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preterm contractions

Babies of 2009 Born to a Baby of 1969

by Myg on July 1, 2009

2009babies

This is a blog with a mission, being, to take some of the GAHfuckdamnohnoisthisokay? out of becoming a mom when you’re over 35, or in my case now, over 40.  I had infertility issues that kept me from getting pregnant when I was younger, and I was one of those hand wringers who would Google “pregnant over 35″ and just be dejected with the search results. Hardly anyone has anything good to say on the matter, or encouraging, or even maybe celebrating women who start their families later. It was all risk and warnings and that shit is just depressing.

But that’s not to say it isn’t real. Indeed, pregnancy for me was nearly every bit as hard and scary as they say it can be for women my age, especially bearing twins. I had pre-term contractions, pre-eclampsia, borderline anemia, a very tough delivery (which had nothing to do with my age, ahem). What they don’t tell you is, so fucking what?

See, I’m trying to cultivate a new and improved attitude about risk.  Now that I’ve taken certain risks and have gotten a certain unbelievably awesome payoff, I’m here to say that if your heart truly longs for a baby and you’re over 35, go on and get pregnant. DO IT. I could have had a worse result, yes. But you know what? I didn’t, and most women my age having babies don’t either. And look what I got to show for it:

Five months

Two beautiful kids, born totally healthy.

So here’s the whole truth about my over 39 year old twin-pregnancy experience. First, the bad.

  • My pregnancy was great until the third trimester, when my back started to hurt so bad I could hardly walk from my car to the house without pain, and when pre-term contractions and then pre-eclampsia kicked in. That period of time involved total bedrest, three hospitalizations and a lot of unfortunate Google searches. 
  • Being pregnant with twins caused more of that than my age. That said, women over 35 have a greater chance of multiple pregnancy. That’s not a bad thing, but it is harder.
  • I delivered five weeks early, due to pre-eclampsia. My delivery was tough, tough, tough. I delivered Doot vaginally and had to have an emergency C-Section for Bing. That had nothing to do with my age, or the pre-eclampsia. He had cord pro-lapse, which can be catastrophic. We were thankfully in good hands. If you’re a high-risk pregnancy, make sure you are too.
  • Speaking of high-risk pregnancy, if you get labeled this know it’s a blessing. You get much better prenatal care.
  • My recovery from delivery took awhile, and to be honest I thought I’d never feel right again. I was wrong, and knew it within about four weeks. Two weeks after giving birth I was much, much better. By a month, I was back to normal except for my weight and my tendonitis.
  • Oh, by the way, did you know you can get mindbendingly painful tendonitis in both wrists while pregnant, just from your hormones? I didn’t, and believe me, this was the most painful and inconvenient part of being pregnant and a new mother – worse than the sleep deprivation. No, there’s not much you can do for it but wait it out. It’s much better now at the five month mark, but it’s not gone.
  • Not a day goes by where I don’t do the math. When they’re 18 I’ll be 58. When they’re 25 I’ll be 65. When they’re 30 I’ll be 70. And so on. Every day I worry about being too old. Not now, of course. I feel young now. I daresay I look young, even younger than I am. But I don’t take terribly great care of myself and that has to change so I can age well and enjoy my kids well into their adult years. I don’t want them to have the worries of caring for older parents, well, ever. But then, I don’t want to die on them when they’re too young. And then, what’s too young? I’ll never, ever, ever be ready to let my parents go.  In any case, I don’t get to decide any of these things, and so they are not worth the worry. But I must tell you, I worry anyway.

Now for the good stuff that waiting got me, and may get you too.

  • Some things that would have really rattled my 30 year old self really don’t rattle me now. I have been called a very calm, confident parent, and I have to admit that I am.
  • I don’t ever wish I was out doing something else that I can’t do now because I have small kids. At my age, I’ve really spent a lot of time doing exactly what I wanted. I’m not worried about my career because it’s so well established I can pretty much write my ticket now.
  • Even though the economy is bad and money is tough, I know I can always make money if need be (see above).
  • My kids live in a nice home, in a great neighborhood with an excellent school district.
  • In my neighborhood, many, if not most of my friends are mothers and fathers who started their families after the age of 35 or at least continue to have kids over the age of 35.
  • I savor every moment I have with them, even at 3am, because at 40 I really know how fast it’s all going to go. I just didn’t have that perspective yet when I was 30.

