Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Excerpts from the Baby Blog

A few months after I became concerned that Mark and I were having trouble conceiving I started journaling in a word document about what I was feeling through the process. In my stir crazy boredom yesterday I stumbled upon the document and was fascinated by how much I forgot or erased from my mind when I got pregnant. As if to say I imediately erased a painful chapter of my life when I saw the positive pregnancy test.


Baby on the Brain

I’ve wanted a baby for as long as I can remember. I can recall at 15 my parents being fed up with my expensive tastes and telling me I needed to make my own money to understand how much things cost. I think it was my dad who told me to do something that I liked and somehow I ended up taking CPR classes and starting my own babysitting business. My dad helped me make the flyers on Microsoft word; we were able to insert a picture of a little blonde haired toddler in a pink jumpsuit that was pushing a doll carriage. It was quite a project because I wanted moms to be able to tear off my name and phone number from the bottom of the flyer. I chose to put my flyer up outside the kindergarten room at Mariemont because it was in the circle that most parents picked their kids up at. I think this was the first time I really proud of myself, when I started to step away from my parents and start doing things for myself. I recall wanting to take the CPR classes because I thought parents would go for this and I would stand out above the other girls advertising babysitting. I remember my dad helping me with the wording of the flyer and it was his idea to put on the picture. I recall taking a stapler and walking over to the school by myself to post my flyers. It was my project, my baby; I remember going over almost nightly to check if any of the numbers had been torn off. And a few here and a few there and then before I knew it the calls starting coming in. The first call was Karen Vick with her 6 year old and 4 year old. And immediately following the Randolph’s and the Cloninger’s who both had kindergartener’s and 10 month old girls (as well as one other child each).

And before long business spread by word of mouth and I had too much to handle and I took down the flyers because I couldn’t take any more families.
I met baby Logan when he was 6 months old and afraid of the floor. When put on the floor he felt trapped and would cry because he was unable to roll over. When you put most kids of that age on their bellies they would lift themselves with their arms and knees, but he just laid there and cried. When he was just a little tyke I started reading him ‘Goodnight Moon’ after his nightly bath. I remember the first couple of times I gave him a bath he was very unhappy with me especially when it came time to rinse his hair. At first when we’d read ‘Goodnight Moon’ I could not finish or sometime start a page before he was ready to turn to the next one. But I’d always go back to the previous pages and read the story through, and on every page I’d point out the porridge, stuffed bear, lamp, chair, baby etc. At first it meant nothing to him but then almost overnight he was involved in the reading. I or he would point and he would tell me in baby tongue what he saw. And then very quickly thereafter instead of pointing things out on the pages and telling him what I saw I’d point and he would tell me what he saw, and then in time he would point and say what he saw. It wasn’t about the words on the page so much as the objects in the pictures. It was the most amazing experience! Even though I only spent a night a week with him reading the story, and even if his parents read it with him too he was learning, his brain was developing, he was changing. And by reading to him I felt like I had an active role in that change. I absolutely loved the end of the day routine. We’d eat dinner, play for a little bit, maybe watch a short video, have dessert, brush our teeth, read stories and go to bed. I would like to follow a very similar schedule with my children. And make it very official, every night at this time we…take our bath, brush our teeth, climb in bed and if we take too long brushing our teeth then we cut into story time. If they ‘lolly-gag” then they miss out on a reward. I want to keep to a strict routine so my children know what to expect. And also so there can be no ifs ands or buts about it, that’s our schedule and we’re sticking to it.


*Prior to today I don’t think I could have given a satisfactory answer as to why I wanted a baby. Other than to say I crave it, I have an unrequited urge, I want it etc. But today it occurred to me that I want to be a mom so I can be someone’s hero. When I babysat I was a temporary friend or chaperone and I could never come close to comparison of their moms. As a babysitter you often hear kids tell you “that’s not how my mom does it” It’s as if to say for those first ten years you can do nothing wrong, you are quintessentially God! Their first word is usually mama (or dadda). When children cry, they call out for mommy. When they draw pictures they make them for mommy. When they grow up, boys often want to marry someone like their mom.


