Monday, December 31, 2012

36 weeks: Wherein the sh#@ hits the fan

Christmas has come and gone. My Thanksgiving post was started but never finished. I have half a dozen blog posts I would have liked to begin, but just don't have the energy. My progress report grades are due in two days. But I have no desire to do anything right now. I only started this post because I knew I must get this off my chest. That and I couldn't sleep this morning.

My complicated pregnancy became even more complicated last week. We hit a new obstacle that we never saw coming.

When I was pregnant with Cole I always had this reassuring feeling that everything was going to turn out OK. Maybe it was because I was on bed rest from 5 months on, so I felt more secure, or maybe it was just because I knew deep down with my mommy intuition that it would all fall into place. And it did.  Cole was born 5 days past his due date and was an average baby size - 7 pounds 3 ounces.

Throughout this pregnancy I've been reassured by the knowledge that I went full term with Cole and that the same or something close to it would happen with Baby Girl. But all of that reassurance flew out the window with one visit to the maternal fetal specialist last week. It was there we learned that the baby is not growing well. She's on the small side and she's not growing the weight the average baby puts on from week to week. They estimate she's 4 pounds 12 ounces and there is a 20% margin of error either way. The lack of growth could be from the medicine I was taking to control the contractions or from a weakening placenta. He said I should wean off the meds and go on bed rest. He told me to go back in 2 weeks to see if there is improvement in her growth. If there is, then everything can continue on as planned. But if not, then eviction for Baby Girl.

You better believe I haven't taken my medicine since that fateful day. 

This is all compounded now by the fact that Baby Girl is still breech. And if she's still breech come our appointment in 10 days, that could potentially mean a C-section. Frankly, I was never really that worried about her turning around. I figured she would in due time. I believed in the power of my body to birth her and her body to know when it was time to be born. After all, I have done this before.

But then he gave me this disconcerting statistic: "90% have turned by now. She's comfortable where she is." I would have been more concerned in the previous weeks if he had mentioned that statistic at my 33 week visit. That concerned would have made me more pro-active than I actually was. But at my 33 week visit he told me not to bother with exercises until 36 weeks and that she'd probably turn. I still did the exercises anyway, but not regularly. They gave me headaches because of the medicine and some seriously nasty heartburn that actually had me coughing. It was gross and a real deterrent. Now, I've been gung-ho - daily breech tilts, pelvic rocks, inversions, moxibustion, Chiropractic adjustments, flashlight, cold pack, homeopathic medicine, talking to the baby, having Cole talk to the baby and, even though I'm not very religious, prayers.  You name it, I'm doing it. Yet her little head still remains in the center of my being - just below my rib cage and above my belly button. She sits on my cervix in a frank breech presentation with her little legs up in front of her froggy style. She could be born breech, but neither Keith nor I are comfortable trying to find a doctor who will deliver her (none at our practice will because of past litigation). Their automatic go-to is a C-Section.

The part about this whole thing that really upset me is that I always believed, despite my irritable uterus hugging my babies tightly, that my womb was a safe place for by baby to grow. Over the past five days I've felt a range of emotions, but the main one is this feeling of powerlessness and inadequacy. I feel powerless to change anything, no matter what I do, and inadequate because I might not be providing the most optimal environment for my baby to thrive.

I always go to negative thinking, so I know this way is not helping me. Because if the problem is, indeed, my placenta, there is nothing I did that could have caused this. These things happen. Today, I realized just how negative I've been over the past five days - fighting so hard against this compounded problem - the fact that she may not be growing and her breech position. I've been fighting so hard, searching for so many causes, placing so much responsibility on myself, harboring so many regrets, that absolutely nothing is happening, and my fear is worsening. My stress is causing my back to ache, my jaw to hurt, my neck to grow stiff. And she still hasn't turned. Are you surprised? I'm not, considering all the tension I'm creating in my body.