In every other way except trying to lose weight, being 40 pretty much kicks ass. My head is clear. I feel powerful. I don’t take shit from anyone. I know what’s important. I thoroughly enjoy everything I have. So really, in that sense, it’s the perfect time in my life to bring my kids into the world.

Not because of the economy or the war or the environment or any external thing. It’s a good time because it’s the time it was possible, and really, it’s as good as any and better than some.

Little Miss Sunshine

 The author, born in 1969, but shown here somewhere around late 1970.

{ 13 comments }

100 Days.

by Myg on May 2, 2009

Bing and Doot, my dearests:

Today marks your 100th day of being my offspring, so I wanted to take a moment to review your accomplishments so far.

Accomplishment #1: You both managed to successfully stay in the womb after weeks of my uterus threatening to expel you.

last pregnant pic

You came out early, but not by your choice.

Accomplishment #2: Points for individuality, since despite being twins, you both came into the world quite differently. Doot, my brave little astronaut, you ventured out first, taking the more traditional route. “PUSH!!!!! LIKE YOU’RE TAKING THE BIGGEST CRAP OF YOUR LIFE!” the doctor, no kidding, screamed at me moments before you made your entrance. I did, and felt that otherworldly POP and then the most enormous relief I’ve ever known. Your head – who knew it was so pliable? Good thing, too because the few stitches I did need, well, the memory of them still makes me itch sometimes.

Bing, my clever little man, it was though you saw what your brother endured on his trip into the world and said, “Screw it. I am NOT squeezing my shit through there!” They cut a quick slice in my belly to get to you before, well let’s just say before the unimaginable because I don’t even want to imagine, not for a second, what could have happened had we not been in totally competent hands in the OR. But once the decision for the C-Section was made, you arrived quickly, safely and you were perfect from head to toe. No elongated head for you, no sir! I can see years ahead of you finding your own path in this world. Let’s hope most of them don’t lead to emergency surgery.

First hugs

Accomplishment #3: Steady hearts, steady breaths. No NICU time. Not even for a few hours of observation. You were both under 5 lbs, but breathing and sucking superbly right away. When they said you could go to the regular nursery it was about the thousandth time that day your father and I counted ourselves among the very, very lucky.

In the hospital

Accomplishment #4: How about the adorable factor? Both of you, either separately or snuggled together exude enough cuteness to shame the entire baby animal kingdom. No kittens, puppies, baby seals, infant capybaras or what have you can touch the “AWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWesomeness” that you two have going on. I thought maybe I was biased in my judgment of your attractiveness, but NO, definitely not. I am totally unbiased and you two are without doubt the most adorable creatures that have ever been or will ever be born. (*The author reserves the right to revoke this statement on the occasion of grandchildren. AND during the years 13-17.)

twin time

Accomplishment #5: You came home the same day I did. I began to understand how amazing this was when everywhere we went, or I went, people said, “Oh twins! How long did they have to stay in the hospital for?” But you didn’t have to stay in the hospital any longer than I did. And by nearly every measure, one could argue you were in better shape than I was when we got home.

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Accomplishment #6:  You grew. And grew. And grew. I have one photo, which I promise to never post, in which I am tandem breastfeeding you. And I swear your heads are not even half the size of my boobs. Now, your heads are much larger than my boobs, sadly, and I can say largely due to the service said body parts have done you. Well done, all of us.

View from the top

Accomplishment #7: You taught me the very meaning of FEAR. I was never truly afraid until I had children. This coming from someone who’s had remnants of an anxiety disorder since the 1980’s. Yet my anxiety since you’ve arrived has crested peaks I’d never dare imagine.

When I first got you two home, every little tiny new thing scared the pants off me, when I bothered to put any on. Bing had a marble sized lump in his left breast. WTF was that? (Turned out to be a common nothing thing that went away on its own). Doot had an umbilical hernia. Oh, and yes, I had a massive herpes outbreak (on my mouth – fever blisters), which manifested itself two days after you were born, and hours after I dared to bestow my first kiss to you Doot. I was TERRIFIED I would give you the Herpes 1 virus, which is quite dangerous in infants. I didn’t, THANK GOD. But I cried and cried and cried and obsessed over it, and many other things in those first weeks.

