From the category archives:

pregnancy diary

A note of caution: If you are currently pregnant, this story is one you may want to wait and read after you’ve delivered. By reading further you agree that neither the author nor Wiser Mom nor anyone connected with the blog may be held liable for contact PTSD symptoms, nightmares, hysteria or other undesirable effects incurred from reading the following account.

There is a huge backstory leading up to this, some of it was documented in real time on this blog. But for those of you who need a refresher or are new to the story, this post drops into it when Myg was exactly 35 weeks pregnant. She had been in the hospital for a week with mild preeclampsia after a third trimester filled with ER visits and two other hospital stays—one overnight and one five days long. Unexpectedly—we had been told a few hours earlier that it would be another week—the OBGYN team decided on the morning of week 34 and 6 days that it would be best to induce labor immediately and not let Myg’s condition deteriorate. The babies were healthy in utero and would most likely be fine after delivery, whereas Myg would only get sicker and not begin to recover until afterward. We catch up with our protagonists at 4 a.m., January 22, 2009:

Myg is being rolled into the operating room for delivery and I am right behind her in disposable scrubs and surgical mask. Twins are considered high risk, so all twin deliveries are done in the OR, just in case. A Pitocin drip to induce labor was started about nine hours earlier, and she was given an epidural at 11:30 p.m. that worked just as you’d want—she has gone through transition smoothly with not too much discomfort and is now 9 cm dilated. She has also been given magnesium sulfate—known in the medical parlance as “mag”—to control her preeclampsia symptoms. Mag will keep her blood pressure, already high and spiky, from getting out of control. It also has a host of nasty side effects, including the possibility of hot flashes that some recipients have said feel as if you’re burning from the insides and your eyeballs are melting. The other effect is that it is a powerful muscle relaxant. Exactly what you don’t want when you’re about to deliver a couple of babies.

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The last belly pic

My previous experience with operating rooms is that they are cold. But as Myg is wheeled into the OR to deliver our twins, I don’t notice the temperature. I notice the table. The scene is like something out of David Cronenberg’s Dead Ringers, which should put a chill into anyone who has seen the film and anyone who doesn’t get the reference should be thankful they don’t. The operating/delivery table has padded swivel legs and stirrups that my memory says are stainless steel, but that sounds unnecessarily cruel, maybe they were just worn leather. Like the straps you’d find on an electric chair in Texas. Overhead, a large array of klieg lights dangle at the end of an articulated arm looking oddly like a female mantis with the severed head of her lover held in the caress of her deadly mandibles. A wall made of monitors and other machines that go bing! stacked about twelve-high is teetering dangerously close to the table. The only man in the 11-person delivery team sits next to them in oversized glasses holding a clipboard or notebook or tablet computer. He is unmistakably Hell’s bookkeeper. Other odd apparatus are arranged about the room but my attention is focused on Myg as she is helped onto the table, still strapped in, and her feet are arranged in the stirrups and a flimsy sheet is arranged over her.

Once again, Myg explains to the doctor and the nurses that we’ve had no birthing classes, no Lamaze, nothing, because she’s been on bedrest since week 26 and no one at the hospital could find any resources that would come to the house, other than the midwife/dula team we can’t afford because I’m in grad school and Myg’s on disability and frankly, we’re as poor as we’ve ever been and thought that it was the best time to have twins because we plan everything and it always works out—just not how we plan it, or we would have gone to birth classes in the second trimester when Myg felt well enough to go on vacation—therefore, we’ve only read about delivery. Yes, in a book. Oh, and online, too. (This works for me, give me a book with instructions and I’m golden, not so much for Myg, and she’s the one that has to do it, so I’m nervous but keeping a good attitude.) No, Myg hasn’t watched A Baby Story, because she’s terrified. (Five months after delivery she still can’t bring herself to watch it.) We need some coaching, please. The staff says not to worry and explains that when she feels a contraction she needs to take a deep breath and hold it and when they tell her to push she needs to push like she’s shitting a watermelon and keep pushing as long as she can—they’ll count to ten—and then she can relax until she feels the next contraction or like she wants to push.

And that’s it. Ready for your skydive/bungee jump/moon launch? Good, me too.

I sit at my wife’s head, looking down at the part in her hair. I want to kiss it, but my mouth is covered by the mask. The delivery team sees a contraction begin on the monitors and they all say in disjointed unison like a girls’ rugby scrum: take a deep breath, now PUSH, hold it keep pushing don’t let it out one … two… three… four… don’t let it out keep pushing and Myg lets it out and stops pushing around seven.

She looks at me with a holy shit expression that says this is not fun I do not want to do this but I have no choice oh fuck…

I whisper sweetly into her ear and she tries to relax for the brief couple of minutes before the next contraction. I try to say encouraging things. I hold her hand. I feed her ice chips. And it goes on and on and on. Myg gets tireder and tireder but continues to labor. Labor. The word in its most radical form. She labors.