*9/14/08-It has been thirty-three days since my last period. I have found thirty-three days to be the average length of time between my periods for the last six months. For the last few days I’ve been nervous about this date. Am I going to have a period? I really don’t want one, am I crampy? Because that will most surely signal that the “P” word is coming. I could have taken a pregnancy test last Thursday, and for weeks I was working for that day…if I can make it to that day...I’ll test and then I’ll know one way or the other. Then I got to that day and was too afraid. I’ve been so up and down. I was really down during my last period and then I got up because it was time to make a baby, and then I was down because I did not think it worked. But I’ve been up and to take a pregnancy test may send me back on a downward spiral and I don’t want to go back there again. But there’s such frustration in the un-knowing. I know so badly what I want that test to say, but what if it doesn’t? Well to be honest life goes on, as Marks says we get to try again (insert raised eyebrows and a major sexual innuendo) and even though I don’t want to try again, we will. I’ll try something different again, work on my stress-wedding thank you cards, reading for fun, cooking for Mark, read/learn about God and maybe I’ll pray to him. The thought of maybe re-convening my conversations with God have been stronger and stronger as I’ve tried to conceive. I keep thinking that God has been so good to me, getting me the great job, taking care of me; every time I speed he magically places a slow driver ahead of me that forces me to slow down just as a cruiser is approaching. When I wanted a boyfriend so badly that I could barely breathe he gave me a husband and I truly think that I’ve been too greedy! That he’s given me so many great gifts and it’s time I pay him for them. That I need to do a little work for God before he decides it’s time for me to have a child. I am like a small child that really, really wants a kitten and shortly after getting a kitten all I want is a puppy. My parents tell me that they just got me a cat and I reply “But I really want a puppy”. “Why should we give you a puppy when you don’t take care of your cat?” Stomping my feet, “I want a puppy.”
Well I fully expect that I’ll get the puppy anyways, despite the fact that I do not deserve it. When Christmas morning comes there’s no puppy, only cat litter. After huffing and puffing for a while I come to the realization that if I want the puppy I should take care of my kitty-cat.



*You know to worry when your “trying to conceive newsletter” turns to “what to do when she’s pregnant and you’re not” or “10 tips to staying positive” and you subscribe to a fertility friend website and you buy fertility aids and you already have in an online shopping cart what you’ll buy for next month if things don’t work out this month.


*I just wished on an eyelash (and no I did not pluck it so I could wish on it) I want this so that If eating your toe-nails was good-luck then by golly I’d cut ‘em ‘til they bleed to increase my chances.


*"I've loved every minute of being a mother," says Zannyha. "You hear people complaining about their kids, about getting up in the night, about flu’s and vomiting. But if you have trouble having a baby, you cherish every minute."


*Conceiving a baby is the simplest, most natural thing in the world — until it isn't,


*December 30, 2008 0140

Dearest future child, I still have not been blessed with your presence. But there is a reason; somebody has a plan for us. As soon as I had made up my mind that it was time to start trying there have been distractions. In July the trip back East , In August back to school, in September my Grandma’s stroke, grandma’s sickness and in Late November my grandma’s death. One week after the funeral your daddy busted his knee. I have spent the last 5 months caring for others. I keep putting off when I am going to shift the focus back to me. Someone has decided that I am not to conceive until they are good and ready for me to. I know all the stress that I have been under has un-balanced my hormones. A part of me wonders if my hormones are un-balanced because of your dad, he makes me so angry with his sarcasm. Just a few minutes ago before he dozed off he was joking that he wants you to have 10 siblings, because he wants a soccer team. But we can’t even have you right now. How and where are we to find 10 more children?
On the finals day of my child development class I was thinking back to early in the class and how emotionally painful it was for me (I took the class because we were trying and I thought it would be so cool to learn about fetal development while I was carrying one) But instead of my being pregnant, a few other women in the class were, I was so jealous. There were days that I would start tearing up at my desk when watching a video with kids, or new moms talking about their babies and the miracle of life, I would get so emotional I would have to leave class. I even wrote a letter to the professor apologizing for my behaivor. Looking back over the course of those few months I couldn’t believe I had done it and almost forgot how bad it had been, the class turned out really well…And most importantly I did not give up!
I think maybe the reason for all the stress these past months has been to show me how strong I can be. That I can do it! Have done it! WILL CONTINUE TO DO IT!!! In the words of Dory in “Finding Nemo” (don’t worry I’ll show it to you someday soon) I need to “just keep swimming, just keep swimming” and eventually my day will come.


