Sunday, April 26, 2009


Here is a video update of Isabella. The changing table has become her favorite location, and mine too, because it's where we go to "talk".

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Easter 2009


Its a beautiful Easter day, and Isabella is enjoying her fathers 4 day weekend. Primroses are blooming in most yards around the city. White and yellow tree blossoms are also starting to bloom. We had a wonderful visit from Auntie Alyssha last week. We went to Luzern for Isabella's first real travel. The city is beautifully surrounded by blue water and white mountains. There is a large pedestrian only area that runs along the river as it comes out of the lake. And unlike Zurich, they seem to care about the outside of the buildings as well as the inside, and most are covered with colorful frescos.

Friday, February 27, 2009

Its a girl


Isabella Jane Hayden was born February 27, 2009, at 7:21 pm CET. She was 51 cm long and weighed 3,650 grams. She and Bryn are very healthy and very beautiful.

To the hospital

Bryn's been having regular contractions since about 4 am. They are becoming strong and painful, so we are off to the hospital. So far she is doing well.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

My Guarantee

We will have a baby by Saturday. Its official. If Bryn doesn't do it on her own by then, they are going to induce labor. Everything is fine, and this is standard procedure. Isabella's heart rate is normal and there is plenty of space in the womb. The doctor explained that the likelihood of labor complications increases dramatically 10 days after the due date. So, when they are certain about the due date they induce labor at 10 days past. So here we are. Maybe its the eternal procrastinator in me, but I really appreciate a hard deadline. Its very exciting for me to know that Isabella will absolutely be here in the next three days!

Monday, February 23, 2009

Birthday wishes

My birthday is almost over, and I did not get what I wanted. . . ISABELLA! Maybe next year. However, I did get an amazing homemade carrot cake form Bryn and her mom, which I am about to tear into. Bryn and I will go back to the hospital for a check up on Wednesday, if nothing has happened by then. Thanks to everyone for the nice birthday wishes.

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Isabella update

Still no Isabella yet. Bryn is feeling fine, but anxious. Yesterday, we took advantage of some sunny weather and walked around the neighborhood. We found a walking trail that runs along a small brook, past a plot of vegetable gardens. Today, I woke up to white streets and rooftops. With the snow falling again, Bryn's mom is keeping us busy with baking lessons.

Friday, February 20, 2009

Still no baby

I just wanted to let everyone know that we are still waiting for Isabella. She seems to think that it isn't time yet. Maybe she is waiting for the weather to warm up a bit. Whatever her reasons, she has a strong will, and we encourage her to make her own decisions. I will try to update daily, and will definitely post when we are off to the hospital.

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Due Date

Well, today was Bryn's due date. . . and nothing. We had an appointment with the doctor, to check the heartbeat and amniotic fluid. Everything was fine, indicating that the placenta is healthy and there is no need to induce pregnancy yet. We will go back in one week if nothing happens before then.

From my perspective, Bryn is having an incredibly easy pregnancy. You will have to ask her if she feels the same. She hasn't suffered from the usual problems; no morning sickness or back pains. She still moves around so well, that I sometimes forget she is pregnant. As fortunate as she has been, it is still a pregnancy, and I think she is ready to be finished. New challenges await right around the corner. The delivery. The new baby.

It was a beautiful day in Zurich today. Blue sky and below freezing, with snow on every surface to reflect the sunshine.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Project Approval

I had my first progress report last week, in the form of a presentation for my Research group. It was the first time that I really explained my project to everyone in the group. It went very well. The group was interested in this ribozyme business I'm in, and asked a lot of questions. In my experience with scientific presentations, questions are a good thing, because it means that the audience at least understood enough to ask questions. When everybody is quiet, it either means I didn't explain things very well, or my ideas are incredibly uninteresting. So I was glad for the questions. Dr. Wagner also approved of my ideas and the progress I was making, so I still have a job for a while.

Bryn and I furnished our new apartment last weekend, and it feels like home already. Although just the other day, I was rinsing the shampoo out of my hair, with my eyes closed, and I had the overwhelming feeling that when I opened them, I would see Portland. Not that I have been feeling especially homesick, just a bit disoriented.

This is the first year that I didn't watch either the NCAA football national championship game or the Superbowl! Maybe this is causing the disorientation? I found an "American" restaurant here that was showing the Superbowl, and I even made reservations. But when midnight rolled around, and it was time to ride my bike to the restaurant (the return would be too late for public transportation), in the below freezing night air, I decided to stay home and follow the score on the internet. Maybe I'm getting too old, or maybe I'm turning Euro. . . either way I don't like it.

Friday, January 16, 2009

Update from Zurich

I have received several requests for updates and information. Instead of the mass email route, I decided to return to the blog. Its good to back.

First off, Bryn and the baby are doing great, I think. My observations of the baby are limited to the sound of her heartbeat at the hospital once a month, and the increasing size and disturbances of Bryn's stomach. Both seem to indicate that our baby is going to be a hyper-genius supermodel.

Bryn and I just returned from a trip to Spain. We wanted to escape the entrenched below-freezing temperatures here in Zurich, and get in some final traveling without a child. We spent a few days in Seville with the family of my co-worker, Elias. They made us feel right at home and gave us an insiders tour of Seville. It is a beautiful, historical city, with many narrow cobblestone streats and a GIANT gothic Cathedral. Palm trees sway in the wind, and the streets are lined with vibrant orange trees. Elias' family even let us participate in their celebration of the Three Magic Kings, which is a day of feasting and gift giving. In Elias's family, it is also a day of singing, dancing, hugging and kissing. I'm not sure every family in Spain is as extroverted as his, but I like to think so. After Seville, we spent the weekend in a devalued four-star hotel (thank you economic crisis) in the city of Cadiz, located on a small penesula on the southern Atlantic coast of Spain. The beaches were beautiful, and the entire city is like a history museum. It gave me real perspective to stand in a Cathedral that is more than five hundred years old and look out over the Atlantic ocean, which is more than 4 billion years old. People have been standing in that spot and seeing the same view since before the United States existed. Before the writing of the Declaration of Independence or the Constitution, before slaves were taken then freed, before baseball, basketball or football were invented, before a single chemical element was known.

As far as work, I am settling in and finally getting some real work done. It is amazing how long it takes to get settled in a new place, especially in a new country. . . and maybe even more especially if that new country is Switzerland. We have a very diverse group here, both geographically and scientifically. Our group members come from India, China, Germany, England, Spain, Portugal, Mexico, Chile, the U.S. and Switzerland. Dr. Wagner is from Austria. In the lab, we are evolving yeast, fruit-flies and ribozymes. The computational biology projects are looking at gene expression networks, signal transduction, transposable elements, and cooperativity/conflict in ecology. It is great to be exposed to so many different cultures and scientific ideas. If I don't learn anything about computational biology, I should learn how to make a mean Shahi Paneer.

Bryn is also keeping a blog, and she has been putting our pictures on the web.
http://ericandbrynhayden.blogspot.com
http://picasaweb.google.com/thebrynster