Monday, June 9, 2008

Wrapping up



Life is great - we're really having fun and enjoying each new day with our little guy.

Breastfeeding is going smoothly. Colby was back up to his birth weight by 6 days old.

He looks so old to me now. I know that sounds crazy but in 9 days, he has gone from being a baby to a little human.

Erin has adjusted beautifully to parenthood. She volunteers to get up for 3am diaper changes (even the really messy ones) and I often catch her just gazing into our son's eyes.

Link to more photos.

So, now for goodbyes - Erin has never been entirely comfortable with the level of detail that I go into on this blog. I had told her that blogs were incredibly important to me when I was researching this whole process and now I felt like I had to contribute something too. She was pretty ok with that. Now that Colby is here though, Erin brought the blog up again - She asked if Colby's whole life is going to be like a tacky reality-TV series on the internet. I love blogs and I love reading the updates about other people's kids but the lesbian-baby-making process was what I had really set out to capture. Now that we have our little guy, I need to respect my wife's wishes and the privacy of our son. So, this will be my final post. Maybe someday I'll start a new blog about politics or knitting or something (I don't even knit!) but the baby-making story is over... at least it has a very happy ending.

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Colby is here!

Colby arrived, May 31st at 4:37pm after a relatively quick 9-hour labor.

His birth story sort of starts on Friday, May 30th. I was 7 days past my due date and feeling antsy. My midwife had suggested that if I didn't go into labor by Monday, that I could try taking a shot of castor oil (known for inducing labor - unfortunately, also known for causing terrible diarrhea). The weekend would be so much more convenient for Erin and me (since we run a business from home) and I figured 2 days wouldn't matter much either way so Erin and I decided that I should take a shot of castor oil Saturday morning instead of Monday. I knew the midwife had delivered another woman's baby on Thursday and then was heading over to our friend M's house because her water had broken on Wednesday but she was still only having mild contractions by Thursday night.

Saturday morning, we set an alarm for 6am and I took 2oz of castor oil (mixed with some italian ice in the blender to dilute the taste) and went back to bed. I woke up at 7:30am feeling the need to vomit and ran to the bathroom. As I got to the bathroom, I decided it might be best to sit on the toilet with the trash in my lap as other "rumblings" seemed to be starting. I did "get sick" but everything was fairly mild - nothing like the castor oil horror stories I'd read about. As I was using the toilet, it seemed like I'd "peed" an awful lot. I wondered if maybe my water broke. I knew if it really was my water that it would keep leaking. Sure enough, I kept dripping but I was fairly concerned to see that the fluid was greenish-tinged - there was obviously some meconium in the water. Sometimes, meconium means the baby is in distress, but it is also fairly common in babies who are not in distress (especially the farther they are past their due date).

Mild contractions had sort of already started before I woke up but I was wasn't really super-aware of them.

I called the midwife and she reassured me that the meconium was OK as long as it wasn't heavy or dark - something like that - she told me a few really important things to watch out for that I completely forget now but said that other than that, it was totally OK.

Then, the midwife explained that she had JUST crawled into bed less than 2 hours earlier because our friend M didn't have her baby until over 72 hours after her water broke and about 48 hours of hard labor. Then, of course I felt like such a horrible, horrible, bitch for inducing my own labor without talking to her about it first. I couldn't bear to tell her that I'd taken the castor oil.

She said that it sounded like everything was still pretty mild and that early labor can take a while so she thought it might be best if I just sort of hang out and call her back if I need her or in 2 hours even if nothing has changed.

I was a little anxious to hear his heartbeat since there was meconium but I also really trusted my midwife's judgement (even running on 3 days without sleep) so I decided to be OK with waiting.

I didn't want to obsess about timing the contractions - I've heard that can be a real downfall for some women because they start counting down the seconds to the next one and tensing up with the anticipation which only makes things worse. I really wanted to just "go with the flow" so I paced around for a while and just let myself get used to the contractions. I tried different things for dealing with each one. They were very similar to period cramps but they came in little waves that got stronger and stronger before slowly getting weaker and weaker. Even within each contraction, the little waves made the actual peak of the pain only a second or two.

I noticed that each contraction was followed by this real wave of "happy feelings". It was very clearly like when you get an IV at the hospital and they tell you, this should give you a happy feeling any second now - and then it just washes over you. Like a warm, drowsy, good feeling. I tried to explain this all to Erin. That I would try to focus on the warm, happy drugged feeling that I knew would come after each painful experience. The feeling was also overwhelmingly peaceful.

At 9am, I started timing the contractions and they were never more than 3 min apart. (no further "getting sick" at all during this time). By 9:30, I called the midwife. It was a little less than 2 hours but I told her I was starting to feel like things were ramping-up quickly. She agreed that it was time for her to come over. The midwife arrived at our house about an hour later (she lives 40 minutes away).

The contractions steadily increased in intensity but I was able to talk myself through them and rock or sway (lying or standing). I would repeat things like "let it come" "don't fight it" or whatever came to mind over and over. As the pain of each contraction increased, the peaceful, groggy feeling between them increased too - I actually fell asleep several times between contractions. I'd open my eyes as another one would start and Erin would say "you were snoring!". The other weird effect this had was that I would always think that labor must have stopped because I felt like 20 minutes or so had passed - really it was never more than 3 minutes between contractions.

As the contractions got more and more intense, I found myself slipping farther and farther into myself - into blackness. I saw the pain in my mind's eye like waves or sort of like a fountain bubbling up stronger and higher each time starting at my pelvis and filling my chest until it would bubble down again slowly. This wasn't where I felt the pain really but for some reason that image kept coming into my mind with each contraction.

