Meaning of Mikayeel

Mikayeel - One of the main Angels of Allah (SWT).

Cerita tentang Mika

Hari kedua kehidupan seorang Bapa. Letih juga tapi seronok. Best! Aku update blog ni menunggukan habisnya pakaian yang dibasuh di dalam mesin basuh. Banyak baju nak kena basuh. Baju mika, akan dibasuh tangan nanti sebelum tido. Kala ini merindui Illis dan Mika.





[caption id="attachment_1521" align="aligncenter" width="450" caption="Tengah khusyuk tengok muka daddynya.."]Tengah khusyuk tengok muka daddynya..[/caption]

Dari tengahari sampai kul 8, Mika tido dengan nyenyak. Mybe dia nak kasi illis berehat. Illis nampak berseri2 hari ini. Walaupuan nampak keletihan di mukanya.

Esok pagi, Mak aku dari gannu akan tiba. Tak sabar2 dia nak tengok cucu barunya ini. Pada malam pula, adik ipar aku akan tiba. Masing2 tak sabar tengok Mika. Kawan2 ada juga datang melawat tadi. Malam ni pun ada yg nak dtg, tapi takley.coz Illis masih di hospital.


Kengakawan, aku tak sabar tunggu esok hari dan hari2 seterusnya dalam menghadapi kehidupan seorang bapa.

Mika lagi..



[caption id="attachment_1521" align="aligncenter" width="450" caption="Tengah khusyuk tengok muka daddynya.."]Tengah khusyuk tengok muka daddynya..[/caption]

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Mika dan Illis..

[caption id="attachment_1498" align="aligncenter" width="450" caption="Bangganya aku dengan zuriatku yang comel ini. Syukran.."]Bangganya aku dengan zuriatku yang comel ini. Syukran..[/caption]

Kala ini, aku keletihan n mengantuk. Walaupun begitu, jiwa ini kegirangan. Hanya tuhan saja yang tahu. Mcm tak caya je aku dah ada anak. Dalam tak caya tu, aku syukur apa yang telah terima n lalui selama ini. Aku bersyukur kedua2 insan yang cintai iaitu Illisriyani dan Mikayeel selamat dalam operasi pagi tadi.


Illis terpaksa menjalani pembedahan kerana Mika berat dan tinggi. Doktor sarankan illis melakukan pembedahan. Jika tidak, ia akan menerima risiko yang tinggi bila Illis melahirkan Mika bersalin secara normal. Tepat 9.45 pagi tadi, Illis dimasukkan ke dalam Dewan Bedah di Hospital Putrajaya. Aku dan mertua aku menunggu di ruang bilik menunggu yang mempunya tv plasama 42 inch tetapi tidak berfungsi. Sungguh kebohsanan. PSP ada di tangan, jiwa dan akal teringatkan Illis dan Mika.


Setengah jam selepas itu, Doktor bawa troli yang mengandungi baby. Beliau berkata., "Siapa suami kepada Puan Illlliissrrii... Illisirani.. Hmm.. Illisriyani?".. Susahnya dia nak sebut nama wife aku itu. Hmm.. Langkas aku bangun untuk pergi kepada Dokotor itu. Beliau mengesahkan baby yang dia bawa adalah anak aku. Gembiranya... Sambil dia tunjukkan kemaluan yang menyimbolkan bahawa ia adalah kepunyaan insan yang bernama lelaki (hehehe) dia berkata, illis tengah dibersihkan oleh petugas pembedahan.. Semuanya selamat.


Mertua aku menyuruh aku untuk Qamatkan ditelinga Mika. Sebelum aku Qamatkan, aku panggil Mika, Babyyyyy! Panggilan yang biasa aku gunakan semasa Illis mengandungkan dia. Mika terus buka mata kirinya sambil tengok pada aku. Aku sedih dan gembira. Lalu aku Qamatkan diteling Mika. Selepas aku menyebut, "Allahu Akbhar!".. Terus Mika bukakan kedua2 matanya.. Air mata aku mengalir..


Aku tahu, mungkin cerita ini agak basi pada anda semua, tapi bagi aku ia adalah cerita indah seorang bapa yang baru..


Pada umur 31 tahun ini, aku menerima zuriat pertama aku, Mikayeel b Mohd. Yusrizal.

