Thursday, April 25, 2019

The Data All Guilt-Ridden Parents Need What science tells us about breast-feeding, sleep training and the other agonizing decisions of parenthood.

RE: The New York Times, Opinion Dept.
by Dr. Emily Oster
published on April 19, 2019

The Data All Guilt-Ridden Parents Need:
What science tells us about breast-feeding, sleep training and the other agonizing decisions of parenthood.

My Introduction Here: I can't resist a challenge, and this article was one. My commentary will appear at the end of Dr. Oster's (long) article. I hope my words might bring some sanity back into the conversation. Feel free to add your own thoughts here, too. My email address will be listed at the end.
Here goes....

In 1980, 8.6 percent of first births were to women over 30; by 2015 this was 31 percent. This is more than an interesting demographic fact. It means that many of us are having children much later than our parents did. By the time a baby arrives, many of us have been through school, spent time in the working world, developed friendships, hobbies. And through all of these activities, we have probably grown used to the idea that if we work harder — at our jobs, at school, at banking that personal record in the half marathon — we can achieve more.

Babies, however, often do not respond to a diligent work ethic. Take, as an example, crying.

When my daughter, Penelope, was an infant, she was typically inconsolable between 5 and 8 p.m. I’d walk her up and down the hall, sometimes just crying (me crying, that is — obviously she was crying). I once did this in a hotel — up and down, up and down, Penelope screaming at the top of her lungs. I hope no one else was staying there. I tried everything — bouncing her more, bouncing her less, bouncing with swinging, bouncing with nursing (difficult). Nothing worked; she would eventually just exhaust herself.

I wondered whether this was normal. I’m an economist, someone who works with data. I wrote a book on using data to make better choices during pregnancy; it was natural for me to turn to the data again once the baby arrived.

And here, faced with crying, I found that the data was helpful. We often say babies are “colicky,” but researchers have an actual definition of colic (three hours of crying, more than three days a week, for more than three weeks) and some estimates of what share of babies fit this description (about 2 percent). But the same data can also tell us that many babies cry just a bit less than that, and almost 20 percent of parents report their baby “cries a lot.” So I was not alone. The data also told me the crying would get better, which it eventually did.

But I also found, more so than in pregnancy, that there are limits to the utility of general information. Parenting is full of decisions, nearly all of which can be agonized over. You can and should learn about the risks and benefits of your parenting choices, but in the end you have to also think about your family preferences — about what works for you.
Breast-Feeding

Take breast-feeding. When I was pregnant and I imagined myself breast-feeding, I usually pictured myself out to brunch with some friends. When the baby was hungry I’d pop on my color-coordinated nursing cover, and she’d latch right on while I enjoyed my mascarpone French toast.

This is not what it was like at all. Like many women, I found breast-feeding incredibly hard. I have one particularly vivid memory of trying to nurse my screaming daughter in a 100-degree closet at my brother’s wedding.

These struggles are made worse by the societal, familial and medical testimonies to the many benefits of breast-feeding. Here, for example, is a partial list of supposed benefits to breast-feeding, culled from medical sources and less official parenting resources: smarter babies with less diarrhea and asthma, fewer ear infections, and a lower risk of obesity and diabetes, and thinner, happier moms with better friendships.
Better friendships? Don’t get me wrong — motherhood can be lonely and isolating, and meeting other moms is a great idea. That’s what stroller yoga is for. But I’m hard-pressed to figure out which of my friendships were enhanced by my attempts to feed a screaming baby in a closet.

Many of the benefits cited here do, however, have some basis in evidence, just not always especially good evidence. And even when the evidence is good, the benefits are smaller than many people realize. This is where being an economist comes in handy.

Most studies of breast-feeding are biased by the fact that women who breast-feed are typically different from those who do not. In the United States, and most developed countries, more educated and richer women are more likely to nurse their babies. This is the result of a host of factors, chief among them a lack of universal maternal supports.

Having more education and resources is, of course, linked to better outcomes for infants and children independent of breast-feeding. This makes it very difficult to establish the causal effect of breast-feeding — whether, for an individual woman, nursing her baby will make the child better off.

Some of the best evidence on breast-feeding comes from the Promotion of Breast-Feeding Intervention, or Probit, study, a large randomized trial from the 1990s run in Belarus, in which some of the mothers received breast-feeding guidance and support and some didn’t. Based on this data, the most well-supported benefits of breast-feeding are lower risks of gastrointestinal infections (with symptoms like diarrhea or vomiting) and of rashes and eczema early in life. To put some numbers to it, the study found that of the babies of a group of mothers encouraged to breast-feed, 9 percent had at least one episode of diarrhea, compared with 13 percent of the children of mothers who weren’t encouraged to breast-feed. The rate for rashes and eczema was 3 percent versus 6 percent.

Yet the study found no effect on respiratory infections, including ear infections, croup and wheezing. So why do we continue to see the “evidence-based” claim that breast-feeding reduces colds and ear infections? The main reason is there are many observational studies that do show that breast-feeding affects these illnesses.

For example, an observational study of nearly 70,000 Danish mothers and their children published in 2016 found that breast-feeding more than six months reduced the risk of an ear infection from 7 percent to 5 percent. This study was very careful, with excellent data that allowed the authors to adjust for a lot of differences across mothers and children.

But observational studies are less convincing than randomized trials because they have a harder time establishing causality. Should we give any weight to this evidence if we have the Probit trial?

On one hand, randomized evidence is clearly better. On the other hand, the Probit trial is only one study. If there are small benefits from breast-feeding, they might not show up as significant effects in a randomized trial, but we would still like to know about them. Given the weight of the evidence, I’d put the link between breast-feeding and a small reduction in ear infections in the “plausible” category. But there is nothing as compelling on colds and coughs.

