Wating for you. Week 23.

by Myg on November 6, 2008

Ed.’s Warning: This post is epic and contains varying amounts of bitching, moaning and gratuitous hospital footage.

Me, Bing & Doot circa 23 weeks

Me, Bing, Doot, circa 23 weeks

Included in this extra special week was one historic election and one trip to the emergency room. On the same day, even.

Last Saturday I was suddenly feeling much worse. I’d been trying to get a grip on some debilitating back pain for weeks and had restricted a lot of my activities to reduce pain. Remember, no pain meds allowed and Tylenol, I’m sorry, doesn’t do it for me. Not that I mind being a couch spore. My remedy for back pain has meant spending most of my time between my bed, the dog’s couch, and the kitchen table. I’ve become furniture for the cats, basically.

On Saturday I became incredibly out of breath and was having heart palpitations over even the smallest activity – like walking up six stairs to go to the bathroom or taking a shower. Sunday night I woke up in the middle of the night, went to the bathroom and when I came back to bed my heart was thumping in my chest like I had a 12 pound freshly caught Tilapia flipping around in there. It was kind of, you know, scary.

I called the Doc’s office on Monday. They didn’t seem terribly concerned about it, but they did push my regular appointment up to Tuesday morning. That would be…

Election Day.

Coolest fin president ever, k?

Coolest f'in president ever, k?

Now, I have been wringing my hands, biting my nails, on the edge of my seat, anxiously pouring over every bit of political text I can find for months and months. I did some canvassing for Obama in PA during the primary, but given my physical circumstances I wasn’t inclined to do much more than give a lot of money I didn’t have and argue with people in my family. (That arguing politics with family while pregnant thing – not recommended, really.)

Suffice to say, I’d waited a long damn time for election day.

With early reports of lines in NYC being as long as 2 hours, I worried about how I was going to handle a long wait to vote as right now, it’s too painful for me to stand in line for 10 minutes at the grocery store.  But I’d worried for no reason because in my very liberal little town, the polling place at 8am had no lines – just a bunch of happy voters, smiling and milling about. We voted, grabbed a couple of coffee rolls to celebrate, and went home to sweat it out as we waited for the results.

At 10:45 am we had the distraction of my doctor’s appointment, and the walk from the parking deck to the OB/GYN’s office just sucked. I felt like I was sprinting the whole way. “Can this be normal?” I reported everything to my doctor. She checked the heartbeats of Bing and Doot and they were fine. Mine? A little off.

“Your heart’s skipping around, jumping all over the place.” She decided to send me to the ER. “You’re carrying twins, so this probably isn’t the last time you’ll be over there.”  Words of comfort, to be sure.

When I got there they bumped me to the front of a long line of assorted disheveled, pissed off sick folks. Hooked up to the pulse monitor I could hear my heart jumping all over the place. Man did that suck. You really count on certain things in your life to be steady and predictable. The beating of your own heart would rank about #1 on that list, even if you don’t consciously think of it. When it’s as erratic as a McCain campaign stunt, the whole world starts to feel a little shaky.

They put me on a stretcher in the back, popped an IV into me, took oh about 17 quarts of blood, stuck a heart monitor on me. I couldn’t look at it though. I got an EKG and the doctor came back and explained I had some extra hearbeats – PVCs he said. Premature Ventricular Contractions.

Well thank heavens I had the presence of mind to bring my new little camcorder – the Flip. I love this thing with all my heart and I’ll blog it another time. But in any case, it’s the size of an iPod and here’s what you can do with it:


Election Day from Myg on Vimeo.

Not the most flattering video of me, but hey, it’s totally real!

So anyway, were the PVCs anything serious? In and of themselves, no. But could they be a sign of something really bad? Combined with the shortness of breath and fatigue, yeah. So the testing commenced. An ultrasound of my legs showed no blood clots or anything, which was good. But now, here’s where I get upset.

I had to get a chest x-ray and a CT-scan of my lungs. No direct radiation to my boys but there could be a little “scatter” and SHIT FUCK DAMN YOU ARE NOT SUPPOSED TO GET ANY RADIATION WHEN YOU ARE PREGNANT!

So, why did I agree to do it?

The doctors were concerned I might have had a pulmonary embolism. You know, that blood clot thing in your lungs that can kill you.

Here’s where I invoke my right to smack the shit out of the resident assigned that day. My hospital is a teaching hospital, affiliated with the medical university that I’ve worked for since 1999. I’ve helped train my share of residents when I was clinical staff on the psych unit. So guess what? I have a right to SMACK THE SHIT out of the residents when they annoy me.

What was annoying me? I asked, calmly – logically, responsibly – “Can you tell me the risks this test poses to my unborn children?” And you know what I got in response?

