Shelton & Brandi

Hello! We're Brandi & Shelton Koskie. Since 2006 we’ve been one of the many couples on the In Vitro Fertilization journey. We were the first IVF fundraiser blog, and thanks to the generous help of many, in we had our first successful IVF attempt. Nine months later, we had a beautiful girl, Paisley. You’re invited to follow along on our journey from infertility to parenthood.  Learn more

The IVF Training Packet

Yesterday Shelton brought in the mail and there was a large yellow envelope. I’m still 12-years-old when it comes to mail – if it looks exciting I want to tear into it immediately. I grabbed the envelope and found it had come from our fertility clinic. I wasn’t sure what to expect, but tore it open and inside I found our IVF training packet. And I froze. It was this bizarre moment and I have no idea what came over me, but I started crying. Shelton gave me one of those odd half-laughs that I’m used to getting (when I sob uncontrollably during the Grey’s Anatomy season finale) and asked what was wrong. I just shrugged and said I wasn’t sure why I was crying.

For so long, five years to be exact, this “IVF thing” has been this “thing” we’re “going” to do. We’re eight weeks away from needles and hormones and lab work and the whole thing is getting very, very real. That packet just represented the reality of what we’re about to dive head first into. It included the information for our IVF prep class. It’s a $195 fee and we’ll spend four hours with the clinic nurses learning the whosy-whatsits of our IVF cycle. More specifically “review specific aspects of IVF, teach medication protocols, and answer general questions.” We’re supposed to read the 55 page handbook that includes a glossary of terms we’re going to hear, instructions, an FAQ, medication explanation, the emotional aspects, lab work and a pile of consent forms.

DID I MENTION IT IS GETTING REAL IN HERE?!?!

On Being Aunt Branee

It’s been almost four years since we received a phone call that would change our lives. We were right in the middle of monitoring my basal body temperature (BBT) to learn if I was ovulating or not. So our infertility journey had begun, but not quite. One night we received a phone call from Shelton’s younger brother who informed us that he and his wife were expecting. I eeked out a discontent congratulations, tossed the phone to Shelton and collapsed on our bed sobbing. We were older than them! We’d been married longer! We wanted it more! Right? At the time it seemed completely unfair and that we were doomed to have a barren womb and barren second bedroom. Six or seven months after that call, a little guy named Stone was born. My first and still only nephew. And so with that phone call my life was changed.

I often joke that Stone is the love of my life. I like to think that he and I share a special bond, despite the MILLIONS OF MILES AWAY his parents moved (look at ANY map and you’ll clearly see that the East Coast is ONE MILLION MILES from Kansas!). He really is something special. I don’t love him “more” than my nieces, but I do love him differently. Is that being too honest? Although I can’t compare it, I imagine it’s the way you love your first child differently than the rest of your children. He’s my first. He’s the boy who added the prestigious title of “aunt” to the front of my name and coined “Branee.” While we’re not related by blood, he’s proven to me that that’s not necessary. So what if we don’t share a chromosome or two. We’ve made chicken eggs together, and that’s really all that matters.

In just a couple weeks that little boy will turn a mind-blowing three-years-old. It’s unfathomable to me that he’s turning three. What’s even more insane is that in the time it’s taken him to talk, walk, potty train and declare that Lightning McQueen might be the single best cartoon character ever, we’ve added two nieces to our brood. Stone now has a little sister, Tilton, and the other brother-in-law has a daughter, Emilee. I love them all to painful pieces. I can’t get enough of them and if you could pour them in a glass I’d just drink them with a straw.

In about eight weeks, we’re adding a third niece. Only this time, she’s mine. Little Eleanor (or Ellie) is being born to my baby sister in July. There’s a therapy session in and of itself, but I’d be lying if I said I’m not counting the days until she arrives. And it makes me consider that love thing all over again. I mean, before Stone, I didn’t know it was possible to love anyone that much. Obviously, the love I have for Shelton is impossible to explain, but it’s that “different” kind. Will I love Eleanor more or differently because she’s my sister’s? If so, it seems impossible. And to that point, what about my own kids? I already feel that I’m tapped out. I’ve reached the end of the Internet so to speak on love, I found the source stream and I’m all filled up and these babies keep finding ways to take more.

