Archive for Baby talk

someone please tell me the insane fear gets better at some point

My first ultrasound is today and I did not sleep well at all last night.  There was much tossing and turning, anxiety and nausea.

If only abject fear and paranoia were pregnancy symptoms, I could be quite sure that the little one is still growing away in there.

I admit, most of my fears are not based on anything other than fear.  I’ve had normal/fast-ish rising betas, no spotting or bleeding, no unusual cramping, but still I’m afraid.

I’m afraid the baby won’t be in my uterus.  Or that there will be something in my uterus but that there won’t be a heartbeat.  Most irrationally, I’m afraid that somehow this is all in my head and that I was never pregnant at all (do women with hysterical pregnancies produce hCG?  on second that, I don’t really want to know).

These were the thoughts that kept me awake last night despite my best efforts to accept that this is out of my hands for now.

Both my mom and Paul will be coming with me today for moral support.  It will either be a happy memory that we will share together or I’ll have the two most comforting people in my life there with me on the worst day of my life.

T-minus six hours and nine minutes and counting.

But who’s counting?

Oh yeah, that would be me.

5w3d

It still hasn’t really sunk in that in 35 weeks there might just be a little one in our home!  It’s still all pretty surreal at this point, especially since I’m not having a ton of obvious pregnancy symptoms.  However, I figured it might be a good time to start tracking the changes in my body, maybe it will help calm me down in a future pregnancy (assuming all goes well with this one).

Weight gain: As of this morning, none.  I weighed 108.6lbs when I got on the scale this morning.  However, I am now 110.8lbs, pretty sure this is just due to bloating.  I think my morning weights are probably going to be more accurate so I’ll probably go off of that going forward.  Normally my weight fluctuates pretty wildly so until I see some significant weight gain (i.e. 5+ lbs) I wouldn’t be surprised if it swings up and down.

Symptoms: I’m definitely getting some pregnancy bo.obs already.  Not to the point where I need a new bra or anything, but I can feel the difference.  Also sore bo.obs and ni.pples but the intensity of this seems to change every day which kind of freaks me out.  I’m pretty exhausted at times but this could also just be lack of sleep.  And I’m having really vivid, crazy dreams, mostly ones that would probably be considered nightmares or at least not pleasant.  I’m very bloated all the time (at times it looks like I already have a baby bump – like right now!) and gassy some of the time.  I have had a bit of nausea and the feeling like I’m going to gag in the mornings, but that was something that tended to happen long before I got pregnant so it’s really hard for me to attribute that to morning sickness.  I think it’s mainly because I don’t eat enough for dinner and get overly hungry by the time I wake up.  Not much cramping-wise, I do have little twinges, almost like a pinching feeling, it happens on both sides and sometimes in the middle.  I also had a bit of a bloody nose last week and also, er, a little flare up with hemorrhoids which caused a bit of a panic one morning last week (until Paul asked me to check where the blood was coming from before I started weeping).  (Yes I have an issue with hemmorhoids ever since my medication didn’t agree with me during my last flare, super sexy I know, but that is why we have a washlet now).  As I’ve mentioned before, perhaps the oddest symptom I have is how not achey my joints feel despite the fact that I haven’t been sleeping much – normally if I don’t get at least 7hrs per night I pay for it with swollen or painful joints the next day, but I’ve only been getting maybe 5-6hrs a lot of nights these past couple weeks and almost no joint pain to speak of.  Maybe I should have done this whole pregnancy thing sooner, eh?

Cravings: This baby definitely takes after it’s daddy.  Normally I enjoy my sweets but in the past week or so sweets have not sounded very appealing to me at all.  I want salty, spicy and sour.  Yum.

Questions: I’m having the first of three visits I’ve scheduled with three different OB offices this Friday and I’m afraid of having the pap smear done.  I know that for the most part the medical field does not think there’s a connection between pap smears and miscarriage but the idea of bleeding and cramping afterwards, even if it’s considered “normal” is just too much to bear.  I don’t think I can mentally make it through something like that and so I’m seriously considering turning it down.  The problem is I haven’t had one since August 2010 so it has been almost two years and I should be getting one.  But, from what I’ve read, even if it comes up abnormal nothing will be done to treat it while I’m pregnant anyway, so I think I would rather just have it done after the baby is born.  Thoughts?

for Paul

I wanted to do something special for Paul’s first Father’s Day.

