Tag Archives: pregnancy

Five Things Friday

Five Pregnancy-Related Things People Have Said to Me This Week

38weeks

1. “It doesn’t look like your baby has dropped yet.” For anyone not well-versed in pregnancy speak, a baby generally “drops” (also known as engaging) just before they’re ready to be born.  When a pregnant woman’s bump looks a bit lower, it can sometimes mean labour is just around the corner.  However, my midwife tells me babies rarely engage before labour after a first pregnancy, so…yeah.

2. “Your bump looks a lot lower!”  See above.  These two observations were made on the same day.

3. “Are you sure you’ve only got one baby in there?” Yep…pretty sure.  Although Adlai does keep laying his head on my belly and saying, “one baby, two babies.”  Maybe he knows something I don’t.

4. “Your bump is so neat!  You don’t look nine months pregnant!” Again, see above.  Am I huge or not? (Don’t answer that question.) I’m so confused.

5. “Come out, Baby Dwight!” No, Baby Dwight.  Please don’t.  I need the weekend to wash your onesies and tidy my room.  I’m happy for you to come any time after Monday, capiche? Love you. xxx

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Filed under Baby, pregnancy, Uncategorized

Answering the call of the quiet buffalo

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It was never my intention to not write for two weeks, but these last few weeks of pregnancy have done something strange to me: they have turned me into an introvert.

A friend of mine in her final stages of pregnancy wrote a few months ago about this same phenomenon, this intense desire to be around close friends, coupled with a strong realization that she needed time alone.  She likened herself to a quiet buffalo.

At the time, I had just emerged from my glowy second trimester.  I was full of energy and my hair looked great and I felt like a fertility goddess.

Now?  Not so much.

I have heard the call of the quiet buffalo, and I am answering.

It takes all I have in me to text a friend back at the moment, much less write three blog posts a week.  I have big plans for every naptime and bedtime, but when it comes down to it, all I can do is climb into bed and go to sleep, or curl up on the couch with a big glass of ice (Sweet Jesus, I have never loved ice so much as I do now) and an episode or two of Parenthood. 

I want to be alone.  I’m not sad or depressed, and I don’t hate everyone (although if one more person asks me if I’m sure I’m only having one baby, I might lose it).  I just feel a deep, primal urge to be by myself, to rest, to be quiet and still and solitary.  That same friend said her sister pointed out that many animals do this – that they go off by themselves to give birth.

So I’m going to try and do better, but I can’t make any guarantees for the next couple of weeks.  I had Adlai at 38.5 weeks, and as of yesterday, I’m 38 weeks pregnant.  I don’t plan to have this baby this weekend, but who knows?  Until he comes, I’ll do my best.  I’ll write when I feel like I can, but I’ll mostly be napping, and turning my room from a campsite into a baby-friendly haven, and just staring at my husband and my firstborn son.

And when this new one comes, well, I don’t know what life will look like then.  But I feel confident this buffalo will, at some point, make way for the extrovert to return.

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Filed under Baby, pregnancy, writing

Three Hours With You

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Last Tuesday, I had an appointment with my midwife.

I was 28 weeks pregnant, so it was your standard blood-testing, baby-poking, pee-in-a-cup appointment.  My visits with my midwife are always pretty straightforward, for which I’m very thankful.  I’m used to hearing the words “good” and “normal” and “perfect.”

So I wasn’t really ready when she poked my stomach with her little heartbeat microphone thingy and frowned.

“Hmm…” she said. “We’ll try again in a minute.”

We chatted some more and she scribbled in the green notebook I have to carry with me everywhere I go.

The second time, it was the same thing: more frowning, more “hmm”-ing.

“It’s a bit fast.  I’m going to send you to the day unit to have his heart rate monitored for a little while.  Just to make sure.”

___

The day unit is in the hospital where I had Adlai, and where I’ll have this baby.  It is on the ward where I spent a week waiting for Adlai and I both to finish a round of antibiotics, where I slept in one room while he was fed every hour in an attempt to stabilize his blood sugar by nurses down the hall in the neo-natal unit.

I hadn’t been there since November 2010.

As Simon and I sat outside the day unit door, waiting for our turn, I watched the midwives standing around their station.  I saw a couple I recognized, including the one who came and got Adlai out of my room a few hours after he was born, who inserted the nose tube he fed through for the first few days of his life.

I felt weird and uncomfortable, so I held Simon’s hand with one of mine, and used my other to feel this new baby kicking and rolling beneath my ribcage.

An hour and a half later, they called my name, and I climbed onto an uncomfortable hospital bed.  Another midwife hooked me up to a heart rate monitor and told me she’d be back to check on me in a few minutes.  As I watched the baby’s heartbeat register on the screen, I called after her: “What’s normal?”