Of all the things I am in relationship to Myg, at this moment I am nothing but an ice machine.

I am an ice machine.
I am the best ice machine.
That is all.

The iceman. I’m good with a Styrofoam cup and chips of ice. See? I can get them out of the cup and put them into your mouth where they melt and soothe and if I knew where the crushed ice machine was I could refill the cup all by myself. And when you stop to think about it, what else does one need in life but some ice chips? All your needs can be met with a foam cup full of ice.

With every contraction the routine is the same. It goes on and on. The mag has made it next to impossible. Myg gets tired. I just want to sleep, she says. Can someone else take over for a bit? She tries not to think about the fact that this is Baby A, nicknamed “Doot” in utero, and that after she gets this done she has to do it all over again for Baby B, “Bing.” She’s ready to be a mother. Or, she really wants to be done with pregnancy and wants these kids out of her, at least.

The team all cheer her on with every contraction and it’s annoying. If it’s annoying to me, I know it has to be irritating her. Myg, amazingly diplomatic, says, okay, I only want one of you to count. She points to the resident. You. You get to count. Everyone else has to be quiet.

I know inside she is thinking along the lines of: Shut up, you dumb fucks, I know the routine now. It’s not complicated. I hold my breath, I push for an eternity, the kid doesn’t budge. I do it again. You had to go to med school for this? If you have any suggestions besides “push” and demonstrating that you watched enough Sesame Street to count to ten as a group, then please enlighten me. Otherwise, I’m coming off this table and there will be carnage that will require a SWAT team and weeks of forensic analysis.

The diplomatic tack works for about two more contractions. But now it’s clear that Doot is moving, they can see his head, everyone is more excited and seems certain that he is about to come out on the next push. Everyone but the bookkeeper starts shouting “encouragement” again. Myg looks at me and says, we’re done with this. I nod and agree. If we want more children, adoption, as we have often discussed, will be the way to go. We’re finished with the biological imperative. The Team tells me to come around to look from their angle. Doot is nearly here.

I walk around and look up between my wife’s legs at the mystery of mysteries, the holy of holies, the place I like to think is my playground and not anything that involves spectators. I’m a guy, I love sex. But I’m also a pretty waspy guy who was brought up right and went to church as a kid. Sex works best in the bedroom. Without a team of specialists with instruments and years of expensive training. And I know, I know, this is not sex—this is the end result of sex when all the pieces of the biological Rube Goldberg contraption fall into place. And we’re in a hospital. Everything is sterile and clinical and has nothing to do with my sex life with my wife and OHMYGODWHATTHEFUCKISTHATTHING? An angry red maw of engorged flesh has replaced Myg’s lady parts, and it’s being stretched wide by a red playground ball with wet black hair that I can just see a crescent of—no way is that thing coming out of that hole. It’s not happening. Meanwhile, the Team is grinning at me like they’ve just shown me the fountain of youth.

I admit, the miracle of life and childbirth are beautiful things, perhaps the essence of beauty—but it’s this as a concept, as an abstract. All the great and mysterious things about the universe, they are summed up by these moments but only metaphorically. In reality, it’s a gruesome visceral experience. It’s difficult, painful, and fraught with a lot of danger that modern hygiene and medical technology have mitigated but not eliminated. Sure, I love the primality. Put someone else’s spouse there and I’ll come in with a camera crew and wax eloquent like David Attenborough and win the Palme d’Or. But when it’s my beloved and my immanent offspring, I’d take no pain, no blood, and no risk if it were offered. Something antiseptic and external—stork delivery, even. I back away from the Team trying to appear nonchalant and not like I’m retreating from the mob at Bedlam.

Back around at Myg’s head, I smile and hold her hand. I lie. Just a couple of more pushes, babe. He’s almost here.

Myg pushes again. She has stopped paying attention to the cheering section. They’re doing it wrong. She has figured out that when she lets her breath out during the contractions and pushes not just with her stomach and bowel muscles, but even with her chest and neck, that they scream more encouragement and the baby moves better.

And I am also happily wrong. In just a few pushes, Doot arrives at 6:52 a.m. and gives a little cry as they hold him up and I look at my son—a weird red lizard dripping stringy white mucous, with what appears to be a version of Winston Churchill’s head run through a Play-Doh Fun Factory. They put him on the heat table and begin wiping him off and sticking his feet onto ink pads and making footprints. They put him in Myg’s arms for just a second and she is overjoyed and I’m choked up and she cries a little and then they take him back to the table where they swaddle him up and at the same time the doc is telling Myg she needs to get ready for round two.

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Doot chilling on the warming table, 30 minutes old

They break Bing’s water and ask Myg to give a push just to get him down into position. Myg is in a daze. She has successfully delivered a baby. She knows she can do it again, how about in 18 months? It’s about 7 a.m. The doc has her hand inside Myg, a contraction comes and Myg pushes and I see a slight look of surprise on the doctor’s face. I felt the cord, she says. She looks up at the monitor and says, okay, Myg just give me one more push, and I’m going to see if I can get his head into position. Myg pushes. No, I feel the cord. The doctor shakes her head and she gives some unseen unheard command.