But since at this point all we have are three betas indicating there should be a baby growing in there, I’m just not mentally in a place yet where I feel confident enough to buy anything that will leave us with a tangible reminder of what could have been, should this not work out. I know that this probably isn’t the right attitude to have and that I need to be strong and hopeful for the little one growing inside of me – and most of the time I am, but the idea of having any baby stuff in the house right now just feels like I’m taking the future for granted. Maybe once we see the heartbeat this will change, but our first ultrasound is still over a week away.

So instead, I’m writing. Writing about this amazing man that is my husband, and who has now become the father of my child (and with any luck, children). Hopefully next year we will be celebrating this day with a wriggly, chubby-cheeked four-month old in our arms.

While I have tons of doubts about what kind of mother I’ll be, there is no question in my mind that Paul will be an incredible father. I know this because of the way he has loved and taken care of me through some of the most difficult times in my life. I know this because being with him has made me want to be a better person, a person that deserves to be with someone so strong and so good inside.

A long time ago, not long after we first started dating, he told me that he knew he loved me because he woke up every morning and the first thing he felt was lucky. I can honestly say that eight years later (exactly eight years tomorrow actually), I wake up every single morning and am simply amazed that this man chose to love me. Every morning before I get out of bed, I kiss him on the forehead and think about the fact that I am the luckiest woman alive to have him by my side.

I didn’t know this kind of love could exist before I met Paul.

Throughout the struggle towards pregnancy, the thing that hurt the most was the thought that I might never be able to carry the child that would be a little tiny reflection of this man who deserved more than anyone else I know to have his wonderfulness passed on. It wasn’t the loss of my own genetics that hurt, it was the potential loss of his.

It hurt me to know that after all he had given to me, everything he had done to take care of me and nurture me, my body could deny him something I knew he wanted very badly, a biological child.

(This isn’t to say that he isn’t also equally excited at the idea of children who come to us through adoption some day, because he has made it absolutely clear that he is, but as I’ve written before, I think it’s totally normal to want both.)

I could give you a laundry list of all the ways I know Paul will be a great dad, from how he never complains about waking up at 4:30am to drop me off at work to how he willingly wipes and washes my obese cat’s poopy behind, but I think (hope) there will be plenty of time in the future to write about what a wonderful father he is to our baby. For today, I’ll just say that I’m so thankful for the opportunity to make him a dad.

through the looking glass (with any luck, anyway)

When I first stumbled into the IF world, there was a lot about it that I didn’t really get.

And, really, how could I?

I was a couple years out of college, not ready for children, but since I had been diagnosed with lupus I was vaguely aware of the fact that my road to babies would probably not be an easy one.

I was drawn to the IF world but again, I didn’t exactly get everything about it.

One of the things that confused me the most was how bitter and angry a lot of these bloggers seemed to feel towards “preggos” and “fertiles.”  I remember reading angry rants about pregnancy announcements or the “expectant mother’s” parking spaces or the general cluelessness of the fertile world and not getting it.

It seemed like such misdirected anger to me, after all, someone else having a baby didn’t affect these women and their own chances at reproducing.

I admit it, I judged them for it a little bit.  And I remember thinking things like, that will never be me.  I’ll never be like that.

And I wasn’t.  At least, not at first.  When babies first started seriously crossing my mind four years ago, I was still overjoyed at every pregnancy announcement, happy to coo over newborn babies, didn’t bat an eye at that lady sporting a big ol’ bump.

I had a lot of hope for myself.  I believed that I would get off the Cellcept and in a couple years Paul and I would be starting our family.  It never even crossed my mind that things might not go according to plan.

And then of course, just as I was getting so close to the finish line, I had the worst flare of my life to date and boom, suddenly the future had turned into a murky mess of confusion.  My carefully constructed plan felt like it had been blown to pieces.