*February 6, 2009
My dreams: I want a girl, 2 boys and then another girl. I want a big red hybrid suburban w/ black trim. 2 dogs, a cat or two, all kinds of colorful fish


*After so many months of trying I have truly given up! The phrases “If” or “when I get pregnant” have been erased from my vocabulary. I don’t know if I will ever get the chance to feel a baby move inside my body.


*
June 9, 2009-Today you are roughly 14-16 weeks gestation. Late at night while your daddy sleeps I stay up against his wishes, and think of/plan for you. I cannot remember a time when I did not want to be a mom. It is so surreal that you are actually coming! When I started dating your dad we talked about kids, and he wanted a lot of them, and he did not want to wait forever to start a family, like some men-winner! When we got engaged I was not as excited about the wedding as I was about having kids. Well before we got married my priorities were out of order. I was buying baby clothes, baby toys, baby books instead of focusing on school and planning the wedding. As our wedding approached we starting talking about, or rather I pushed, pushed, pushed your dad to know when we could/would start trying to have you. Because we did not want you to conflict with your dad’s law school we arranged to start trying 2 months after we got married. Which was just way too long for me! So I saw to it that we did not wait that long. As luck would have it, it took eight months to conceive you (sorry for the disgusting details) but those eight months were the hardest of my life to date. Almost every night I would sit up and beat myself up about how I wasn’t pregnant, and how I must be doing something wrong. I started every day by charting my temperature, my mood, my cervical mucus etc. Determined that these scientific measures would get me pregnant. I read books, I ate special foods, I threw away many beauty products because of their harmful effects to fertility. I bought special vitamins, I journaled, I cried, and every two or so months I got a period. I had never felt pain like this, I even thought I was not getting pregnant because there had been too many pluses in my life, or there was a lesson I needed to learn first but was too stubborn to see the lesson. I was determined to be a mom, but I felt helpless to do so.
When I did get pregnant, I did not believe it. I was and still am so, so very afraid to lose you. Early on I started bleeding and was so afraid that I had lost you. I am anxious for every ultrasound because I get to see you move and see how much you’ve grown. But also at each ultrasound I get to know if your heart is still beating, and that you’re still alive in there.


*

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Sick Again

So I have yet another infection. I have a sore throat, low back (kidney) pain and I urinate continuously. The doctor's office sent me to the lab to pee in a cup, unfortunately I was unable to perform/provide them with enough urine, so I had to sit around in their office until I could provide more. Because it will take time to get the results back they have started me on an antibiotic ahead of time...woot! That's how I wanted to spend my 23rd birthday...

Well that was a few weeks ago, I finished my antibiotics last weekend and was feeling great. As it turned out there was no infection, even though all of my symptoms went away following/during the course of antibiotics.

Well I am sick again, again, again, for like the billioneth time this pregnancy. I have missed almost a month of work since becoming pregnant due to illness.

So Sunday after church we went to a "hey let's together because you're dying, but you're not dead yet party" I have been with Mark for years and have never met alot of his aunt's, uncles, cousins until this past weekend. Being the pregnant woman at the party I was the official baby holder, which was fine by me. Unfortunately I got thrown up on by Olivia, a really easy/quiet 6 month old. No big deal I wiped up my shirt and pants and continued holding her, but oh my goodness that smell sticks around.

