he began to massage the perineum rather vigorously. He said, “Hey! I can feel the head; you are fully effaced. Let’s push!” Now this is the only time that I thought the doctor rushed things a bit by having Sue push so hard, and sometimes without a contraction; however, as Sue said later, she was thrilled by the encouragement to push and was ready to do so. I think she perhaps tore a little more than she needed to, but even the doctor said Sue tore very little.

This part of the labor I remember in flashes and bits, because there were such huge rush of energy in the room. In between contractions, we would scramble to get Sue a little more water or fortify our positions, and during a contraction we would shout encouragement, while massaging with one hand and snapping pictures or shooting video with the other. I made a huge effort not to direct too much of my time to taking pics, but I also knew that she would appreciate the documentation later.

Suddenly we could see the top of the baby’s head and everybody really started shouting. The baby’s head was very wedge-shaped – and I briefly wondered if the baby was okay – but when the baby’s head actually made it out, it was much more round. Sue later said that once the baby’s head was out, the baby started kicking inside and she had the startling realization that the baby was ALIVE and was really coming out to join us as a another fully-formed human being. There was a pause, then another tremendous PUSH! and the rest of the baby gushed out; slipped out in a torrent. The baby was held aloft upside-down by one foot. I could hear the baby bawling and Joss’s hushed, “It’s a girl.”

Once the baby was out, the other medical personnel kicked into gear: the baby was suctioned and dried by three orderlies with much hissing, sucking, and gurgling. I would have preferred to hand the baby directly over to Sue and have the baby rest on Sue’s chest – but I figured that we were pretty lucky to have had so little intervention thus far – and the baby did get back to Sue pretty quickly.

Sue was dazed. Was it really over? After a short rest, the doctor encouraged her to push again and the placenta and amniotic sac came out fully intact. The baby was placed by Sue’s head, and new parents looked on with widening eyes.

The rest was really just clean up. Joss followed the nurse out with the baby, because the baby needed to spend twenty minutes down at the nursery being measured, prodded, and poked. Again, I would have preferred the baby rest skin-to-skin on Sue, but at least Joss stayed with the baby the whole time. I stayed with Sue while the doctor stitched her up (he just did a couple stitches) and slowly became aware that I had both blood and poo on my clothes. Slowly, one by one, we each got cleaned up and rested. The baby came back, swaddled and calm. We propped up an exhausted Sue and the baby turned out to be a nursing champ. We rested, gathered our things – and made our way slowly to the post-birth room.

The baby was born at 1:33 pm, May 7, 2007. She was 3200 grams, or just over six pounds; this is considered a healthy normal size for an Asian baby. Sue was in labor for about 15 hours. She had a completely natural, drug-free birth.

Hurray!

Welcome to this world, Nabi Grace Dimock.

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I think we could solve a lot of this world’s problems if we could give everybody a baby to hold. Maybe it would only take one or two babies per household, because a baby actually radiates enough love to enfold more than just his/her parents.

Noi Na is doing her thing; being totally lovable and needing constant attention – we are all reaping the benefits of being parent-like.

Songbae is watching the first episode of Heroes (to catch up to us), Sue is in the bedroom nursing, and Joss is in the kitchen steaming veggies to go with the salmon teriyaki. Tomorrow is my last day.

I made quite a pile of good memories on this trip.

The labor and birth was something else.
Did I mention that Sue is a hero?

Posted in babies, Jeannie stamp-of-approval | 2 Comments

Little Butterfly

Songbae arrived last night – so now all the Lee kids are here to herald the new baby – and to have the newest family member imprint on the people who will be hovering over her for the rest of her life.

She is incredible. I emailed everybody a photo of her at six hours, and my dad said, “She’s beautiful. She looks like she’s six DAYS old.” We’re all stumbling over ourselves to give the highest praise to this absolutely perfect, completely new, delicately formed tiny human being.

Her name is Nabi Grace Dimock. “Nabi” means butterfly in Korean. Her Thai nickname is Noi Na, which means custard dumpling. That’s an appropriate name for this dollop of creamy goodness – I could eat her up with two or three bites.

I’m watching Sue and Joss fall deeply in love with her. We’re all caught in a buoyant, expanding wave of love; my heart has cracked open and love is spilling, spilling, and my heart is swelling, swelling. The little custard dumpling is creating more love in the world!

Here she is at two hours old.

Looks a lot like Bella did…

and then again at two days old.

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Baby!!!

A beautiful girl! Looks just like Sue.

She was born at 1:33 pm on May 7, 2007, weighing 3 kg.

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