Today I went for my third specialized chiropractic adjustment designed to give the baby more room to turn. Before the adjustment we talked about my tension, my stress, factors that cause me to be stressed and the various effects of it on my spine and neck. Then he did accu-puncture before the adjustment. On the way home, I thought of what Baby Girl will look like when she's finally born, and I just totally lost it. Bottom line is I just want her to be safe and sound, alive and healthy. I finally let go. I stopped pushing her, and I stopped putting pressure and laying guilt on myself.

That's not to say that I'm not going to keep trying to turn her, because I am still doing everything I can. I will continue to do my exercises and even have the doctor do an External Version. But if that doesn't work or if she flips back (which happens), it will not be the end of my world. In the end, I cannot make my child do something she doesn't want to do. And I told her this. I told her she doesn't have to turn if she doesn't want to. I felt such a release after I felt what I said with my whole being.

This is one of those hard lessons you learn as a parent. I remember learning this lesson with Cole during the first year of his life. If you've been following my blog for a while, you know that he didn't want to sleep longer than 1.5 -3 hours at a clip. No matter what we did (and we did everything short of cry-it-out) we just couldn't change him. When we finally accepted that he was wired that way, we no longer stressed about it. We stopped making ourselves insane with worry that we were doing something wrong or that something was wrong with our child because every OTHER kid seemed to be sleeping through the night. We accepted him. And we were a lot happier. And so was he. True there were times when our sleep deprivation brought out the worst in us, but we trudged through it and came out a little more rested on the other side.

I'll leave you with a funny picture I took of Cole after I set up the ironing board to do a breech tilt. Cole insisted he had a baby in his belly too. And that she ALSO needed to turn around.




Friday, December 28, 2012

Following through on your post-Christmas promises from the year before is always of utmost importance when parenting a toddler


Presents? For me? Oh boy!
In late 2011, after a challenging time being away from home with a toddler, we made the decision to not travel like maniacs the next Christmas.

This became doubly important with me being 36 weeks pregnant this Christmas.

After we spent two fun-filled, but very challenging days at Papa Joe's house for Thanksgiving, we decided we were not going to travel a long distance for Christmas. We had to sift back into our memory storehouse to remember our challenges from last Christmas, wherein we at least together could celebrate getting through it with a Martini. There was no such luck this year, as my body has been occupied by another resident who really can't drink for another 21 years (Cheers to that happening!).

We also remembered that every Christmas, we tend to get sick after bouncing from one family to the next. Kissing cheeks, breathing the same air, sleeping with lumpy pillows on foreign beds can do a number on you after a few nights. So we did what we thought would work best for our family: We went to Dada's aunt's house in Pawling for Christmas Eve dinner and spent Christmas Day with our little family.

Mama resting through a contraction
Aunt Susan's gorgeous A-framed home is not toddler friendly (but whose is?) in the sense that there are delicate, fragile things within Cole's reach wherever we turned. But the people were toddler friendly, and that's what counts most. Cole received lots of amazingly thoughtful gifts and we got to see mostly everyone on Gramma's side of the family. Cole was even introduced to some neighborhood cats and thoughtfully inspected nearly every ornament within reach (antique or not) on Aunt Susan's 100 foot tall Christmas tree. I suffered through some pretty bad contractions and came out alive on the other end.  Then we ate a yummy dinner while Cole had a minor meltdown, and by the time we got to the end of Susan's road to head home, Cole was asleep. We arrived home by 8ish and got Cole to bed with not much of a problem. (If there was a problem, I can't remember).

On Christmas Day Cole woke up to a Christmas tree surrounded by gifts just for him. He went to it as soon as he got his trusty old ice pop from the freezer (yes it's winter and he's still craving these things). We got him his own set of bongos, a tom drum, a bilibo, the new Fresh Beat band cd and some other small gifts. Santa got him a Green Toys red race car and tow truck. We watched him play all morning, before taking off in the afternoon for a little trip to Belleayre Ski Mountain. Cole went briefly on the slope before sitting in the lodge with Mama while Dada took a run of his own. We originally planned on Baked Ziti for dinner, but by the time we got home, it was pretty late - for Cole at least. So we got Japanese takeout for dinner and decided that next year we need to make the trip to Belleayre earlier and have our dinner prepped ahead of time.
Bowling with Gramma


Cat Heaven. If they only knew...