Fast forward an hour I was forced by my husband and his siblings to scarf down what was left on my plate so we could hurry away from the party. So with an uncomfortably full belly we set out for the longer that I am used to drive...within a short while I got a tummy ache...and then nauseated...and then even more nauseated. By the time we reached the intersection of Walnut and El Camino I was swallowing back the pre-vomit juices and was preparing to puke into my purse. If it had been just Mark and I in the car I would have asked him to pull over much earlier. But in the car was Mark, his brothers Jared and Christian and sister Kellie. I was really embarassed and did not want to puke in front of them...and was trying my darndest to make it back to the in-laws before tossing my cookies. I had planned that when we pulled into the driveway I would open my door and let it go! But sitting there at the intersection I couldn't hold off any longer and started heaving into my mouth, I covered my mouth with one hand and rolled down the window with the other. Well before the window got down far enough for me to stick my head out I un-intentionally took a breathe. Thus bringing the vomit into my nose and lungs. Now two days later I sound like I have a cold, but my head is clear but my lungs are full...of I don't want to know what. I threw up the whole way home from the intersection, the rest of that evening and for all of Monday. So now it is Tuesday, and I have kept down breakfast and some cookies(thank goodness).

I have spent so much of my pregnancy on the couch (morning, noon and night). I had moved off of the couch last week and kept a really full, fun schedule everyday, I really enjoyed getting out of the apartment. But now the doctor, my grandma, my dad, everyone I talk to tells me to REST! I am tired of resting...I want to escape!

I know that once the baby comes we (baby and I) will be locked in at home for awhile, so I really wanted to get out now and not be a home body so that when the baby comes I won't resent being trapped at home for so long.

At this rate (with my cough and voice) my next outing might not be until Friday(frown)...for my ultrasound(YAY-I get to see da baby)!

Monday, July 20, 2009

Excerpts from Home Game by Michael Lewis

So in an attempt to understand what goes on inside the male mind I rented a book I had recently heard about on the Today Show about an author's experiences as a father.

Some of what I read could be Mark-like qualities, but for the most part I did not see a resemblance between the author's experience and the dad's I have met and know through my own life.

I read the entire book in one evening (If there is one perk to lazing around on the couch, it is being able to read a book an evening...I know I will not be able to even dream of doing that once I become a mom)

Here are some excerpts that made me stop and think:

"Memory loss is the key to human reproduction. If you remembered what new parenthood was actually like you wouldn't go around lying to people about how wonderful it is, and you certainly wouldn't ever do it twice"

"Five months pregnant with our first child, Tabitha (his wife) pointed out that the feeling of being weighed down by adulthood wasn't likely to improve anytime soon. Parenthood loomed. there was a time when I suspected this wouldn't have much effect on me. I figured that the chemical rush that attended new motherhood might get me off the hook-that Tabitha would happily embrace all the new unpleasant chores and I'd stop in from time to time to offer advice. she'd do the play-by-play; I'd do the color commentary. Five months into the pregnancy that illusion had been pretty well shattered by the anecdotal evidence. One friend with a truly amazing gift for getting out of things he did not want to do wrote to describe his own experience of fatherhood. "Remember that life you thought you had?" he wrote. "Guess what. it's not yours anymore." "

"The language of parenthood is encoded. When a mother says to a father, "I want to take her to the hospital," she is really saying "WE are ALL going to the hospital, and if you whisper even a word of complaint, you will have proved yourself for all time a man incapable of love." Maternal concern is one of those forces of nature not worth fighting."