I’ll never forget sitting in my nephro’s office, the one who had been so hopeful about my chances for pregnancy a few months earlier, and hearing him say the words, “You hate to tell a woman so young that she probably shouldn’t ever get pregnant, but…”

He never finished the sentence.  He didn’t have to.  I remember the tears that filled my eyes and how I tried to hold them back.

That flare was what broke me.  It catapulted me into a place where suddenly I understood.  I understood the bitterness.  The anger.  The revulsion at seeing someone else’s impending happiness.  It wasn’t about those preggos, those fertiles, those baby bumps.  It was about the reminder.  The reminder of what might never be.  The reminder of what would never come so easily.  The anger at how the rest of the world seemed to take it all for granted.

A moment I’m still ashamed of now, two years later, was when I saw this girl I went to college with at this weekly food-truck event.  I was still recovering from my flare.  I was bloated from the steroids and all the water-retention from my broken kidneys.  I looked pregnant.  And she actually was pregnant.  Like about to give birth any minute pregnant.

I wasn’t even sure it was her at first, she was extremely pregnant and wasn’t one of those women who only gained it in the belly if you know what I mean.  She saw me too, but she probably wasn’t sure it was me either as I was carrying about forty pounds more than the last time she saw me in college.  But as we snuck glances at each other I became more and more sure it was her and the fact that she kept looking at me made me think she was thinking the same thing. (I would later find out through mutual friends that she had indeed moved to the bay area and had a baby, so yes, it was definitely her).

So I hid.  I literally ran away.  I could not bear the thought of saying hello to her.  I couldn’t look at her pregnant belly.  All I could think about was the fact that she had what I wanted, what I might never have.

We weren’t the closest of friends as evidenced by the fact that we drifted completely apart after college, but we were friendly and in the same circle.  And I should have said hello.  And I should have congratulated her.  But all I could do was feel sorry for myself.  Feel angry that I looked six-months pregnant but all I was carrying was water in my belly and she clearly had a baby in hers.  It wasn’t her fault, but I didn’t know who else to blame.

I don’t really know what the point of this post is.  I guess, it’s something that’s been on my mind since I found out I was pregnant.  I know there are people in my life who are still struggling with the pain of infertility and loss.  There is at least one person in my family who I love very much who I’m afraid will be hurt if this pregnancy sticks.  Not that she won’t be happy for me, but just that it will be yet another reminder of the unfair hand she has been dealt so far.

And I hate that, I really do.  I hate that there’s nothing I can do about it.

All I can do is try my best to be sensitive about this.  So if things continue to go well, there will be no real-time FB updating of this pregnancy.  No announcement, no ultrasound photos.  Nothing that might inadvertently hurt people I care about who are already feeling enough pain.

As happy and overjoyed I am about being pregnant, I can’t forget how awful it is on the other side of this.  And if I get my happiness, the least I can do is try my best to make it a little less hard for someone else.

(I feel the need to add the caveat that this blog is like my journal and so I do plan on chronicling everything here.  I don’t think many people in the IF community read this anyway, in fact, I think I probably come here more than any other visitor does, so I feel okay about continuing to post.)

specialists vs normal people doctors

First, the good news, my beta at 4w5d was 5,043!  The nurse seemed quite happy with it so I’m going to take that and run with it for now.  She even said that they’d be able to prove to me soon that there really is a baby growing in there hehe.

And now the annoying stuff.  I’ve been on a quest to find a regular OB and I’m so frustrated by dealing with office staff that is only used to dealing with “normal” people.  They don’t seem to understand what “high risk” means and since this is my first pregnancy, I really don’t know what it means either, but I do know it means that I should not be getting my first u/s at 12 weeks.

I was specifically told by my high risk ob that I should be getting u/s quite frequently, if not at every visit.  I was also told there would be more labs done and more frequent visits than in a “normal” pregnancy.

Well the staff at all these “normal” people offices don’t seem to get that at all.  They keep telling me that as long as there are no obvious complications (i.e. bleeding, cramping, etc.) that they believe I’ll be treated the same and on the same schedule as any other patient.