Each time that I looked at the clock, I was surprised how much time had passed. This made me really happy. It wasn't like I'd look up and be horrified to see that it had only been 5 minutes. I'd be amazed that it had been hours when really I would not have been shocked no matter what the clock showed. This helped my confidence. At one point, I do actually remember thinking to myself - I'm not scared because I know that I could do this all night if I had to. I vaguely remember thinking something like "I may regret even thinking that!".

The deeper that I got into the darkness, the easier it was to cope with the pain. The tiniest russle of paper or whispering in the room would immediately pull me back to the present though. I couldn't just "float away" if there was even the slightest noise. I feel like that must be some kind of primitive safety feature - like a wild animal being so acutely aware of the sound of a branch cracking nearby. I sort of felt like a bitch asking everyone to be SOOO quiet. It made such a ridiculously HUGE difference in the pain though. I was totally "drugged out" on my own endorphins when the room was quiet and nothing seemed difficult at all. The second I heard even footsteps though, it was like when you wake up from a really awesome dream and squeeze your eyes shut trying desperately to get back into the dream but you know it is too late. The pain would come full-force then but at least I knew that the next one would probably be easier because it would probably be quiet again.

Around maybe 2pm the contractions changed and started forcing me to push. It was weird - such an incredibly weird feeling. Something vaguely like the urge to vomit. You can only control just so much and then your body just convulses entirely of its own control. The problem is that I was only 5cm dilated! Fighting that urge to push was SO hard. That was the hardest part of the labor. I had to blow hard to try to keep from pushing. I could fight off some of the light waves of each contraction but most of the time, that hardest wave would hit and my whole chest would convulse. I'd blow hard and it would sound something like getting the wind knocked out of you. Focusing on blowing at the peak of each little wave of pain totally cleared the haze that had allowed me to cope so well with the pain - suddenly I wasn't able to just let the pain wash over me. I was really angry and frustrated at that point because had I trusted my body and tried so hard to just allow it to lead but now it was doing the "wrong" thing.

I remember asking the midwife to just tell me how many contractions it would be before she checked me again or how much time. She wouldn't at first but finally I think she said "30 minutes". I focused hard on the fact that I had so recently thought about how quickly time had been passing. Surely, I could survive for 30 more minutes.

Luckily, I went from 5cm-10cm in about half an hour. Being told that I could push now was the BEST feeling ever. I think I said something like "you're kidding" and really didn't want to allow myself to believe it yet - just in case she was.

Then, I got this really weird break that I've never heard any other woman describe. In my memory, the contractions totally eased off for about 10-15 minutes and I really felt "totally normal" my head wasn't all woozy or sleepy. I don't know if it was actually 10-15 minutes. My concept of time wasn't great at this point. I was in a fantastic mood though and I asked the midwife's assistants to grab our cameras, the mp3 player to record his first cry, etc. It was really nice to just feel totally fine for a few minutes. Everyone else scrambled around to get supplies ready because we all expected pushing to go pretty quickly.

My mom arrived at this point because her cell phone wasn't getting service so she decided to just "check" to see if I'd tried to call. One of the midwife's assistants came in to the room and told me she was here. I was feeling pretty on-top-of-the-world at that point so I invited her in to watch the delivery (after looking to Erin for her thoughts on that). Fairly soon, contractions started ramping up again and I was actually anxious for them to hurry up and get "productive" because I was anxious to meet our little guy.

Well, pushing turned out to be not quite as easy as I'd hoped. I was sitting in a really cool birthing chair at first and I really liked the idea of giving birth in that but it really just wasn't working. The midwife was checking Colby's heart rate after each contraction and I think everything was still fine at this point but she was strongly suggesting that I try a different position. I tried a few contractions standing, a few leaning with rigid arms against the bed, a few squatting (that hurt like CRAZY but in retrospect I think that was because it was actually working - I just wasn't ready to get quite that intense yet). Then, the midwife suggested that I try just laying on the bed, propped up, sort of like the "standard" position women give birth in. I was skeptical and to be honest, it sounds crazy but I was thinking "I chose a home birth so that I could have the freedom to be in ANY position that I want, how boring!" (hah, little did I know that it would be more like a sick game of Twister by the time it was over).

I reluctantly agreed to try lying down but after the first contraction, the midwife said "The baby doesn't like that position - why don't you get up on all fours". I don't think there was a ton of urgency in her voice but I could tell this was not just a suggestion. She might have said something about it is common for that to really help. I don't remember this at all but Erin said that she also said something about his heart rate dropping and that there seems to be some "cord involvement" .

I got on my hands and knees and within a few contractions, the midwife also gave me some herbal tincture watered down in a shot glass. Things seemed to ramp up a bit. As the contraction would bubble up, I would rock, rock, rock, and wait for the hardest wave before I'd push as hard as I could. Progress was slow. The midwife suggested that I could get more power into each push if I pull one leg up to my chest and then grab it and really push into it with each push. (this is the Twister part). It was sort of like the start of a track-and-field race only none of those runners are 9 months pregnant and naked. As each contraction built, I would pull one leg up. After the contraction, I'd put it down to rest. It was crazy and totally convoluded but it was working so I went with it.

Sometimes when I pushed, I would see stars or fireworks exploding. It really didn't hurt that much for most of the pushing. The very, very end hurt but at that point, I really didn't care anymore. The really ouchy bit was only maybe 15-20 minutes at the end and it was only while I was actually pushing. I don't remember any pain between contractions. That was the mind-fuck part of it though - I had to push but it hurt to push. I couldn't just not push but I was sick of the pain and just wanted a little break or something. I had to make a decision to just plow straight into the pain and go for it. Until I let go and decided to just "go" the labor was never going to be over.

