Beta Update

I can’t be bothered doing these blood tests anymore!  So no more beta updates until the next pregnancy, whenever that may be!

Spotting now, DPO 11, and if tomorrow is CD 1 I get to phone the imaging company and book my HSG for Tuesday next week.  What fun!
Also coming up: A trip to Perth from Tuesday-Saturday next week, which will include an appointment with the recurrent miscarriage specialist (Wed), the geneticist (Fri) and the reproductive endocrinologist (Fri).  Way to pack it all in.  
I was considering asking for a referral to a new IVF clinic (my old referral is bound to have run out by now and I’m thinking of switching for the hell of it) and maybe trying to get an appointment with a potential new doctor there, but DH says it might be too much to squeeze in for one trip.  I think he is probably right.  But I do want to get that ball rolling soon, mainly so I can get some information for my Wonderful Donor, and hook her up with a teleconference or something so she gets the whole procedure straight in her mind.  Her husband has given the go ahead, and at the moment we are all thinking about December as a possible date for cycling.  
We are both still mentally preparing for this next step. DH would like, ideally, to give my eggs another go – we did get two relatively normal embryos once, after all.  And we still don’t know if it is the eggs making the problem, or the  immune system.  But will we ever know?  We won’t know if donor eggs will work either, unless we try them.
Of course I would love to try with my own eggs too, but I feel my body only has so many IVF drug attempts in it and I am not far off the limit [ I seem to have a nasty reaction – each time I do it, some major joints fuck up and are never the same again.  So far I have done both elbows and both wrists – they became weak and easily injured, then they became injured and have never properly healed, and are easy to re-injure (eg: bringing in a load of wood can ruin my elbow for months).  I read that this could be a side effect of lucrin, so the second time it happened, I mentioned it to the Doc- he’d never heard of it and didn’t seem that interested.  Typical response.  However, I am interested and I’d like to keep joint mobility for as long as possible thanks.]  
Then there is the option of trying for another ‘natural’ pregnancy, but frankly, we could be waiting a while, and what will have changed to improve chances of success? – nothing.
So it feels like time to be answering the big question – do I want a chance at mothering, or do I just want to pass on my genetic material?  I think I am now ready to let go of the whole ‘child as genetic link to self’ dream and accept a different part of the mothering dream.  After all, I have had almost five years to get to this acceptance, the question has been with me for at least three of those years.  It is not a sudden decision, nor one I am taking lightly.
I could see the DE option as less than I want, or I could see it as imperfect; I could see it as unfair that I don’t get to have a baby my way or like other ‘normal’ people; I could mourn the loss of what will never be – and all of those views are valid on some level – in fact they are the very steps I have been through, over time.  But now I can see another side.  I see the DE option as part of the reality of my having a chance at becoming a mother.  I am able to see it as a gift, not a loss.  Something that has the potential to add an important dimension to my life.  It’s special.  Not everybody gets the chance to create life in such a way.  And not everybody has the blessing of friends willing to give such an enormous gift.  So.  I say: Bring it on!
And if it happens to work.  Well.  Let’s not get ahead of ourselves….
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I breathe in, I breathe out

Deep breath in.  I am not sure where to even begin there has been so much going on for me in the past two weeks.  I feel great physically, but emotionally I am a mess.  

Here is what is happening right now in my life:

My Aunt’s Funeral: was beautiful.  I went along to the viewing, (which I had thought I wouldn’t) and stood with my siblings and cousins, watching over her and remembering things about her, having a laugh and a cry together.  It was very healing.  We all wore sprigs of lavender with purple ribbon pinned to our breasts.  Lavender was her favourite flower.  She held a lavender bouquet at her wedding in February, and another as she lay in her coffin just a few short months later.
Her hands looked so big.  I kept looking at her chest, waiting to see the rise and fall.  The finality of the stillness unnerved me.  I didn’t know what to say, most of the time.  There were lots of hugs and much weeping.  We got through a lot of tissues.
She had a great many friends.  Real friends, close friends.  She attracted a lot of people because she gave a lot of herself, smiled a lot, laughed a lot, listened well, never said a bad word about anyone, always looked on the bright side, hardly ever complained and just got on with it.
The service was very moving.  The room was filled with a couple of hundred people.  Although I sat between my Mother, husband and Father in the middle front row, I could tell the place was full.  The funeral director, one of my brothers, and a close family friend all said eulogies.  My Uncle compiled a montage/slideshow of photos old and new, from various parts of my Aunt’s life, which ran on a big screen at the end of the ceremony as my Aunt’s chosen song (Jeff Buckley’s version of Hallelujah) played, while her coffin drifted on those little rollers through the big glass doors.  It undid me.
After all the wailing and gnashing of teeth were done, many people joined together at her local pub to send her off with a toast and to share their memories of her in a more personal setting. We stayed til five and then drove the three and a half hours home.  It had been a long day.  
[During the gathering, my Uncle shared with me his experience of being present at the vigil for the two days before my Aunt’s death.  My grandparents, my Uncle, all my Aunt’s children, her husband and my mother (as palliative care nurse) camped out on the lounge room floor for 3 days, just being with her as she sat and dozed in and out of consciousness on the sofa.  Being with and supporting each other.  Having cups of tea.  Playing scrabble (her favourite game & she was a formidable opponent).  Saying goodbye.  It was very special and I am glad to have shared it, even if only vicariously.  My mother had also called me the second night and told me what was going on. Suggested my Aunt might not last until morning and perhaps I wanted to light a candle.  DH and I were playing scrabble at the time.  We felt a bit flat after the phone call and wondered if we wanted to continue the game.  I got a seven letter word in my next hand, but nowhere to put it.  The word was funeral.]
Pregnancy Announcement: On the way home from my Aunt’s funeral my best friend (IF, IRL)*  texted me to say she was pregnant.  We had a pact that whoever went first had to text the other (rather than phone or in person) and she had already let me know earlier in the week that she was three days late, so I was expecting it.  I even gave her one of my tests so she wouldn’t have to go to the chemist (small country town and all that).  She came over later in the week and DH wrote her out a path form for her beta, as it would have taken too long to get an appointment to see her doctor.  Her first beta was 10,000.  Her 6 week scan is today.
I won’t pretend it hasn’t been hard for me, but it has been different.  I haven’t felt angry or jealous or resentful.  But I have felt embarrassed and ashamed.  Odd, I know.  It has brought up feelings I had when still at school, where I was never picked for a team, but always left until last.  That’s exactly how I feel right now.  That shame, of not being good enough for someone to choose.  And along with that, a good dose of abandonment, as the person I shared this journey with is leaving me now.  ‘Crossing over to the other side’, as the IF community would say.  She is one of my closest friends in this town.  This is not going to be easy.  But I AM happy for her. Apart from anything else, it has been three years since her first and last pregnancy (that ended in miscarriage at ten weeks) and I know exactly what she’s been through.  Yay for her!
We have had the conversation about how we are both feeling.  I have told her that I want to share this pregnancy with her.  I want to cherish the next nine months of having her to myself, because soon I will be sharing her time and attention with a child and it will never be the same. I don’t want to cut myself off from her, as I have done with so many of my other friends.  This feels like a big step for me.  I have never shared anyone’s pregnancy journey before.  Actually been present for it, interested in it, engaged with it.  I don’t quite know what to expect, but I can guess it will be bringing up emotions for me all along the way.  I think this is healthy and I welcome that opportunity.  But I don’t suspect for a minute it is going to be a walk in the park.
However, it has been somewhat of a catalyst for making a commitment to embracing my existential crisis.  Really taking a good hard look at myself and my life and what I want.  What I think I can hold on to.  What part of me is the solid, the real, the true, and what is the transient, the suffering that I can let go of.
Bathroom renovation – intermission/light relief: The sander came this morning “to have a look at the job” and says he can maybe do it within a fortnight.  So that’s progress of a sort.  A two month bathroom renovation in the middle of winter was not what I had in mind, but there you go. Could be worse.  
White Light Essences – Water:  Another good friend dabbles in the art of Australian Bush Flower Essences and the White light essences are an extension of those, which work more on a spiritual plane.  Water is the first of these.  My friend warned me that it would probably make me cry for days.  I replied: no problem, I have been crying for over a week now anyway so it is not going to make much difference!