“Anything between 110 and 160, depending on how active baby is.”

They say that a lot here. “Baby.” Not “the baby”, or “your baby”.  Just “Baby.”

Simon sat in a chair by the bed, and we watched the numbers on the monitor: 143, 138, 132, 144, 155…

Normal, normal, normal.

It went on like that for nearly an hour, and with every passing minute, I breathed easier.

A second pregnancy is different to a first.

With my first pregnancy, there was not much to do but rub my belly and dream of my child and marvel at the miracle taking place inside me.  There were hours of prayers and epic lists of names and near-obsessive counting down of weeks.

With my second pregnancy, there has mostly been Adlai.  There has been Adlai’s playgroups and Adlai’s naps, and writing letters to Adlai in the little journal I keep for him.  There has been preparing Adlai for a new brother, and disciplining Adlai, and thinking about potty training Adlai.  And, occasionally, there is a quiet moment in bed at night when I am still and the house is quiet and I feel this new one kicking and flipping, and I smile and remember he’s there, he’s coming.  There are a few names scribbled in a notebook by my bed, a conversation we revisit every couple of weeks.  There is an app on my phone that tells me how many weeks along I am and, truly, sometimes that is the only way I know.

The hour and a half I waited for my turn, and the hour hooked up to the monitor, were an inconvenience.  I had work to do, and dinner to cook.

But as I sat there and watched the needle jumping, scribbling out this tiny boy’s heartbeat, writing down his existence, I felt thankful for the inconvenience.  For the few minutes of uninterrupted time to concentrate on the life of my second son.  Even the few minutes to worry about him, and then to be relieved to know he was okay.

Sometimes the numbers jumped up to 158 or 162, just as I felt a little foot squeeze into my ribcage, or a lump of something roll under my belly button.  I could imagine him in there, content.  Oblivious to me out here, wondering if he was okay, nervously watching his every move.

My eyes filled with tears and I held Simon’s hand.

“We’re going to be his Mama and Daddy,” I said, because it felt like news.

“I know,” Simon said, because maybe he already did.

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Filed under learning, pregnancy, seasons, Uncategorized

What Not to Say

Listen, I know what you mean.

I know you’re looking at my belly, thinking, “Wow, that’s a lot bigger than it was last time I saw her!”

I know you’re thinking, “Your stomach has grown so much.” And I know you know that I’m just carrying a child.  A child who probably weighs about 6 pounds right now.

But hear me out.

It is never, never okay to say these words to a woman:

“You’re so fat!”

Pregnant or not.

Capiche?

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Urination Violation, pt. 2

Yesterday, I gave myself the Indian name “Pees in Cups.”

Today, I think it might need to change to “Pees in Pants.”

I was just standing in the kitchen, talking to Simon, when I sneezed…and wet my britches.

Any tiny bit of dignity I was still hanging on to just flew out the window.

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Just a little mustard seed.

In December of 2008, I was standing with two of my best girlfriends at a friend’s wedding, eating canapés and laughing at our husbands, who were standing across the room and, I’m sure, doing something immature but hilarious.  One of us – I don’t remember who – mentioned a pregnant friend of ours, and asked if we were thinking about babies.

“No, not yet,” said the other.  ”I think we’ll wait a couple of years.”

I smiled.  ”Actually, I think we’ll be ready soon.  We’re hoping to start trying this summer, maybe June.”

June.  Of 2009.  Why not?  I had a good job, we had a cute house, we’d been married almost two years, and we were feeling the emotional readiness for a family earlier than the four years we’d originally thought.

We all know what happened next: I lost my good job in April, and we decided to wait until things were a bit more certain.

Meanwhile, the girl who’d said they were waiting a couple of years found out – quite surprisingly, especially to herself – they were expecting a baby.

Simon and I decided to move to England in December, and figured it’d be best to wait until we got here to start thinking about babies again.  For me, it was mostly about not hitting my parents with the news we were leaving North Carolina and the news I was pregnant with their first grandchild at the same time.

December came, and we moved.  Meanwhile, throngs of my close friends had called or facebooked or emailed to say they were having babies.  I smiled and congratulated each one of them, but every time, my heart ached a little bit.  It had been a year since that conversation at the wedding.

Once we got to England, things weren’t easy.  We lived in Simon’s old bedroom in his parents’ house – an arrangement that was supposed to last for a few weeks – for five months.

Jobs didn’t come through (that’s another story), and I started working at Starbucks while Simon helped out doing landscaping with a guy from his parents’ church.  Every day, while I poured coffee and wiped tables, I watched women – some younger than me, some older – come in with their babies.  They fed them and smiled at them, and held them, staring down at them lovingly…

I sometimes went into the bathroom and cried.