Finally, finally, finally, I felt his head pop out. I took several deep breaths waiting for the next contraction but things started getting a little crazy at that point. Maybe there was one more contraction and I pushed but he was stuck. Then, I felt the level of anxiety in the room mounting. Apparently, Colby's head was turning bright blue. I heard the midwife say "it isn't around his neck"... but something was clearly cutting off his cord. There was urgency in her voice and she said, something like "he needs to come out on this contraction". As I started to push, she grabbed Colby and pulled, HARD, I could feel her rocking my whole body back and forth. I felt, very clearly, his shoulders stuck inside of me. She said to her assistant (in a very calm voice) "Get the O2". Finally, his shoulders POPPED free and he slid out and let out a huge yell. It was amazing. It was the best sound I've ever heard in my whole life. The midwife said "well, we don't need the O2 anymore!"

It is a little scary that we had an almost-emergency at home but I know that our midwife carries a ton of equipment and most of what would be immediately available at a hospital was right there in my room, ready to go. It worked out really well and I know that I will have another home birth if I get pregnant again. The midwife said he had an "occluded prolapse" and I guess it is pretty rare - I think that means that his cord was pinched somewhere but wasn't obvious where. She said that once his shoulders came out, it looked like he had a tangled bit of cord stuck just above one shoulder.

There is so much more - details about that day and about the 4 days since then. I think of things all the time that I want to write down and keep forever. There definitely is no time left today though. Throughout this story, I've nursed Colby, he took a really long nap on my chest (while I was leaning back ridiculously far for typing) and now he's up nursing again. Time for me to go have some "family time".

Friday, May 30, 2008

41 weeks - STILL waiting

Well, 7 days past due and nothing going on.

The midwife didn't do a pelvic exam at the last appointment - she's said in the past that they can just be frustrating and misleading anyway because I could be 3 cm dilated for 2 weeks or I could be totally not dilated and still end up going into labor the next day anyway.

In some ways the time has been nice because E and I finished all of the work that we had hoped to get done on the house and got work-stuff really organized. Now, it seems like we work for about 2-3 hours per day and finish everything. Now that we don't feel obligated to work on the house, the rest of the day is just "free time". How is it that life seemed so hectic before? I'm sure we'll still have our busy days. Obviously once Colby is born things will be a lot crazier but I love it that E and I run our own business from home and spend all day together - hence, we both sort of get to be stay-at-home-moms.

We have been going out on really long walks every evening though to try to work the little-guy down a bit. We don't really set a time or route but we seem to be walking for about 2 hours every day. There is a huge cemetary near our house and the view from the top of the hill is wonderful. There is also a huge maze of snowmobile trails behind the cemetary that seem to go forever in every direction. It is fun to talk about bringing Colby to these places when he gets older - the HUGE rock that we climb on, the fire-circle with the incredible view of the mountains, and the best places to spot large families of deer.

I don't know why but I really wanted Colby to be a MAY baby, not a JUNE baby. I'm trying to get over that though because it doesn't really look likely. Why is it that May and June just seem to have such different "moods" to them?

I keep reading all these articles online that say that the AVERAGE first-time mom will go 8 days past her due date. Why even bother with the other due date then? This would have been a lot easier if I'd just been counting down to tomorrow as my "due date" instead of 7 days ago.

Sunday, May 25, 2008

40 wks + 2 days

Nothing yet... just waiting.

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Fun Photos!

We took some awesome photos on Monday. I had sort of wanted to get professional photos done but never really got around to it. Now that it is really getting "down to the wire" I decided to just set up the tripod in the bedroom (since the bed makes a fairly neutral uniform backdrop - and because it was cold/raining outside). My camera has a way to set the timer so that it will take photos at 1-second intervals and I could set the number of photos. We took 10 at a time and that gave us a chance to really just play around with poses and stuff. We were both in a really good mood and laughing constantly. I think this one is my favorite. The rest are here.



Our friends M & B came over Monday night to henna my belly. I wasn't sure about that idea at first but I really like how it turned out. It was a lot of fun too. More fun henna photos here.











Monday, May 19, 2008

39w 3d and waiting

Well, I'm finally starting to get restless. Until just a few days ago, I was totally happy to have Colby right where he is. I really like being pregnant. I've had a really easy pregnancy and I know that I'm going to miss this experience when it is over.

A friend of ours is due any day now also and she said something that I liked - "This is the easiest part of parenting - I know exactly where he is and that all of his needs are being met" any of our inconveniences (feeling like I have to pee all the time!) are nothing compared to once he's on the outside.

Talking about being pregnant is so weird because the bad parts are so easy to describe in absolutely excruciating detail. Nausea, heartburn, constant pressure on the bladder, etc., etc. - I can say those things and everyone else knows more-or-less what that feels like. Watching my body build a human out of nothing more than the food that I eat and a set of blueprints too small to see under most microscopes - now that is crazy. There just aren't any words to describe that.

So, we're ready Colby, hurry up. I'll miss being pregnant but now I think we're ready to jump into the next step.

No exciting symptoms to report though - I hope I don't go way past my due date.

