Saturday, January 25, 2014

♥ 15 weeks ♥


It's Saturday again, and another week is gone. We will be leaving for our belated honeymoon in three weeks, and when we return, we'll be just one week short of halfway through this pregnancy. It's hard for me to fathom how quickly time has been passing, and so I'm already a little anxious about Baby reaching teenagedom and suddenly deciding we're the least cool, most terrible people on the planet. I might be getting a little bit ahead of myself...

This past week had its ups and downs. Every morning, I'd crawl out of bed, get hit with a sudden bout of nausea, and after I'd stared at the toilet seat for what felt like hours and all of the acid had drained from my pitiful stomach, I'd go eat some breakfast and not get sick for the rest of the day. Usually, one or both of the cats would join me, although I suspect their motive wasn't to comfort but rather to remind me that they, too, needed food. Yesterday was the first day in a long time that I spent my lunch break doing something other than sleeping. In fact, I cleaned the upstairs bathroom and tidied up our living room, which I haven't had the stamina to do in awhile.

I'm getting anxious to feel our little one move around. There's been a lot of random instances of pressure against my lower abdomen, which I think is probably the growing/stretching uterus, but it's fun to imagine that Baby is doing somersaults or playing the air guitar rambunctiously in there. Maybe the walls are like a trampoline, and he/she is just having a blast bouncing back and forth, boingboingboing...

In terms of size, he or she is approximately four inches long and weighs 2.5 ounces. If you're big on fruit representation, we're looking at an apple-sized Baby right now. Now, I think I'll be going to drink some apple juice and switch the load of laundry.

Saturday, January 18, 2014

14 weeks!

My bump is starting to get a little more defined! I was concerned because I've been losing weight since the pregnancy began, but I weighed in at 132 this morning, which compared to the 130 I'd been earlier this week sounded pretty good.
Around 11am yesterday, I started getting very severe mid-to-upper back pain, which I thought was caused by the bad sitting position I'd been in all week for work... but by last night, it was so bad that in order for me to move, I had to have someone lift my torso up from the couch/bed. Bathroom runs were not a good time. This morning, it had gotten even worse, and I woke up at 7am with no ability to roll out of bed on my own, so I called my doctor's office, and the doctor on call told me to go to the hospital's labor and delivery unit for a urine sample in case it's kidney stones or a kidney infection. He assumed it was muscle spasms, though. I called the hospital, and they said I could just go to the ER, which isn't something I want to do again anytime in the near future after two visits in the last few months, so I decided to wait it out and see if it worsened. I slept for a few more hours and as of right now, my pain has eased a lot, and I'm able to stand up straight/sit down without too much discomfort. I just hope this isn't a recurring thing.

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

4 months of marriage + 3 months of pregnancy


Today marks 4 months since I walked out of Kingwood mansion, fumbled down a couple of flights of steps in a very long gown, and married my best friend. It's also been just over 3 months since our pregnancy began, which is not the way we would have imagined our first year of marriage to go, but honestly, I don't believe that either of us would have it any other way. What I'm learning is that life has a lot of unexpected turns, and when it comes down to it, whether you find out about them while you're on your lunch break in the Kroger restroom or not, you simply have to accept that your own plans aren't ever going to be be the final say in any matter. And if you don't want to find out you're expecting two months into your new marriage, use birth control pills. If you're not taking precautions against conceiving a child, chances are you may just be a little hopeful that you will. I can't say it upsets me that I'll only be 39 when this little one becomes a legal adult. I won't say "moves out," because we just never know what the situation is going to be, but -- perhaps that, too?