The operating room, already burgeoning with attention to Doot’s birth, blossoms. The 11-person team moves in complex synchronous harmony about twice as fast as they had been. What’s going on? Myg asks. The anesthesiologist begins turning dials and jams a mask over her face. Are we doing a C? There is worry in her voice and I realize something has happened, something with Bing and they’re going to do an emergency C-section.

A nurse flags my attention calling me “Dad” and it seems strange but I know it’s me.  Follow me, Dad. She leads me out into the hallway with some rehearsed reason for why I can no longer stay in the room with Myg. You might faint, she says. Wait here. She points to a spot on the carpet in front of the delivery OR doors and leaves me there. I do as I’m told. After five minutes I begin pacing. I am worried but have faith in the Team that the C-section will go smoothly. I call my mother and tell her about the arrival of her grandson and let her know that the second is on his way. The doors slide apart and someone notices me as he moves past carrying arcane medical devices. The second baby is out, he says. I am relieved. He doesn’t say anything about Bing’s condition. I assume everything is fine. A manx cat appears pushing a small cart bearing Doot. The cat speaks. Do you want to come with me to the nursery? Apparently, it’s a nurse.

It’s not until hours later that I understand that when Myg pushed and the doctor felt Bing’s umbilical cord that it was a fairly rare and serious situation known as a prolapsed cord. The monitors showed his heart rate had dramatically dropped to 80 bpm when Myg had pushed. He would not have survived a vaginal delivery. Now I go cold when I write those words. On that day, I was supremely confident and ecstatic.

What they did not tell me and part of the reason I was in the hall during the emergency C-section is that because Bing’s heartrate was dropping they had to open Myg up immediately. As in before the anesthesia was in full effect. Myg apologized later to the surgical team for all the screaming. I didn’t hear a thing two sets of doors away in the hallway. Are you numb? The doc asked. You’re numb enough. Myg says the cut wasn’t painful, but that having her guts moved out of the way in a hurry was like having a wild animal pawing at her insides. The doctor knew she’d survive that trauma okay—the important thing was to get the baby out.

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Bing joins his brother in the nursery after escaping the womb via a window

Both of our sons arrived healthy and whole. Neither required any time in the NICU. They even made it through the bilirubin spike without needing light table treatment. As of this writing, they’ve quadrupled their birth weights. They smile and laugh and roll over. They grab hold of fingers and toys and eat solid-er food. They’re delighted to see me every time I enter the room. Because of my wonderful sons, these five sleepless months full of diaper changes and spit up and two babies crying in tandem at a 4 a.m. that lasts forever have been the greatest five months of my life.

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Husband becomes Dad

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First snuggle

{ 13 comments }

Week 36. Happy 1 week birthday, sweeties.

by Myg on January 30, 2009

I’m still alive, and no longer pregnant. My sons were born last week on 1/22/09, at 35 weeks and 1 day, due to preeclampsia.

We are all home, and we are all perfectly fine after a fairly hairy birthing experience. I will post all the gory details, I promise, when I am up to it. So far it’s a week into my sons’ lives and my recovery so energy has been a little lacking, as I’m sure is obvious.

I am still dealing with that GOD DAMNED tendonitis – which believe it or not, is now the worst of my physical complaints. I am wearing special braces for it but they make typing really, really difficult (if less painful). I’m taking more typos than a 9th grader’s text message. So I’ll really keep this one brief and just share this:

Yes, they are totally delicious. Yes, I am just insanely happy. Looking at them opens up new universes for me, every time I do it. And I do it all day long.

Thanks to you all for being there and supporting me through all of this.

I can’t help but feel the world is filled with love after all.

Type at you soon.

{ 12 comments }

I’ll pay for this, trust me. I’ve got my wrists splinted (once again, DeQuervain’s tendonitis in both wrists is the reason), and I am still in pain. But I just have to write today.

As of yesterday, I have crossed the 34 week threshold with both boys and myself mostly intact. I wanted to scream with the relief I felt, seriously. The intense worry about preterm labor over, I felt a sense of power and accomplishment that’s hard to describe. WE MADE IT!

Then last night I got the call with my lab results from a 24 hour urine screen. My results were by no means devastating, but far less than ideal for my taste. See, I have had a lot of borderline symptoms of a lot of things throughout this pregnancy, and the most recent of these scares has been preeclampsia. Of all the problems to have when you’re pregnant, preeclampsia is one you really don’t want. It’s not that its unmanageable, it’s just that it’s potentially very dangerous (if it goes undiagnosed/untreated) and it can sneak up on you. Meaning, I could go from very mild symptoms to very serious symptoms in a matter of hours.