Friday, May 9, 2008

Cold sore

The one damn thing that always kept popping into my head when people talked about fears of labor isn't the pain and suffering of giving birth or even emergencies that may come up. For me it was having a cold sore. Sounds silly at first but I've heard that babies can catch them and end up with chronic open sores all over their skin. I need to actually research that better but I've been worried that I'll get a cold sore, possibly just from the stress of a labor, and not be able to kiss my baby for 7-14 days. I'd also have to be incredibly diligent about washing my hands, not touching my face, etc. What if I screwed up and kissed him without thinking or felt like maybe I didn't wash my hands enough? It would suck. I'm not saying that I'm never going to have a cold sore again but I'd really prefer not to have to deal with that in the first week (or two, or three).

So what showed up on my lip today? Yup, a cold sore.

Maybe this is good though. I rarely get them back-to-back (though it has happened) so now I've got about 14 days to deal with this one and may be less likely to get another one right away. So, ok, I can deal with this... it still annoys me.

Tuesday, May 6, 2008

Very Long Post on Home (or Natural) Birth

So, obviously I've been thinking about birth a lot lately. Why is having a home birth important to me?

We watched The Business of Being Born yesterday and while I did enjoy it, I found that I didn't agree with everything that they said. I started thinking about what I do and don't believe about birth in general... of course many of these things may change after I actually experience giving birth but I'm just talking about how I feel right now.

Several people in the movie said something like "birth is a rite of passage" as if that automatically made it more valuable. I do not believe that natural child birth is inherently valuable just because it can be called a "rite of passage". Our culture has many positive rites of passage such as a marriage or graduation ceremony. There are also (what I consider) harsh or negative rites of passage though like a severe beating as initiation into a gang, fraternity/sorority hazing, and even "basic training" in the military is set up to be a rite of passage (among other things).

Oddly, the fraternities, gangs, and military have hit on something that nature "already knew" - the traumatic experience often does make a person or group feel more bonded, loyal and strong. So, in some senses, it does serve a very real purpose in childbirth. Yet, at the same time, hazing is illegal (in all states?) and I was horrified to read about gang members beating their friends (often 13 or 14 years old) nearly to death for no reason other than to "initiate" them. Birth is not a feminist "macho thing" for proving a point. Women should not feel like they have to endure labor in order to be respected as a mother or feel like a failure if they don't end up with a natural birth. To me, when people say "rite of passage", I feel like they're saying - "you must endure this beating in order to get into the mommy club." Labor is not a natural hazing ritual or initiation. However, those odd benefits of strength, commitment, and loyalty that come with enduring trauma can not be overlooked as completely trivial either.

I do not believe that most doctors just want to turn beds over quickly. I prefer to think that doctors really want to relieve pain. That is why they are doctors. They like solving problems, not just sitting there and watching someone suffer (or go through what looks to them like suffering). They may feel that a shorter or less painful labor is really the most "humane" thing even if it does carry some increased risks. They also may be aware of the risk of a malpractice lawsuit and know that doing something puts you at a far lower risk of being sued than doing nothing.

I don't believe that hospitals are "bad". I believe that the majority of people who work there do genuinely want to help. It may be very common for doctors or nurses to push drugs or c-sections more often when they are tired or anxious to go home but I would still prefer to think of those as mostly sub-conscious decisions rather than blatantly selfish ones.

Ok, so what do I believe are my reasons for choosing a home birth?

Over 30% of births in the US are via Cesarean Section. The World Health Organization states that no region in the world is justified in having a cesarean rate greater than 10 to 15 percent. The US has the second-worst infant mortality rate of all developed nations. If you only look at the 7 countries with the highest populations, the US has the highest cesarean rate, the lowest number of births attended by midwives, the lowest number of home births and the worst infant mortality rate. In the 5 European countries with the lowest infant mortality rates, midwives attend more than 70% of the births.

Studies of planned home births by low-risk women, attended by a trained professional, indicate that home birth is at least as safe as hospital birth (See WHO research here section 2.4 Place of Birth).

Hospital labors tend to be longer, on average, than home labors. My theory - many people can't even pee with someone watching or listening. If the body needs a safe, private environment just to pee, it seems logical that women would prefer not to labor with a million strangers coming and going, bright lights, and strange noises.

Many women who had hoped to have a natural birth in a hospital setting find that their labor will not progress without pitocin. The contractions produced by pitocin are much longer and stronger than natural contractions so women almost always need an epidural to cope once pitocin is given.

If the woman started out wanting an epidural from the start, that often slows contractions so pitocin would likely follow.

The epidural is applied directly to the spine specifically so that the mom gets the drugs but baby doesn't. The pain relief means that mom's body stops producing the endorphins and other natural stamina and pain-management drugs that would normally flow both to her and to the baby.

Side effects of the drugs, stronger and longer contractions, lack of maternal endorphins, etc. all make the labor significantly more difficult for baby to handle. The baby is then far more likely to go into distress and require an emergency C-section.


I have read that women who give birth naturally have far lower rates of post-partum depression. The insane cocktail of hormones released during labor is like a runner's high times ten (or more) and helps women to feel like they can conquer anything. Those hormones also help to tell the woman's body that it is time to start producing milk. Women who have a natural birth tend to have a significantly easier time with breastfeeding (especially vs moms who had a c-section). It seems logical that women who are really struggling with breastfeeding would also be more likely to feel inadequate as a new mom. Some studies also suggest that those natural chemicals produced during labor trigger an intense bonding mechanism. A mother's reduced ability to bond with her baby could also lead to depression.

Trading one day of insane pain for increased risk to the baby's health, increased discomfort for the baby, and months of struggling with breastfeeding, bonding, and depression just doesn't sound like a great trade-off to me.

Well, we'll see how I feel about this 3 weeks from now (assuming I've birthed the little guy by then). These are just my feelings about it all now and it helps me to get them all down in a logical order. I know mid-labor is full of doubts and second thoughts so having a very clear idea of why I'm doing this should help.