Last night, I experienced sleeplessness between the hours of 2:20-5:00. For whatever reason, I started thinking about words that I like, because I read in some book or other that a good way to figure out baby names is to take a word you like, then find names that sound similar. Around 3:30 or so, I woke up Felipe to inform him that the word "diatribe" really appeals to me, and could he please help me find a similar name? He breathed angrily, sort of like a mad bull, then mumbled something about "Guyashribe." Around that point, he flipped around in bed so that his feet were next to my face, which I suppose meant he didn't understand the importance of rhymes at such an early hour. Some time after that, I woke him again to wish him a happy monthsaversary and to remind him that we used to be fun, young people who would do crazy things like go to a diner and eat breakfast in the middle of the night. He growled about how we used to do that at 11pm or midnight, and not when we had work in the morning. (He'll probably tell you he got no sleep himself, but that's not true at all. I only jostled him awake for things of the utmost importance.)

Monday, January 13, 2014

Baby's sex

Last night, as usual on a lazy Sunday evening, Felipe and I were lounging about in our living area. I was in one of my less hormonal moods, moving between cooking dinner and watching something on Netflix, when he asked me something -- a question I won't quote, since I'm not sure exactly how it was worded -- about whether I thought I'd start crying when the baby was delivered. After making a comment about how I'd be crying for joy once the agony of labor had ended, I realized that I hadn't really put much thought into how I'd feel in that moment at all, other than ripped apart and bloody and regretting intensely my decision to refuse pain medicine from those kind souls who'd so generously offered it. I'd thought about how badly I want my baby to successfully latch, to begin the bond of breastfeeding between mother and child that I've spent the last months reading about and praying for success in. But that moment, the one in which baby separates forever from my womb and becomes its own, semi-independent person, with a social security number and an overwhelming weight of societal expectations placed upon on his or her shoulders? I guess it hadn't really occurred to me what I would feel, but in the back of my mind, I was pretty sure I wouldn't cry. Maybe it's Fergie's fault, with her insistence that big girls don't cry, but I have viewed my own tears as a source of shame for quite some time now, even to the point of masking them with excuses: allergies, spicy foods, or anything at all besides emotions. Which isn't what I want my children to believe, regardless of their sex, and suddenly, I was spiraling hard into a pit of worry that this all could only mean one thing. I'm a bad mother.

So this morning, as I was laying miserably on our sofa after throwing up multiple attempts at breakfast (forget what I say about nausea ending; I don't believe it ever does), I had forgotten all about the event aforementioned. I picked up my phone to see what was new in the pregnancy apps. Lo and behold, there was a post that said, simply,
"gender at birth?
Anyone else waiting tell birth to get the gender"
Despite the poster's lack of punctuation, I was intrigued. I clicked on the subject line and began reading the responses of women who have made the decision to wait for their babies to announce their sex. (And no, I don't agree that 'gender' and 'sex' are synonyms, but I understand that a lot of people do use them interchangeably.) Maybe it was because of my empty stomach, or my hormonal daze, but I suddenly saw so clearly that this is what I've been missing out on. Ever since we found out we were expecting, we've been talking and receiving questions about finding out baby's sex and when we will be able to do so. I read somewhere that over 80% of parents choose to find out via ultrasound, not birth, though I'm not sure how accurate that statistic is, since many people obviously don't have the option for a pre-labor sex scan.

You got it: we have decided to wait until birth to find out this baby's sex. I know not everyone feels the same way, but here is a list of reasons I have for this decision:
  1. I cried, quite pathetically, when I imagined that final push and hearing my husband's voice announcing to me whether we have a son or a daughter. And I imagine I'll cry, quite happily, when it's really happening.
  2. Labor is extremely scary for me, but when I imagine the outcome as not just holding our precious miracle for the first time, but also knowing that such exciting news will be waiting for us, I feel a whole lot less afraid and way more determined.
  3. Regardless of this baby's sex, we probably want to have more children in the future, and buying an array of things that are designed for that specific "kind" of baby would be tempting if we found out pre-labor. This way, we'll have lots of unisex items that can be recycled for the future.
  4. There are a lot of gender expectations that we wouldn't want our children to be subjected to while they're still trying to develop into fully-formed human beings, and can't even cry audibly to express their disagreement.