That said, if you’re going to get it, you want to get it at this stage, when you know you can deliver and your babies will have a relatively good chance of having a perfectly normal life. Because delivery is the only cure for preeclampsia.

What is preeclampsia? From the preeclampsia.org website:

Preeclampsia is a disorder that occurs only during pregnancy and the postpartum period and affects both the mother and the unborn baby. Affecting at least 5-8% of all pregnancies, it is a rapidly progressive condition characterized by high blood pressure and the presence of protein in the urine. Swelling, sudden weight gain, headaches and changes in vision are important symptoms; however, some women with rapidly advancing disease report few symptoms.

Those of us pregnant with multiples, have anywhere from a 20-30% chance of getting it.

As for me, I haven’t been terribly symptomatic of preeclampsa, but then I’ve been on bedrest – which is one of the main management strategies for mild preeclampsia. Even so, on bedrest I’ve had issues with my blood pressure fluctuating from normal to borderline high (130s/80s – high for me), protein in my urine and sudden weight gain (7 lbs in 10 days).

And hello, here’s another lesson to you about vigilance in your medical care. Last week during my doctor’s appointment, I was the one who noted the sudden change in my weight gain (usually I gain about a pound a week) and the consistent issue with trace and +1 protein in my urine. I noticed this when the nurse left my chart open on the desk. I was reading it while waiting for the doctor. The doctor, (who I seriously think is about 29 or 32 years old at the oldest), NEVER said anything to me about any of it. She’s not a resident or a fellow. She’s an attending. Since she didn’t bring it up, I didn’t ask because I figured it didn’t matter. But it was nagging at me all weekend.

I went into Labor and Delivery on Sunday night when I was worried I might have sprung a little leak (I didn’t think I needed to come in, but I called and as soon as you call, they make yoy come in). Because this had been on my mind, I brought it up to the attending there as an aside. She thanked me for mentioning the weight gain and ordered the 24 hour urine and some blood work.

Why? Because 20-30% of women with multiple pregnancies get preeclampsia, and I had multiple risk factors (over 35 years old, pregnant with twins is a double whammy). So OF COURSE if I was exhibiting the above tendencies, the doctor should pay attention and order further labs.

For those who are interested in this kind of thing, my results for the 24 hour urine were protein of 400 (400 what? mg? I don’t know, because they never told me and there’s just so much you forget to ask). It should be under 300. While 400 is not terribly high, the doctor told me it was “borderline.” Bloodwork was all normal, but my blood pressures are labile and borderline, my protein counts are borderline, everything is borderline. I suppose that’s better than definitive, especially since I am getting the close monitoring regardless. But I want to be in the, “No WAY do you have preeclampsia” range. And that’s just not the case.

As I was writing this I just got a call from the doctor who ordered the 24 hour urine. They are admitting me for observation. Why? Well, a couple of hours ago I felt like my feet were feeling a little puffy. I asked Alex if he thought my feet looked at all swollen and he said yes, a little bit. Right after that, the nurse from the OB/GYNs office called to answer some other questions for me and I told her about it. She said, “Don’t freak out about that – that’s not a big deal. I looked at your labs and your chart and your protein count is not that bad – we don’t know that it’s preeclampsia. If you face or hands swell, then come in. If you get a persistent headache that won’t go away with Tylenol, come in. But for feet, we’re not that worried about it.”

“Are you sure?”

She was. But then just now I got a call from the doctor, who says because I have some swelling in my feet the team decided to admit me to the hospital for observation. So I guess it’s a bigger deal than she thought. How big, I can’t say.

So I’m now waiting for Alex to get home (and honest to god, he never really goes anywhere but of course – of course – he went down to his mother’s house to get me a blood pressure cuff and isn’t around). After he gets home I’ll shower, get dressed, get my bag together and go over to be admitted.

Keep in mind, if my boys had to be delivered now, (which so far they do not), they have every chance of a good normal life as anyone. They will need more help right after they’re born, yeah. But they are big, strong, healthy, moving, and breathing. Yes breathing, or rather practice breathing since there’s no air in there.  I am told this is a very good sign.

I’ll try to update as I can from the hospital.

{ 3 comments }

Getting close now.

by Myg on January 9, 2009

I am still here! But, I still have this awful De Quervain’s Tendinitis in both wrists. It’s a neat little injury that makes things like putting my hair in a pony tail or wiping my butt ungodly painful. I don’t know that I got it from typing, like I originally thought. I’ve read that sometimes pregnancy hormones just bring it on. But I do know that typing makes it hurt more and that rest and ice are all I can do to keep it from getting worse. I also know that new moms get this a lot from hoisting little babies, so if I can’t get the pain under control now I can imagine how bad it’s going to be when I’m lifting two kids for diaper changes umpteen times a day.

I’d say I’m keeping this post brief for that reason, but it’s not true. This is why I stay off the computer – if I start writing, I have a hard time stopping.