Mikayeel b. Mohd. Yusrizal

Memperkenalkan anak lelaki kami, Mikayeel b. Mohd. Yusrizal. Beliau telah dilahirkan pada 22 April 2009 jam 10.15+am di Hospital Putrajaya dengan seberat 3.86kg. Ibu dan Mikayeel, sihat sejahtera.




[caption id="attachment_1498" align="aligncenter" width="450" caption="Bangganya aku dengan zuriatku yang comel ini. Syukran.."]Bangganya aku dengan zuriatku yang comel ini. Syukran..[/caption]

[caption id="attachment_1510" align="aligncenter" width="450" caption="Mikayeel b Mohd. Yusrizal"]Mikayeel b Mohd. Yusrizal[/caption]

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Dah ada nama untuk baby kami..

Kami dah ada nama utk baby kami nanti..









kami dapat nama tu bukan dengan idea iklan ini..  Harap maklum!

36 weeks

36weeks

B'day Kimie yang ke 6 pada 10 April 2009




[caption id="attachment_1467" align="aligncenter" width="300" caption="Aku dan illis suka gila dapat hadiahkan khemah ni pada kimie.."]Aku dan illis suka gila dapat hadiahkan khemah ni pada kimie..[/caption]




[caption id="attachment_1472" align="aligncenter" width="300" caption="Makan, tido, main dalam khemah ni.. :)"]Makan, tido, main dalam khemas ni.. :)[/caption]

Gambar ni aku cilok dari blog ibu kimie.. Gambar dari kamera illis tak sempat nak diedit lagi..

Poppy seed to pumpkin: How big is your baby?

35-honeydew-melon


lebih kurang sebesar (5 1/4 pounds/18 inches - head to heel) ini baby ku dalam kandungan isteriku..

Sungguh penat semalam.. Tido malam sungguh nyenyak!

Penat dan nynyakku bukan sebab Nabil menang bintang popular Berita Harian atau Penyokong kelantan bakar kereta polis. Tapi sebab aku dan illis mengemas rumah serdang tu.

Kemas tu sebab dah lama tak kemas. Bertahun agaknyer. Hehehe. Selain tu, kami nak sambut baby kami. Kenalah bagi kemas untuk dia. Kang dia tahu kami pemalas ngemas rumah. Hehehe..

Apa2 pun thanx tuk illis sebab sanggup "turun padang" kemas.. Berpeluh2 sakan kami. Tetamu pertama kami sejak kemas rumah tu semalam ialah Along Famili pada tenghari semalam juga. :)

Your pregnancy: 35 weeks

How your baby's growing:


Your baby doesn't have much room to maneuver now that he's over 18 inches long and tips the scales at 5 1/4 pounds (pick up a honeydew melon). Because it's so snug in your womb, he isn't likely to be doing somersaults anymore, but the number of times he kicks should remain about the same. His kidneys are fully developed now, and his liver can process some waste products. Most of his basic physical development is now complete — he'll spend the next few weeks putting on weight.

Note: Every baby develops a little differently — even in the womb. Our information is designed to give you a general idea of your baby's development.


How your life's changing:


Your uterus — which was entirely tucked away inside your pelvis when you conceived — now reaches up under your rib cage. If you could peek inside your womb, you'd see that there's more baby than amniotic fluid in there now. Your ballooning uterus is crowding your other internal organs, too, which is why you probably have to urinate more often and may be dealing with heartburn and other gastrointestinal distress. If you're not grappling with these annoyances, you're one of the lucky few.

From here on out, you'll start seeing your practitioner every week. Sometime between now and 37 weeks, she'll do a vaginal and rectal culture to check for bacteria called Group B streptococci (GBS). (Don't worry — the swab is the size of a regular cotton swab, and it won't hurt at all.) GBS is usually harmless in adults, but if you have it and pass it on to your baby during birth, it can cause serious complications, such as pneumonia, meningitis, or a blood infection. Because 10 to 30 percent of pregnant women have the bacteria and don't know it, it's vital to be screened. (The bacteria come and go on their own — that's why you weren't screened earlier in pregnancy.) If you're a GBS carrier, you'll get IV antibiotics during labor, which will greatly reduce your baby's risk of infection.

This is also a good time to create a birth plan. Using our form will help you focus on specifics — like who'll be present, what pain management techniques you want to try, and where you want your baby to stay after you deliver. It will give you a starting point to discuss your preferences with your medical team. Childbirth is unpredictable, and chances are you won't follow your plan to the letter, but thinking about your choices ahead of time — and sharing your preferences with your caregiver — should take some of the anxiety out of the process.