What about long-term benefits, and the claims that breast-fed kids will grow up to be thinner, healthier and smarter? One woman told me her doctor had warned her that by quitting breast-feeding, she was costing her child three I.Q. points.

Let’s return from the land of magical breast milk to reality. Even in the most optimistic view about breast-feeding, the impact on I.Q. is small. Breast-feeding isn’t going to increase your child’s I.Q. by 20 points. How do we know? Because if it did, it would be really obvious in the data and in everyday life.

The question, really, is whether breast-feeding gives children some small leg up in intelligence. If you believe studies that just compare kids who are breast-fed to those who are not, you’ll find that it does. There is a clear correlation here — breast-fed kids do seem to have higher I.Q.s.

But again, this isn’t the same as saying that breast-feeding causes the higher I.Q. One study of Scandinavian 5-year-olds found that children who nursed longer had cognitive scores that were nearly 8 points higher on average. But their mothers were also richer, had more education and had higher I.Q. scores. Once the authors adjusted for even a few of these variables, the effects were much smaller.

In fact, the most compelling studies on this compare siblings, one of whom was breast-fed and the other not; these find no significant differences in I.Q. This same type of sibling study has also looked at obesity and, again, found little to no impact.

The good news for guilt-ridden moms is that there is little convincing evidence for any long-term effects like these. The Probit researchers followed the children in the trial through the age of 6½. They found no change in allergies or asthma, cavities, height, blood pressure, weight, or indicators for being overweight or obese.

If you’re a mother trying to decide whether breast-feeding is worth it or not, there’s one more piece of data you should take into account: the possible effects on your own health.

A lot of the claimed benefits of breast-feeding are about mothers, and many are bogus. Breast-feeding doesn’t seem to promote much additional weight loss or provide free birth control. There is no evidence linking breast-feeding and friendship quality.

However, there is real evidence for a link between breast-feeding and cancers, in particular breast cancer. Across a wide variety of studies, there seems to be a sizable effect — perhaps a 20 percent to 30 percent reduction in the risk of breast cancer for women who breast-feed for longer than 12 months. In addition, the case for causality is bolstered by a concrete set of mechanisms. Researchers suggest that breast-feeding changes some aspects of the cells of the breast, which make them less susceptible to carcinogens.

After all that focus on the benefits of breast-feeding for kids, it may be that the most important long-term impact is actually on the health of the mother. Moms often feel selfish for thinking about their own wants and needs when faced with decisions about their kids. In this case, the data gives you permission to put yourself first for once.
Sleep Training

There are other fraught parenting decisions for which the evidence is much easier to understand than it is for breast-feeding. One example is sleep training.

Sleep training — colloquially, the “cry it out” technique — refers to any system where you leave the baby in his crib on his own at the start of the night, and sometimes let him fall back to sleep on his own if he wakes during the night. The name refers to the fact that if you do this, your baby will cry some. Pediatricians often recommend sleep training, and many parents do it.

But go on the internet, and you’ll find many articles detailing the extensive long-term damage sleep training will do to your child. At its core, the concern from the opponents of “cry it out” is that your baby will feel abandoned and, as a result, struggle to form attachments to you, and ultimately to anyone else.

This idea comes, perhaps surprisingly, from 1980s Romania, where thousands of children lived in orphanages with very little human contact for months or even years. One of the things visitors noticed in these places was the eerie quiet. Babies didn’t cry, because they knew no one would come. The argument is that “cry it out” does the same thing.

This is absurd. Sleep training methods do not leave the infant for months without any human contact, nor do they suggest subjecting children to the other types of physical and emotional abuse that occurred in those orphanages.

To learn about the impact of sleep training, we need to study it in the way it is actually used. Fortunately, many people have, and in a lot of those cases they used randomized trials.

Consider an Australian study of 328 mothers whose 7-month-old babies were having problems sleeping. Approximately half were assigned to do a sleep-training regimen, and the others were not. In the short term, the authors found significant benefits: The intervention improved sleep for children and also lowered parental depression. But they didn’t stop there.

They returned to evaluate the children a year later and five years later, when the children were 6. In this later follow-up, which included a subset of the original families, the researchers found no difference in any outcomes, including emotional stability and conduct behavior, stress, parent-child closeness, conflict or parent-child attachment. Basically, the kids who were sleep-trained looked exactly like those who were not.

These results are not an outlier. Review studies of sleep-training interventions do not find negative effects on infants. And many show sizable improvements in maternal depression and family functioning. Sleep affects mood, and parents who sleep less feel worse. The evidence paints a pretty pro-“cry it out” picture.

Nonetheless there are academic articles that argue against it. One small study that gets a lot of play shows that in the few days after sleep training, mothers are less stressed, but the same is not true of infants. The researchers interpret this as a signal that the mothers and children are losing emotional touch with each other, but this is a stretch. Why not interpret the evidence to say that cry-it-out relaxes parents without hurting children?

Fundamentally, the argument against sleep training is theoretical: that some children are devastated, even if those results don’t show up in the data, or that the damage may not manifest until babies are adults.

I think it is fair to say that it would be good to have more data. It’s always good to have more data! However, the idea that this uncertainty should lead us to avoid sleep training is flawed. Among other things, you could easily argue the opposite: Maybe sleep training is very good for some kids — they really need the uninterrupted sleep — and there is a risk of damaging your child by not sleep training.

Does this mean you should definitely sleep train? Of course not — every family is different, and you may not want to let your baby cry. But if you do want to sleep train, you should not feel shame or discomfort about that decision.
‘Working Moms’

Finally, there are some parenting decisions where the data just isn’t much help at all, and family preferences have to take the front seat. One example is the question of whether to work outside the home.