I did realize the absolute need to get over it, all that fear. So while I’ve still got plenty of it I’ve been dealing with it better, yes. Because I either get over it or I am miserable and if I’m miserable, how can I bask in your awesomeness (see #4 above)?

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Accomplishment #8: Smiles. Oh Godddddd, the smiles. Your father and I fall apart whenever you smile at us.

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The other day, Graham, Dad heard you laugh in your sleep! He was so excited he called me at work, and after I teared and snuffled a few times, we congratulated ourselves, thinking we must be doing a great job as parents for you to have such funny dreams. And by the way guys, I’m sure this trend of us taking credit for your accomplishments is something you’ll need to discuss with your therapist sometime in your early adulthood, if not sooner.

And Liam, holy cow, you are the smiliest baby I’ve ever known. You wake up smiling. You smile at anyone you meet. You smile at the dog. You smile at the wall. You screech, squeal, coo, belch, spit up 300 oz and then smile at the pool of spit up. You really crack us up.

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Accomplishment a gabazillion: I just realized the futility of numbering your accomplishments in this way. It’s not that there are too many to list. It’s that your birth and your lives so far are so enormous a factor in my universe that breaking out the individual things like this does not come close to conveying the complete transformation of our lives.

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I want you to know, I was happy before you were born. I really was. I had a sense of purpose, a creative mission, a sense of the meaning of it all. Granted, I was not so happy when I wanted to have you and couldn’t, but I knew deep in my heart that if I could never have you, I would grieve and then find a way to move on in my life and make peace with it. So when I tell you, I’ve never known happiness like this, I’m not saying this from the point of an unhappy, unfulfilled person. I’m saying that you have brought to my life a depth, a sense of purpose – the perfect mission. The reason to live at all, and the way forward.

You changed everything. Everything. Every thought I have, every hope for the future, the very meaning of life itself. My world, my body, my concept of family and my notion of priorities. All different now. I have to tell you though, your father and I were counting on that.

You did not disappoint.

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{ 8 comments }

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.”

{ 5 comments }

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.

{ 2 comments }

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.

    { 6 comments }

    Afternoon Tea at the Ante-partum Unit

    by Myg on November 24, 2008

    Everything is still status quo, but it’s Monday and I’m not going home from the hospital today. Probably not tomorrow either.

    This mostly boils down, once again, to what I call my “clusterfuck of life timing” issue. Because I am having preterm contractions now at this moment, when we – me & the boys – are only 26 weeks and 5 days along, and because of my positive Fetal Fibronectin test, the medical team is understandably nervous about sending me home.

    Now, they would have sent me home if I could take Procardia, a medication that stops contractions, but I seem to react badly to it. I tried to take another low dose this afternoon but within 15 minutes I had heart palpitations that made me feel like I was in a full blown panic. Man did that suck. There are other medications they can use to stop contractions, but none of them look like a good long-term bet for me right now, so I think the plan is to just watch me here and make sure I don’t go into labor.

    They will probably keep me here until we hit 28 weeks, which would be next Wedneday. At that point they said they might be more comfortable with “watch and wait” at home. But we’ll see. As I now know, anything can happen in a week.

    I am pretty okay with this plan, as much as I want to go home. I’d rather be bored here than home biting my damn nails over every flutter or tightening in my belly. We’ve come a long way to get to this point and I will do anything, anything at all to keep the guys in there gestating for as long as possible.

    A little while ago a 14 year old Chaplain (okay, maybe she was 26?) came in and asked me if I wanted her to pray over me. It was so awkward, but I felt bad for her so I said okay. She rambled a little, “Um, God, um, heavenly father, dear Lord um please be with um Amy here today…” and I tried to look serious – but it really wasn’t easy.

    Besides that, they brought me a cannoli and a cream puff this afternoon and asked me if I wanted tea or coffee. And the pastries? They were totally edible!

    As long as wireless holds and the boys stay put, we’re doing just fine.

    { 4 comments }

    (Eds note of caution: Another post so long it should have chapters, really.)

    This is where I spent Friday night and Saturday morning:

    It’s room 7 of the Labor and Delivery Unit at my hospital. See the cute little newborn tray across the way? I apologize for the crap photo, but it was all I could muster from my cell phone at 6 am after hardly any sleep.