Ten tips for labor coaches

What an important role you've taken on as labor coach! Whether the woman in labor is your partner, family member, or friend, she'll look to you for strength and encouragement. And though you may find it hard to watch her in pain as she goes through labor, you're likely to find the birth one of life's most powerful and satisfying moments.


Here are some tips for being a great labor coach:




Know what to expect


Labor is not the right time to be flipping through a pregnancy book or notes from childbirth classes, so finish your reading beforehand. And go to a childbirth class with an open mind – you'll get solid, basic information, as well as a sense of how other coaches are planning to get through the event.




Be ready to wait


Unlike in the movies, most women labor for hours before they even go to the hospital. Indeed, it's often more comfortable to spend the early stages of labor at home. And many hospitals won't let a laboring woman check in until her contractions are regular and coming about every five minutes.


You may want to time the contractions periodically, so you can have a sense of how things are progressing, but you don't need to do so continuously. Much better to save your energy to care for your loved one.


Be available to do whatever she finds relaxing at this point, such as watching TV, taking a walk, or cuddling on the bed. This isn't the time for finishing up last-minute projects or doing household chores.




Be flexible


The same labor strategies don't work for all women. Well before the baby's due date, take time to discuss expectations and options. Later, you can take the initiative with your laboring mom's wishes in mind. But be prepared to change course – part of a labor coach's job is to discern what works and drop what doesn't.




Don't take things personally


A woman in labor may be in her own world. Giving birth is a long, hard job, and some women cope by reaching deep inside themselves.


The laboring woman may become outwardly irritable at times, too. For instance, she may love having you massage her early in labor, and then during transition find being touched intolerable and let you know that in no uncertain terms! It's important not to misconstrue her behavior as a rejection of you.




Bring a few things for yourself


Most pregnant moms ready their overnight bags long before their due date. But you may be spending the night at the hospital, too, so don't forget to pack some things for yourself. Essentials: A change of clothes, comfortable shoes, and a sustaining snack (one with no strong odors, please!).


Partners sometimes join moms in the tub or shower. If you think you might do this, pack a bathing suit.




Ask questions


Medical professionals should, but don't always, explain what they're doing and whether it's mandatory. Don't be shy about seeking out information, whether about medical procedures or about helping the laboring mom get more comfortable – especially if she's not up to asking questions herself.




Be her advocate


A laboring woman is not always in the best condition to make hard decisions or assertive requests. Be ready to step in if the situation calls for it. You may need to ask that her healthcare practitioner be woken from a nap, that an anesthesiologist be paged, or that a mirror be brought in. And if Mom plans to breastfeed, help make sure that she has a chance to do so soon after the baby's born, and that someone's there to help her if she's having trouble.




Help her stay focused and relaxed


Suggest different coping techniques when necessary, drawing on the methods you've both learned in childbirth classes. For example, suggest position changes or encourage her to find something – such as a breathing pattern, your face, or even a foot rub – to focus on during the contractions, and bring her back to it whenever she starts to think she won't make it.




Know your limitations


A lot goes on in the birthing room. Be aware of what you're willing to do during the process and what you want to leave to the professionals. For example, if you're not comfortable cutting the umbilical cord (even if that was the initial plan), just say so.




Just be there


This is one of those events for which showing up is the most important thing of all. Even if you want to – or have to – leave most of the hands-on stuff to the pros, your presence matters. And no matter how you really feel, project a sense of confidence and calm reassurance: "You're doing great! Everything's going fine." There'll be time for you to unravel later.

35 weeks

35week1

Seven fears expectant fathers face

From the moment you learn of your partner's pregnancy, you're thrust into a strange new world and encouraged to participate in the pregnancy and birth process. Yet, you may feel awkward about sharing your fears and insecurities. That's only natural. Here are seven common fears faced by fathers-to-be:




Security fears


The biggest fear men face is the one most deeply hardwired into our culture: Will I be able to protect and provide for my family? In most families when the first child arrives, there's this sudden if temporary shift from two incomes for two people to one income for three. And that's a tough burden to carry in today's world. The father has to be strong in ways he hadn't counted on before. He has to provide support not just financially but also emotionally: His wife will need his help, she'll be undergoing dramatic emotional shifts, and he has to be ready for her to lean on him.