I’m fairly certain that this last stage of pregnancy has been specially designed to torture me in new and inventive ways since:

  • I can’t leave my bed AND
  • I can’t really be online very much AND
  • I can’t really type, which means I can’t write much, which means I have no real outlet now to vent my frustration AND
  • Watching movies all day makes me feel like I am INSANE and is beginning to give me bad headaches

So you know what? I am beginning to really look forward to giving birth.

Yeah, I know it will hurt LAMF. No matter what path the birth takes. But I am beyond that right now. Labor has to end at some point. C-Section recovery would suck, sure, but bazillions of women do it and survive. I can too.

Yes, I am aware that the arrival of my two boys will make my life an utter living chaotic sleepless hell and did I mention, I won’t get any sleep until they’re in college, and they’ll cry and poop and vomit on things and cost so much money and oh my god, how will I do it, how can I survive, HOW DO ANY PARENTS OF TWINS EVER MAKE IT OUT ALIVE?

I am a little burnt on the well meaning attempts to “prepare” us for how hard this is going to be. I have some feedback for you, well-intentioned advice givers who may already be parents:

Do you think I am an idiot? I am almost 40 years old, not 20. I KNOW IT’S GOING TO BE HARD.

I am prepared for the following:

  1. The realization that there’s no real preparation for this. We’re just going to have to jump in the deep end and swim LAMF.
  2. However hard I think it’s going to be, I have no idea how hard it really will be.
  3. Everything in my existence will be different (no shit, that’s the whole point, right? Otherwise why go through all that damned IVF?)

I’m sorry if that doesn’t satisfy you that I understand how god awful being a new parent is. In any case, please, please, please for the love of all that’s holy, just SHUT UP. Stop going on about how hard it is for a few, ok? I know a lot of you have probably jumped into parenting weepy eyed and misty and sentimental and really unaware of how radically life changing parenting would be. I AM NOT LIKE YOU. I am ultimately an over anxious pessimist, so I’m sure I’ve got the “holy shit, what have I done?” experience covered. And plus, I want my life changed radically, get it?

Still here? Thanks for your patience. I had to get that out of my system, and no, it’s not directed at anyone specific, and certainly not anyone I know. It’s directed at the well meaning strangers in doctor’s offices and parking lots who have to make comments, and just about everything I read these days that goes on and on about how awful labor and delivery will be, and how hard it is to be a new parent (especially of twins, OMFG!) but yet how, “oh, it’s all worth it.” It’s like they’re writing a column called “Basics of Life for Total Dumbasses.”

Can you tell I’m reaching the end here?

When my hands recover, whenever that is, I’ll come back and write about the last few weeks. They’ve been, well, they’ve been.

We are 33 weeks and two days today. If I get past 34 weeks and go into labor, they’ll let me deliver. I am hoping to get to 36, but am also in the “hey, whatever happens I’m just along for the ride” state of mind now.

Allow me to leave with a status pic:

If I can post again, I certainly will.

May all your pregnancies be sparkly and light and full of only the advice you seek.

{ 7 comments }

Last Christmas Alone!

by Myg on December 24, 2008

Just wanted to let you all know that my bad bout of tendonitis persists, so even typing this much is painful. That’s why I also haven’t been commenting on blogs, plurks, etc. IT SUCKS, by the way, and as predicted, there’s nothing to be done about it other than “suck it up, you’ve only got about 5 weeks left.” Of pregnancy, that is. Then I can take some anti-inflammatory stuff if need be.

Five weeks left? Really? It is almost impossible to believe that.

But today we are 31 weeks, so it’s about right.

And by the way, I am starting to freak the f–k out. Not about the boys being here, outside of my body. More about getting them here – the process. Labor. Or C-section. Either way, it’s making me antsy. But my WRISTS HURT (did I mention I have tendonitis in both wrists? Hmmm? WELL I DO!!!!) so I’m not going off about it here.

Don’t know if we’ll get another video post up or not for week 31. We’ll see how it goes. I don’t know how many people saw the last one and I think I’m better in writing than on camera anyway, but hey, nothing gets better without practice. In any case, our very quiet Christmas with me on bedrest has turned into an avalanche of company all day. Let’s hope my uterus complies with the social calendar and that Alex and I can actually be here all day.

Lesson learned from this holiday season: Always buy all your gifts online! OH MY GOD how wonderful not to have to go to the stores and panic last minute! Yeah the gift choices aren’t so inspired this year, but with a little more effort you could do wonders this way.

Also, insensitive doctor moment of the week (from our regular OB/GYN visit, with a new doctor.)

Dr. Bedside-manner-is-SO-not-my-strength: “So, are these normal twins, or are they IVF twins?”

Potential answer #1: “They’re FUCK YOU twins.”

Potential answer #2: “They’re foot-in-mouth, much? twins.”

Potential answer #3: “They’re freaks of scientific progress twins.”