"The thing that most surprised me about fatherhood the first time around was how long it took before I felt about my child what I was expected to feel. Clutching Quinn after she exited the womb, I was able to generate tenderness and a bit of theoretical affection, but after that, for a good six weeks, the best I could manage was detached amusement. The worst was hatred. I distinctly remember standing on a balcony with Quinn squawking in my arms and wondering what I would do if it wasn't against the law to hurl her off it. I also recall convincing myself that official statistics dramatically overstated the incidence of sudden infant death syndrome-when an infant dies for no apparent reason in her crib- because most of them were probably murder. The reason we all must be so appalled by parents who murder their infants is that it is so easy and even natural to do. Maternal love may be instinctive, but paternal love is learned behavior.
Here is the central mystery of fatherhood, or at any rate my experience of it. How does a man's resentment of this....thing....that lands in his life and instantly disrupts every aspect of it for the apparent worse turn into love? A month after Quinn was born, I would have felt only an obligatory sadness if she had been rolled over by a truck. six months or so later, I'd have thrown myself in front of the truck to save her from harm. What happened? what transformed me from a monster into a father?...The simple act of taking care of a living creature, even when you don't want to, maybe especially when you don't want to, is transformative. A friend of mine who adopted his two children was asked by a friend of his how he could ever hope to love them as much as if they were his own. "Have you ever owned a dog?" he said. And that's the nub of the matter: All the little things that you must do for a helpless creature to keep it alive cause you to love it. Most people know this instictively. For someone like me, who has heretofore displayed a nearly superhuman gift for avoiding unpleasant tasks, it comes as a revelation. It's because you want to hurl it off the balcony and don't that you come to love it."

Frustration

I am not a perfect person by any means. I have weaknesses, and I know what they are! One of said weaknesses being: I get frustrated by said people number one, number two when I chose to get pregnant I wanted to learn all that I could about all of it. And even though I am not a doctor and don't know everything I do consider myself to know more than most about certain aspects of the pregnancy process. I have taken a bizillion anatomy and physiology classes over the years and even more biology classes,and for my short time as an infertile women I read a lot about overcoming it and then for whatever reason I pick up on the weirdest factoids.

My sister-in-law whom is also pregnant found out last weekend that she is having a girl. She hails from a family that is all girls, she has 3 sisters and no brothers. So she says on my facebook the other day something to the effect that it is her genes that made them have a girl. But in this overabundance of silly knowledge I know that it is the male's sperm that determines the sex of children. There are boy sperm and girl sperm (i.e. each sperm carries either the chromosomes to be a girl or to be a boy). Boy and girl sperm are different in that Boy sperm swim faster than girl sperm but die really quickly. Girl sperm swims slower but live longer than boy sperm. So as scientists have discovered the more intercourse a couple have the greater their chances of having a boy, because they are frequently refreshing her body with more fast swimming, quick dying little boy sperm. And the less often a couple have intercourse at the women's most fertile time the more likely they are to have a girl. Either way...it's a long swim for them, taking sometimes days to make it to the center of the egg to fertilize it. I picture a little freeway that the sperm swim along, at first the boy sperm pass all the girl sperm, but then as time goes by the girl sperm catch up as all the boy sperm are crashed and are dead along the side of the freeway.

It's really silly, but it's really bothering me...she didn't pick the sex, his sperm did! My husband tells me to let it go, that to tell/educate her would be arrogant! But this is one of my weaknesses!

*This is completely un-scientific but maybe the fathers that have all sons don't make as many or any girl sperm and if they have all daughters then maybe they don't make boy sperm.

And as I can see from reading this...I really need to stop reading books and get the heck out of the house!!!!

Thursday, July 2, 2009



What now hangs above the dining room table, following our first wedding anniversary.

Mark's Knee-hab

So after five or six months of Physical Therapy, (four of those months post surgery) Mark has been released. They feel that they have done all they can for him. They've educated him on the exercises he should do, but it's still a long road back. A return to soccer is atleast 8 months down the road. But in order to go back to soccer at all, he has to work, work, work at it.

He gets easly discouraged, today at the gym he was upset to find that with the affected leg he could not lift thirty pounds (a fraction of what he used to be able to). So because the weights frustrated him, he stepped over to the treadmill to run, but his knee hurt too much so he ended up stoping.

I hate to be critical but I think Mark chose the surgery because he thought it would be a quick fix. And to his credit, the doctor made it all sound so simple. But the road back to "normalcy" continues...