    No, thank God, I didn’t have the babies. Though it was pretty damned hilarious that mere hours had passed after I’d written about the milestone of potential viability for the boys when I started to notice a lot of tightening across my belly. I counted seven times in 45 minutes and thought, “huh, well I should probably call the doctor.”

    I did and they said COME IN RIGHT NOW.

    At this moment, the boys were at 25 weeks 1 day in development. It was about 10:30 at night. “They’ll probably just do a cervical check and send me home,” I thought. Wrong.

    Walking into the Labor and Delivery unit for the first time under these circumstances felt like stepping into a starring role in a movie without ever seeing the script. It was something completely unreal for which I was utterly unprepared. Then the frightening reality hit me. At some point, I’d be delivering these two boys into the world. This was the place it would be happening. Maybe even this room.

    “Not this room. We do all twin deliveries in the OR just in case we need to do a C-section.”

    Okay, not in that room. But near that room, for sure.

    “Wow, you really are contracting,” the nurse assured me after she hooked me up with fat hard plastic nipple-looking monitors on my belly. One each for the boys and one to monitor the contractions. And by the way, having those monitors strapped around my gut didn’t do much to ease the tightening feeling I was having. My first thought was, “SHIT” and my second was “So, this is what contractions feel like.”

    Gallons upon gallons of blood collected. Peed in a cup. Then, a parade of folks came into the room. A happy trio of obstetrical staff greeted me as my “team” for the evening. It consisted of two high school aged residents (okay, they were probably late twenties) with a 12 year old boy turned medical student in tow (okay, he was probably 23). They – the team – were to going to perform the cervical exam.

    “When is the last time you had sexual intercourse?” Three young pairs of expectant eyes searched mine. Alex looked up.

    “Uh…” (Now, I apologize for the few of you who may read this who actually know me because a little TMI is headed your way. You can skip the next few paragraphs. In fact, I encourage you to do so.)

    See, Alex and I had been so cautious since IVF (yep, that’s JUNE) we had really begged off sex in a way that was starting to make us feel inhuman. Or too sibling like. I’d never been told not to have sex once I hit that positive pregnancy test. I just had a feeling, like, maybe we shouldn’t take the chance. But last week, after such good news at the ultrasound, I figured what the hell. I wanted to celebrate. So we did it – on Wednesday night – just a couple of days before this whole thing started.

    “Did you know that sex can cause contractions?”

    And here I was blaming the whole thing on the #1 Value Meal from Burger King I’d had a few hours earlier. I happen to think fast food is disgusting, but I’d had the strangest craving for Burger King that night. Now they said it could have been the sex? Regardless, I vow to never eat Burger King again.

    Anyway, since it had been more than 24 hours since the sex they were able to do the cervical exam. Luckily.

    “Then, you just take the swab and swipe it around the outside of the vagina,” the resident said, as I watched the med student looking intently at the space between my legs. “Have you been itching? You look like maybe you have a little yeast infection here.” Lovely. Times like these make me real glad I’m not the shy type.

    They performed two ultrasounds, one vaginal to check cervical length and one abdominal to check the boys. Cervix normal – between 3-4cm long. Closed, drum tight. Boys looked great. Heartbeats were just fine. All the fluid was there, where it was supposed to be.

    They cultured (like a Pap Smear) for what’s called the Fetal Fibronectin (fFN) test. From the March of Dimes:

    The presence of fFN during weeks 24-34 of a high-risk pregnancy, along with symptoms of labor, suggests that the “glue” may be disintegrating ahead of schedule and alerts doctors to a possibility of preterm delivery.

    A negative result is highly reliable, and means that you are not generally going to go into labor within the next two weeks. That culture would have to go to the lab so we’d need to wait on that for awhile.

    I was still contracting. Not hard, mind you, but it was happening. I tried to will it to stop. And I think – maybe it sounds crazy – I was able to get it to ease up a little bit. I just kept imagining my uterus as a soft pillow the babies were nestled into. I tried to think of the softest, snuggliest things I could and then imagined my uterus was made of that: clouds, Mason’s ears, jello, cool wHip, and then it finally hit me.

    The little blankie bunneh and puppeh that Doot and Bing had gotten as a shower gift from my neice. When I lifted them to my face and felt those little baby blankies the first time I declared them the snuggliest, softest little toys I’d ever felt. So it may sound weird, but I imagined my uterus was made out of them. Every time I began to feel my belly tighten, I’d think of the puppeh/bunneh material and believe it or not, if I did it early enough, I’d feel my abdomen just relax and get soft. It didn’t work every time, but it did help. Amazing the weird little tricks you can do with your brain.