The Artist’s Way: Continuing on the theme of existential crisis, this is part of a conglomerate of things that are bringing a lot of emotional upheaval into my life at the moment. I am now into my second week of the course, though taking a rather slower approach.  I have only missed one ‘morning pages’ although I am still on exercises for week one and think I might take two or even three weeks to complete each ‘week’ of the course.  This is ok.  In fact it is good, because it is an example of where I am not sticking myself to some arbitrary rule and flogging myself to death over not achieving some standard I have set.  I am just allowing myself to take the time I need to plod through and make the most of the journey. It feels great, a real relief.
Meditation: Over the last week I have made time for meditation on most days, around 30 mins. I can’t believe I am finally doing this, after thinking about it and talking about it and wanting to do it for so long, I am actually building it into my life.  I loved the ten day Vipassana course I completed in November last year at the International Medication Centre.  I had planned to do another one this April, when the ectopic intervened.  I thought I needed it to spur me on, but I guess not.  Somehow I have just found myself ready to commit the space, and just to sit. Sometimes at night when the dinner is cooking itself, and sometimes in the morning if I get up early enough.  This morning I saw the pink clouds of dawn wafting past my window and the morning song of the warbling magpies.  It was beautiful.
Elimination Diet: Also over the past week I have found myself wanting to avoid sugar, alcohol, caffeine and cut right back on wheat and dairy.  It just felt right to do it and it hasn’t been a big deal like it often can be.  I find myself offering DH the Friday night chocolate and not feeling at all like I am missing out.  Yesterday I ate two pieces of shortbread my friend had made with her freshly picked macadamia crop.  It was delicious, but I felt a bit weird/wired? afterwards.  And it didn’t make me want to rush out and eat a packet of biscuits.  So I’m feeling lucky that it has been so easy to have a bit of a cleanse.   I’ll just keep going until I don’t want to do it anymore. See- flexibility!  No more bigger-than-Ben-Hur-rule-bound- extravaganza! Phew.
Byron Katie – The Work: I discovered this through a link here, at Sarah Solitaire’s site, which I found while catching up on another friend’s blog, who I rediscovered while taking part in NCLM.  God I LOVE the internet.  Having said that, I have a friend IRL (happens to also be my hairdresser, J) who has told me about this before, but I guess that wasn’t the right time, and NOW is the right time.  
“The Work is a simple yet powerful process of inquiry that teaches you to identify and question thoughts that cause all the suffering in the world.  It is a way to understand what’s hurting you and to address your problems with clarity” [taken from the website].  You write down what is annoying you, then ask some questions, then try to turn it around.  I won’t go into it here, you can see for yourself if you want to click on the link.
Anyway, I am struggling with the turnaround quite a bit, and told J as much.  She offered to help me work through it any time – just give her a call.  I can’t believe how generous people are being with their time and themselves at the moment.  I feel so lucky.
And here’s the BIG offer of help:
Donor Egg:  OMFG.  The other best friend I have in this town, C, today just offered me her eggs. We were having a conversation about it over the phone about an hour ago and she just came out with it.  I haven’t even told DH yet.  
C is my shiatsu practitioner and I babysat her almost-one-year-old last night while she took a meditation class.  I was in the middle of a rather emotional and heated discussion with DH about where to go from here, (brought up by the RE’s letter in which he addressed our questions and basically had no treatment to add besides asprin and the HSG) and the fact that I couldn’t do the driving force/main researcher/ and advocate roles anymore and could he take them on please? (that’s the nice version) when I had to leave it all hanging and go off to the babysitting job.  So of course when C got home I blurted it all out to her.  Felt much better. Then did a bit more talking with DH when I got home.
This morning DH emailed me a link to the Australian guidelines for investigation and treatment of recurrent miscarriage.  Basically it does appear that we are very close to the end of the line. If not there already.  We have now decided to see the geneticist, the recurrent miscarriage specialist, the RE (all in Perth) and the RI (in Sydney) before we call this a day. Neither of us feel they will have too much to add, (besides offering us IVF again) but I think it might be useful for closure, to hear them say their pieces and tell us we tried everything we could and it’s not our fault and such like.  Some reassurance that we’ve done our best and we can let it go now.
And then C phoned and I told her the developments and how I was close to a decision to let it go because my options had narrowed so rapidly.  She asked “what about someone else’s eggs?” and I told her it was great in theory but the donor egg lists in this country are years long and realistically it isn’t going to happen – people just don’t donate their eggs here anymore.  I have a dear friend in the UK who would do this for me, but the logistics of that exercise via such distance just seem too much. 
And she said these words:  You can have mine.
Even if I don’t, for whatever reason comes along, take her up on the offer, just having someone say that and really mean it is probably the biggest gift I have ever been given.  I’m still crying over it.
Ok.  Now you can breathe out.
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Beta Update

