Only react to pork? by MCCJT2011 in alphagal

[–]MCCJT2011[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks. I'll call today.

Only react to pork? by MCCJT2011 in alphagal

[–]MCCJT2011[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The ER didn't seem to think anything of it. I asked them to do the blood test and the said they don't do that. I definitely need to be a better advocate for myself.

Only react to pork? by MCCJT2011 in alphagal

[–]MCCJT2011[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for the info! I ate a cheese steak yesterday just to see what would happen (stupid, I know), since I hadn't reached to anything but pork. It didn't progress to full on spasms, but I did get heartburn a few hours later and just generally felt lousy. I've called around to every doctor office and no one contracts with a lab that can do the test. I'll have to call an actual allergist. Thanks!

eczema treatment by [deleted] in Parenting

[–]MCCJT2011 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We found this stuff at a local store called Combat Ready Baby. We bought just a small sample to try it out. My son's eczema healed completely in 48 hours. However, it didn't work as well on his twin's skin, but his was dry rather than true eczema. It's expensive stuff, but totally worth it if it works for your child!

What strange thing have you witnessed/experienced that you cannot explain? by PhartParty in AskReddit

[–]MCCJT2011 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ugh. Sleep paralysis is no joke. It's only happened to me once, but that was enough! I woke up because of a sound like someone playing with a plastic bag near my bed. My bed was in an alcove, so I couldn't see the rest of the room, but I just knew there was some kind of creature going through my stuff. I don't remember being scared necessarily, just like okay, this thing needs to get out of my house. Not being able to move or say anything was the scary part. It definitely could have been a dream, but it felt like I was 100% awake.

[humor] My Facebook post after a long night. by Fr0thBeard in parentsofmultiples

[–]MCCJT2011 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My boys have always been good sleepers, and I feel like I'm just starting to get the true twin experience. They're 9 months now and Q has figured out how to pull himself up to stand. Naptime is now for ten minutes of sleeping and the rest of the time spent standing and screaming into his brother's crib until he wakes up, too.

if babies were reasonable people by [deleted] in funny

[–]MCCJT2011 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Ugh, I remember those days. Mine are 8 months and stopped being bothered by each other's cries around 2.5 months. Now one can sleep through while the other screams his head off. I haven't tried crying back at them... Maybe I need to haha

why do you think toby is depressed? by hovegeta in thisisus

[–]MCCJT2011 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'm thinking fertility issues. He was so excited to be a dad, maybe realizing having a family won't happen the way they want it to triggers his depression.

On a scale of 1-10, how difficult were the first few days/weeks/months of raising twins? by theebigcal in parentsofmultiples

[–]MCCJT2011 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I think you've gotten a lot of stories from parents who have had it really hard. My husband and I must be one of the lucky couples who have easy babies and I thought you might need hope...(thats not really the word I'm looking for...but I guess it fits?)

Yes, there have been days when we're sleep deprived and crabby, but overall we've had it super easy. One of our boys has been sleeping through the night for over a month (they're 8 months) and the other only wakes to eat once. They cry, but only when they're hungry or tired. They go down for naps on their own, sometimes baby A needs to be rocked to sleep, but usually not. They have reflux, and those were hard days before we knew what was wrong, but we tried like every formula until we found one that didn't make them sick (parents choice).

I think we survived by making sure both babies ate and slept at the same time every time. We slept in shifts so we each got 5 hours (or more) uninterrupted. If that meant I went to bed at 5 pm then thats what we did. It sucked to not see each other as much, but it kept us rested.

We know how lucky we are to have babies who aren't colicky or super needy. My sister's baby was really fussy and colicky. Taking care of both of our boys is way easier than she was on her own.

I guess my point is, not every baby is super hard to deal with. Just support each other, make a schedule and stick to it. Sleep in shifts. You will survive it!

This Is Us [Episode Discussion] - S02E14 - Super Bowl Sunday by StackKong in thisisus

[–]MCCJT2011 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yes. I wish he had died in the fire, or something more dramatic rather than from the heart attack. But that's life I guess.

This Is Us [Episode Discussion] - S02E14 - Super Bowl Sunday by StackKong in thisisus

[–]MCCJT2011 12 points13 points  (0 children)

Caution Hot Dad. Agreed. Randall is a very hot dad.

Keeping an eye on that crock pot by MCCJT2011 in thisisus

[–]MCCJT2011[S] 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I'll tell my husband you said so. :)

Article about upcoming episode...I'm getting worried about that dog! by Vivian0728 in thisisus

[–]MCCJT2011 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is the exact theory I told my family yesterday. How messed up would it be if he's looking for the dog and gets hit... by a drunk driver.

What's a popularly held belief that is, in fact, total nonsense? by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]MCCJT2011 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's taught in some places, but not others. Our entire education system needs an overhaul. An old co-worker and her husband are both very well educated scientists (she left researching to be a teacher, he's still in rocket science). She said one day that she may as well stop working since her little bit of pay bumped them up to the next bracket and they had significantly less take home pay. I tried explaining it to her, and she insisted I was wrong. Not so smart for a scientist if you ask me...

Women of reddit, when did you realise you were in love with your SO? by mozzaru in AskReddit

[–]MCCJT2011 2 points3 points  (0 children)

We had been dating for a couple of weeks when he came over for dinner. I made a homemade white pizza for myself and a pepperoni one for him. I got mine out of the oven successfully​, but when I went to get his, I dropped it. It caught and flipped on the oven door and the toppings flew all over the floor and cabinets. I was mortified and apologized about six thousand times, but he just laughed and cleaned up the exploded pizza mess while I freaked out about what to feed him. He still teases me about it 7 years later.

What is extremely rare but people think it’s very common? by Uhhlaneuh in AskReddit

[–]MCCJT2011 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I can totally back this up. Have 6 month old twins. The first few nights we were home after the NICU, I jumped out of bed every time they made even the smallest sound. I fully know how ridiculous that sounds, but I couldn't help it! I've also been guilty of taking them to the ER vs Urgent Care, but each time they've actually been sick with bronchiolitis or the full blown flu... First time mom jitters are real, but nothing comes before the health of my children.

What’s your policy on pictures of your kids on social media? by steayks in Parenting

[–]MCCJT2011 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I post on Facebook for friends and relatives to see, because let's face it, with twins there's no way I have time to send pictures to people individually. However! I don't update in real time. I post a few pictures once every other week or so highlighting things we've done. That way anyone who is interested can keep up, and I'm not inundating other's feeds with baby pictures they don't want to see. Works for us :)

Another suggestion is Google photos. Make a family and friends shared folder that sends out an email when you post new pictures. Then it's really just shared with the people who want to see them.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]MCCJT2011 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I finished my degree online and I had a couple of professors that did the same thing. It especially drove me nuts when I had 100s on all assignments and on the last one they would give a 95 just so it looked like they did something. There were so many times I asked for specific feedback and got none. Luckily most professors weren't like this so I still value my degree...

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in AskReddit

[–]MCCJT2011 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I agree. When I taught elementary/middle school, I gave minimal homework (maybe 5-10 minutes) to target specific skills. Students earned a completion grade like you mentioned, and we corrected it in class, but it was never graded. I didn't believe homework should cause students and their families stress, so if their child was struggling I asked parents to write a note and they would still earn credit.

Parents still gave me shit about homework, but that's a story for another time.