Potential answer #4: They’re Wonder Twins and they will kick your sorry doctorish ass with form of a pouncing puma and shape of an ice shoe to stick up your butt.”

Actually I didn’t say any of those things (surprise!) and it didn’t bother me so much when she asked. But still, you know?

Happy holidays, all. Going to soak my wrists in buckets of ice!

Edit: Oh hell, I forgot, I DON’T have gestational diabetes! Yay!!!!

{ 2 comments }

Waiting for you. Weeks 29 & 30.

by Myg on December 19, 2008


Waiting for you. Weeks 29 & 30. from Myg on Vimeo.

{ 2 comments }

Quickie

by Myg on December 16, 2008

Sorry for being lame and just doing a quick post, but I have a bad case of laptop thumbs right now.  I made a video blog for week 29 but the sound is really, really low for some reason. So I need to do redo it. Hopefully today I’ll get it done.

In the interim, I’ve had a quiet week (leans over, bangs head on wood for luck). Contractions have been scattered and mild throughout the day – nothing like the rock and roll uterus that got me into the ER on average of once a week the preceding three weeks.

But I found out today my Glucose Screen for Gestational Diabetes came back at 140, which is not super duper high but borderline enough that I need to endure the 3 hour test this Friday. The upside? Alex is going to be cooking for me for the next three days (you have to follow a “diet” for three days that includes a lot of carbs, and for whatever reason, a lot of potatoes. Tough, I know).

Until later, then.

{ 1 comment }

Waiting for you. Week 28.

by Myg on December 8, 2008

At some point last week I lost track of the days. I didn’t know the date and I had to ask Alex what day of the week it was. At first I thought this was a bad sign that bed rest was driving me into a meltdown, but then when I thought about it I didn’t quite know. Maybe free floating in time for a little while isn’t so bad, especially when the last 28 weeks have been an intense marking of days resulting in no small amount of stress here and there.

Even so, be assured I was completely aware when we all reached Week 28.

It was last Wednesday, 12/3. Two days after my last ultrasound and check-in with the OB/GYN and all was well with us. It was some point after that, but before I started to feel fairly ill that I found myself totally unaware of what day it was.

Then Friday night I began to feel sick to my stomach and got a headache. I had no appetite. A couple of Tylenol took care of the headache, but I had a really tough time eating. I wasn’t sure what to think of this. I hadn’t been anywhere to see people I could catch a stomach bug from. I do know later in pregnancy women lose their appetites because there’s not much room for the stomach. With twins this is obviously going to happen earlier. But it seemed to happen suddenly, with no improvement on Saturday or Sunday. I just didn’t feel right.

Then mid-Sunday morning the contractions started again. About four an hour, not regularly (like one in 10 minutes, 20 minutes, 15 minutes, 8 minutes, 30 minutes, etc.) which is supposedly okay, but I had just had a good week with hardly any contractions all day on most days. So the onset of this was unnerving. And the contractions were a little different. Some of them were painful, crampy. The kind they said to look out for.

I’ve read that nausea, diarrhea (oh yeah, for your daily dose of TMI, I had that too) can be early signs of labor. Plus I was having the contractions and they went on and on from about 11 am until around 5, which was when I finally broke down and called the on-call service again.

“Come in,” they said. Of course they did. They always want you to come in. “It’s the only way we can tell anything.”

I am getting really tired of pelvic exams, by the way. But two – yes two – last night showed that my cervix is indeed still closed and thick. The first pelvic they did soon after I arrived so they could do another Fetal Fibronectin test (fFN). The resident said, “How do you feel? You’re not contracting at all.” Well I felt great when I heard that.

But after the pelvic, guess what? I was contracting a whole bunch.

“We’re going to start an IV for fluids.”

No, you’re not. If I’m not going to have surgery, and you’re not planning to give me IV meds, you are NOT giving me an IV. Sorry. I mean, why do they even want to give me an IV for that when I can drink?

“Okay, I’ll bring a pitcher of water.”

Great.

Another ultrasound showed Doot and Bing to be totally fine in there, though Bing has flipped around from head down to transverse. Ouch. I asked the doctor if that much movement could have triggered the onset of the contractions. She said no. I didn’t believe her (she’s one doctor there I don’t like all that much, which is pretty good given that there are about 72 doctors I’ve seen there so far).

My fFN came back negative, though. That’s another 7-14 day insurance policy against pre-term labor. Three residents, a medical student, the doctor on call and the nurse all came in to tell me. No shit – six people. Three of them remained to give me a second pelvic exam, “Just to check your cervix to be sure the contractions aren’t changing anything there. Hey (lackey medical student), can you go get my maglite from the other patient’s room?”

It was still the same, and I am not at all certain the second pelvic wasn’t just practice for them.

Is it me or are pelvics getting more intolerable?

“We feel comfortable sending you home.”

Good. Fine with me.