    The real doctor came in and caught me up on what they knew. So far I was not showing any signs of preterm labor. Thank god. If I had been, they’d give me a steroid shot to help my babies develop their lungs to give them a better chance of survival should they – GOD FORBID – be born soon. But since, as she explained, they can really only give that shot once it was better to do it closer to when they actually suspected a delivery. That sounded fine to me.

    She then told me that since everything looked good they were going to wait for the fFN test to come back and then probably transfer me to another room. All of my bloodwork was normal. No infections, no signs of pre-eclampsia. No major issues here. I was just contracting. “Some women just contract throughout their pregnancy,” she said. Great.

    They gave me a 20mg dose of Procardia at around 12:30. Procardia is actually a heart drug that lowers the blood pressure, but it also helps relax the uterus. I received the most painful IV of my life – so bad that I begged the nurse to take it out. The IV was for hydration only, not meds. Luckily the doctor came in to talk to me right then and I bargained out of the IV – let me drink water. Given that everything else looked fine, they agreed and brought me a pitcher.

    Eventually, my contractions did stop and my fFN test came back at 3am – negative. They took me off the monitors so I could get some proper rest. I sent Alex home to make sure Mason hadn’t destroyed the house and waited for transfer to my new room.

    But then at around 4am, I felt the tightening in my uterus again. Fuck. The nurse returned with a wheelchair to take me to the new room, but instead called the doctor. They strapped the monitors back on. I’d be spending the night where I was. Stuck on my back, strapped like so much old luggage. They were going to give me another dose of Procardia, but I asked the nurse to check my blood pressure first. Sure enough, it had dropped from 137/70 (which is real high for me – this is where it was when I first arrived) to 105/58. They skipped the Procardia. Boy am I glad I asked. Another example where, no matter how much you like your medical team or how confident you are in the quality of care you are getting, you can never assume they’ve thought of everything – especially at 4am. If you’ve got a question or any reservation ask, ask, ask.

    I could not sleep. I don’t know if it was my nerves, the Procardia, or the position I was lying in, but my PVCs (heart palpitations) were fucking terrible all night. I had near constant thumping in my chest. I felt like I was having an unending panic attack without the panic. Then the boys were jumping, kicking, rolling nonstop. Maybe they do that all night and I don’t notice it because I’m asleep, but hooked up to the monitor (which for some dumb reason, the volume was turned up in my room) every kick was THUD, BOOM, THRASH loud as hell. I could hear their heartbeats all night too, which at first was reassuring and then annoying, as they’d invariably wander away from where the monitor was strapped so that you then suddenly couldn’t hear their hearts. Hearing the steady heartbeats of your babies stop is not something to fall asleep by.

    To bargain my way out of the IV, I drank that entire pitcher of water. So I had to pee every hour on the half hour. All in all I probably slept a total of 20-30 minutes every hour until Alex got there at 10am. Maybe it’s good practice for what’s to come.

    I started contracting again at 6am. The doctor came in the morning and said, “You were so quiet all night I was going to just discharge you! But since it’s starting again I’m going to have the high risk OB/GYN come and take a look at you so we can decide what we need to do.” And I was fine with this. I did not want to go home with intermittent contractions without having every last person of expertise weigh in on the situation. Because that’s how I am.

    7:30 am was change of shift. Alex was not back to the hospital yet but I was starting to really miss him. My new doctor came in and introduced herself and told me they wanted to give me the Steroid shot. “Huh what?” was my response. “But I’m not having preterm labor and I thought you could only give that shot once, and it was better to do it closer to – within a week of – delivery and my fFN test was negative so don’t I have at least two weeks minimum before that would be an issue?”

    The nurse came in with the shot as the doctor was explaining her feelings. “As a mother of a pre-term child myself, let me just say this. It’s the worst thing you’ll ever go through, watching your baby in the NICU. If we give you the shot now, it will definitely help – just in case – you do go into labor within the next week. It will help lung development and help prevent brain bleeds. We can’t at this point guarantee that you won’t go into labor within a week or so. And that doesn’t mean you can’t have another shot later if it doesn’t – it just means that the second may not do as much good, but there are a lot of ways to interpret the data around this. I think this would be the safest thing to do now, but it’s up to you.”