Yes. This is me totally taking a picture of my son touching delicate objects.

Playing carsies with the friendly neighborhood cats.

Ok. Slooooowly hand me that plastic bat that's almost as big as you.









Thursday, December 13, 2012

Currently: We're all pretty irritable.

Ugh. Yesterday I wound up back at the birth center because of breakthrough contractions. They were 8 minutes apart. My medicine was not doing much to stop them. After a multitude of tests it was determined like before that I just have an irritable uterus and THAT, according to the doctor, "can be tricky" because I never know how/if it's going to affect my cervix and send me into real labor. So I took today off for a little rest and found I had hardly any contractions because mostly I laid in bed or sat down. It was kind of nice not to have to constantly feel the tightening long before it even begins. (The doctor said the reason for this is because I'm so skinny and there's not much fat between my uterus and my skin.)
It was nice not to worry about breathing through the contraction or dealing with the pain and discomfort in the middle of teaching a lesson.

But Friday is back to reality.

Which brings me back to the post title - we're all pretty irritable as of late.

Cole wants to be with me 24/7 when I'm home (that includes a random weekday I take off because I'm trying to give my uterus a rest). And when he's not with me he's very upset with Dada for keeping him from me or me from him. "I want YOU, Mama," is what he always says to me. And to Dada? "I want Mama, not you."

Dada is irritable because he turns into chopped liver whenever Mama is home and that's not a nice feeling for him.

Mama is irritable because I can't decide if I should take a few weeks off before my due date to take it easy and get ready. I only have a little bit of sick time and I really want to save that for AFTER the baby is born. I've been conflicted about this for a while. The other internal conflict I have is wanting to stay home for the rest of the school year with the baby (and Cole of course). I've talked about this before on this blog, but it still plagues me. It's what I've always wanted, but it will really be a huge financial hardship for our family. We're struggling to make ends meet right now, it would be harder than anything we've ever done. My main worry is that Dada will be constantly stressed about money, and I'll feel guilty and selfish as if I'm doing something wrong by staying home when all I really want to do is have that extra time with Baby Girl that I didn't get with Cole. I mean there is a reason why he wants to be with me every minute I am home - because I am gone for so many hours every week. With my commute and demands of my job I leave at 5:45 a.m. and usually don't get home until 4 p.m.! I just want someone to say - "you should stay home; it will work out." But really, I need to believe that myself. I need to be the one reassuring me and for some reason I have this horrible self-doubt that is causing me to be extremely indecisive. Why can't I just make a decision already and stick with it?!

I'll leave you with some happy photos taken in the past week.

The bump picture is my 34 week bump taken next to our bassinet that is now a holding place for random clothes, something we swore we'd never let happen. The Santa picture was taken outside our house when our neighborhood got its annual fire truck visit from Santa. Cole remarked later- "He didn't say 'Ho Ho Ho' or 'Merry Christmas!'" The picture on the floor is of Cole and I during my nightly breech tilt exercise. And the picture if Cole and the leaf is my favorite. Dada sent it to me on Tuesday while they were at the park having a really fun time chasing each other around). Apparently, the leaf was for me.







Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Our new dishwasher

Introducing the ever enthusiastic - Cole - as our new family dishwasher! All we had to do was let him bring his stool into the kitchen and VOILA! A whole new world called "the counter and the inside of the sink" were opened up to him. Ever since this weekend he's taken a huge interest in the dishes.

I'm not totally sure but I think the only reason we ever kept him from bringing the stool into the kitchen was because of the danger we thought it presented - both to Cole and to the things we keep on our kitchen counters (uh.. Just about everything important?!)

This is what he says when he cleans: "I'm making it so it's clean."

He's so passionate.