Jul 29 2007

Pegalpacas!

Last night I had a peaceful, beautiful, and slightly bizarre dream — I was hanging out in a sunny, grassy field with some alpaca. The adults had wings. A momma winged alpaca (pegalpaca?) came over and stretched her wing over me and her baby, and we all cuddled in the warm sunlight.

I think this means Robin’s totem animal is the alpaca.  Poor guy.  You know all the other Bay Area hippie kids are gonna have wolves and foxes and cool critters like that.  My little fellow gets stuck with the pegalpaca!


Jul 28 2007

Drama

Well, we had some excitement this morning, and not the fun kind—but the story ends where it began, with everybody happy and healthy and the baby still tucked securely in my tummy.

About mid-morning I started experiencing some really intense pain in my right side, basically exactly where the cyst is located. After about twenty minutes of trying to manage it through changing positions, et cetera, I started feeling nauseous, my vision was swimming, and I was seeing stars. We decided to go to the emergency room. Once there they checked my blood pressure and found it quite low, so I was hooked up to some oxygen (to ensure that the baby got oxygen despite my temporarily impaired circulatory system) and an IV bag. Then I dramatically threw up everywhere, which was grody. Also I was doing a lot of moaning and whimpering. I knew it wasn’t labor; there was no sense of contractions, just a very steady, very sharp, localized pain in my right side.

When my blood pressure had stablized a bit, they gave me some morphine for the pain along with an anti-nausea medication. And…everything got better. The pain subsided. By the time the ultrasound tech arrived to check out my insides, I was basically feeling completely fine. The ultrasound confirmed that the cyst had not ruptured, nor do I have appendicitis, and the baby is looking great. In fact the technician was absolutely crowing over our beautiful baby. “I do high-risk OB,” she explained to us, “so I see a lot of…bad stuff. It’s really a delight to see a baby as perfect as this one.” Apparently he is spot on by every developmental measure.

The going theory is that the baby was kicking against the cyst, causing the pain, and the morphine shot allowed me to relax, which encouraged the baby to move, which resolved the issue. After checking my blood and urine to rule out infection, we were released. I felt a little silly about running to the emergency room, but the doctor and nurses assured us that we’d done the right thing. There’s nothing to stop it from happening again, unfortunately, but we’ll cross that bridge if we come to it.

And hey, we got another look at the baby. His weight estimate right now is 7 pounds 4 ounces, and the magic ultrasound software, after taking all his measurements, predicts his delivery date as August 13 (so one day after my official due date). I have no idea how accurate that timing estimate is, but the weight estimate can be off by as much as one pound in either direction. Still, since babies at this stage put on a quarter pound to a half pound each week, the best guess is that he’ll be eight to eight and a half pounds at birth…bigger than I was, sadly (I was a very considerate 6 and a half pounds!), but not a 10 pound monster like my little brother Jesse. Hopefully!


Jul 27 2007

Still No News!

Another week, another doctor’s visit…she (it was one of the lady doctors this time) says that my cervix may be getting a leetle shorter, but it’s still closed, and the baby’s head hasn’t engaged with the birth canal.  Meaning that nothing’s likely to happen this week.  “He seems very happy right where he is,” she commented.  I do have another two weeks until my due date, but if the baby were born today he’d be considered full-term (not premature), and I’m ready to get this show on the road.  But kiddo ain’t going anywhere in a hurry, apparently.


Jul 26 2007

Haircut

I gots a haircut!  The picture’s a little blurry but you can get the idea:

me with flippy hair


Jul 19 2007

Summer Bounty

I know Whole Foods is yuppified and pretentious, but I love it with all my yuppified, pretentious heart, oh I do I do. I just had a great time this afternoon picking out the perfect heirloom tomatoes for gazpacho tonight, and assembling the bits for a roasted beet salad tomorrow—including a lovely interlude at the cheese counter, where the Cheese Girl on duty helped me navigate the bewildering array of blue cheeses in order to pick out a nice, pregnant-lady-safe “Blue de Basque.” And then she insisted on cutting me a wedge from the center of a new wheel, because she sniffed that she “didn’t like” the way any of the existing wedges looked. And also she called me “sweetie.” Whole Foods is just nice, everything’s pretty and happy and nice, and I always walk out of the store smiling.

I stopped by the grocery store on my way back from this week’s check-in with the doc. He says that although I’m not due until August 12, I could really pop any time now. There’s no sign of any imminent excitement though: my cervix is still “long and closed,” and the baby’s head “fairly high,” although he has dropped a bit. And this concludes today’s installment of News From My Reproductive Organs.

(I just asked Sam how his reproductive organs are doing, in case anybody cares: he says they’re A-OK.)


Jul 17 2007

The Empathy Belly

OK, I really have nothing to say about this except “Haw! Empathy Belly!” This thing is a strap-on contraption designed to allow non-pregnant people “to experience over 20 symptoms and effects of pregnancy, including: Weight gain of 30 pounds; Fetal kicking and stroking movements; Shallow breathing and shortness of breath; Increased blood pressure, pulse and body temperature; Bladder pressure and frequency of urination; Low backaches; shift in center of gravity; waddling; Fatigue, irritability, and much, much more!” Hilarious!

I ran across the Empathy Belly while reading a really interesting article about male pregnancy, which hasn’t happened yet but totally could, someday soon.


Jul 11 2007

One Month to Go!