I am back home now and see my regular OB/GYN tomorrow. Of course, I am with a group that has 743 doctors so the only thing regular is the office space – not the physician. I am still not feeling great, but not sure now how much of it is mental. Am I contracting? Sometimes. I’m trying to just ignore it unless it’s super obvious. You can get pretty stressed out with this stuff. At least I can. Even when you’re supposedly doing okay.

I’m already tired of the hospital, and I’m sure I’ll be there again and again before the big day comes. And as helpful as it is to write, I confess it’s hard to blog when you feel sort of shitty all day. Though for whatever reason I still feel like it’s important. To me, at least.

Now, let us not forget there are two babies inside of me growing and growing. It’s week 28 and the boys are:

  • through the 28 week hurdle, which is a huge deal when you’re worried about pre-term labor. 90% of babies born at 28 weeks can survive.
  • 2.3 oz (Doot) and 2.5 oz (Bing) each and continuing to grow. I thought those weights were fairly kickass, but then I saw this chart and realized that they are merely average. That’s okay. I know their spectacular specialness will shine in other ways. And in pregnancy, I think it’s good to be average.
  • are opening and closing their eyes. But you’ve got to wonder, what can they see in there? It’s gotta be fairly dark, especially under the covers most of the time.
  • still kicking, after all these weeks.

As for me, the above has covered most of it. But a few other things to mention:

  • Colostrum. I’m not going to say anything more about that, other than it was one of my “what the hell is that?” moments last week. If you don’t already know what it is and truly need to know, go here.
  • Mood. Was feeling pretty good last week when the contractions had subsided. Not so much this week with an upset stomach and all. It’s like a dingy damp cold towel has been wrapped around my brain and I can’t get it off. It’s absolutely no damned help at all that “general malaise” is often cited as a precursor to all kinds of terrible pregnancy problems, like HELLP and/or pre-term labor.
  • Alex put up curtains in our bedroom to block out the light so I can sleep during the day. I love that man.

As badly as I want Doot and Bing to hang in there for the next 10 weeks and go to full term, some days I feel so done with this pregnancy stuff. It’s little things that I miss being able to do, like go for a walk or hey, how about out of the house to someplace that’s not a medical facility? I now have too much fear about every little thing I feel in my body and I am a lot more frightened of giving birth than I let on.

Can I say all that and not feel like a jerk? Because when you’ve overcome infertility to get to this point, sometimes you just feel ungrateful voicing those feelings. I swear, I am not ungrateful.

I’m just tired. And worried.

And I know, I know. “Get used to it – you’re about to be a mother.”

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Status Quo

by Myg on December 2, 2008

Just a note to let you all know things have been mercifully quiet with my uterus the last few days. That’s not to say the boys aren’t rocking out in there. In fact, it feels like they’ve been throwing a sock hop.

One of two things seems to be happening. Either a) I’m NOT having very many contractions anymore or B) I’ve managed to successfully ignore them. I don’t think it’s B, or at least I hope not. It’s tough because the entire ordeal has made me a lot less trustworthy of my body, and that’s exactly what I have to be right now.

But every little twitch or flutter, I find myself pressing on my belly. Is it hard? Is it starting to ball up? Is that a contraction or is the baby just moving around?

It doesn’t help that different doctors tell me different things about this. For example, one doctor told me that if I felt just one part of my belly getting hard, it was the baby moving. On a different day, a different doctor told me that was a localized contraction and I should monitor it. He said if I felt the baby moving, then no. But you know what? I don’t always feel them when they move. I am not sure how that can be at this point, but when I was hooked up to monitors I heard a lot more movement than I felt.

So I’m just, well, I just kind of don’t know.

I do know that overall I feel better, and I feel less tightening in my uterus, so I think the bedrest has really made a positive difference. Though I look at the weeks stretching out ahead and the walls of my bedroom and think, “AFFFHHSJSJAALALLLPASAAADRRRGFGHHHHH!” That’s shorthand for, “Oh my fucking god I can’t wait to do dishes and walk the dog and clean the house and go out of the house for any reason besides the doctor and this room so needs to be painted and holy crap I still have unfinished work stuff I need to take care of and oh shit I didn’t bring the disability forms with me yesterday and I need to get those filled out and argh I should really be more productive than lying in bed all day on the internet I should read a good novel and catch up on some phone calls but I really hate talking on the phone and don’t want to explain this shit all over again and again and I haven’t even started any Christmas shopping oh fuck it we’re broke anyway can we get a pass on Christmas this year or what and oh that reminds me we need to send a gift to our nephew who just had a birthday and “ALEX???? Can you bring me some ______________?”

That’s pretty much how it is with me these days.

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I’m home now.

They sprung me last night when one of my doctors, another high-risk Maternal Fetal Medicine (MFM doctor) decided to do another Fetal Fibronectin (fFN) test. “Let’s just see,” he said. He was curious if my last test could have been a false positive. I was curious too because you know, I just had this feeling. I don’t know what it was. Something about the look on the resident’s face as he wielded the swab. I didn’t quite trust it.