It’s a weird thing watching my sister be pregnant. I’m not nearly as painfully jealous as I expected to be. In a lot of ways I feel numb to it, yet a ridiculous kind of excitement at the same time. I’m a big crier. Always have been. And moments where I would ordinarily cry buckets, I just kind of stand back with a contented smile. I’m seeing my sister differently than I ever have before. She’s growing up (thank God!), she’s not 12 any more (clearly!), and I find myself looking forward to our conversations more than I usually do. There are six years between us, and as kids and even until recently, that six years seemed like decades. We’re as different as night and day, and so I can’t help but to think that the way in which she’ll raise Eleanor will be completely opposite of how I intend to raise my children (for no other reason than to spite me and make my hair curlier than it already is!).

One of these days, I’ll get to make that phone call to Jenna that will change her life, and make her an aunt. Will it be different because she already has a (as in singular Jenna!) child of her own? Possibly. But I will stack my auntieness against any auntie out there and promise you that I think my nieces and nephew are pretty much the raddest kids around!

2008 Most Popular Baby Names

The list of most popular baby names from 2008 was released today, otherwise known as “the list of names NOT to give your child.” Who wants to be Emily #12 or Jacob #9? I grew up as Brandi J., or in 7th grade when the girl who sat behind me in English shared my first/middle/last names, I became Brandi #1. There were Brandis everywhere. Not to mention the littany of “Br” names that were terribly popular and would cause me to instantly respond, like Brandon or Brittany.

The Social Security Baby Name site is my favorite name site. You can go back to see the top 1000 male and female names since 1880. 1880!!! That’s nearly 130 years worth of baby names. If you’re like me, you search the list for anything not within the top 100 for the past ten years. I can say my two middle name picks don’t appear in the top 1000 and my first names are in the 200s and 400s respectively. No, I will not tell you what they are. I will tell you, that they are awesome!

I’m not sure if I share this odd characteristic with other IVFing women, but almost as much as I want to have a baby I want to name one. Petty? Maybe. Since I was a little girl I’ve dreamed of all the cliche scenarios – prom, my wedding, becoming a mother. My 6th and 7th grade scrapbooks have lists of names I liked so I could save them for consideration much later. (I’ve looked at that list recently, I am not using ANY of those names!) I feel like it’s one of the most creative expressions a parent can make – not to go so far as many Hollywood celebs and name my baby Tissue Willow Lollipop Sprinkles – but something that’s interesting, familial, and positive.

Shelton has begrudgingly played along with “name the baby we don’t have” for years. And by years, I mean pretty much as soon as our pillows started lying next to one another at night. Finally! Someone to play my game with me! (Why he didn’t run away then I will never know. But he had his chance and now he’s stuck.) He rarely likes anything I suggest and I don’t think there’s much he’s suggested that I care for. But, we have landed on a boy name and a girl name that we like very much and I can’t wait to inflict them upon the innocent baby that will hopefully spring forth from my womb a year from now.

Getting Fit for Fertility

During the course of the past two years my health has become more important to me than ever. Making sure my body is in tip-top shape to carry this baby, that’s just going to turn around and wreck all my hard work (wink), is a major motivator. Call me what you will, but one of my biggest concerns with having this baby (or these babies, time will tell) is that I’m simply not ready to lose my figure. I’m not Heidi Klum by any stretch of the imagination, but I also like to think that I’m fairly fit and have retained my assets, if ya know whatti mean. I don’t want a big butt, wide hips, saggy boobs. I know it comes with the territory. I also know that if I’m maintaining a healthy lifestyle now, that it will be commonplace while I’m pregnant, and make bouncing back easier after delivery.

When I became the editor for DietsInReview.com, I couldn’t help but to shift my healthy lifestyle into overdrive. I’m more conscious than ever before of what I eat. My grocery bill each week is at least half dedicated to fresh fruits and vegetables. The “protein source” on our plate is not really the main entree anymore, as it is a side to our salads, fruit, roasted veggies and the like.

Don’t get me wrong, I could destroy some McNuggets, throw myself face-first into a bag of Doritos, or easily polish off a cheeseburger or chips and queso. I’m a grease lover, Shelton is a sugar lover. So when his sweet tooth is acting up, my suggestion to have some strawberries or a sugar-free Jello pudding sounds like a terrible idea, while it suits me just fine if I’m in the mood. Me on the other hand, I fear that pregnancy cravings will send me right back into the fat loving arms of Arts & Mary’s salt and vinegar kettle chips or an ooey-gooey pepperoni and mushroom pizza from Papa J. Those “indulgences,” if you want to call them that, are fewer and farther between these days, and I like to think it’s going to stay that way. In fact, I much prefer a grilled fish or chicken breast with roasted veggies to any combo meal.