This decision is stressful. It often seems to define your whole parenting persona: What kind of mom are you? Are you a “stay-at-home mom” or, as the child of one of my friends once described her, a “stay-at-work mom”? Language like this is never helpful, and even less so when it frames this decision in such a gendered and heteronormative way. What if Dad stays home? What if there are two moms? Or only one parent?

Really, this decision could be better stated as: “What is the optimal configuration of adult work hours for your household?” Less catchy, but more helpful.


If you try to look to the evidence on what is “best” for children, you’ll be disappointed. There are studies of this, of course, but they’re hard to learn anything from, because it is extremely difficult to separate a family’s circumstances from decisions about employment. A 2008 meta-analysis found that children in families where one parent worked part-time and the other full-time performed best in school — better than children with two parents working full-time and better than those with one parent who didn’t work at all.

But again this is probably a result of many differences between those families, not just the mothers’ career decisions. There is really no compelling evidence that proves that having a stay-at-home parent affects child outcomes, positively or negatively.

(There is reliable evidence that time at home in a baby’s first few months is beneficial, but that is an argument for longer maternity leave, not for not working at all.)

This means that the decision really comes down to what works for your family. One part of this is obviously your budget, but the other part is your preferences.

I work because I like to. I love my kids! They are amazing. But I wouldn’t be happy staying home with them. It isn’t that I like my job better — if I had to pick, the kids would win every time. But the “marginal value” of time with them declines fast. (“Marginal value” will be familiar to anyone who remembers their Econ 101. There may not be any useful data on this question, but economic theory still comes in handy.) The first hour with my kids is great, but by the fourth, I’m ready for some time with my research. My job doesn’t have this nose-dive in marginal value — the highs are not as high, but the hour-to-hour satisfaction declines much more slowly.

It should be O.K. to say this. Just like it should be O.K. to say that you stay home with your kids because that is what you want to do. In our attempts to focus so much on what is best for our kids, it is a good idea to step back and think about what works for you.
And Everything Else

These decisions — breast-feeding, sleep training, working — are just three of many that will come up in the first year of a child’s life. More await, from co-sleeping to screen time and more.

One day, your child will have a temper tantrum. How on earth do you deal with that? Exorcism? And what about potty training? You may find your child is one of a surprisingly large share (about 1 in 5) who refuse to poop in the toilet (it has a name: “stool toileting refusal”). In your pre-child life, you probably never thought about the question of how to encourage someone to poop in a particular location. But there you are, needing to find your way.

That lady on the internet comment board wants to tell you what to do, but she doesn’t live in your house, and she cannot know what is right for your family.

I’m not trying to give advice. I’m just arguing that in many cases the data can be helpful. But if the data falls short and you still want advice, let me pass along something our pediatrician once told me. It was our 2-year-old’s checkup, and I had my usual list of neuroses.

“We are going on this vacation, and there are bees,” I said. “It’s kind of isolated. What if Penelope is stung? She’s never been stung before. What if she’s allergic? How will I get her to a doctor in time? Should I bring something to be prepared for this? Should we test her in advance? Do I need an EpiPen?”

In other words, I had built up this elaborate and incredibly unlikely scenario in my head. I needed someone to remind me that yes, this could happen. But so could a million other things. Parenting is not actually about planning for every possible disaster.

The doctor paused. And then she said, very calmly:

“Hmm. I’d probably just try not to think about that.”

Emily Oster, an economics professor at Brown, is the author of “Expecting Better” and the forthcoming “Cribsheet: A Data-Driven Guide to Better, More Relaxed Parenting, From Birth to Preschool,” from which this essay is adapted.
***
My commentary here:

Marriage
About 40 to 50 percent of married couples in the United States divorce. The divorce rate for subsequent marriages is even higher.The median length for a marriage in the US today is 11 years with 90% of all divorces being settled out of court. However, studies have shown that lower-income couples are currently more likely to get a divorce than higher-income couples. I am not sure marriage is such a good idea.  Guess you shouldn't get married....

Pregnancy
About 10 to 20 percent of known pregnancies end in miscarriage. But the actual number is likely higher because many miscarriages occur so early in pregnancy that a woman doesn't realize she's pregnant. Stillbirth affects about 1 in 100 pregnancies each year in the United States; this is about 1 percent of all pregnancies and about 24,000 babies. Guess we shouldn't get pregnant...

Infant Death
World wide, of the 8.2 million under-five child deaths per year, about 3.3 million occur during the neonatal period —in the first four weeks of life. The majority - almost 3 million of these - die within one week and almost 2 million on their first day of life. Today in the U.S., more than 2,000 babies die of SIDS every year, according to government figures.

The U.S. is a worse place for newborns than 68 other countries, including Egypt, Turkey and Peru, according to a report released Tuesday by Save the Children. A million babies die every year globally on the same day they were born, including more than 11,000 American newborns.
According to the Center for Disease Control, approximately 12,000 children and young adults, ages 1 to 19 years, die from unintentional injuries each year in the U.S. Guess we should rethink this too....
***
I think you get the message which is, we can quantify, analyse, and apply every statistic available, but people, REALLY? Our babies don't come off a conveyor belt at birth, ready to evolve along with the rest of the world, at the same ratio as say, technology. They are in fact born expecting--hardwired, if you will--the same environment that they had in the womb. They are actually more immature than most other mammalian species, and, by the way, we are the only mammal that has ever asked, "What should I feed my baby and where should my baby sleep?"
My answer to Dr. Oster and other economists,  statisticians, and scientists is that our babies and parenting norms should never come under the heading of statistics at all, nor should statistics have such a major part in the conversation concerning their needs. We are our baby mammals' only and entire world. They have no one else. My decisions as to all aspects of their care and nurture must come from instinct and my heart alone. If I bond from the beginning I will continue to know what is best for my baby. Advice comes from others who have discovered what works best for babies, An old saying goes: Two Jewish grandmothers are better than one pediatrician. 
Bio
From the editor:
Midwife-turned-author, Stephanie Sorensen seems to swim seamlessly through cultures, religions, superstitions, raw fear and ecstasy to the first breath of a new baby. She invites her readers to join her, taking us on a tour to the innermost workings of another world. She lives among one of the most diverse populations on earth, and has given birth to a book that takes us on a bizarre journey, giving us a rare, intimate glimpse into her daily life. With graphic prose we enter with her into the Land of Birth. Midwife, mother, grandmother, doula, world traveler and author, Sorensen lives and breathes birth. She has five children scattered around the world, grandchildren
and over a thousand babies she calls her own, even when she cannot pronounce their names correctly. With stories so graphic you will feel your own contractions again, she guides us through her world of Amish bedrooms, hospital labor rooms, birthing suites, and operating theaters. Get your scrubs on. It's time to push!
Ma Doula, A Story Tour of Birth, North Star Press, St. Cloud, MN, won as a finalist in the Midwest Book Awards, 2016.