Performance fears


More than 80 percent of the fathers I come across in my practice say they were worried they wouldn't be able to perform when their wife was in labor. They were afraid of passing out, throwing up, or getting queasy in the presence of all those bodily fluids. Such fears may be based on cartoons and sitcoms and our culture's way of making fun of men, but two things became clear: The men all expected it — and it almost never happens. In follow-up interviews, it turned out only one out of 600 men fainted, and that was in August in Fresno (California), and the air conditioning had gone out and two of the nurses had to leave the room, too.

If you really can't tolerate blood, step out of the delivery room. Don't ignore your fears — work through them, talk to other fathers who've been there. Typically, the first thing fathers say when they come out of the delivery room is "The baby and my wife are fine; it's a girl." And the second thing they say is "I didn't get queasy — I came through it okay."



Paternity fears


About half the new and expectant dads I interviewed eventually came around to admitting they had fleeting thoughts that they weren't really the baby's father. But if you ask them whether they suspect that their wife had an affair, they're insulted and hurt. On a logical level, it's a disconnect, but on an emotional level something else is going on. He's dwelling on his own inadequacies: "It's too monumental, too godlike, being part of the creation of life. Someone bigger than me must have done it."

One of the fathers I encountered was this interesting guy with bright red hair, freckles, and a crooked smile. His baby had bright red hair, freckles, and a crooked smile. And he said with a straight face, "I wonder if my wife was unfaithful." But he went on: "It just seemed — I don't know — this was too good, too miraculous to happen to me."



Mortality fears


When you're a part of the beginning of a life, you can't avoid thinking about the end of life. Thoughts about your own mortality can loom large: You're not the youngest generation anymore, your replacement has arrived, and if everything works out right, you'll die before your child dies. For a lot of young men who go around thinking they're immortal or invincible, that's a big change. One of my clients was a world-class racecar driver, and he gave it up. He told me, "I don't have the right to die anymore."




Fear for your spouse's or child's health


Childbirth is such a nerve-racking experience. Scary things can happen to the person you love most in the whole world. You might lose the baby; you might lose your wife and have to bring the baby up alone. It really wasn't long ago that giving birth was fraught with danger: When my grandparents had children in the early 1920s, the main cause of death in women under 50 was childbirth. Today, if the birth goes well and the baby's fine, you'll still find most parents secretly counting the newborn's fingers and toes.




Relationship fears


Men often fear that their wife will love the baby more than anyone on earth — and exclude them from that intimate relationship. It's a very real fear of being replaced. In so many households, after the birth Mom becomes the gatekeeper, giving her husband access to the baby only when she sees fit.

I remember being at a Fourth of July fireworks show where a mother was carrying a newborn and the dad went over to give the baby a kiss and she slapped his hand and said, "You'll wake him." The dad just crumpled and walked away. What he should have said then was, "I'd like to hold him now, and if he wakes up I'll take care of it." He needs to make it clear that this is his child, too, and they're partners in raising him. He needs to spend time alone with his baby and kick Mom out of the house some days. Otherwise, I can see him spending all his time on the golf course because there's no place for him in the house.

Each parent brings different strengths to the partnership. The child usually relies on the mother for security, comfort, and warmth. The child looks to the father for his sense of freedom and separation and sense of the world. Of course, those qualities can come from either parent, but when all these strengths work hand in hand, it's fabulous.



Fears of "women's medicine"


Men are not used to the ob-gyn establishment. It's foreign, it's cold, it's something we don't understand well. Even as observers, many men feel embarrassed and inhibited around stirrups and gynecological exams. Hospital examining rooms and delivery rooms are not made comfortable for a father. Men are usually fairly ignorant about a woman's reproductive system — it's what happens "down there." And so when men encounter all this for the first time, they get clobbered with it. Being prepared — making decisions together about the kind of care you want for your partner and baby — helps tremendously. Having a birth plan, with a set role for you, also helps to make clear what's ahead in the process.

Jerrold Lee Shapiro, a licensed clinical psychologist, is the author of Becoming a Father (Springer), The Measure of a Man (Berkley), and When Men Are Pregnant (Delta). He lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with his wife and two children.

Selamat tiba di Serdang pada pukul 10.40 am

Walaupun harini hari ke3 aku mc, aku ttp berjaya gagahkan diri utk balik ke serdang. hampir seminggu setengah aku tinggalkan atas urusan kerja. sibuk yg boleh dikawal lagi. ada income sikit. ley simpan2 utk masa depan. baby pun tak lama lagi nak kuaw.