Food I’ve got. Food I’m great at. I’m label conscious, I watch portions, I get my three squares a day plus two healthy snacks in the middle (in other words, I eat smaller meals throughout the day). Working out, on the other hand, still has my number. Once I get into a regular pattern I’m golden, I enjoy it to some degree. But when I’ve gone a period of time without it, I think I’d rather saw off my toenails (I have this weird thing about breaking nails so that is pretty awful in my mind). I loathe running, but love the elliptical. I love any kind of core-strength training, but don’t particularly care for things like jumping rope or playing basketball. I love doing work on a fitness ball. I guess if you practice what I’m preaching, it’s that you just need to get moving. Start by dedicating 30 minutes a day. Surely we can all squeeze that in. Hell, grab a fit ball and do crunches while you watch TV at night, or get that much-needed family or spouse time by taking a walk. Opportunity presents itself and we just need to take it.

In the long-run we have nothing to gain but our health. I encourage you to also take stock of your pantry, read the food labels and comparison shop, add more fruits and veggies to your diet, and get moving!! It’s better for you, it’s better for these babies we’re trying to grow, and it can’t hurt in the post partum world either.

If you’re ready to get started, this handy calculator will show you your BMI (body mass index) to define how healthy your weight is, your BMR (basal metabolic rate) to determine your daily caloric need, and your IBW (ideal body weight) to help you make a healthy and attainable goal weight.

I hope to share more of my personal tips and insights on living healthier with you soon.

Wichita Weight Loss Examiner

I can’t get enough of publishing online and if you can’t get enough of what I’m publishing online then check out my articles as Wichita’s Weight Loss Examiner. Examiner is a great place to find localized insight on a variety of topics, and since my day-job is as the editor for DietsInReview.com, this seemed like a natural place to help my fellow Dub-towners.

My newest article talks about donuts.

“Gotta be hungry to eat a donut? I never heard of such a thing,” says Lawrence Garfield, played by Danny DeVito, in 1991’s Other People’s Money. Garfield loved donuts, and didn’t think there was a specific time of day that a donut should be eaten, or that you really even needed to be hungry to eat one. That philosophy could be good for The Donut Whole, a new coffee and donut restaurant in the heart of downtown Wichita that serves the cakey treat 24 hours a day.

Read more of Wichita’s The Donut Whole is no place for a dieter.

Retweet to Win a Pair of TOMS Shoes

UPDATE: Congrats to @jtodak!

To be eligible RT @babyorbust I want to win a pair of free @TomsShoes! http://bit.ly/TOMSgive

We are always inspired by new ways that we can give back. And of course, as our Web site three years ago was a fairly unique way to raise the funds needed to do IVF, we’re especially intrigued by unique ways to help others. When we learned about the TOMS Shoe company, we agreed this was definitely something we could get behind. Blake Mycoskie was a contestant on the show Amazing Race. His travels took him to Argentina and after filming he returned there for vacation. He went on a volunteer mission helping a group of children receive shoes. Most of the children in these villages have never worn shoes. According to the “facts” published on TOMS‘ site, this can lead to illness, disease or even prevent them from attending school.

So Blake worked with locals to re-create a traditional shoe worn in Argentina. He upgraded the traditional rope sole to a rubber-style sole that would be more durable, and used canvas and corduroy material to make a comfortable, casual shoe. Blake returned to the U.S. to not only sell shoes, but to giveaway shoes. His commitment since day one has been to give one pair of shoes to a child in need for every pair of shoes sold. One for one. Since 2006, TOMS has given away more than 60,000 shoes to children in Africa and Argentina.

While we’d love to have a pair of these super cute, super comfy shoes, we’d rather give than receive. We’ll buy one person a pair of TOMS (up to $50 value), if you’ll just tweet about BabyOrBust and TOMS! Just tweet this message before Monday, April 13, 2009 to be eligible.  RT @babyorbust I want to win a pair of free @TomsShoes! http://bit.ly/TOMSgive

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We will draw one Twitterer at random on 4/13, then contact that person, get their mailing address and shoe size, and give away not only one pair to the Twitter winner, but another child somewhere in the world who needs a new pair of shoes a lot more than us.

Also, join Shelton and I on April 16 as we join TOMS for ”One Day Without Shoes.”