Posts

Showing posts from 2020

PREPARATION OF HOSPITAL BAG FOR DELIVERY - PART THREE

Image
  We have come to the last and final part of the series- Preparing Hospital Bag for Delivery. In spite of my tight schedule, I wanted to finish the series before my friend AV actually needed to start packing (I will follow up on that a little later). So here we go!  

PREPARING HOSPITAL BAG FOR DELIVERY – PART 2

Image
  Writing a blog with a 7 weeks old baby is by no means an easy task, but it was encouraging to have many positive reviews and they definitely motivated me to continue. In this post I plan to cover the preparation of mother’s bag for delivery.   MOTHER'S (+ CARETAKER’S) BAG Going to hospital as one and coming back as two is definitely an exciting thought, but also needs a lot of preparation from the mothers’s side. Here is a list of items needed in the mother’s bag.

PREPARING HOSPITAL BAG FOR DELIVERY – PART 1

Image
    It has been over 6 weeks since I became a mother, and little did I imagine that so soon I would be writing a blog. In fact, when a friend suggested that I restart writing, I scoffed at him. How to write a blog with a demanding baby who wants me around all the time! Unexpectedly, few days later my good friend AV, a soon-to-be-mom, asked me whether I can give her a practical list for preparing a hospital bag for delivery , and boom! Here I am, all sleep derived and pressed for time, typing just that, while my baby sleeps next to me.   Enough of boring introductions! I just want to remind AV, and anybody else who reads this post, to understand what you are about to read is my personal opinions and experiences. There maybe someone who disagrees with me, or someone who wants a bigger or smaller list. Feel free to comment if I have missed something or you want to tell me something I don’t know.   For the ease of organizing my flow of thoughts, I have classified the list into the followi

CORONA, HOSANNA and HALLELUJAH

Image
CORONA, HOSANNA and HALLELUJAH As I pen down this article, the world statistics of Covid-19 stand at a total of 1,781,383 cases and  108,880 deaths. We are under a lock-down – a period of absolute nothingness such as we have never experienced before. The graphs around the world are neither favourable nor reassuring. Our generation, especially the millennials, are being forced into a sudden pause that stagnated our fast-moving and busy lives. None of this is good news. Of course, we try to unlock the lock-down with sugar, spice and everything nice, but not all sections of society have the privilege to “celebrate” the curfew. Amidst all the gloom and doom and the depressing dubiety, a big section of Christendom is still recovering from the unprecedented crisis of observing the Holy Week at home. Is everything around in shades of grey as we perceive them, or are there rays of hope to which our eyes are blind? Palm Sunday or Hosanna Sunday, celebrated by some Christian commu