Thursday, January 9, 2014

Staying inside, dreaming, and collecting baby items

Since Sunday, I’ve only left the house once. I had a fall walking – or attempting to walk, rather – to the mailbox a couple of weeks ago, and even though I only suffered a mild concussion, I’ve been wary of going out in this cold, icy weather at all. There was a time when being cooped up indoors for this long would have suffocated me, but maybe due to the pregnancy, I’ve just been thankful for the consistent temperature in our home. I’ve been really trying to take it one day at a time and not make many plans, since they have a tendency to stress me out when I’m looking ahead at them, especially since I never know when I’ll have a sudden spell of nausea or just want to go into hibernation.

Speaking of hibernation, I dreamed I was a bear last night, and I curled up for a six month nap to wait for Baby to arrive. I also had several less cozy dreams, but I won’t go into those – vivid dreaming is definitely one of my prominent symptoms, and it started a few days before I even took the pregnancy test.

We haven’t bought much for Baby yet, but I thought I’d mention the fun items we have purchased/received so far:


1. Love You Forever was a very special Christmas gift from my cousin Nicole and her boyfriend, Matt, as her mom read it to her every night when she was a child.

2. No picture to illustrate, but my mother-in-law and sister-in-law sewed us three beautiful burp cloths with fabric cut outs of elephants, since we've chosen elephants to be our child's favorite animal. (Or at least the theme of their first bedroom.)

3. The Vera Bradley Happy Snails Baby Bag, which I bought with gift money from my in laws after Christmas. I love it! A little on the "girly" side, but I'm sure if we have a baby boy, he won't notice/mind. I watched several reviews of it before purchasing, and I saw several positive ones with mothers who cloth diaper, showing how many stuffed all-in-ones they could shove in there with cloth wipes and homemade wipe spray. It just seemed like the perfect choice, so now it's sitting atop the china cabinet, waiting to be used.
4. Another Vera Bradley item, my mother-in-law put this adorable bunny blanket friend in my stocking for Christmas. It's anxious to be covered in Baby's spit up!

5. A few onesies and newborn outfits from Goodwill, where I discovered people discard their never-worn newborn clothes (a common phenomenon, I'm realizing!) for thrifty people to scoop them up for spare change. I shared this with my mom, and she has her own stash of freshly washed, like-new clothes waiting for Baby to stain up upon arrival.

 6. Though not intended for this particular baby, Felipe gave me this Little Miss Austen version of Pride and Prejudice before our wedding, because I'd seen it at Barnes & Noble and fallen in love. I'd stashed it away thinking it would be several years before anyone could chew on its pages, but turns out we'll have a use for it soon enough!

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

Concluding the first trimester.



This morning, I had an 8:45 appointment with Dr. Subit at Women’s Care. Since I didn’t have to get the pap test, it was very quick, and I was all dressed again and ready to go by 8:57. They took a urine sample when I first arrived, then the nurse took my blood pressure and I waited for the doctor to come in. He showed up pretty quickly, and after our introductions, his first question was whether I wanted a boy or a girl. I laughed and said, “Well, I’m supposed to want a ‘healthy baby,’ but I wouldn’t mind if it were a healthy baby ____.” We’ll leave that blank in case baby reads this someday and isn’t the sex I mentioned, in order to avoid hurt feelings, but those of you who know me can probably guess what was said. Of course we’ll be happy regardless of the outcome. We listened to baby’s heart beat for a bit (160 beats per minute!), and he did a vaginal culture swab. He asked if I had any questions, and I mentioned that every book I’ve read says we pregnant ladies need to sleep on our left side, so I wondered if this was true/when I would need to start doing so. His response was that no studies have actually shown any particular sleeping position to be better than another, but sleeping on the back/stomach later on in pregnancy, once I’ve blown up like a balloon, could cause discomfort or increase swelling during the night.

