Brie Gowen

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The Conversation I Just Had With My Child That Rocked Me!

February 13, 2022 by brieann.rn@gmail.com

I’m going to share a story with you. I almost titled this “my parenting regret,” but regret is probably a strong word. I know I’ve been a good mom, but do you ever look back, wish you could hit rewind, and do things a different way? Maybe my particular hindsight can help you see things in a different light.

I was driving in the car this past week with all three of my daughters, when my eleven year old said, “I’m glad that I’m getting to know you better, now.”

Confused, I asked, “what do you mean?”

She answered, “well, I just feel like I get to see you more now than I did when we lived in the blue house.”

She was referring to our life before traveling, our life before leaving our small town, but most importantly, our existence before we truly discovered what’s important in life. Allow me to recap for those unfamiliar with our personal life.

Almost five years ago I came to a place in life where I realized I wasn’t happy. I mean, I was happy. I had a great husband, children I loved, a wonderful home, and so much more. Yet… something was amiss. I was stressed, struggling, and considered myself what many women affectionately call one another, a “hot mess.” I was always running, always busy, and stretched on every side. My husband owned a business and worked six days a week, at least twelve hours a day, and even on his off day, he was sometimes doing stuff for work. I worked part-time, 24 hours a week, but homeschooled the girls five days a week, and spent my spare time (I know, hilarious) working a side business to try and earn extra income. Crazy. I felt like I was a single parent, breastfeeding around the clock, and striving to be better at all the things. It. Was. Exhausting. I was stressed, my husband was stressed, and apparently so were my children.

Back to present day, riding in the car, I continue the conversation with my oldest, “that’s weird, cause I work more now than I did then!”

Work may not be the best description here. More specifically, I work outside the home more now than then, but looking back, I suppose I was always working on something during that season of the “blue house” as my child put it.

My daughter replied, “yeah, I know, you work more now, but back then it seemed like I never saw you.”

Interested in this line of conversation I purposely asked, “who do you feel was home more, me or your dad?”

She replied quickly, “Dad.”

You know, the dad who worked six, full days a week!

I continued, “I was home way more than him. You don’t remember me there?!”

I watched her contemplation, and then she replied, “I guess I remember doing school with you, but I hated school.”

Ahh, yes, my initiation into homeschooling. Now, if I did call something a regret, it would definitely be how I handled schooling my child at five to six years old. Instead of looking at her as an individual learner, I compared her to other children. I compared her to her public school cousin the same age. I compared her to my SIL’s child who started reading at four, or my other nephew who had no troubling picking up his phonics in kindergarten. But I think my big mistake was the doubt I had for myself as her teacher. I was afraid I wasn’t doing good enough for her, so I unintentionally pushed her too hard, basing my worth as an educator on her unique performance. She would cry through her reader, and I would yell a lot. No wonder she banished it from her memory!

But it gets worse. The nail in the coffin.

She added, “oh, and you cleaned a lot.”

From the backseat my nine year old chips in, “yeah, you cleaned a lot back then.”

Sigh.

Not to be outdone, my eleven year old continues, “I can remember Dad being home really well! He would take me to Walmart, buy me a toy, and we’d sit on the couch watching Sponge Bob and eating Oreos all day.”

First, I made sure I relayed this to my husband later. He had mentioned to me more than once regret over not being around more when our girls were little. After I told this little story, he had peace that they only remembered that time of his overworking with fondness, and he hadn’t mucked things up too bad after all. I suppose all parents are their own worst enemy.

This conversation in the car didn’t so much guilt me as it taught me. I wasn’t drowning in regret, but it did rock my thinking. My husband had one day off a week, but that one day he made sure was quality time. That’s what our girls, six and four at the time, remembered.

I had focused on the things I thought were important at the time. Housework, ensuring my five year old knew all her sight words for the week, cooking every night, and building my business that was supposed to financially bring both of us parents home. I had rushed us to dance classes and homeschool co-op’s, but I had not taken as much time just to simply enjoy them being little.

Ok, I’ll look at this from all angles. I understand that things need to be done. If I didn’t clean the house, we would have been covered in our own trash. And reading is fundamental! Ha! Building my future via a small business was a wonderful plan, and activities and classes are important to childhood development. So, what’s the takeaway?

Remember when I said we had learned what was important over the past four years while traveling? See, we made a decision to sell our big house, sell our possessions, trade in the two cars for one vehicle, and travel for work so one parent could stay at home fulltime. We realized we didn’t need all the square footage. We realized we didn’t need to work more to have more stuff, but we did really enjoy more time. By doing the above, huge life-shift, we discovered what was important to us. Time with one another.