Monday, May 5, 2008

Still not quite ready but getting there (37 1/2 weeks)


Our house still isn't QUITE finished yet.... but I am so amazed by how close we are. The trim isn't finished, we need closet doors, etc. but here is a photo of the almost finished master bedroom.


Friday, May 2, 2008

37 weeks - Full term

Full term - yikes! He could, technically, come any day now. Most first-time moms go a little late though so I'm pretty sure we've got a few weeks left.

I don't know why this strikes me as so funny but we've ordered this pool from a home birth supply company. It just seems funny to think of delivering a baby among brightly-colored fishies. I'm not entirely sure that I'll even want to deliver Colby in the pool but it was only $30 and we were ordering some other stuff from the company at the same time so I figured what-the-heck. Our midwife has a sump pump that we can borrow so the plan is to just set this up right in our living room. I was somewhat reassured by the fact that our midwife said this is the exact same pool that she delivered her daughter in and that she was very happy with it.
It came with a little net - the kind you use to take dead fish out of the aquarium - for "light debris"... I don't think I want to know what "light debris" is. Ahh, this should be exciting.

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Very tired

We've been absolutely working our butts off on getting our remodelling done before Colby arrives. It looks AMAZING but it has been really, really hard work. We've been up late every night and doing really hard work like sanding the floor, building shelves for the new closets, refurbishing the bureau we bought at a used furniture store for Colby, etc. etc.

We've been experimenting with new materials that I've never used before like zero-VOC paint and an all-natural ultra-low-VOC floor finish. I was a bit worried at first because you often have to sacrifice quality for safety but everything has turned out absolutely awesome. I can't get over how cool the floor finish is. I haven't read up on it a ton but it seems to be made from whey that is a by-product of the cheese-making industry. They say that the whey would normally end up in a landfill but they've found a way to make it into this incredibly durable, fast-drying, ultra-low-VOC finish. I was worried about durability but this stuff is already really hard (less than 24 hours old)... it is so much stronger than normal water-based finishes. I'm not sure how it will compare to the hardness of an oil-based finish (it will take a week to fully cure) but it really is impressive so far. Oh, and unlike oil-based, they claim that it won't yellow. I'd take scratched up floors over dark yellow ones any day (our downstairs is already SOO much darker than it was when we originally refinished it).

Ok, break time is over, back to work... It feels awesome to get all of this stuff done though. We're SO CLOSE to being done with our new bedroom and I'm absolutely dying to set up the nursery (which we're sleeping in until our bedroom is done). It will feel really good to actually have a space just for Colby.

36-week photos - yeah, they amaze me too, my belly looks just like a watermellon!

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Almost 35 weeks

In the past two weeks, we've had two amazing baby showers. It was so wonderful to see old friends and and get to hang out and feel loved by people from so many different phases of our lives. We were both totally blown away by everyone's generosity and the incredible time and effort that went into so many handmade gifts.

It really does feel awesome to be a part of such a large network of people who care about us and support us. We feel so lucky - especially given that we're starting a fairly non-traditional family - to be surrounded by so much love and support.

During the week between the two baby showers, I got hit pretty hard with the flu. With the exception of going to the bathroom a few times (to get sick or to pee), I slept for 36 hours straight. I couldn't even keep water down. My lips were so dry and cracked, I knew I must be incredibly dehydrated and I started to get a little worried about Colby. Luckily, just as I was getting pretty worried, things started to get better. I could finally drink water. Then, eventually, I could eat tiny amounts of food. I guess I was sick for about 5 days total from "cold" through feeling really terrible and then back to coughing and stuffy nose. It was a little strange - I don't think I've ever had a cold/flu combination before. I'm so glad that is over.

Ahhh, but.... I might have actually lost weight. I went to the mw today and used her crazy scale. First, it said that I'd only gained 0.4 lbs in the last 2 weeks. Not great but I didn't expect much since I'd been sick. Then, just to be sure, I tried again. It said I'd lost 4 lbs! I moved the scale to the other end of the bathroom and got the exact same reading (lost 4 lbs). I tried several more times and finally gave up. At the end of the appointment, I went into the bathroom one more time and got the exact same "lost 4 lbs" reading again. Sure, I was sick but I don't think I was that sick. Looks like I'll have to take a walk down to the college at some point and try their scale.

We've started a "time capsule" for Colby to open when he turns 16. We told everyone about the idea before the baby showers and asked them to contribute something small that represented 2008 to them (a 2008 penny or clippings from a fashion magazine were examples that we gave).

I'll try to remember most of the things (maybe I'll edit later to add anything I've forgotten) -
  • a National Geographic magazine on global warming and a reusable grocery bag (the kind available near the checkout at most grocery stores.
  • sets of sealed baseball/football cards - I believe it is the Red Sox starting lineup and some rookie cards
  • an issue of Spin magazine
  • an issue of People magazine
  • an article from our local newspaper on gay marriage vs civil union in VT.
  • political fliers from all of the current presidential candidates
  • state quarters from states the hold particular relevance to our family
  • a beautiful little photo album and letter from my grandmother. The letter is written as if she's not still around -she has said she may be mentally or physically gone by then - it was a little weird to realize that this may be one of the strongest impressions that he has of his great-gram (who will be 96 when Colby is 16). She also wrote a lot about my dad who is already deceased and included photos of him.
  • an issue of Time magazine
  • my brother, who's 10, added a toy that he really likes that shows what kids are playing with in 2008
  • a roll of 35mm film and a letter about how picture-taking has really changed dramatically over the last decade. It also mentions the current "high-end" digital camera specs.
  • quite a few sealed envelopes that we won't even get to see until Colby does.