comments may be sent to ssskimchee@gmail.com

Saturday, April 13, 2019

An Annotated Bibliography Here


General Resource

Videos


  1.      1. a must see: elephant giving birth in Bali (one of Ina May's favorite videos)  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Otpwcu3UGw
  2.  “Birth Story: Ina May Gaskin & The Farm Midwives,” 2012, directed by Sara Lamm and Mary Wigmore. (DVD)
  3. “Breast Crawl by UNICEF” http://www.breastcrawl.org/video.shtml a must see!
  4. “Breastfeeding: the Why-to, How-to, Can-do Videos”—Vida health communications. www.vida-health.com
  5.  “The Business of Being Born” with Abby Epstein and Ricki Lake. (DVD) (See also “More Business of Being Born,” the 4-part continuation of the series.)
  6.  “Christian dads experience what it feels like to give birth”—one for your partner! (Youtube)
  7.    “Doula”—about Loretha Weisinger’s work with teens. (Netflix)
  8. “Doula: a documentary”—produced in 2012 by Childbirth Collective in Minneapolis and Emily Rumsey. http://www.emilyrumsey.com
  9. “The dramatic Struggle for Life”—very amazing footage from Bali.
  10. “Everybody Loves . . . Babies” by thomas Balmes. (DVD/(Youtube))
  11.  “Extraordinary Breastfeeding” a five-part online video series, these videos give real food for thought! (Youtube)
  12. “Guerrilla Midwife”—follow CNN hero of the Year Ibu Robin Lim into the trenches of her work from Bali, where hemorrhage after childbirth is a leading cause of death, into the tsunami disaster zone in Aceh, where her battle is fought with only one weapon, love.
  13. “Thalasso Bain Bebe par Sonia Rochel”—Baby bath by Brazilian midwife Sonia Rochel (Youtube)
  14. “Twin Vertex Birth”—the birth of the author’s twins at The Farm in 1982, with Ina May Gaskin. (DVD)
Internet Resourcesa
11.  askdrSears.com—valuable advice on breastfeeding and parenting (my personal favorite)
22.   Breastfeeding resource pages—Leche League Lnternational. www.llli.org/nb.html
34.  Caroline Flint, U.K. Midwife website: http://carolineflintmidwife.tumblr. com/
45. DONA International website: information on doula training, certification and Doula Magazine. http://www.dona.org
56.  Ina May Gaskin’s homepage: http://inamay.com/
67.  The Newman Breastfeeding Clinic, the Centre for Breastfeeding Education, and the Centre for Breastfeeding Studies: http://www.nbci.ca You can call them for help anytime too: 416-498-0002 a connection to an amazing group in Canada with seemingly endless information—all excellent.
  8. Ongoing blog: callthedoula.blogspot.com
Books
1.     Attatchment Parenting: Instinctive care for your baby and young child, by Katie Allison Granju
2.     Babies, Breastfeeding and Bonding, by Ina May Gaskin
3.     Baby-led Breasetfeeding, by Gill Rapley and Tracey Murkett
4.     Birth Matters: a Midwife’s Manifesta, by Ina May Gaskin
5.     The Birth Partner: a Complete Guide to Childbirth for Dads, Doulas, and All Other Labor Companions, revised 4th ed, by Penny Simkin
6.     The Birth Partner: Everything You Need to Know to Help a Woman Through Childbirth, by Penny Simpkin
7.     Birth—Through Children’s Eyes, by Penny Simkin
8.     Breastfeeding and Natural Child Spacing: How Ecological Breastfeeding Spaces Babies, by Sheila Kippley
9.     The Breastfeeding Answer Book, by La Leche League International
10.  Breastfeeding Matters: What We Need to Know About Infant Feeding, by Maureen Kathryn Minchin
11.  Comfort Measures for Childbirth, by Penny Simkin
12.  The Continuum Concept: In search of happiness lost, by Jean Liedloff – my all-time favorite book!
13.  Do Birth: a gentle guide to labour and childbirth, by Carolyn flint
14.  Hold Your Premie, by Jill and Dr. Nils Bergman
15.  Ina May's Guide to Breastfeeding, by Ina May Gaskin
16.  Ina May’s Guide to Childbirth, by Ina May Gaskin
“The midwife considers the miracle of childbirth as normal, and leaves it alone unless there's trouble. The obstetrician normally sees childbirth as trouble; if he leaves it alone, it's a miracle.” ~ Sheila Stubbs
17.  The Labor Progress Handbook: Early Interventions to Prevent and Treat Dystocia, by Penny Simkin
18.  Ma Doula: A Story Tour of Birth, by Stephanie Sorensen
19.  Medications and Mothers’ Milk, 14th ed., by Thomas W. Hale
20.  Mothering the New Mother, by Sally Placksin
21.  The NAPSAC Directory of Alternative Birth Services and Consumer Guide, by Penny Simkin
22.  Natural Health After Birth, by Aviva Jill Romm
23.  The Nursing Mother’s Herbal, by Sheila Humphrey
24.  Parenting Without Borders: Surprising Lessons Parents Around the World Can Teach Us, by Christine Gross-Loh
25.  The Politics of Breastfeeding, by Gabrielle Palmer
26.  Pregnancy, Childbirth and the Newborn, by Penny Simkin
27.  Saving Babies? The Consequences of Newborn Genetic Screening, by Stefan Timmermans and Mara Buchbinder
28.  The Simple Guide to Having a Baby, by Penny Simkin
29.  The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down: A Hmong Child, Her American Doctors, and the Collision of Two Cultures, by Anne Fadiman
30.  Spiritual Midwifery, by Ina May Gaskin
31.  The Tender Gift: Breastfeeding, by Dana Raphael
32.  Testing Baby: The Transformation of Newborn Screening, Parenting, and Policymaking, by Rachel Grob