With just a month left until my due date, I’ll be having a doctor’s appointment every week until the baby comes. Today I got my favorite of the four doctors, the pretty one who has herself been on maternity leave for the past couple months. So we chatted about her experience (she has a little girl, and she had a c-section because it was a breech birth, and she says she thought she’d be prepared for the sleep deprivation of caring for a newborn because she did a residency, but in fact taking care of the baby is harder). She took my weight and my blood pressure, measured my belly, poked around in my hoo-hah, made a few notes on my chart, and then smiled at me approvingly and said “You’re doing great medically.” So nice to hear!

Edited to add: bonus piccie of preggie me.

me, preggers


Jul 3 2007

Hiccups

Robin has them. It took me a while to figure out what they were. “Ergh, he’s poking me…in this rhythm…it’s kind of annoying, it’s like he has the hiccups or something!” Then I remembered my mom telling me that I had the hiccups constantly when she was pregnant with me. The Internet says it’s common for babies to get hiccups, because they’re “practicing breathing”, which is sort of charming.

I saw the doctor again this week but it was very much a “hi, how are you, [brief examination of belly] baby looks fine, see you in two weeks!” sort of thing.  He’s positioned head down, curled up along my left side. That’s really all the news from my womb that there is to report.


Jun 25 2007

What I Learned in School Today

Over the past few weeks Sam and I have completed a series of classes that will supposedly render us Fit to Parent, although there was not, as I was hoping, a certificate with a gold seal presented at the end. But the instructor told us that some hospitals actually do that, which amused me sufficiently.

Childbirth Preparation was the first and longest class, an all-day affair. I got to bounce on a birthing ball and Sam learned some massage techniques. I think the most useful aspect of the class may have been the videos. There was something about just watching the women go through labor that helped to defuse my terror around the event. There was no screaming or flailing around like they do in the movies. Although one of the women was really whiny and pathetic, so I’ve resolved not to be like her. “I can’t dooooo it,” she’d moan, and I’d think, “Lady, what kind of alternative are you imagining here? That kid is not going to stay in your belly until he’s eighteen.”

I told my mom that story, and she answered me with one better: she actually knows a woman who, thirty-some hours into labor, decided it was for the birds. She lifted her feet from the stirrups, hopped off the table, and declared to all assembled that she was done, she was going home, and if her husband wanted the baby so much he could jolly well have it himself. I guess they talked her into staying and the baby was actually delivered shortly thereafter.

But anyway, I’m feeling tentatively okay about the process of labor. From what I can see the chief enemy is not pain but exhaustion. I have my little strategies all planned out; they’ll no doubt fall by the wayside immediately once I’m immersed in the real thing, but they make me feel better. I particularly liked learning about acupressure points, because they seem pleasingly like magic.

I didn’t make Sam go to the Breastfeeding class. I’ve remarked before that I find it a bit mystifying how breastfeeding is supposed to be this difficult thing requiring classes and “lactation consultants” and such—I mean, Neanderthals did it, how educated do you have to be? But the instructor reasonably pointed out that many of our most basic behaviors are taught and learned rather than “hardwired,” and breastfeeding is the same: if you grew up somewhere, like in a tribe, where all the women breastfed and you got to see how it was done from an early age, then it probably would come pretty natural, but since our society hides breastfeeding as this weird and slightly shameful thing, most women don’t know how it’s done.

So we learned the basics: what it looks like when a baby has a good latch, how to tell if the baby is hungry (besides crying, which obviously can mean a lot of things besides hunger too) and how to tell if the baby has gotten enough, how to avoid some of the most unpleasant pitfalls. Which, I have to say, are very unpleasant indeed: yeast infections on your nipples! Ew!

Sam did join me again for Newborn Parenting, which was only half as long as the childbirth class: I guess because the actual parenting is the easy part! Right? The instructor seemed to be trying to intimidate us by handing out this sheet titled “New Parent’s Time Requirements”, where activities like feeding and diapering were broken down with the length of time required for each and the number of each required in a day. The point of the sheet seems to be that time somehow bends for new infants, because the time alloted for these activities totals fourteen hours, and we were also told the baby needs to sleep for about twelve hours a day (sadly, most of those hours will not be contiguous). So, I dunno. I cling once again to the idea that taking care of an infant cannot be that hard, because if cave people did it then I can do it.


Jun 12 2007

Still Life with Diaper Bag

Okay, would the lovely person or persons who sent us this splendid diaper bag please step forward? It arrived from an eBay sender with no indication of who the buyer might have been, although clearly it was someone with exquisite taste. There is even, tucked inside the bag, a matching burp cloth that frankly is much too fine to actually be burped on. We will use it for ornamental burps.

diaper bag

In other news, I had my 32-week ultrasound today, and the ultrasound technician told me that the placenta is no longer covering the cervix! So, yay! It will take up to a week for me to get the full report from my doctor, but it sounds like the news is very good. The cyst is still there, about the same size, but it’s not giving me any trouble so I’ve decided not to be concerned about it.

In other, other news: he’s still a boy. The ultrasound technician (the same one I had last time, which was nice) pointed out the scrotum. As she put it, tactfully, “They’re very well-differentiated as this age.” I think what she meant is that his balls are huuuuuge compared to his little baby body. They’re like as big as his foot.

I wonder if Robin will read this when he’s older, and be mortified?