My brain isn't working right now, I know there were several more things that I'm not thinking of right now. I'll have to add those later. Erin and I haven't decided what we'll add yet.

Most of the items included a note with them explaining why the person chose that item - I think those will be almost as special as the items themselves.

We also need to come up with some kind of special container to keep all of this stuff in. We were kind of hoping to do something "2008-ish" but haven't thought of anything good. Commemorative Olympic tin maybe? Hmmm.

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Almost 33 weeks

(edited because I wrote it way too late at night and had a few random mistakes. It also looked like it needed to be broken up a bit. )

Hmm, this blog is turning into “my pregnancy is so freakin’ cool and I’m going to go on and on about how cool it is”. I really didn’t mean it to end up that way but I am happy and I suppose it is better to record all of the really cool parts than complain all the time.

****************Part 1****************
So, I had said in my last post that I was a little concerned about my super quick weight gain of 7 pounds in 3 weeks. Not incredibly concerned but hoping I didn't continue at quite that rate. I've been eating healthy so I didn’t change anything yet but I was very curious to see the next "weigh-in". Well, I went to the mw on Monday and the scale read only 0.8 lb more than I was 3 weeks earlier!

Normally, that would be bad but I've wondered how accurate her scale is because it is always tipped up against the wall when I come in and I have to set it on the wobbly bathroom floor. (I know, now you're probably wondering what kind of crack-pot mw I'm seeing). Anyway, she said that the scale occasionally gets weird readings but is pretty good overall.

Erin and I were out for a walk on Tuesday and as we were strolling around the local college campus, I popped in to the gym and weighed myself. It was exactly the same as the most recent reading on the mw scale. Soooo, it looks like now I've only gained a very reasonable 8 lbs in 6 weeks, 26 lbs total, and we're just about at 33 weeks.

Everything I've read says that the "ideal" weight gain is 25-35 lbs so I feel reasonably confident that we're on track.

****************Part 2****************
We recently completed our childbirth class that the midwife held in her office. It was fun to hang out with 3 other couples who are all planning home births and talking about cloth diapering.

The class had a fairly good mix of information and also "touchy-feely" stuff about fears and getting in the right mindset for labor and parenting. We did one exercise where we had a lump of clay and were asked to turn back-to-back with our partner and sculpt an animal that somehow represents "good parenting" or has some other family-related strength that you respect.

It was neat to see not only the variety but also how couples often chose the same strengths. One couple both made apes (the exercise was clearly set up to be a surprise so as far as I know, nobody peeked). Another couple, the dad made a penguin and the mom made a duck. The other two couples' animals (Erin and I were one of them) didn't seem to have anything in common to me.

I couldn't think of anything and time was running down so I made a dolphin. I figured they are intelligent and playful. They also seem to teach life-skills to their young. Erin made a kangaroo. I thought that was very sweet. She said that while the non-birth parent in the kangaroo family doesn't actually take turns carrying the young, that it seemed like it would at least be possible in theory. It also seemed to emphasize to me that so much of parenting happens after the actual gestation/birth.

In another class, we had to draw a series of pictures of the journey through not only labor and birth but then realizing that this is only the beginning. We were asked to do the drawing in 3 parts, sort of like "now", "gestation/labor", and "parenting". I absolutely love Erin's drawings. I want to frame them. In the first drawing, she's lying on her stomach in tall grass with big binoculars trying to see the future. The second is a labyrinth. The third is her and a little boy sitting on a hilltop in that classic meditation pose - legs crossed, eyes closed. She explained that someone in a video that we had just watched mentioned that they see the baby as a "teacher". She said that it isn't even necessarily him actively "teaching" but that we already look at ourselves more closely and carefully as parents. She drew both herself and Colby as "wise sages" because as we grow into our role as parents, we will not only teach him but he will teach us.

Quite proud of my darling - those were both such wonderful and insightful lines of thought.

My drawing was not as exciting - it seemed to correctly describe my outlook but I'm not sure it was terribly "deep". I drew a hiker, pack loaded up with just the essentials, belly, big and round, looking out toward a journey that I know will be hard but I feel still excited and fresh. Then, the winding path that sometimes even doubles back on itself. Finally, the bruised, bloody, dirty and blistered hiker sitting by a campfire, cozy tent up in the background holding a baby in her arms. The journey is hard but the view from the top makes you forget all about it.

As we were running out of time, I popped a stick-figure of Erin in there next to me without a pack but still walking beside me the whole time. In the third drawing, she has a few scuffs and scratches too.

****************Part 3****************
The "drywall guys" just finished our bedroom so we're hoping to toss some zero-VOC paint on (or at least just the primer) before we head out for an incredibly busy weekend (concert in MA, baby shower in NH, then back home to VT) so that maybe, just maybe, we'll actually have a nursery for Colby before he arrives. We still need to prime/paint our room, finish the floors, depending on how ambitious I'm feeling, we may even get closet doors, move furniture into our bedroom, paint Colby's room, then move all of his stuff into his room. Phew, we can do all of that in 7 weeks, right?

Friday, March 14, 2008

Happy Thoughts

A quick list of happy thoughts -

  • Erin told me yesterday, "I think you've reached the cute part of pregnancy; you look like a cartoon". (I'm taking that in the best possible way.)

  • Erin put her head on my chest last night and read bedtime poems to Colby. She read the Jabberwoky (she promised he wouldn't understand it anyway), The Mad Gardener's Song, Winkin, Blinkin, and Nod - maybe some others (I was really tired). Colby played gently while she talked - I felt his little fingers and toes wiggling. I could feel Erin's words vibrate through my chest so I'm sure Colby could hear her too.