33.  The Ultimate Breastfeeding Book of Answers: The Most Comprehensive Problem-Solution Guide to Breastfeeding from the Foremost Expert in North America by Jack Newman and Teresa Pitman

34.  When Survivors Give Birth: Understanding and Healing the Effects of Early Sexual Abuse on Childbearing Women, by Penny Simkin
35.  The Womanly art of Breastfeeding, by La Leche League International
36.  Waiting With Gabriel: a Story of Cherishing a Baby's Brief Life, by Amy Kuebelbeck
Resources for Mothers of Multiples

Internet
Gina Osher is “The Twin Coach in Los Angeles. She bravely writes about some of the uneven feelings that twin parents may experience in hopes of helping other moms who are having the same challenges. See: http://www.thetwincoach.com/
community.babycenter.com/post/a26537489/
www.netplaces.com › Twins, Triplets, and More
www.rookiemoms.com/twins-week-bonding-with-each-child/‎

Books about twins:
1.     Chicken Soup for the Soul, Twins and More: 101 Stories Celebrating Double Trouble and Multiple Blessings by Susan M. Heim, Jack Canfield and Mark Victor Hansen
4.     Everything You Need to Know to Have a Healthy Twin Pregnancy by Gila Leiter with Rachel Kranz
5.     Having Twins And More by Elizabeth Noble
6.     Hello Twins by Charlotte Voake
7.     It's Twins!: Parent-to-Parent Advice from Infancy through Adolescence by Susan M. Heim
8.     Little Miss Twins by Roger Hargreaves
10.  National Geographic: In the Womb - Multiples DVD by Lorne Townend
11.  Parenting School-Age Twins and Multiples by Christina Tinglof
12.  Raising Twins: Parenting Multiples from Pregnancy Through the School Years by Shelly Vaziri Flais, MD, FAAP
16.  The Everything Twins, Triplets, and More Book by Pamela Fierro
18.  Twinspiration: Real-Life Advice from Pregnancy Through the First Year by Cheryl Lage
19.  What to Expect When You're Expecting by Heidi Murkoff
There are many more books and valuable web sites out there. Mothers of Multiples groups are springing up all over, too. If there isn’t one near you, start one!

Monday, April 8, 2019

The Queen of Barter (a slight digression from my normal birth topics.)


The Queen of Barter
I don’t remember when it began. All of a sudden I realized I had things other people wanted (or I could tell them they wanted) and I wanted things I was too poor to buy. I didn’t want a lot: gas for the car so I could look for a job, Christmas presents for my family. A Christmas tree. I didn’t have $40 for a tree, damn it! But I could sew. I could paint. I could cook. I could clean. I could flip pancakes at 4 a.m. if I needed to.

I wasn’t bad at begging. I was helping resettle Hmong and Cambodian refugees after the Vietnam war through a non-profit my husband and I started in 1980. Each month I would speak at a different church about our work and happily bring home enough for rent from the collection plate that day for the storefront we lived in and worked out of with our then 1-year-old, Avi. The day after Thanksgiving I arrived at every major grocery chain within a 20-mile radius and begged unsold turkeys. I came home with over 30 of them. One call to my newly resettled Hmong friends and the turkeys were gone within an hour. “Turkey” was added to their growing vocabulary.

Clothes, broken vacuum cleaners, doggie shampoo, hundred-pound bags of rice, a local restaurant even donated bulk frozen meat and fish weekly for us to give away. One woman grabbed all the clothes she could carry week after week until we realized she was holding garage sales in her apartment building thanks to our clothes shelf. I knew those bikinis wouldn’t fit her.
By then we had a whole schedule of free English classes, a food and clothing pantry and walk-in assistance with bills, letters, finding doctors, whatever came through the door.

On the nights David stayed to study at the university I would often take Avi with me after a long day of working in our center, walk the 2 blocks down to the Dorothy Day soup kitchen and homeless shelter and grab supper there. The street people knew me and I felt perfectly safe going there in the evenings. Besides I was too tired to cook. Every night of the week a different local church brought in a meal and served it, though I never saw the church people sit down to eat with the guests but stand safely behind the food buffet for protection. I always joined a table of ladies who would try to get the baby on my lap to laugh. He would always comply.

At one point we realized that if anything ever happened to us, we didn’t have anything like a will with any wishes concerning our baby. David’s elderly parents assumed they would get custody when we brought up the subject which we didn’t think was the best plan. I called up a friend I had worked with several years back whose wife was an attorney. She agreed to draw up a will for us in exchange for my making her a tweed suit. She loved it and we had one less worry.