I can’t turn back the clock on the first six years of my oldest daughter’s upbringing, but I can move forward a little wiser. I can understand that young children won’t remember things like the fully-balanced meals every night or what grade they got in their school subjects, but they will remember Oreos and snuggles. Our relationship won’t be built on a foundation of how many days I was home from work with them, but rather the quality of the days we did have. And I’m telling you, as a fulltime working mom, that’s a huge deal. As mothers, we can often feel guilty for working out of the home, but if my experience teaches you anything, know that sometimes you can be home, but not really be there.

If anything, remember to be there when you’re there. That’s what I do now. As a working mother I don’t focus on quantity of the time with those I love, as much as the quality of the time we have. If you’ve lost a parent, like me, then you’ll understand a grieving child mostly wishes for “just one more day.”

I guess my goal, at this season in life, is to leave a legacy of quality. That the time I shared with my children will be fondly remembered as time well-spent, and while they’ll probably still grieve for one more day, more importantly they will recall fondly the days we had, no matter how many there were.

The Bittersweet Breastfeeding Journey

July 22, 2017 by brieann.rn@gmail.com

Today marks 72 hours post wean. What that means is my little one is laying in my lap right now. I’m giving her extra cuddles to make up for not surrendering my breasts to her, and she’s showing me that she loves me even though I’m not. Breastfeeding is one of the most amazing, peculiar journeys you’ll take as a woman. It starts very bumpy, but that first wet diaper and sweet smile with milk still dripping from their puckered lips makes you feel like a superhero. 

I am woman! Hear me roar! Look at me with my marvelous bosom. I am nurturing a tiny human!!

Then your bosom starts to swell in epic proportions as it expands to feed a growing baby and tries to find its rhythm. The pain of engorgement, the leaking nipples with breast milk circle stains on every shirt you own. The realization that you have become attached to your infant almost like a ball and chain, and now your diet is dictated by this tiny vampire/totalitarian dictator. You hear other women speak of babies sleeping through the night, and in your fuzzy, sleep-deprived brain you wonder how that’s even possible for a baby who eats every two hours. All. Night. Long. 

But it’s wonderful. In this weird way that totally captivates your entire world for the period of six weeks, a year, and beyond you form this rock solid bond with this blossoming personality you birthed. They depend on you, they love you like no one ever has before, and every time you look down and see them suckling sweetly you want to melt into your own crazy, hormonal sob-fest. I mean, really, is there anything sweeter than a nursing baby?!

Well, I fall into the beyond a year breastfeeder, and somewhere around month 18 for me it becomes a different kind of nursing relationship. Always being a nurse on demand kind of breastfeeder my emerging toddler personalities typically seem to arrive at a place where they want to control the relationship, and the breasts no longer become mine in my daughters’ eyes. My boobs aren’t my boobs; my boobs are theirs. With each child there comes a time where the power struggle becomes real! They desire my breasts to be like a buffet dinner, and even become angry if they’re not constantly available for a little sip here and there. It always comes to a place where it’s no where near as enjoyable. How can it be when the nurser is turning flips while they drink and tugging on your nipple like they’re milking a cow?! The only thing that keeps you going is that nighttime nursing where they sleep so beautifully and peacefully, and you think, ahh. I did this. So sweet. 

But when they want another nightcap at 3am? Not quite as sweet. It’s one thing when they need it for nourishment, but quite another when you’re the fleshy pacifier and you know it!

Sounds awful, right? So what’s been my hesitation this time around?

She’s my last baby!

*insert hysterical sobbing

I want my body and my breasts back!

But I’ll never nourish another tiny human from my bosom again!

It’s time to stop!

But I don’t want it to end!

I’m beyond annoyed at this breastfeeding relationship right now!!

I’m absolutely in love with our breastfeeding relationship right now!

Sigh. 

It’s probably the most bipolar I’ve felt, since college anyway. Every single time I have pumped a bit off to prevent severe engorgement as I attempt to dry up my milk I look down sadly at that liquid gold flowing so fast into the bottles and want to cry. As I see her stop trying to nurse anymore, after tasting the lemon juice on my nipples one time too many, I want to cry. As I look at her sleeping soundly in bed, without the aid of breastfeeding, and how big she appears, I. Want. To. Cry! 

She’s my last baby. My last breastfed baby. 