Illis pun dah sarat2 aku nampak. aku kesiankan dia duduk kat serdang masa aku out station, so aku bawa dia sekali. at least dia ley releasekan tension dia utk menantikan kelahiran anak kami. Sejak 2 menjak ni, aku selalu ke Utara. Kebetulan kerja aku banyak ke sana, so aku bawa illis sekali. Bolehlah dia luangkan masa dengan familinya..


Hujung bulan 4 ni pun mybe ke sana lagi. Masa tu aku tatau lagi, aku akan pergi atau tarik diri utuk bertugas luar. Dah genting masa tu. Kalau aku jangkakan kerja aku sibuk ke utara, aku dah registerkan illis utk deliver baby di sana (Pulau Pinang). Famili dia pun ley nengokkan. Mertua aku semua dah pencen, ley mereka tgok2kan.. Tapi nak buat mcmana.. Tak dijangka..

Aku dan Illis di Taiping

1 - 3 April 2009 kami akan berada di sini. Aku ada kerja kat sini. Lepas ni ke Sungai Petani pun ada urusan kerja. Oleh kerana dekat dengan rumah mertua, kami pun balik lagi ke sana. Sebenarnya, 2 minggu lepas kami baru balik dari sana. Ingatkan masa tu kali terakhir illis balik sebelum deliver. Tapi ada peluang lagi illis balik. Heheh. Bukan main suka dia.


Kalau korang nak tahu, aku kerja sebagai PRO. So, kena selalulah melibatkan diri dengan media. Memujuk media untuk datang ke majlis/program ofc aku. Media pun pandai memilih value berita untuk siarkan dlm ruangan masing2 kan? Orang2 keliling bukan main sibuk tanya pasal media. "Datang berapa ramai nanti? Siapa yang akan datang? Jgn lupa suruh mereka cover itu dan ini..". Ayo! Aku tahulah kerja aku.


note:- along, angah lupa nak edit gambar. nanti dah sudah edit, angah roger!

Fetal Movement: Feeling Your Baby Kick

When should I start to feel my baby move?


You probably won't feel your baby kick until sometime between 16 and 22 weeks, even though he started moving at 7 or 8 weeks and you may have already witnessed his acrobatics if you've had an ultrasound.

Veteran moms tend to notice those first subtle kicks — also known as "quickening" — earlier than first-time moms. (A woman who's been pregnant before can more easily distinguish her baby's kick from other belly rumblings, such as gas.)

Your build may also have something to do with when you'll be able to tell a left jab from a hunger pang. Thinner women tend to feel movement earlier and more often than women who carry more weight.


What does it feel like?


Women have described the sensation as being like popcorn popping, a goldfish swimming around, or butterflies fluttering. You'll probably chalk up those first gentle taps or swishes in your belly to gas or hunger pains, but once you start feeling them more regularly, you'll recognize the difference. You're more likely to feel these early movements when you're sitting or lying quietly.




How often should I feel movements?


At first the kicks you notice will be few and far between. In fact, you may feel several movements one day and then none the next. Although your baby is moving and kicking regularly, many of his jerks and jolts aren't yet strong enough for you to feel. But later in the second trimester, those reassuring kicks will become stronger and more regular.

If you're tempted to compare notes with other pregnant women, don't worry if your experience differs from that of your friends. Every baby has his own pattern of activity, and there's no correct one. As long as your baby's usual activity level doesn't change too much, chances are he's doing just fine.


Do I need to keep track of the kicking?


Once you're feeling kicks regularly, pay attention to them and let your practitioner know right away if you notice a decrease in your baby's movement. Less movement may signal a problem, and you'll need a nonstress test or biophysical profile to check on your baby's condition.

Once you're in your third trimester, some practitioners will recommend that you spend some time each day counting your baby's kicks. There are lots of different ways to do these "kick counts," so ask for specific instructions.

Here's one common approach: Choose a time of day when your baby tends to be active. (Ideally, you'll want to do the counts at roughly the same time each day.) Sit quietly or lie on your side so you won't get distracted. Time how long it takes for you to feel ten distinct movements — kicks, twitches, and whole body movements all count. If you don't feel ten movements in two hours, stop counting and call your midwife or doctor.

34 weeks

34weeks
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