I came to our marriage quite savvy about being frugal. I had been trained by the experts in frugality: The Monastic Order of the Carmelite Nuns of the Ancient Observance and Mother Teresa’s Missionaries of Charity of Calcutta sisters before that. I had dreamed of being a nun all my teen years (when I wasn’t going to rock concerts and smoking weed) and even before that, though I was brought up in a Jewish family. My parents never knew what they had done to have ended up with me. That is another whole book, though.

The Carmelites prided themselves on not having changed anything in over 400 years, boasting a pure, undiluted life of poverty, chastity and obedience in order to die to self. That meant that the superiors had over 400 years to think up every possible way to live out those vows. We were instructed in the novitiate on how to make a tube of toothpaste last beyond any expiration date printed on it by carefully cutting the tube open and rationing what stuff was left there. We were issued two habits, a wool summer one and a slightly heavier wool winter one. They were each washed once a year on the day we switched seasons.

I knew I couldn’t ask for Q-tips after the ones I first brought ran out so I figured I could meticulously peel off the top layer of used fibers after each use and in that way reuse it again and again, making it practically immortal. One carefully cut off all canned food labels and laid them in a neat pile in a drawer in the kitchen on your assigned cooking day. They would be used for writing notes to Reverend Mother during times of the Great Silence when all were forbidden to speak. We were each issued an emery board which was to be used to sharpen your 2 allotted safety pins, which were used to pin your work apron to the habit. Each nun was issued two light bulbs, one a 7-watt bulb and the other 20-watts. As they were handed to you, you were to understand that the 7-watt bulb was to be screwed into the socket in your cell for times of prayer, washing and dressing. It was to be removed and the higher watt bulb inserted for designated reading times. I decided to go a step further and read only by standing at the window in my cell, thus saving the bulb indefinitely. It is a miracle I didn’t go blind. Sanitary napkins were unheard of. We used old clean rags, washing them out by hand and hanging them under the bed springs to dry. I didn’t have a problem with that. I had stopped getting my ‘monthly’ shortly after joining. I lost too much weight too fast and I had stopped menstruating completely, my periods only resuming a whole year after returning to the world.

The Missionaries of Charity were a lot more fun, though they even outdid the Carmelites in striving to live a life of poverty. After each meal the sisters would line up and each wash their plates, returning them to the dish cupboard. The thing was however, that soap was only used on Sundays. The nuns would go outside after each meal carrying their plates and scrub them with sand from the ground in the vacant lot behind the convent.

I have since read that Buddhist monks and nuns save some water in their cups toward the end of each meal. They also save a piece of kimchee or lettuce and use those to wipe and rinse the plate or bowl. Then the water is drunk and the kimchee or lettuce eaten. No waste. No need to wash up either, saving valuable water.

Well, I am sure that it is evident by now that I didn’t last in either convent. I met David, an ex-novice Trappist monk, actually I was introduced to him by Reverend Mother Immaculata, and that was the end of that vocation. For both of us.

By the time we had four children David was teaching and we were living in a 3-story log cabin palace. Friends had decided to move to Europe and happily gave us the cabin and the 70 acres it was on for a pittance. It didn’t have electricity or running water but that was part of the adventure. Our free-range children loved it, grazing in the raspberry patch before breakfast, holding make-believe weddings, throwing acorns in leu of rice. We had an onion-domed chapel and four hermitages or poustinia on the property besides. It had been run as a retreat which we hoped to continue. We had an average of 600 people a year trudge up our ¼ mile, washed-out road to the top of our mountain and the main house where we lived.

I was homeschooling between making up food baskets for the guests, baking bread, and caring for the kids. David kept the wood box filled and hauled in 50 gallons of water a day for cooking, cleaning, bathing and washing clothes—all before leaving to teach for the day. At night, after the kids were in bed, he would grade papers by kerosene lantern late into the night.

I was adamant that I stay home while the children were little. Out in the boonies there was not much need to barter. We were pretty well set. Then I got it in my head that I had to have a piano. Music had to be part of a well-rounded curriculum. I started bringing home local newspapers and scoured the for-sale ads. Finally I found it: black walnut upright piano. $400.

I called and the man described it. It was perfect. I said, “It is exactly what I am looking for. But I don’t have any money. (pause) I barter.”
The line was silent. Then he said, “Groovy. What do you do?”
“Well,” I began. “I make quilts. I make sourdough bread, shoo fly pie….”
He let out a long sigh. “I’ve always wanted a butterfly quilt. Just a great big butterfly.”
“Really?” I said. Would it be that simple?
“Oh yeah. That would be groovy.”
“OK. You’ve got it,” I said.

Three weeks later I called him up and later that afternoon he came up our mountain with his truck. Our road had recently been graded, otherwise I don’t think this would have worked. He and David wrestled the piano to the door of the log cabin. They tried every angle, but it was not going to fit through the door. Then piano man had an idea. He disassembled the entire thing and brought it into our living room, piece by piece. The children lined up on the couch to watch, mousey quiet the whole time. This was the most excitement they’d ever seen in their little lives.

When all the parts were strewn across the cabin’s main floor the piano man commenced putting it all back together. Then he tuned it. And then, to the delight of the children he played several pieces. Then he stayed for supper, happily cradling his new quilt as he left later that night.

A few weeks later I had a call from an old friend. She wanted to come and make a retreat but she couldn’t leave a donation. I offered that she come and make her retreat and then in exchange, watch the kids one evening so David and I could have a long-overdue date in town. Rural Wisconsin didn’t offer much, but a nice quite dinner was very nice. We ended up doing the date-night-for-a-retreat-night once a month after that. I’d look forward to it all month.

A couple of months later Hannah was born. At home. Before my midwife made it up the hill. I was hanging onto the wood stove at 4 a.m. when she arrived (Hannah, not the midwife.)