My next appointment is in four weeks, and I'll be seeing another doctor then, as a nurse recommended I meet all of them since there's no guarantee as to which one will deliver Baby. I'm not sure exactly what will take place during that visit, since I've opted out of the majority of tests they do, and the next thing on my list is for an ultrasound at 19-23 weeks.

Can we just skip all the icky stuff and get straight to holding that precious baby in our arms?

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

Holiday overview

Christmas Eve was spent with my mom's side of the family, where we had a delicious meal, exchanged gifts, then watched Christmas Vacation until we were too tired to stay any longer.


We spent Christmas morning at my parents', late morning/early afternoon at Felipe's parents' and the Kowalkas' home, then had the workers over for dinner. There are no pictures of any of those events, probably because Patrick wasn't around to create a G+ event and make us all join party mode so that photos are auto-uploaded (so convenient!).

On the day after the day after Christmas, Felipe took to me our favorite Woosterian restaurant, Broken Rocks Cafe.

We had a meal with Felipe's side of the family on New Year's Day, and I beat everyone at Balderdash (no big deal), then we went to my grandma's house. During the visit, we chipped in to help my mom finish hand quilting the quilt she's making for me and Felipe (and, if you remember that long ago, the one I started while living at my old apartment and never finished).
I paused from quilting to watch a very detailed video of a natural birth with Driana and Aunt Lisa. As you can see, I'm feeling very brave about it:
 And to celebrate 2014, Kennedy ate a peach with a movie playing in the background.

Saturday, January 4, 2014

12 weeks!


Morning sickness has mostly subsided now, and I'm so much less fatigued. I had my second doctor's appointment yesterday, but with a different doctor's office, as neither Felipe nor I had been very satisfied with the care provided by Dr. Meda at Samaritan Women's Care. During our first visit, she was dismissive of questions, brief, and not thorough at all. I contacted Women's Care in Mansfield and set up an appointment to pick up where we'd left off with Samaritan, and wow, I was impressed. The first step was to talk with the person who handles insurance, and she carefully went over all of the costs and their processes, making sure I knew everything there possibly was to know and seeing if I had any questions. After getting blood drawn by the nicest nurse who didn't leave the tourniquet on my arm for several hours, I was allowed to remove my coat and boots when getting weighed at this appointment, bringing my weight down to 133 from the whopping 145 it had been at my previous appointment. The nurse at Samaritan was in a rush and told me to leave my boots on when I attempted to do otherwise, because it "didn't make that much of a difference, anyway." Accuracy is not their fine point, I guess.

The appointment ended with a 30-45 minute conversation with a nurse about each of the appointments I will have between now and birth, what tests are optional and which are necessary, and some description of the birthing process at MedCentral. One of the reasons I had felt so strongly about switching doctors was a phone call with Dr. Meda's office in which I requested to opt out of the pap test and was told, "you have to have it." When I asked exactly what that meant, I was transferred to a nurse who advised, "Good luck finding someone who won't make you get the test." I cancelled my next Samaritan appointment and decided that even if I was required to have the test, I'd rather have it in an environment where I felt comfortable and respected. Funnily, I hadn't even told this nurse about that issue, and she looked at the paperwork, remarked, "Oh, you're only 20, we don't do pap tests on anyone under 21," and crossed it off the list. When I got home, I Googled "pap test under 21" and found an enormous number of articles on major news sites saying studies have indicated that it is unnecessary and even unwise to test on women before they're 21. In addition, an ABC news article stated, "But they’ve  found that testing every three years prevented just as many cervical cancer deaths as testing every year. But  the annual testing brought on false-positives, unnecessary biopsies, which bring a risk of infection, pregnancy complications and infertility, and, of course, unnecessary stress." I had my last test about a year and a half ago.

I think my husband is getting hungry, so I'd better go help with that, and I promised a trip to the library today :) Hopefully I'll get better at updating regularly.