10

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Beta Update

This week, my beta is 14.  Two weeks ago it was 18.  Am I going to be ‘pregnant’ until the end of the year????

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A week later

A week later and much has happened.

For starters, clearly I have fallen off the NCLM caravan. I tried to make the time, I really did, but to no avail. I discovered my life is just too full to be able to manage 1-2hrs per day at the computer, as much as I enjoyed finding out about other people and their stories. I will endeavour to return all comments left, but cannot promise they will be within any particular specified time frame.

Things are moving quickly with my tutoring job and I have spent a lot of time this week on research and development of a tailored program, with help from B’s teacher and a literacy specialist. He is still keen as mustard and his mother has found someone else who wants to avail themselves of my services, so it looks like I might be getting even busier.

I managed about 5 loads of washing this week, vacuumed the house and cleaned all the lounge room windows. Oh alright, only about 12 of them. I couldn’t be bothered with the other 14 as they needed a ladder. Yesterday I listened to an interview with Philip Pullman on His Dark Materials Trilogy as I ironed a week’s worth of shirts and trousers (now I am only a week behind instead of 3 weeks behind). Today I managed to get 7 assorted varieties of broccoli plants in the ground in between cleaning C’s house, filling the car with petrol, checking the mail, doing a quick shop, putting a script into the pharmacy, having my beta tested (YES, STILL!!) and rushing off to my tutoring job (15 min drive) after stuffing my face with a quick smoked salmon- and-avocado-on-corn-thins lunch. But I didn’t manage to catch the nursery woman with whom I have placed my fruit tree order although I phoned her twice. Oh well, on tomorrow’s list it goes….

Nothing is happening on the bathroom renovation front, but because of this, we have a nightly visitor to our upstairs (outside) bath/shower. The resident possum has decided he likes to eat soap. Of course, it is locally hand made goats milk apple and cinnamon flavoured soap, so I guess we can’t blame him. However, after the first couple of 11pm forays and *crash!bang!wallop!* there-goes-the-shampoo-again events designed to wake us with a start just as we were settling in for a deep sleep, we brought the soap inside each night (except once when DH forgot). Sadly, the possum is now a victim of very effective partial reinforcement conditioning, and returns with quotidian regularity just in case he gets lucky. We have now had to bring the shampoo inside also. (Because he knocks it over in the bath, the lid pops open and it leaks. Expensively). Which is all very well until you get out there in the dark and freezing cold, finally get your kit off and are now wet all over, when you remember you’ve forgotten a certain important something. Namely soap and shampoo….

To other matters: The books by my bedside table do not seem to be diminishing in any great hurry. Last month I counted 21. Yesterday I also counted 21. Yet in the last week alone I have finished at least 4. This is my dilemma:

I order books in through the library when I come across good reviews or recommendations. Sometimes they are so new the State library system has not yet even received them, sometimes other people are reading them and sometimes other people are reading them and there is also a long queue behind them. So I go on a waiting list.

Now, it is a bit of a lottery as to when any book one has requested becomes available, and they generally pop up like unexpected treats over the course of any given week or month. But I had a dearth for ever such a long time (perhaps a month?) that I was driven to the point of putting even MORE requests in. Hoping something, ANYTHING would be available in the coming week. I am not sure why, as I already had a great pile of books of my own waiting to be read. And if that were not enough, which is most certainly should have been, this interval also neatly coincided with my birthday. For which I received at least four books (five if you count Madhur Jaffrey’s World Vegetarian cookbook, and I do – I have often been known to take one of these tomes to bed for reading pleasure), of which I am still reading/dabbling in concurrently Is It Just Me Or Is Everything Shit? by Steve Lowe and Alan McArthur and Rogue Economics by Loretta Nopleoni. [I finished The Observations by Jane Harris in one day. Greedy? I think I might have to admit to it.]