Last night at around 6:30 the new fFN test came back negative, which is a 98% insurance policy against preterm labor in the next 7-14 days.

“Pack up – you’re going home,” they said. I so wasn’t expecting that. Luckily Alex had just brought me sweat pants or I would have been leaving the hospital in my bird jammies. But I would have left just the same.

Monday night I started a different medication called Indomethacin. It’s sort of like strong Advil. You can only use it for about 48 hours or else you start to have risks for the babies, but this medication actually seems to work – a lot better than Procardia. And I haven’t had any side effects from it. So my contractions stopped. Two hours at different times of day, on the monitor, with nada, zip, nothing from my cranky uterus.

“Have you been feeling any contractions?” they asked.

See, here’s where it starts to get frustrating. What I thought I’d been feeling as contractions were often not picked up in monitoring. Or, I’d feel nothing at all, and they’d tell me they’d picked a few contractions up. So now I don’t really know what I’m feeling. That doesn’t help.

My plan? Do NOT to over think this. Last time my body was acting in a troubling way I knew it and I called the doctor. This is me, trying to learn to trust my intuition – something I’m normally really bad at. But I think my intuition has been pretty spot on during this pregnancy. So I’m not going to obsess over every little twitch. Not with a 98% assurance that things are okay for now.

So, this was quite the tricky pregnancy diary update. I tried starting it a number of times in the hospital and as you can see it’s a late getting here. Not that I couldn’t blog, mind you. But blogging specifically about the boys’ development and my wait for labor was so close to the epicenter of my fear for the last several days, it wasn’t a real go-to blogging topic.

But we’re alright now.

And hey guess what? I’ve been calculating my weeks wrong, so when I was writing these updates all along I thought I was a week behind where I was. As of today we have finished 27 weeks worth of gestation. That means last week was week 27 and now we are crawling to that magical 28 number – the point in time when 90% of babies born prematurely survive. This is key given the last couple of weeks.

Here’s the package as of last night:

Funny, for a month’s worth of growth it doesn’t seem so dramatically bigger than week 23, does it? But it is bigger, that I can tell you. And so are they.

In the past couple of weeks, the boys have:

  • grown to about just over 2 lbs each, according to our last ultrasound on 11/20. Not too bad for twins, if I do say so myself.
  • been flipping around in there like two-pounder circus fish, if there was such a thing as circus fish (there isn’t, right?)
  • fully developed hands, which I am certain they’re using to spar with each other in utero
  • fingerprints and foot prints
  • begun to recognize my voice. Too bad it’s not giving them something more compelling to listen to besides “Alex?!?! Can you ________ ? (get me some water, let the dog out, throw this in the laundry, etc, etc, etc.

And what’s important to note, according to Mayo, if babies are born at 27 weeks they have about an 85% survival rate. I don’t like to think morbidly but after 5 days in the hospital worried about such possibilities, I couldn’t escape it. So there it is.

As for me, well you probably know all that’s needed about the last few weeks from the previous few entries, but I’ll share some belated wisdom:

  • I KNEW I should have been out of work earlier. I knew it because of my back pain, which I bitched about endlessly here from week 21 on. I really thought the degree of pain I was having was not right, and I am kicking myself that I wasn’t more assertive about going out of work sooner. On the weekends when I could lay down every time I started to feel uncomfortable I had little back pain. Every day I had to stand or sit for longer than an hour I had problems. The contractions both times started the day after I’d been to work. I explained this to one of the doctors after the first hospitalization, but still she said, “Let’s put you out at 28 or 30 weeks.” I should have said, “Uh, no dear, I know how I feel and I’m not going back.” Let that be a lesson to me. Especially since work didn’t care one iota about me coming back.
  • I didn’t mention it, but I am on strict bedrest now. And after less than 24 hours of being home, I’m staring at the walls of my bedroom going, “Damn, this room needs to be painted.” Nesting instincts are a piss poor match for strict bedrest. I can get up to go to the bathroom, take a quick shower and downstairs once a day. Not going to get a lot of nesting done in this context. “Alex, can you please paint the bedroom?” No, seriously, he’s got enough to do.

Thanksgiving will now be here. Everyone wants to visit, which is really nice. But I will be horizontal and Alex will be frantically putting the house in order today to receive said guests on short notice. I am not sure but I think he gets the raw end of the bedrest deal. I think a nice invite for him out somewhere tomorrow with a plate of leftovers for me might have worked a little better, but oh well. Thank god he’s a good sport and has a better sense of humor.

And anyway, I’m still totally psyched for turkey, and all the more so with my dog at my feet drooling at the chance for dropped crumbs. (Okay I admit, not all of them are accidental.) But I’ll have to work on Alex to get the whole “afternoon tea” thing down.

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