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

The things they don't tell you about pregnancy

So there were a lot of things I did not know about pregnancy coming into it. I knew I wanted to be a mom and there was no talking me out of that, but I was so blurred by the itching/uncontrollable want to be a mom that I failed to heed to the warnings about what I was about to endure.

Sure some of my co-workers warned me about the FATIGUE: during the first trimester, the third trimester and then after the baby is born. They warned about the uncomfortability aspects, the nausea etc. But I was so excited I did not care how badly they painted pregnancy I still wanted to do it.

And I still do want to do it, but I will definitely feel differently going into it next time, I will prepare myself differently.

1. No one mentioned how bad the fatigue would be. In the first trimester I could not move, Mark would leave for work and I would be on the couch, he would come home from work and I would still be on the couch. I could sleep 8 or 20 hours a day and felt the exact same. The first trimester Lethargy can be compared to back to back to back to back all nighters. You feel like you have not slept at all. You are extremely light-headed so the only thing that feels like a good idea is sitting or laying down.

2. Urinary Frequency- pregnancy gives the word Frequency a new definition, "Yes, I eat frequently but I go to the bathroom REALLY, REALLY FREQUENTLY". Do yourself a favor and just move to the bathroom. In the first trimester there were times that I think I went to the bathroom like every half hour.

3.While we are on the topic of the "U" word, not a single soul told me about pregnancy related urinary incontinence. Poor me puking my guts out one end, and losing urine out of the other end (and having no control over it). I made the mistake of letting the husband in on my embarassing secret. He responded by laughing and telling me I was a freak. I really thought I was alone in this, that I had a problem! So at my very first prenatal doctor's appointment, at the very end of the appointment I mentioned that I "leaked" while puking and the response that my husband had. Fortunately my N.P. was very comforting and encouraging. She told me it was very normal, that puking is like a whole body muscular experience, it's no wonder we "leak" at the very least. The very next time I vomitted I took notice of how much of my body truly was involved, the entire body really is involved. I noticed that when I heave I go up on my tippy-toes and stretch my calves. You're taking something that is (or was) in your stomach (at the middle of your body) and telling it to oppose gravity, climb it's way back out the way it came in, many feet above where it had been resting.
*Due to this predicament I wear a pantyliner all day everyday because you never know when you might puke, cough, or sneeze. All of which may produce "leaking" I know what you're thinking, I never "leaked" before getting pregnant. Well now someone resides on your bladder. And after pregnancy, after we've stretched that nostril down there to the size of a watermelon. Well apparently for most, the urinary incontinence stays on after pregnancy.
*My best advice is, if you feel a cough, sneeze, or puke coming...do a kegel while simultaneously crossing your legs and feet.


4.Vomitting can be a relieving experience and a painful, burning experience as well. Sometimes I throw up moments after completing, or during a meal. It's like my body says "Rejected, go back where you came!" when eating. Those times are just annoying, because you're hungry, everything in your body says eat, but your body won't accept the nourishment. And if you don't get something to stay down quick then you're going to continue to get more and more nauseous, and feel even more lethargic.
And then the other one: Sometimes you throw up food you ate much earlier in the day or even yesterday. This one hurts because it's partially digested, so when it comes up so do the stomach acids and gastric juices...uh um...owe!!!!! It burns the whole way up and out and even after the food is out the acids remain in the esophagus and mouth and continue to burn. So even though you just threw up you need to eat, drink and take a tums to wash away the burn.

5. Nausea-My best position when nauseous is laying down, eyes closed, not moving a muscle (because the slightest movement could make it worse) and doing lamaze breathing while silently crying. For husbands: Don't touch me, don't talk to me, dissapear until you appear with the very food that I know I needed to eat, but didn't know I wanted! I can't tell you how many times Mark would angrily ask me "what do you want me to get you?" (Through tears) "I don't know, I need to eat, but I don't have an appetite for ANYTHING, and I am afraid that anything I try, will make this worse."

*I'm not trying to talk people out of pregnancy, because it truly is a miracle-women make humans, it's rather remarkable- but this is more to educacte those that may become pregnant in the future, and like me were never told of these "wonders".