Um, no.

That is not going to fly.

Then they ask me things like why I’m high risk and clearly have zero clue what lupus nephritis is and why it would make me a high risk patient.

I just don’t want to deal with these doctors for “normal” people.  I like the safety of my specialists who actually know what lupus is and what the risks are.  I don’t know if I can trust a “normal” OB who I will probably have to educate on my condition.  I mean, seriously?  What is the point of seeing a doctor who you have to teach about your medical condition?

I love my high risk ob so much and am so upset that he can’t be my sole provider through this.  I have a feeling that every visit with the “normal” OB is going to be needlessly stressful and frustrating.

I hope I’m wrong, but I just can’t see this going any differently.

the crazy

So…I’ve pretty much gone into full on anxious-crazy-pregnant-lady mode.

As in, constantly obsessing over whether or not I actually am still pregnant.

Today’s reason du jour, my b.oobs are not quite as sore as they have been.  It is my only real, for sure, pregnancy symptom and I have been poking at the girls all day and they aren’t quite as angry as yesterday.

Cue minor emotional meltdown.  I called my nephro’s office this morning because the high risk ob is out of town and I figured that meant I can’t get another beta from him, I waited all day until I couldn’t wait any longer and called back to see if the receptionist had gotten him my desperate pleading message to order another beta.  She was really sweet and finally got ahold of him and he asked why I didn’t just call the ob’s office because his staff should be able to call in the order even if he was away.  So I did and the nurse was like, “Sure of course.”

So I could have saved myself the angst of waiting all day to find out whether or not they’d let me get another test.

Oh well.

Right when I got home from work I headed straight for the car and the hospital.  Even before I had my blood drawn, my mind was already racing with thoughts like, “What if it JUST started falling?  How will I know unless I get another test after this one?”

Hi, my name is Joyce and I’m addicted to pregnancy tests.  Pee sticks, blood tests, ultrasound, whatever, just someone reassure me I’m still pregnant pls ok thx.

I’m very torn as to whether or not I want to have morning sickness.  On the one hand, it kind of makes sense that I don’t since my mom said she never had it with either me or my sister.  I’m assuming things like that are somewhat hereditary so if she never had it, it’s reasonable to assume that I might not either.  Since I have a horrible appetite to begin with and feel nausea all the time under normal circumstances, the fact that I’ve actually felt better since getting pregnant could mean that NOT having morning sickness actually is my symptom?  And if I did get morning sickness I would probably not be able to eat anything at all since I already have no appetite to begin with (normally).

But this whole lack of symptoms thing is really pretty disconcerting too.  It’s too early for me to feel the baby move, we haven’t even had an ultrasound yet, and all the other “symptoms” are things that are kind of normal for me anyway.  Like being tired (I also haven’t been sleeping so hard to attribute that to being pregnant), breaking out (something I never did as a teenager but have been having issues with over the past year or so), stuffy nose, bloated and peeing a lot.

Okay.  I really need to stop now.  This can’t be healthy.  I need to let go of this because if anything bad is happening right now inside of me, I can’t really do much to stop it, can I?

I just have to believe in my body.  Obviously given my past this is VERY hard to do, but Paul pointed something out to me yesterday.  Despite all the shit my body has put me through over the past eight years, it has done something right recently.  It got pregnant very quickly.  And so I need to give it a break and just hope that it keeps doing right.

embracing joy

This morning Paul and I went to church for the first time in several weeks.  I’ve been finding excuses to miss for the past few weeks so I made a point of us going to the earliest service this morning so that I would have less time to talk myself out of it.

As always, I was so glad that we went because it was a message I know God meant for me to hear, now, when I need it the most.

It was the second week of a new series called confidere: Advancing with Faith and today’s message in particular was about embracing the joy of life and how this was illustrated in Jesus’ first miracle (turning water into wine at a wedding feast).

Ever since I saw that faint second line last Monday, I have been wondering, how much joy should I allow myself to feel?  How happy can I be about this?  I have been doing a lot of hedging, never wanting to talk about “when” we have a baby, but still “if.”  My friend EndoJourney actually wrote an amazing post about this recently which really hit home with me even though her road so far has been a million times harder than mine (luckily she is also one of the strongest people I know).