Once it’s done, it’s done. And we’ve gotten 72 hours in; I know I can’t turn back. Deep down I don’t want to. But I do want to cry a little bit. 


In the meantime I’m sitting over here with cold cabbage in my bra. I’m soaking in the sweet snuggles from my baby who loves me for more than just my boobies (thank goodness), and I’m trying to remember that this is a good thing we’ve done. We are at the end of a fabulous 19 month journey together where I gave of myself physically to my child, and now we move forward to the other adventures the rest of childhood has to offer. I am blessed. 

What This Huge Breastfeeding Advocate and Three-Time Successful Nurser Has to Say to the Moms Who Choose to Formula Feed

August 31, 2016 by brieann.rn@gmail.com

I saw a little something in a Mommy Facebook group today that got my attention. A young mother was admitting that she had “given up” breastfeeding before her child was three months old. Naturally I had all kinds of feelings about this situation. After all, I was breastfeeding my almost nine month old daughter as I read the post. She was actually the third baby I had nursed successfully and I saw no immediate end to our nursing relationship. I had breastfed my other two daughters to at least eighteen months of age. So you can imagine what I thought about this post. 

I thought, “good for you!”

Good for you for making it as long as you did. Seriously. The rest of this young lady’s post actually told of the shame she had endured from others for not making it longer, and that made me sad. Cause here’s the thing. Breastfeeding is crazy. It’s hard, and I can totally see why so many are not able to continue. As much as I love and support breastfeeding I would never judge someone who chooses not to nurse, just as I hope I’m never judged for continuing it beyond the typical suggested first year. 

And I’m no expert. I’m a huge advocate, sure, but I’d be lying if I said breastfeeding was easy. Especially if I said it was easy for me. I can recall nursing my first, and I was absolutely clueless. I didn’t know what I was doing, and I kept referencing books for how to hold her and make her latch. I was so worried I was doing something wrong, and the initial couple of months are a blur. I basically sat in a recliner all day while a tiny baby sucked the life out of me. She ate, slept a bit, pooped, and then we started over the same cycle again. I gulped glass after glass of water and worried obsessively over if what I was eating was the cause for her colicky disposition. It was awful. But then it also wasn’t, if that makes sense. 

With my second baby they kept telling me at my well-baby visits that she was too small. They threatened forced, weekly weigh-ins, and I felt like the biggest loser mom in the world. Was my milk not enough?! She certainly seemed full, and seeing her as an energetic, albeit petite three year old now, I think I did just fine. 

With my third daughter it took a while for my milk to come in, and as we sat at home the first day I watched her wet diapers like a freak. I scoured the Internet for someone to tell me I wasn’t dehydrating my baby, so even though I should have been a seasoned, know-it-all nurser, I still questioned my abilities. 

Even now I feel like my body doesn’t belong to me. I long for real bras and the ability to drink five cups of coffee if that’s what my heart desires. I continue breastfeeding because deep down I love it and it works for us, but if it doesn’t work for you, that’s okay. I get it. But the real point is it doesn’t matter whether I get it or not. It doesn’t matter what I think, and it shouldn’t matter what anyone else does either. You do motherhood your way.
Breastfeeding has so many great benefits, but it’s not for everyone anymore than co-sleeping or baby-wearing is. And I don’t think you’re any less of a mother if you don’t breastfeed for a full year, or even for a day. Motherhood is tough period, so whatever you decide for your baby is perfect for you, and that should be the end of it. 

There are a million books, and there’s a billion “experts” on everything from sleep-training to discipline techniques, but at the end of eighteen years it won’t matter an iota whether they cried it out or you used timeout as your discipline of choice. Not really. Do you love them? Good deal. That’s what counts. If you’re worried about it then you’re probably doing great. 

Above all, don’t let anyone shame you into feeling like the way you’re parenting is less. Unless they’re personally dealing with the colic, waiting up worried when curfew has passed, or paying for college, then I’d let the opinions of others roll off your back. But if it matters at all, my opinion, you’re doing great. 

Adjusting to Life With a Newborn

December 30, 2015 by brieann.rn@gmail.com

Last night my newborn daughter screamed, and I mean screamed. It was like a mix between a pterodactyl and the sound of one’s anguish after a piano is dropped on their head from a five story building. Or maybe that’s what my head felt like after two hours of her screeching and wailing. For reals, it was pounding. 