In March, my phone rang at midnight, and I answered it, startled out of sleep.

“It’s me,” said my friend Emily, the other girl from the wedding conversation.  ”I’m pregnant.”

“Oh, wow…that’s so great.  Congratulations.”

“Did I wake you up?” she asked.  ”I’m so sorry.  I’ll call you back later.  Go back to sleep.”

We hung up, and I stared hard out the window, tears stinging my eyes.

“Why are you doing this to me?” I whispered in the general direction of the God I knew could hear me…

…the God who was making me wait while everyone around me was getting what I wanted…

…the God who knew that, at that moment, I was carrying a child the size of a mustard seed.

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Filed under confessions, dreams and realities, England

Okthankyou

I’ve been getting a lot of advice from all kinds of sources lately.  There’s something about pregnancy, and childbirth, and child-rearing, for that matter, that opens up the door for input from everyone from mothers-in-law to friends to random strangers on the street.

Along these same lines, I recently heard two stories that I find shocking:

First, a friend told me she was walking around Target with her 4-month-old baby boy (in sweltering hot North Carolina), and realized he was sweating and unhappy.  She took his socks off to help him cool down, and before she could even get back to her car, she was stopped by not one, but TWO strangers who told her she should ‘put some socks on that boy.’

If she was carrying him around by one arm, I’d understand people intervening, but for Pete’s sake.

Another friend told me she was bottle-feeding her baby in a coffee shop – with a bottle of breastmilk, mind you – and two different women came up to her and lectured her about breastfeeding being best.  Good golly – I agree with them, but it was freaking breastmilk.  And what if my friend, for some reason, wasn’t able to breastfeed?

What is it about babies that invites advice from people who don’t even know you?

Simon wrote about some of the ‘advice’ we’ve gotten last week on his blog, which you can read here.

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Filed under learning, Uncategorized

Secrets and silence

When it comes to keeping secrets, I’m rubbish.  I’m more than rubbish.  I’m a great big rubbish bin.

Not your secrets, mind you.  Your secrets are safe with me, and I pride myself on my ability to seal my lips with your secret crushes, your subversive job-hunting, your incognito trips to the movies to see Step Up.

It’s my own secrets I can’t keep. 

And that explains – I hope – why Great Smitten has been like a barren wasteland since I found out April 7 (on our three-year wedding anniversary) that we were having a baby

Initially, there was shock, followed by hushed whispers between Simon and me – we were living with his parents, and waited three weeks just to tell them.  Right under their noses, we were visiting the doctor and sneaking folic acid tablets; I was saying yes to glasses of wine (it’d be too obvious otherwise – I love a glass of wine), then taking fake sips and sneaking the glass to Simon when they weren’t looking; I was nodding, sympathetically-but-knowingly, when my pregnant friends talked about their morning sickness or their growing waistlines.

I knew.  And Simon knew.  And it had completely shifted our paradigm – it had, like nothing else before, rocked our world.

But it was a secret.  For three weeks, it was our secret and only ours. 

We had no jobs, no house, no car, and every night, I scribbled in my journal, letters to God.  Confessing I was scared, confessing I didn’t trust Him.  Begging Him to prove me wrong, to call my bluff.

I would sign into my blog, ready to write to you, but all I could think of, the thought that consumed me, was this new thing.  This life growing inside of me, that was going to change everything.

I would start to type about things I’d seen in London, places I’d been, food I’d eaten.  But it was stiff and meaningless, and it still sits there, in my drafts box, cold and unfeeling. 

Lies. 

Decoys. 

Because I had a secret, and I couldn’t tell you.

I’m so glad you know now.

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Filed under confessions

Pregnancy Promise #43

I promise not to talk about my uterus, especially in mixed company.


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Filed under Pregnancy Promises

I’m not fat.

19 weeks this Friday.  Baby Dwight is about 6 inches long.  That’s not including legs which, if its parents are anything to go by, are probably at least a foot long themselves.

For weeks I haven’t been able to believe there’s actually anything in there, but then this happened:

For years my weight has fluctuated, and every time I’ve put on a little extra pudge, I’ve immediately thought, “I need to walk more….I need to watch what I eat.”

Watching my tummy bloom this time is different, of course, but I’ve had to train myself to let go of that old voice.

I’m learning to love this new body of mine (it helps that its mostly my tummy growing and not everything else), because I can see it’s doing exactly what it’s supposed to be doing – making room for the little life that’s growing inside of it.

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Filed under a change will do you good, learning