When you have had things go wrong, when the road to joy has been difficult and when you are well aware of exactly how quickly it can all be taken away from you sometimes it seems impossible to celebrate the moment.

But after this morning, I’m convinced that that is exactly what God wants me to do.

Here are the notes I took:

  1. It [the miracle] happened at a wedding feast (a celebration). The way of Jesus was a happy way.  Jesus was comfortable with celebration. Jesus models for us an essential joy and a way to celebrate.  People feel comfortable around him and he had a love of life that was contagious.
  2. It was the result of a request that could be viewed as frivolous. It reminds us that we cannot put Jesus into a box.  Jesus embraced all aspects of life even as he came to give his life.  As long as we live our life with humility and for God, we should seek to enjoy the gifts of life.  Jesus did not see the unfairness of life as a justification for pulling away from celebrating the gifts of life.
  3. It was an answer to a request from someone He loved that was made for the benefit of another.  We’re given permission to ask for blessing even when it is not an earth-shattering request.
What does it mean to live a spiritually integral happy and joyful life?  There will be times the Lord asks us to pull back, but there are also times He will ask us to do things more joyfully.

 

To me the message was clear, no matter what happens tomorrow, God is asking me to celebrate today and each day I am blessed with this little life that grows inside me.

And if that wasn’t clear enough, as we sang the final song “Our God” by Chris Tomlin, I received a phone call followed by a voicemail which I checked as we walked down the street to our car.  It was my high-risk OB calling with the results of my second beta on Friday.

552 (doubling time of ~26 hrs, “normal” is 48hrs)

I admit, despite the sermon I had just taken in, my first reaction was mixed (so what’s new?), because I know I’ve read that betas that rises too fast can be bad in rare cases.  Luckily I called the doctor’s office and the answering service paged him and he called me right back to let me know in his mind this was an absolutely great number and he didn’t think there was anything to worry about it.

So today, I am celebrating the fact that I am four weeks and two days pregnant and that so far things appear to be going about as smoothly as I could have ever hoped.

Our God is greater
Our God is stronger
God You are higher than any other
Our God is healer
Awesome in power
Our God, our God

43

My doctor kept me in suspense until almost 11am, but in the end I didn’t care because…I’m pregnant!  hCG was 43 at 9dpo which my doctor said is consistent with being 3-4 weeks pregnant (by my calculations I am 3w3d). 

I was a bit confused at first because I thought 10dpo meant I was 1w3d, luckily Dr. Google cleared up the confusion by explaining that the two weeks before ovulation are actually counted towards the length of the pregnancy.  (Apparently I either wasn’t paying attention during s.ex ed or it needs to not be taught by the gym teacher in order to be effective).

I also found out I will be seeing four doctors for the duration of this pregnancy and not three because my high risk OB is not a “full-service” OB.  So now I have the added fun of trying to find a regular OB asap.  But again, I don’t care because I’m pregnant!  I’ll do whatever I have to do to keep this little one growing and healthy.

Right now I’m feeling a lot of things, the overriding emotions being joy and gratitude.  I don’t know how we got so lucky, the hubs is still in a bit of shock, “We really did it on the first try?” he asked me after I told him the number.  I guess those faint lines were not real to him but the blood results made it real.  He is pretty proud of himself, as well he should be!

Unfortunately, there is also a lot of fear and nervousness lurking in the shadows.  What if it doesn’t end up sticking?  What if my heart gets broken?  I have seen so many women in the blogosphere (and some in real life) go through so much pain, I’m not naive to the fact that anything could still happen.  But during those months I prepared my body for pregnancy, I also promised myself that I would cherish each and every single day that God allows me to be pregnant and not let the fear ruin this gift.  I’m determined to keep this promise.