And so it transpires – you know what’s coming, the irony – that everything is turning up at once!! Not a day passes that I don’t receive a phone call “This is the library, we have a book for you to collect.” Or “This is the library, we have another book for you to collect.” [I also order talking books, to transfer onto my laptop and reroute wirelessly through my stereo to play while I am ironing, or cooking, or doing other domestic duties that require my eyes and hands but not necessarily my ears. I just finished 44 Scotland Street by Alexander Mc Call Smith, and Eating For England by Nigel Slater arrived the following day. I haven’t begun as I am too bust getting through the backlog of podcasts from ABC radio National and then there’s the Classic Tales Podcasts to see about…]

So I have finished and despatched Susannah Clarke’s Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell, and The Journal of Dora Damage by Belinda Starling while traipsing through How to talk about books you haven’t read by Pierre Bayard a few chapters at a time. Today I collected Lullabies for Little Criminals by Heather O’Neill. Phew. So, back to 21 again. Among those I own myself (or have borrowed from friends who don’t mind waiting a while before they see it again) that I am itching to get my eyes on a little further down the pile (and in no particular order) are:
The Hidden Connections by Fritjof Capra
The Science of Happiness by Stefan Klein
Cultural Amnesia by Clive James
The Artist’s Way by Julia Cameron

Which I will intersperse, for levity, with:
Mrs Kimble by Jennifer Haigh
Mr Golightly’s Holiday by Sally Vickers
Rashomon by Ryunosuke Akutagawa

And at this stage I won’t even mention the other eight or nine languishing at the end of the pile. (Or the twenty or so others that lay in wait on the shelf above my bed…)

However I will mention that last night I dipped into The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying by Sogyal Rinpoche. I have not opened this book for nigh on ten years. DH was reading it off and on for a while, alongside his Yoga Sutras of Patanjali. He asked me if there was anything we could do for my Aunt as she lay dying, and when I replied that she was dying, what could we do for her? he passed me the book. I flicked through to the section on the process of dying and saw that there was indeed something I could do. I imagine Christians might call it praying. The Yogis believe that meditation offered to a dying soul can ease their passing. And so I lit a candle (my favourite and most special candle I had been saving for I did not know what occasion) and I lay down and drifted to sleep after about an hour of meditating just for her. It was so deeply peaceful. The candle burned to the end. This morning, she was gone.

I have not yet had time to cry.

She will be dearly missed.

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MTHFR

Not sure how this was missed with our first round of testing, but we couldn’t find the results for this test so decided to do it ‘again’.

Results came back today: I tested positive. heterozygote (ALA677VAL) for the methelyne terahydrofolate reductase mutation. (aka ‘MTHFR’)

I am very tired from googling this all night, so will have to add links in tomorrow. Suffice to say for now: perhaps this is linked to my RPL and let’s delve a little deeper. I have emailed my (soon to be) RI in Sydney (who specialises in RPL and NK cells) with this information and will be interested to hear what he has to say about it.

Must. Go. To. Bed.

Didn’t comment anywhere today. And I think resting on my laurels ran out yesterday….

ETA: RI says it is a common finding which does not require any specific treatment. So. Back to square one. Sigh….

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Bathroom Renovations

Did I mention we are having our bathroom renovated? Yes, the dulcit tones of hammering and bandsawing from 8am to 5pm since last Tuesday have graced our ears. Well the builders have now mostly finished, and so leave today, while we wait 2.5 weeks for the floor sander to come in, then they will come back for half a day (when they can squeeze us in, so whenever that may be) to finish off the skirting boards and some grey-water piping.

Looks like we’ll be taking those outdoor showers for another month. Lucky it is June, and thus, WINTER, and did I mention we had our third frost for the month this morning? DH had to bucket the car windscreen again. So, not very cold outside. Much.

But at least I may get a lie in tomorrow morning.

WHERE I LEFT A COMMENT TODAY
http://kyfti.blogspot.com/
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http://www.yearsinthemaking.blogspot.com/
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Pregnancy Announcement

No, not mine. Before you get all excited. Or depressed.

I don’t know how pregnancy announcements make you feel, but normally they make me feel like shit. Yes, I am depressed it isn’t me. But I am even going to admit this: I am rarely, in any way, happy for the other person (unless we are talking my pre-TTC years). I just feel generally resentful and grumpy and depending on who it is and how close they are and how many kids they already have and how easy it has been for them, I generally have a good old cry as well.

But not this morning. This morning I got an email from an online friend. She POAS the day before her (FET) beta and got two lines. And guess what? I WAS HAPPY FOR HER!! My FIRST reaction was “wow, that’s FANTASTIC, I am so THRILLED”. Huh? So where did that come from??? I haven’t felt this way for someone in a very long time. It probably helped (me, not her!) that she has had a long hard struggle, with medical complications on both sides, numerous failed IVF’s and lots of embryos that never survived thaw on her multiple FET’s. So I am able to feel a bit more generous with my well wishes in cases such as these. But to actually feel REAL HAPPINESS for them, no.