“The risk of this test is to them is a lot smaller than the risk to you if we don’t do this test, trust me.”

Hello? Is that what I asked you, bitch? NO. I asked “WHAT is the risk to MY UNBORN.” Not, “What’s the bigger risk?” or “Should I really have this test done?” I was quite the perturbed.

With more reasonable prompting, he did go over some of the risks, which include really great things like an increase in childhood cancer rates from 1 in 10,000 to 1 in 7,000. Is that risk still relatively small? Yes. Is it smaller than the risk of pulmonary embolism? Yeah, of course. Did it make sense to have the testing if the doctors were really concerned? Of course it did.

But I still felt god awful for having exposed my kids to even that much risk. Really god damned awful.

Guess what? I didn’t have a pulmonary embolism. Thank God. Seriously, thank God. All of my labs were normal. I was fine, other than my heart jumping all over the place. Verdict? Gosh we dunno. Plan? Outpatient follow-up with cardiology for more thorough evaluation. Go home now. It was 7:30pm.

I went home to begin watching the election results, though I almost couldn’t do it as the day had been so emotional. But I did anyway, because, seriously, how could I not watch one of the greatest moments in the history of the modern world?

I was glad I did. At 11pm when Keith Olberman announced Obama was our new president-elect, I cried. Man, did I cry. Then during Obama’s speech I cried. Hard.

But I felt good. And you know what? My heart felt good. Because I knew then that I’d be bringing my boys into a world where we have a chance of making the world a better place. And as I gradually start to move  into my new role as a mother, I realize there’s nothing I care more about than that.

So how are Doot and Bing doing in week 23? They are:

  • Kicking, kicking, kicking. In fact, last night I had my first experience of actually seeing a well placed kick by Doot lift a paperback off my belly. Whoa! Sometimes it’s adorable. Sometimes, not so much. Like that kick to the bladder this morning.
  • Able to hear me and Alex, for sure. Do they think it’s weird how much we talk to and/or about the dog? Do they like that Kings of Leon song I keep blasting over and over? How do they like the Rachel Maddow show? The things you wonder about.
  • Developing their lungs and the blood vessels to the lungs, which is all kinds of important right now. Statistically speaking, when they get to 24 weeks old they’ve got a 50/50 chance at viability outside of me if their lungs grow enough. But…here’s to praying there’s no need for that.

And as for me? Well, if the long entry above the bullets wasn’t enough for you, let me recap:

  • I’ve got some physical stuff going on right now that’s not exactly what I’d hoped and dreamed my long wished for pregnancy would be. But you know what? So far it’s nothing so dreadful that I can’t sleep at night worrying. I can deal with it.
  • I am always, always, always worried about money. I don’t know if this will ever stop now that I’m about to be a mom, but God I hope so. My strategy so far is to try not to think about it. Good plan, eh?
  • I’m trying to figure out how to salvage the rest of my work responsibilities from now until D-Day given the stuff going on. But for some reason, I don’t care all that much. Changing priorities, anyone?
  • I love my husband and my dog more than I can say.
  • I love my country, now more than ever

Enough said, don’t you think?

{ 2 trackbacks }

Dry run: a story about preterm labor that wasn’t.
November 16, 2008 at 11:28 am
Waiting for you. Patiently. Weeks 25, 26 & 27.
November 26, 2008 at 1:11 pm

{ 3 comments… read them below or add one }

penelope November 6, 2008 at 9:19 pm

Oh, my gosh! What an experience! Can’t imagine how scary that all was (and I’m sorry you had to go through all of it but am glad you are ok). And on the most stressful day of the year, too. But now: super election goodness and excellent baby progress!!! I hope all the other stuff settles down, too. Take care of you!

Myg November 7, 2008 at 12:30 am

Thanks Penelope. It was a downright sucky day, for sure, but I am relieved to know it’s not something that’s really bad. And at least I was too preoccupied to obsess over the election all day! Always gotta find the bright side. Thanks so much for the well wishes!

Tatiana November 7, 2008 at 4:18 am

Congrats on moving to your own .org! I originally started my blog because I got tired of my husband telling me “we’ll buy a domain name for a family website next week… next week… next week”, so hopefully sometime within the next year I can move to one myself ;)

That is so much stress, and I am so sorry to hear it happened to you. I also stood on the cusp of having to get an x-ray due to my immigration crap; fortunately my case worker was a woman, and she understood why I would not take that risk unless absolutely necessary. I hope your cardiology appointment turns up news less dire than the worries that would be running through my head if I were in your shoes!

Also — President Elect Barack Obama — I haven’t stopped smiling yet!

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