    “But Dr. S____ (the doctor from the night before) said she didn’t think I needed the shot or that I should have it now.”

    “Look, if you get 100 different doctors in here you will get 50 doctors who say do it, and 50 who say don’t. But as someone who’s lived through it, I’m telling you it’s what I would do.”

    “Um…ok…I guess…if you really think I need it.”

    “Do you want to wait to talk to the high-risk doctor first?”

    “Yeah, and I’d like to be able to talk to my husband about it. He’ll be here in a little bit so can we do the shot later?”

    “Sure.”

    Now here’s why that little exchange is so important. See how close I came to getting that shot? I had this chat on almost no sleep. I had become more confident that I was going to be okay until this doctor – nice as she was – came in with her spiel about why this was so important and how despite absolutely no signs of preterm labor and a negative fFN screen, I might even go into labor within a week or so anyway. The nurse was standing there, shot preparation in hand. I was armed only with my groggy recollection of the rationale my other doctor had given me. My anxiety went through the roof. Of course – of course – I wanted to take every precaution I could to protect my babies.

    Luckily, the doctor picked up on my hesitation and didn’t push it – actually gave me an out of talking to another doctor. Otherwise in my state of mind I might have just shown my ass and taken the shot and explained it to Alex when he got there. And that would have been bad, because of this (from Babycenter.com:

    Because the benefits of the steroids are greatest during the first seven days after treatment, it used to be common practice to repeat steroid treatment weekly for women who continued to be at high risk for preterm delivery and were still pregnant after the first treatment. But experts now think the risks of repeated treatments probably outweigh the benefits. They’ve been associated in some studies with decreased fetal growth, suppressed adrenal gland function, and adverse effects on long-term lung development….

    …Another thing to note is that even a single dose of steroids may have some short-term adverse effects on you. Although it doesn’t happen often, corticosteroids can raise your blood sugar to levels that require you to take insulin for a little while even if you don’t have diabetes. If you do have diabetes or gestational diabetes, corticosteroids may require you to increase your insulin dosage.

    I saw the high risk doctor just after Alex got there. I really, really liked her. I actually liked all of the staff – that was one very good thing about the experience. Even the doctor who scared the shit out of me seemed very professional and on top of it. But here’s the rub with that. The high risk doctor again did a bunch of ultrasounds and saw my cervix was totally normal – 3cm long. The babies looked great. No signs of preterm labor. Other than “take it easy” and “watch for these other problems” I was given virtually no take-home instructions or restrictions. “So should I get that steroid shot now?” I asked.

    “Definitely not.”

    Huh. I explained what the other doctor had said, yadda, yadda, yadda. The high risk doc said, “She thought you were 3-4 centimeters dialated, when the chart said your cervix was 3-4 cm long. It was just some miscommunication. I cleared it up with her.”

    Fucking A, man. That was my response to that. In fact, that IS my response to that. Fucking A. A major medical decision almost made on totally wrong information. In more dire circumstances, this is how relatively healthy people die in hospitals.

    Stay vigilant with your healthcare providers, no matter how much you like or trust them. It bears repeating. Even at 7:30 a.m. on no sleep, stay vigilant. More vigilant than I was.

    They were going to let me go home. Oh hooray! Then came the new resident, “We’re going to send you home with a script for Procardia.”

    “Are you sure? Are you going to advise me to check my blood pressure somehow then because my blood pressure dropped a lot last night after I took it and I have no way of checking it at home.”

    “Huh” was her response. “Let me check with the doctor.”

    No, I did NOT go home with a prescription for Procardia. Vigilance.

    Here’s what I went home with: advice.

    • Take it easy this weekend and don’t go back to work until you see your regular Ob/GYN on Tuesday.
    • Track the contractions. If you have a bunch, drink some water and lay down for an hour. If they still get worse, call us right away.
    • If you have any bleeding, spotting, discharge of any kind, call us right away.
    • You’re pregnant with twins, so just get used to the idea of coming here between now and delivery as things come up. It’s not a big deal – it’s expected.
    • NO SEX!

    As we were driving home I asked Alex, “Do you think we caused this to happen because we had sex?”

    “I say it was the Burger King.”

    Whether it was or not, who’s to say. But that’s one whopper I won’t miss.

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