So congratulations to ME, for somehow making this shift. Let’s hope it hangs around. My new attitude AND her new pregnancy.

WHERE I LEFT A COMMENT TODAY
http://justastayathomewife.blogspot.com/
http://cupcakesandconundrums.blogspot.com/
http://lostinspace2008.blogspot.com/
http://lifeandtimesofkimbosue.blogspot.com/
http://the-view-from-the-hill.blogspot.com/
http://averyopenbook.blogspot.com/
http://www.scrambled-eggz.blogspot.com/
http://mountpg.blogspot.com/
http://highlandhardrain.blogspot.com/
http://blog.candelariasilva.com/
http://cardsdealt.blogspot.com/
http://korechronicles.wordpress.com/
http://barrenalbion.blogspot.com/
http://sglover212.blogspot.com/
http://www.ramblingsbyreba.com/

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drawing personality

What does your drawing say about YOU?

You tend to pursue many different activities simultaneously. When misfortune does happen, it doesn’t actually dishearten you all that much.
You are a thoughtful and cautious person. You like to think about your method, seeking to pursue your goal in the most effective way.
You like following the rules and being objective. You are precise and meticulous, and like to evaluate decisions before making them.
You have a sunny, cheerful disposition.

[I agree with all of this except the last line. But maybe sunny and cheerful was my natural disposition. When I was very very young…]

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Mosaic Meme

Today’s little bundle of fun: The mosaic meme. I saw this at http://sweetsouthernknits.blogspot.com/

Here are the rules:
a. Type your answer to each of the questions below into flickr search
b. Using only the first page of results, pick an image.
c. Copy and paste each of the URLs for the images into fd’s mosaic maker.

The Questions:
1. What is your first name?
2. What is your favorite food?
3. What high school did you go to?
4. What is your favorite color?
5. Who is your celebrity crush?
6. Favorite drink?
7. Dream vacation?
8. Favorite dessert?
9. What you want to be when you grow up?
10. What do you love most in life?
11. One word to describe you.
12. Your flickr name.

Mine:

1. Simone, 2. Morrocan sunset, 3. Pelican in Busselton; WA, 4. Aquamarine (panorama), 5. David Attenborough – Naturalist, 6. One Pomegranate and a crowd, 7. The famous maple, 8. Desserts, 9. We are choosing hope over fear., 10. Smile You Give, 11. IMG_7677, 12. Glance

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Hair today, Gone tomorrow.

I had my hair cut again today. VERY short. I am growing the colour out. Everyone says how brave I am, and how nice it looks. I am coping, but I feel like I am having a bit of an identity crisis at the same time. I have been going grey since I was about 18 and have thus coloured my hair for the past 20 years. I have no idea what I REALLY look like. Well, I do now. Today the hairdresser said the colour is pretty much all cut out this week, and today I am the real thing. Bare bones me. It is a funny kind of exposing feeling, a bit like walking down the street in my underwear. I know I’ll get used to it, but it takes a while to let the vanity go.

Oh well, at least it doesn’t get in my eyes like it used to.

So, still 12 behind for NCLM. Just can’t seem to keep up. Perhaps other people are having the same problem and that is why I had 9-11 comments on my posts the first week, and only 3 or 4 on each post the second week. Or perhaps my commenting is getting so crap people can’t be bothered to visit! Oh dear.

WHERE I LEFT A COMMENT TODAY
http://bustedbabymaker.blogspot.com/
http://www.growinginourheartscan.blogspot.com/
http://www.smartypants-ttcwritings.blogspot.com/
http://tryingin2007.blogspot.com/
http://missionimpossibleinfertile.wordpress.com/
http://drhousewife.blogspot.com/
http://stacie-heeeeerestorkeystorkey.blogspot.com/
http://desperatetomultiply.blogspot.com/
http://wishwaithopepray.typepad.com/
http://perkyovary.blogspot.com/
http://sweetbabydreams.blogspot.com/
http://www.bambinoclark.blogspot.com/

WHERE I RETURNED A COMMENT TODAY
To avoid just playing tag, I thought I would wait until someone who ISN’T already just returning MY comment, commented. But that hasn’t happened for days. How long will I wait?

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