I’m also feeling…a bit…guilty?  This kind of goes back to why I never really dove headfirst into the IF community even though I’ve lurked for years.  I have struggled and fought and clawed and scratched my way towards pregnancy, but my fight has been to be able to TTC, not to actually get pregnant.  And (at least so far – knock on wood) it seems that isn’t an issue for me.  We got a positive on the first natural cycle of my life.  It makes me feel like that person people in the IF community hate and part of me feels guilty that it came so easily.  I have to remind myself (as Hillary was kind enough to do!) that it was not easy, not at all.  It is for sure a huge blessing that I got pregnant quickly and I’m NOT one of those clueless fertiles that takes that for granted.

So hopefully those negative feeling resolve soon because I want this pregnancy to be all about the first two emotions I mentioned: joy and gratitude.

Symptom-wise, my bo.obs are starting to get a teensy bit sore and I’ve been super gassy and bloated.  Of course those are signs of PMS too so it’s hard to take too much comfort in them.

Last night was the first night in literally years that I did not take a sleeping pill to help me fall asleep and it was pretty awful.  I think I managed to get a couple of hours of sleep total, but now that I know there is something growing in there I’m just not willing to risk it.  I’m hoping that the “super tired” pregnancy feeling I keep hearing about will kick in and allow me to get a good night’s sleep without the pills soon.

I’m seeing my high-risk OB on Friday.  Not sure what they will be doing since I asked and he won’t be doing a pap or an ultrasound (too early to see anything they said).  At least, I’ll be able to get another beta I guess.

I still can’t believe this is happening.  I’m pregnant!

Still there

Another test with FMU – the line is still there and less eye-strainingly faint!!! Calling doc as soon as they open…

don’t know how i’m going to sleep tonight

So, Dr. Kidney went ahead and ordered bloodwork for me but since it was so late in the day we won’t have the results until tomorrow.

🙁

On the bright side, my blood pressure was excellent, my urine had very little protein in it and my complements were stable.  My doctor even said that if I am pregnant that could be a reason that my bp seems lower than usual.  Interesting.

On the way home I was seriously considering stopping at Wal.greens to buy every single brand of pregnancy test I could get my hands on.  I saved the cup of pee (gross, I know) so I figured I could dip each one in it and see if any others showed positive results.  I called Paul and he said that I was nuts and just to wait for the bloodwork to come back so I drove home.

But once I got home, I really felt like I needed to test at least one more time to make sure it wasn’t just a defective test, so I ripped open a second FRER from the same box and boom, another extremely faint, am-I-crazy-or-is-that-a-line line.  Paul confirmed that he saw something but he was still pretty skeptical despite my insistence that any line is supposed to be a positive.

I thought that second test would put my mind at ease, but no, suddenly my mind started jumping to the fact that maybe the entire box of tests was defective.  I decided I needed to use a test from another box and Paul really thought I was crazy but indulged me and drove me to Wal.greens so we could buy another box of FRERs.

I got home, ripped the box open and dunked away.  Three minutes later, there it was.  Another ever so faint line.  Paul was still not sure it meant anything.  He asked why I didn’t let him see the test window before I tested so he could be sure he was really seeing something.  I didn’t have a good answer, other than, shall I rip open another test?  He said no.

But I feel fairly confident that I’ve stared hard enough at enough negative tests over the past few years that there was definitely something.

I seriously can’t believe this is happening but I don’t want to get too far ahead of myself.  It’s early and unfortunately I’ve been lurking in the IF blogosphere for long enough to know that seeing a positive doesn’t necessarily lead to a happy outcome.

Earlier when I said I didn’t have any symptoms, I guess that isn’t necessarily true.  Strangely enough what convinced me to test today was the rain.  Normally when it is about to rain I know ahead of time because I feel queasy and my joints ache.  So when I went to go get lunch today and was greeted by a surprise downpour it made me wonder.  I read (because yes, I googled the crap out of “early pregnancy symptoms”) that there is something called early pregnancy factor which is produced after fertilization and that this EPF suppresses the immune system.  Could it be that my lupus wasn’t acting up in the rain because of the EPF?  That’s what I’m hoping anyway.

My doctor’s office opens at 9am and according to my lab they should have the results first thing.  Fingers crossed and praying that this is it!