  • Today is exactly 30 weeks and I still feel great. I had another reflux "episode" a few nights ago (very bad - needed to change all the sheets, scrub the carpet, and empty the trash at 4am). We went out that day and bought bigger pillows though so now I'm back to sleeping great.

  • Colby is head-down already - yay! The midwife pressed on my belly to feel his position. Erin put her hands under the midwife's and as they jiggled my belly in one place and then another, the midwife said, "See how when we shake his bum, the whole body shakes, but when we shake his head, it just rocks back and forth". Erin was mildly grossed-out but I thought it was pretty cool.

As of the last midwife appointment, I'd gained 7 pounds in only 3 weeks - Yikes! I'm up to 25 lbs so far. Hmmm, only 10 weeks to go but I'd prefer not to continue gaining 2+ pounds per week. I did notice a huge change in my belly size too though so it seems our little guy had a growth spurt or something.

I mentioned my crazy "heartburn" to my midwife last week. She called it reflux and I realized that was a much more accurate word for describing it. She said that reflux that bad is really unusual so I guess I'm just weird. I haven't really had any of the very common daytime heartburn problems in a long time though so I think it is a fair trade.

A few 30-week pictures.

Saturday, March 8, 2008

Perspectives

Our friend Kyle read my last post and posted an entry on his blog about it. It was a little weird for me to just kind of stumble upon it a few weeks later when I happened to check his blog. That isn't the reason for this entry though - the reason I'm writing this post is because, while he didn't at all imply that I was being a whiny b*tch, he did say that it was sort of a wake up to the "realities of pregnancy". The funny thing is that I thought my post was sort of the opposite. I honestly genuinely feel like pregnancy has been SO MUCH less of a pain than I had expected.

My "What to Expect..." book says that I may be experiencing some or all of the following symptoms:
  • lower abdominal achiness
  • constipation
  • increasingly heavy whitish vaginal discharge
  • heartburn
  • indigestion
  • flatulence
  • bloating
  • occasional headaches, faintness, or dizziness
  • nasal congestion and occasional nosebleeds; ear stuffiness
  • pink toothbrush from bleeding gums
  • leg cramps
  • backache, sciatica (lower back and leg pain)
  • mild swelling of the ankles and feet, occasionally of the hands and face
  • varicose veins of the legs
  • hemorrhoids
  • itchy abdomen
  • shortness of breath
  • difficulty sleeping
  • scattered Braxton Hicks contractions
  • clumsiness (also increased risk of falling)
  • colostrum leaking from enlarged breasts
  • mood swings
  • absent mindedness
  • increasing fatigue
  • overheating

Of the symptoms listed above, I really only have heartburn that has been fairly easy to control, minor back pain (worst while driving), occasional leg cramps, and some absent mindedness that may or may not actually be related to pregnancy. I feel pretty darn awesome whenever I think of how crappy I could feel.

As of my last midwife appointment, I'd gained a little over 20 pounds. I still can't get over how crazy that I carry that around 24/7 with only a little heartburn to complain about. I do hesitate to say that I LOVE being pregnant. I definitely think I'll miss some aspects of it when it is over. I'm only in the beginning of the third trimester though so I suspect things only go down hill from here. I might as well enjoy my happy pregnancy feelings while they last though.

Photos of the diapers I've been sewing. I bought the pattern from VeryBaby.com

Belly photos from 27 weeks - I hit 29 weeks on Friday. When I look at those photos I can't believe how much bigger I got in just the last 2 weeks. My belly growth really seems to be accelerating. I'll take a new set of photos at 30 weeks.

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Two Trimesters in Review

Well, I'm almost 27 weeks, does that mean I'm in the third trimester? I think it does. Holy crap, we have SO MUCH WORK to do in the next 3 months. Our bedroom is only mostly sheetrocked (it was an addition on the house that we started years ago - it has been livable but I'm sure we're not going to have any MORE time once Colby is here).

So, actually, I said Colby above, I guess I've been so bad about blogging that I haven't even put up the ultrasound photo of our little guy... or mentioned that we've named him Colby... and that he's a HE.




That is sort of why I titled this post Two Trimesters in Review, because I have a lot of catching up to do.

I was thinking about how everything changes every day and you can't take anything for granted. I've learned that I'll just start to really dislike a pregnancy symptom only to have it be instantly gone and replaced by something twice as bad the next day. Sort of a "be careful what you wish for" kind of thing. Now, I just focus on how happy I am that whatever random annoyance I have now isn't worse.

Early on, all I felt was TIRED - sleep was like a drug that I craved 24/7. Forming that little lump of cells into something resembling a baby is obviously REALLY hard work.

For weeks 6-9, I was sick. The weirdest part though is that it wasn't even that simple (in just 3 weeks). It started off as a general "motion-sick" feeling where I just felt crappy all day long but not like I was actually going to "be sick". Then it turned very quickly into random explosions of illness but mostly feeling normal between those, and finally random aversions. Even just looking at the bottle of my multi-vitamins made me run for the sink/toilet.

I've had a few weird cravings - bagel with cream cheese and hamburger (the burger just stuck between the two halves of the cream-cheesy bagel - oh, and with ketchup too). I had a bagel with almond butter on it and then a side of fried clams. Those weren't actually in the same bite though, just on the same plate. The last one isn't so weird, I just happened to think it up recently - almond butter, with a bit of brownie mix swirled in and then I'd take one of those "real-fruit" coconut popsicles and dip it. I've been craving sugar lately like crazy. Actually, specifically chocolate most of the time. I've been trying SO HARD to eat healthy though so I usually only cave in at the end of the day and have a bit of ice cream, a popsicle, or a few chocolate chips. Overall, I think I've been doing OK. Every once in a while I'll go a little crazy (like with the almond butter, brownie mix, and coconut) and eat a large serving of desert.

