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blainiac

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Posts posted by blainiac

  1. I am a SAHM who ogles my male cleaner while he does the ironing, as I watch daytime telly and smoke fags.


    My toddler meanwhile messes up the house for my cleaner to sort out while spilling Fruit Shoots all over the carpet and crushing jammy dodgers into the walls and furniture.


    My husband thinks the cleaner is excellent value at ?10 per hour.

  2. I started out in a flat in Camberwell 20 years ago, then a house Dog Kennel hill way, then rented Woodwarde Road. I looked and looked in East Dulwich for a suitable property to buy. Kept finding the gardens and room sizes too small for the price of property and thinking I could live with that - but in the end I thought it daft to spend so much on a house with such a titchy garden just so I could wander down a street of nice shops and get a coffee. At the time I was looking to buy a 4 bed was ?650K-?750K. Circumstances changed and I found my budget reduced considerably. I am in sydenham now with a four bed victorian property, 100ft garden, culdesac, opposite a park (there are loads and loads of parks sydenham way). Two minutes walk station, 15mins into Victoria. It is the best move I could have made. I have discovered a whole new world of M&S food, Waitrose, bike shops, Kelsey Park, Wells Park, Mayow Park, Crystal Palace Park, Bromley shops & glades swimming pool, 2 minutes drive gambardos, Beckenham Spa, Beckenham Odeon, the joys of LIDL - i could go on. We also have a Blue Mountain, and great Bookshop here too. I am a convert and thought at one point I could never leave Dulwich. I can still visit all my old haunts by car within 10 minutes. To be honest as the boys have grown and having a garden they can tumble into and one that will fit their trampoline there has been no looking back. There is community here. There is community everywhere in London if you look and definitely life outside LL. I thought that Crystal Palace, Sydenham and Beckenham were the a**e-end of nowhere when I first got to south london from north, but in fact they have proved to me that they are not. I could never leave london - country is a place you visit, and remember your kids will not thank you when they are teenagers and you become a 24hour taxi service because their best mate lives in the next village.
  3. I had this with both my pregnancies. Do not worry or stress about having to take the insulin if you have to - it's whatever's best for the baby. Fingers crossed you can control it with diet!


    I found the following of use diet wise in the mornings - in the am next to no carbs or a slice of Rye Bread with protein of some kind (ham, cheese, egg, bacon), spinach, mushrooms. Milk has sugar so if porridge make with water (not to my taste but it fills you up). No fruit or juice as sends your levels through the roof. Tea or coffee with no milk.


    The rest of the time you are kind of following a Hay diet of sorts - the food combining works. When you have carbs you have to cut the portions; everything should be as unrefined as possible. Eat loads of leafy greens, sweet potatoes I found were a good sub for ordinary spuds which are best avoided as they have the highest sugar content of any vegetable.


    Cut out all biscuits, sweets, chocolate (although a couple of squares of 90% dark was OK). Puddings were extremely limited, things like panacottas I could handle as the fat of the milk counteracted the sugar of the fruit. Low sugar yogs.


    You need to eat fruit but space it through the day and eat with a handful of nuts. Don't have your fruit as a pud.


    All in all it is difficult I won't lie to you, but you will not put on tons of baby weight and you will be really healthy following the diabetic diet. Most importantly exercise - even flinging your arms about and running on the spot will get your levels down. If you have a supportive partner who can join you in your new healthy diet all the better!


    You will have the best care though at Kings and a fab team of midwives. I had to have CSections with both mine, so do familiarise yourself with all that this entails early on to avoid any heartache. They are not keen in letting you go over term for all the reasons that you outline above - stillbirth etc. If you want a natural labour really go all guns to make this happen, visualisation, hypno whatever it takes, when it comes up to your due date.


    Try and enjoy your pregnancy - it is hard with the diabetes, but think of the good you'll be doing you and the baby by being a little bit strict with your diet. On a positive note, both my sons had no problem with their blood sugar after birth, and I returned to normal with no sign of the diabetes (so far!).


    Good luck with it all and enjoy your baby!

  4. We love all those you mention sillywoman plus Snore & Little Rabbit Foo Foo by Michael Rosen

    Alexis Deacon - Beegu

    The Night Pirates - not sure who by

    Anything by Richard Scarry - What Do People Do All Day / Busiest People Ever

    Lost & Found - Oliver Jeffers

    The Runaway Dinner & The Pencil - Allan Ahlberg & Bruce Ingman

  5. Perhaps you might consider getting a cat - my brother had a house that was overun. He was at his wits end and his girlfriend was threatening to move out (I wish she had as it goes). They got a kitty and the problem was solved, the mice moved out - unfortunately the girlfriend stayed.


    I appreciate getting a pet might be seen as a little drastic by some and sometimes they aren't a good mix with small chidren (although our cat loves ours - she is the boss of them though). Good luck with finding a solution.

  6. I picked up a leaflet from King's Oral Health Team and they recommend a toothpaste which has at least 1,350 - 1,500 ppm fluoride in it. Then the whole family can use it. It's a problem if you start off with kiddy paste because if you have a fussy 6 year old like I do, they then refuse to move up to the stronger versions - they still want to use the milk teeth toothpast when all their milk teeth start dropping out. There is currently only 1 brand of toothpaste that is acceptable to our child - i have to buy in bulk so we don't run out!
  7. There are loads of activities for toddlers in East Dulwich and nearby. With my toddler we've recently enjoyed Ruby Rhymes (?5 / ?3 concessions) at the Herne Hill United Church (10.30 mondays). As it's a drop in music class, if you can't go one week you don't waste a session. There are also other classes at other venues including Vauxhall City Farm which I haven't tried yet but hope to - www.rubyrhymes.co.uk.


    Also Busy Bees at the Horniman Museum (Weds & Fridays) - the Horniman is one of our favourite places to go as there is a music gallery where they can play instruments & an aquariu. Rhymetime at Dulwich library (Weds am), Baby & Toddler group at Dulwich Library on Thursdays am & pm sessions - all of which are free.


    There is Tiny Gym at the Camberwell Leisure Centre (mondays)& Peckham pulse soft play (don't bother with Tumbletots you're better off with these two), various 1 o'clock clubs (Peckham Rye / Brockwell Park / Ruskin Park). Plus loads of fantastic parks, Dulwich, Peckham Rye, Ruskin, Sunray Gardens. Try this link to what's on for children in Camberwell & Dulwich http://www.southwark.gov.uk/Uploads/FILE_43664.pdf Also check dates & times as I may be incorrect on some of the above.

  8. it's really worth getting a family season ticket for exhibits like this. I think we paid ?26 and then you have unlimited admission for the whole time the exhibit's on for 2 adults and 2 children. So you can keep going again and again, or go with a mate and their child if you haven't got the whole family with you. Think under 3's go free any way - you'd have to check on that point - maybe it's under 5's. Think Robot Zoo's coming to an end 8th November though.
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