David was home for two weeks to take care of the kids and the house. I had stocked the kitchen with easy-to-make meal ingredient, but all David managed to make was scrambled eggs and canned soup. After three days I’d had enough of his cooking.

I called a woman in town I had met once or twice. Pat and Mike ran a tiny greasy spoon café in Colfax. Mike was not well and I’d heard Pat had cancer but they kept the café open. I explained my predicament and suggested a barter: If she could box up a dinner for 2 weeks for four little people and two adults every night that David could pick up after school—it could be anything at all, we weren’t fussy--then in six weeks when I was up to it, I would come in every Saturday and Sunday at 4 a.m. during hunting season and flip pancakes for her, bake cookies, muffins, pies, whatever they needed until my bill was paid up. She didn’t hesitate. “Sure, we can do that.”

The next afternoon David arrived home with a cardboard box and laid it on the table. The kids hopped up onto the benches excited to see what Papa had brought. He lifted out foil-wrapped cheeseburgers, malts in covered to-go cups, a large green salad and French fries. It tasted heavenly. For two more weeks Pat outdid herself: soup suppers with crusty French bread, pies, chef salads, broasted chickens.

When I finally felt strong enough, I called her and told her to stop the boxes and tally up my tab. The next Saturday I nursed the baby around 4 a.m. and drove the eight miles into town. David would sleep in with the kids until I returned three hours later. Pat showed me how to make platter-size pancakes with sunny-side-up eggs imbedded in the top pancake of the stack. I learned how to make steak and eggs, pumpkin muffins and giant M&M cookies. When hunting season ended Pat had me come in and empty and paint her pantry behind the stoves. After 4 weekends she announced that I had paid up in full. I was crushed. I loved my new job. I didn’t want it to end.
***
We had jobs, we had work, and we were living in upstate New York over twenty years later when we got a call from the Midwest that our oldest child needed rescuing. Every parent’s worst nightmare. We left everything and moved back to Wisconsin in twenty-four hours.

A dear friend who ran a retreat center gave us two rustic cabins to live in on her property. No phone, no way for anyone to find us. It was a radical intervention but it worked. We quickly realized we weren’t eligible for any help or programs in Wisconsin until we had been residents for 60 days. After 60 days we could begin applying for services which could take months to clunk through the system.
Ok. Back to survival mode. We would do what we had to do. Our meager savings quickly ran out but not before we heard about the food programs in the area that recycled outdated and government surplus food. By Thanksgiving that year we had been gifted with five turkeys. You bet I used every last bit of all that good meat. I could write a turkey cookbook. (Hmmm…I wonder if anyone ever has.) The cabins didn’t have an oven. There were hot plates, a crock pot and a toaster/grill thing. We made it work.

I rummaged through my box of sewing paraphernalia and started cutting out tiny squares from all the cloth I had saved. I added a calico skirt I seldom wore to the mix. I was able to sew five quilted Christmas stockings out of all the scraps.

I hit the local boutiques and sold all of them the first weekend we went out. As soon as I got back to the car and nodded a YES! the tribe would cheer. Next stop was the gas station. Each stocking went for $45.

It took us three months to find work. Our next eldest daughter was an LPN and offered to register with the board in Wisconsin and find work. She got a job first. Our golden goose.

With the leftover money after buying gas we could go to thrift stores and gather kitchen items like pots and pans and buy dish soap and shampoo. I could also find discounted cloth remnants to make more stockings out of. Those kept selling quite well up until Christmas.

On Christmas Eve I took my last two stockings out after supper and drove to our local tree farm. I whipped out the stockings and gave the young guy my (now) canned spiel: “These are my last two hand-quilted stockings and I would love to trade one for that little Balsam over there.”

He laughed. “My wife just had a baby boy yesterday and told me we should have a stocking for him! How much are they?” I told him $45. He pulled out his wallet and gave me five dollars.
“That tree is $40 and here is the difference. Wow! This is beautiful. Thank you SO much!” One more happy customer. I dragged the tree home and we decorated it with paper chains and popcorn and cranberry strings. And ate turkey for supper. Again.

On weekends I would go to the farmers’ markets and barter. During the week I’d take the girls to the closest rivers and we would collect stones. I would paint them while the girls played 

board games or cards or cut out tiny squares of cloth for the quilted dolly blankets we were now mass producing. Hunting season was now open and we didn’t dare go on walks anymore. We would haul home as many rocks as we could carry.


Even in the winter the farmers markets were bustling. Homegrown meat, soaps, maple syrup, artisan bread, winter squash, honey. I traded with each vendor when they didn’t have regular customers. I approached one table. A farmer couple were selling organic chickens, bacon and eggs. I showed them the stockings I had left and the newest item: river rocks painted with bugs, animals, nesting dolls—whatever I’d dreamed up the night before.


The farmer lady didn’t say anything. She grabbed a burlap bag and started stuffing it with organic chickens and several dozen cartons of eggs, picked out a rock bunny and handed me the bag. I offered to give her more rocks; I knew the bag I was holding cost way over $50 at least. She smiled and told me to come by her table again next weekend.

I got a similar response from many of the others. Within an hour our trunk was full. Squash, bread, eggs, organic butter, bacon, more squash, far more than I’d hoped for. Score!

The next week a policeman went first to our car, still running in neutral at the edge of the market and wrote David a ticket for parking illegally. David pointed out that they were still in the car and that it was still running. He was served the $35 ticket anyway. Then he went after me, telling me I was bothering the customers and if I didn’t stop he’d arrest me. I told him I had not spoken to one shopper, only the vendors. Then he told me barter is illegal since the state can’t tax it. He said I would either need a vendor license, which I knew cost $300 for the season, or a similar peddler’s license. Shit! Shit, shit, shit!