As I tried every trick up my sleeve, every secret, gassy baby hold, every lullaby, every rocking chair, and every type of pat, burp, and bouncing available, to no avail, I remembered. I remembered what it’s like trying to get accustomed to life with a newborn. Yeah, it’s easier than the first time, but it’s still a chore. 

I’ve been reminded, and I’ve been reminded big time. Every time I try to do anything other than hold the baby, I’m reminded. 

I’m reminded that showers are not a necessity; they are actually a sweet, sweet gift. They’re a prize for which you strive and dream for. They’re something you struggle to obtain, but nine times out of ten, don’t achieve. 

I’m reminded that I can accomplish nothing. Not one. Single. Thing. Nothing. 

My house is a shambles. My hair is a mess. My laundry overflows. My sink begs for attention. And all my bills are late. I mean, who can think about balancing a checkbook in the face of sustaining the life of a very tiny human being? Ain’t nobody got time for that. 

As I feed her, rock her, and gaze at that precious, squishy face, it all seems worth it. Of course it’s worth it! It’s crazy; I’m crazy. But it’s a good crazy. Right?! I’m tired, so tired, but she feels so good in my arms. I lightly brush my hand across her peach fuzz head and a crooked smile appears on her soft, pink face. And I fall in love all over again. 

And as I gaze at this little slice of Heaven, this piece of my heart that resides outside my body, a crying toddler comes running loudly down the hall hiccuping complaints that only I can solve. A sleeping baby wakes with a startle, and I’m reminded. I’m reminded again how “challenging” life with a newborn can be. 

It’s challenging to leave the house. It’s challenging to cook dinner. It’s challenging to tie your own shoe with one hand. Because that’s all you have. One hand. When you have a newborn you only have one arm; the other is always occupied. 

I could hold her forever, but eventually everyone else has to be fed something other than chips and gummy snacks. They need clean underwear. And you need to use the bathroom. I’m not saying I’ve breastfed on the toilet, but I’m not saying I haven’t. 

It’s challenging. 

It’s challenging to try and change your diet for someone else. 

Did the onion in my lunch make her gassy?

Oh God, why, why did I drink that caffeinated soda after 8pm?!

It’s challenging to try to find wardrobe choices that are not only breastfeeding friendly, but that also fit around a new, more than ample bosom. Not to mention a shirt that looks nice in the face of a belly that still appears four months pregnant. 

It’s challenging. 

It’s rewarding. 

It’s wonderful.

It’s hard. 

It’s the new normal. For now. 

  
It will be doable again one day. One day I’ll look up and realize I’ve been doing something for myself for a full twenty minutes. No one is crying, everyone is being self-sufficient, for the moment, and it’s actually kinda quiet. Oh Lord, it’s quiet! What are they doing?!

For now, I am just getting by. Each moment is achieved from nap to nap. From feeding to feeding. From poopy diaper to poopy diaper. So many poopy diapers. That is my new normal. For now. 

I’m adjusting. Slowly but surely I’m getting used to painful breasts, spit-up down my cleavage, and doing things for myself in fifteen minute bursts of time. I’ve done it before, and I can do it again. It’s just an adjustment. 

Plus those itty, bitty baby cuddles are the best!

But I could do with a little less of the midnight screaming. I’m only human, after all. 

Five Ugly Breastfeeding Truths

May 23, 2015 by brieann.rn@gmail.com

I’m reaching towards the end of my first trimester in pregnancy, and this past weekend I noticed for the first time that tingling feeling starting in my breasts. It was a feeling similar to your foot that’s fallen asleep after it begins to wake up with the pinprick feelings of returning blood supply. It was also a feeling I was familiar with, and I knew it signified the beginning of another breastfeeding journey. 

The thought filled me with joy and excitement for I knew what lay ahead. I knew the contentment I would enjoy by feeding another baby from my body, but I also remembered the challenges that would be in store. 

While breastfeeding is a wondrous thing it is also a challenge, and the first time around it’s actually exasperatedly exhausting and stressful. I read a lot of books before hand, but I don’t think any acquired amount of book knowledge can prepare you for the difficult road ahead. 

Here’s five ugly truths I learned the hard way. 

1. You’ll have no idea what you’re doing! Despite all the books, videos, and conversations with other experts in lactation when it came time to actually breastfeed I was like, so what do I do again?! Immediately following her birth I remember my newborn latched on immediately. I thought, I’m made for this. I got this thing licked! But then I was bombarded with the reality of not knowing a thing. 