The only negative symptom I've had during the second trimester has been heartburn. At first, the heartburn would come mostly during the day. Weird things would trigger it too - not the normal tomato sauce that I've always heard about. No, my worst was when I'd eat oatmeal and banana for breakfast. I don't even know how long that stuck around for but my daytime heartburn is mostly gone for now. (of course, I stopped eating oatmeal and banana for breakfast).

A few weeks ago though, I think my least favorite pregnancy symptom started up. I was fast asleep and woke up gasping, choking, and spitting because the contents of my stomach had, for some strange reason, decided to completely fill my mouth and nose. It wasn't that I was vomiting in my sleep, my stomach just leaked. I thought maybe it was just a fluke thing but after 3 nights of that I've started sleeping on a big wedge of pillows. That seems to have solved the problem. I now know how it is possible for someone to die if they pass out while drunk. It was horrible and terrifying to wake up feeling like you're drowning. At least this one was a fairly easy fix though.


So, six months down and I think those are my only complaints - not bad. I'm amazed every day at how relatively normal that I feel. It is so bizarre to think that I've gained almost 20 lbs and I really don't feel any different. If I were carrying around a bucket full of 2 and 1/2 gallons of water 24/7 I think I'd be dramatically more tired and sore. It really is just amazing how the female human body adjusts to everything during pregnancy with relative ease.

Sometime soon I'll post pics of the cloth diapers I've been sewing (that has been an adventure since I think the last thing I've sewed was in Home Ec. class in 6th grade) and maybe our big bedroom renovation project. I'm ridiculously proud of the diapers though since they've been particularly challenging for me.

Monday, January 28, 2008

23 weeks and 3 days

Around midnight last night, I started bleeding. It was terrifying. It was at least as heavy as a normal period. We called the midwife and she said that sometimes it is nothing but sometimes it is serious. If it was a serious problem, cramping would soon follow so she said we could wait to see if I started cramping before going to the ER. I figured we weren't going to sleep either way so we might as well go to the ER and see if they could tell us anything definitive. We decided to go to townM instead of townR because their hospital is nicer and they're only 10-15 minutes further away. It took about 45 minutes to get there and it felt like forever. We were both really freaking out and imagining worst-case scenarios. The bleeding seemed to be getting worse. The midwife had said that before 24 weeks, they don't generally even try to save the baby since it just isn't possible to survive that young. (I'm 23 weeks and 3 days!) I think she was sort of saying there was no point in rushing off to the best ER because even if it was bad news, there was not much they could do. It just kept turning over in both of our heads though. (The midwife did end up being really great through the whole process and I'm chalking that comment up to the fact that I had just woken her up in the middle of the night.)

So we got to the ER and I said "I'm 24 weeks pregnant and bleeding" - hey, what's a few extra days right? The ER Dr. was a little bit of a nut. Granted, it was about 2am and we probably woke him up (the ER was completely empty). He certainly didn't seem experienced at a pelvic exam though. We were so incredibly stressed out and that was NOT helping. He was having trouble finding my cervix and since Erin did my IUIs she had to be pretty good at that so she finally said "try down and to the left". I felt like just asking him to get out of the way and let Erin do it. He did an exam and said that at least my cervix didn't seem to be dilating (he didn't seem totally sure about that either though). The bleeding seemed to be stopping. He called the OB on-call who said I should go home and follow up with an OB within the next 2-3 days for an ultrasound and to come back to the ER if I start cramping.

We got home around 3am. Both Erin and I talked about how, over the last 3 hours, we couldn't help thinking about what it would be like to lose him. I thought about what it would be like to pack all of the tiny little clothes into boxes. Erin said part of her regretted finding out the gender and giving him a name because it would be sooooo much harder to lose him now.

I was almost falling asleep when Erin said "Is he kicking now?" I said "No, not right now" she waited a few seconds and said, "Can I snuggle with him anyway?" She moved over so that her back was against my belly and Colby started kicking right away. It was pretty cool. We've done that quite a bit when he's really active at night so that Erin can feel him moving while we fall asleep. It felt so good just to know that at least for the moment, he was still doing fine and safely squashed between us.

We slept terribly until 8 and then got up and started calling doctors. We managed to get an appointment today with Dr C. who we'd seen to get our ultrasound 2 weeks ago. He was really great. Maybe this is TMI but just a basic explanation - I had a really small cervical polyp (weird little growth on the cervix that is no big deal) that I saw my PCP about back when we were trying to get pregnant. Dr. C. said that sometimes due to hormones and stuff, they'll grow like crazy during pregnancy and bleed. He asked Erin if it looked any bigger now and she said something like "OH MY GOD!" so that was pretty obviously the problem. He removed it quickly and painlessly (no drugs or anything, it just didn't hurt). He said that the problem should have been fairly obvious and it was unfortunate that the ER doctor just wasn't experienced enough to know that. (We told Dr. C. about how Erin ended up offering him some advice on finding my cervix and he thought that was absolutely hilarious.) He said there was no need for an ultrasound because any other problem would be a HUGE coincidence and 99% of serious problems also have severe pain along with them (but obviously to call if we had any other problems).

So, we're fine now. It sucked but it was actually nothing and our coping skills also weren't very good at 2am.