The next business day I took the $35 ticket to the local government offices to contest it. I was interviewed at several points and finally brought before an assistant magistrate. I stood before his desk, indignant. He was a tall, dark man, Arab I guessed by the Muslim decorations on the walls of his office. He read the complaint and then asked my version of it. I explained that the car was not parked, but still running and that there was no way I had the money for a ticket. I explained that we were looking for work and only bartered to get gas money and food. I had come prepared, though, and took a painted rock out of my parka pocket. It was a matryoshka nesting doll holding a baby nesting doll, one of my best. I told him we collected the rocks along the Mississippi and painted them to barter. He took the rock and turned it over a few times. Then he smiled and said, “You’re good. You are very good!” He ripped up the ticket. I told him to keep the rock. “No,” he said. “You can sell it.”

Well, our kids survived and so did we—barely, but we were healing. You never think your family will find such drama. Our prayers were answered, and we made it through that year. We moved into an apartment with the girls in the city and soon after both found work. I still painted rocks and started taking orders from local boutiques, some rather high-end ones, too. I got a job as a free-lance proofreader for a publishing company. Rachel kept working as a nurse, a job she loved, and the others went back to school. We could afford to go out to eat on rare occasions now, and buy decent clothes, though I insisted they be on sale or second hand. We weren’t rich yet. I still cringe when I think back to what we almost lost. The girls look back and remember the fun adventure they had living in the cabins in the woods at Christmas and the rest of that year.

Fast forward another 10 years. Our kids were all doing really well. They were spread across the U.S. and one was in the U.K. David was working and I had resurrected my former midwifery credentials and rather than sit the state boards all over again I transferred all of them and became a certified doula. It was my dream job. I worked in the homeless and refugee communities in the Twin Cities. I was the only one on the birth team that didn’t have to leave at shift change and could also visit them at home afterwards. The only trouble was that the state health board decided that all insurance companies should be paying our fees so while they battled over who should pay us, we weren’t being paid. In the end we weren’t paid in over 2 years.

Back to survival mode, though it wasn’t as dire as before. We could only buy the barest groceries and items. We didn’t go out much. Around that time I offered to baby sit my grandson and tried to help my daughter out where I could. My grandson and I actually had a grand time after I picked him up from school each day. We walked all over the city: museums, parks, anything that was free. We rode the trains and buses and discovered all sorts of fun places that didn’t cost anything. We could go to the Mall of America on the train and walk around for hours.

One day we were bumming around the University of Minnesota and found an art show in progress. There were tables full of gorgeous pottery pieces. One large platter caught my eye. It was absolutely beautiful. I scribbled a note and put it under the piece. I asked that, should it ever be for sale to call me, and wrote my number down.

About a week later I got a call. The potter turned out to be the art professor. I went back and met him at the university. Very hippie-arty type. No wedding ring. I needed to size him up if I was going to pitch my barter card. He was very nice. He suggested $50 for the platter. I told him I thought it was very lovely and I would like to barter. He didn’t need a quilt. He didn’t need a new jacket. Out of the blue I said, “I bake a mean shoo-fly pie.” He really brightened up then. I could tell no one was at home cooking for him. “Would you like me to make you some pies, maybe one a week for you to bake at home?” He loved it. I delivered the first pie--a huge Dutch apple pie with crumb topping the next afternoon with a card with baking instructions. A few days after that I made an old-fashioned 2-crust berry pie. He was still happy with the arrangement. The following week I arrived at the pottery studio with a large chicken pot pie also made from scratch. He said it more than paid for my clay platter. He even gave me some red clay to take home for my grandson.

By November that year I still wasn’t being paid though I took referrals for clients. When I got home from a birth I was often wired from all the coffee and adrenalin. That year I decided to teach myself how to make Ukrainian eggs as an outlet in the evenings when I didn’t want to sleep but wasn’t up to TV. It was an affordable hobby. It would have to be. A dozen eggs cost under $2.50 and the dyes only a dollar a package. I could make the bees wax last if I was careful. The tools were $7 each but I hoped they would soon pay for themselves. 

I broke as many eggs as I decorated that first year but slowly got the hang of it. Then I discovered etched eggs. I was smitten. Brown eggs are drilled and blown out. We only get organic eggs because we don’t want to waste them and we would be eating a lot of eggs. I drew designs and pictures free-hand with the tool, warming the wax chips in the copper cup at the end of the kiske by waving it over a burning candleThen the egg is dipped in an acid solution until the background corrodes to a pure white, which took about 20 seconds.





By the summer I had over 200 decorated eggs and hit the outdoor art shows. Again, I knew I couldn’t just stroll around with an open basket and hawk eggs for $20 a piece, but I was after the vendors. I needed Christmas presents for the coming holiday and the birthdays until then. I was hoping to decorate our apartment walls with a bit more than calendars from the local gas station. I lucked out at the Hennepin-Uptown art show which featured hundreds of artists in booths over a mile of sidewalks. I traded for Egyptian pottery, Israeli batiks, a French oil painting, handcrafted bowls and mugs, and lots of other stunning works of art. I started selling the eggs at church craft sales after that, also bartering with other sellers for all sorts of things for the house and for gifts. 

When my book came out, I realized it contained even more bartering power. I brought 6 copies with me to the Renaissance Festival last year. My grandson had his heart set on a wooden sword. I went up to the sword maker who was dressed in proper Medieval attire. My spiel changed slightly, though. Now I could cite the Middle Ages’ custom of barter to the shop keepers who couldn’t contest it and happily traded books for all sorts of handcrafted goods.


I still make all my Christmas presents, usually starting in June. The family knows and expects we will be giving only homemade again this year. It has even rubbed off on some of them. Whomever hasn’t been gifted with one yet will receive an etched egg. I still make Christmas stockings though only for the latest arrivals in the family. 


To conclude: Barter is still alive and well, in spite of any laws to the contrary.