The next time I saw my baby, after some time in the nursery, I brought her to my breast, albeit awkwardly, and she squinted at my nipple like it was a foreign object. I clumsily changed positions, holds, and breasts trying to make it easier for us. I looked back at diagrams in the books, I manipulated my nipple painfully into her tiny mouth, undressing her to try and make her wake up and eat! She slept, my breasts became enormously engorged, and I worried, what am I doing wrong?!

2. You’ll do it all the time! In our quest to conquer breastfeeding my newborn and I adopted the old adage of practice makes perfect. We practiced all right. The first two weeks I was glued to my recliner, a boppie pillow in my lap, and my husband helplessly bringing glass after glass of ice water for my parched throat. 

I read babies breastfed every two hours, but here I was breastfeeding all day long. We would nurse for about an hour where somewhere along the way she would doze off. Heck, maybe I did too. But eventually we would both wake to the liquid explosion emitting from her Pampers swaddler, and I would pry myself from my throne to change another poopie diaper. She would cry relentlessly, and I would finally settle her screeching tears by putting my breast back in her mouth. 

Repeat above paragraph, over and over.

Somewhere along the way I figured out how to put her down for those thirty minute naps before she doodied again, and in that golden half hour would eat, use the toilet, or collapse into an exhausted heap on the couch. Then I’d breastfeed some more. It was pretty much my new thing. 

3. You can’t quantify it! Despite all the time we were spending breastfeeding, like all the time, the hardest part for me was being unable to see what she was eating. Since I had no idea what I was doing I was plagued with questions like “when will my milk come in?” Or “am I making enough?” I wondered helplessly, “is she eating enough?” Even, “what if I’m starving her?!”

Breasts don’t have notches along the side that tell you how much is in there. You can’t look at them afterwards and see what’s left. You have no number of ounces drank. You’re basically winging it, and though books and lactation specialists will give you basic guidelines of how long to nurse on each side, when it comes down to it every breast and every baby is different! You’re left looking at the clock, putting scrunchies on your bra strap to remember which boob was used last, counting wet diapers, and trying to decipher if your baby is crying because they’re hungry, gassy, or simply because they’re a newborn baby. After all, crying is kind of their thing. 

4. It will hurt! I can honestly take great joy in saying that it gets better over time, and by the time you go to nurse your second child your nipples are pretty callous to the discomfort of suckling. But that first week. Sheesh! 

When I first discovered lanolin I thought I was in heaven. I remember rolling over one morning that first week and looking down in shock at the monstrosities on my chest. They were ginormous, they were shiny with a scary, accompanying roadmap of veins, and my nipples looked like the floor of the Sahara. They were dry, cracked, and to my amazement, bleeding! Lord have mercy, I never knew!

As a side note, if you’re a new mom, new to breastfeeding, and considering nursing your future child, please remember the above painful paragraph doesn’t happen to every woman, and most importantly it doesn’t last. Any great, wonderful thing usually involves sacrifice. Kind of like the whole pregnancy and childbirth scenario, period. 

5. Your body is not your own! While pregnant you have to watch everything you do. You have to watch what you eat, caffeine consumption, activity, and medicines you take. It’s exhausting. Well, breastfeeding is basically an extension of that, and if you choose to breastfeed for eighteen months or more like I did then it’s a lengthy one. 

When you nurse you don’t have to limit yourself to the extent you did while pregnant, but you can’t go crazy chugging coffee or wine either. You must make certain that medications you take are safe with breastfeeding, and initially you can drive yourself insane trying to soothe baby’s tummy based on your dietary restrictions. Don’t let that consume you; it can be very demotivating to continued breastfeeding. And while your body is still not your own if you decide to nurse, you learn to make it work for you both. You also realize six months, or even eighteen months more of sharing your body isn’t really a long time in the grand scheme of the eighteen years or so that your child will be at home. 

The thing is breastfeeding is tough, and there are a ton of ugly truths you never realize until, and/or if, you make the decision to nurse your baby. It’s a challenge, and it’s not always fun. But then it’s wonderful. Then you wonder why you ever doubted doing it. You wonder if you want to stop, and sometimes you extend breastfeeding past the typically popular first year. Then you surprise yourself one day, and you realize you love breastfeeding. Ugly truths and all.  

Meet Brie

Brie is a forty-something wife and mother. When she's not loving on her hubby or playing with her three daughters, she enjoys cooking, reading, and writing down her thoughts to share with others. She loves traveling the country with her family in their fifth wheel, and all the Netflix binges in between. Read More…

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