Archive for the 'concerns during pregnancy' Category

blue through and through…

November 20, 2009

The cursor blinks and blinks on the page, like eyes that open and shut, waiting for something to change or appear or disappear.  I’m looking for words, wondering where my words have gone.  Oh, sure, if I lift the six piles of laundry there’ll be a few, and maybe some under the half eaten grapes and playing cards scattered on the floor, Jack of Spades’ face half chewed through.  Moustache stuck to my girl’s chin, her devilish grin growing as she stomps around the house with nothing but a dirty t-shirt (from one of the piles) draped over her head like a swami.  I want to ask her to tell my fortune, what our future holds.  I am stuck between knowing I ought to be present for what IS and wanting to push fast forward on this life, hoping that what’s ahead will offer more comfort, more ease, more grace. If I were brave enough I’d tell you that my words have gone into a deep state of arrest.  Too little time, too few moments of all-out joy.  WHy would I document the hollow and heavy blueness I feel?

I know a wise woman who used to say “you gotta go through it to get to it.”  Ironically, her nickname is MOMS.  It’s a weird place, this blah, mehh, shoulder-shrugging, uninspired place.   A crossroads between utter loneliness and chosen social hibernation.  The feeling that I have nothing to offer, that I am- gasp- boring.  How do you go through that?  And what will be on the other side?  What exactly will I be getting to?

Rob assures me that it’s just hormones.  And the toll of being so ill with the first trimester (now second) nausea hitting me hard.  ANd not getting any sleep.  And caring for a little one that is “ON” almost all day long.  I can only hope he’s right.   I think there could be nothing sadder than not caring much about anything.

I know I need to change my inner vibe.   I know I need to take better self care.  Carve out more time for me to do the things that give me lift.  Even if just a few times a week.

I suspect that’s why there’s not a lot of books out there on parenting with a baby and a toddler.  Who has the time to be an attentive parent AND write the nitty gritty truth of how it is?  Few, I suspect.   Though a little creativity goes a long way…. the babysitting trade I do with a friend allows me this precious time now to write, Seava gone to play with her 8 year old pal for the next two hours.

A friend told me before Seava came that I would get a lot of parenting advice, but the best she had to offer was this:  you will never feel like a good enough parent, and that once you accept that and get over it, everyone will be much better off.   Part of my blueness, I think.  I once believed I gave up Catholic guilt for New Year’s long long ago, but it seems guilt is a daily part of my regime.  Take, for example, this week’s earlier outing.  Riding the bike to do errands and then meet a friend, Seava decides to have a full-out fit while in her seat, wiggling and wobbling all over.  “Stop” I say firmly.  More wiggling, with deeper intensity and whines (oh dear god, help me with the whining).  “Cut the shit,” I say, half annoyed, half worried I’d dump the bike with us both on it. A driver in his car, with his windows rolled down, hollers out “Do you really talk to your child like that?” and then to the passenger in his car “DId you hear her?”.  Instant Shame.   I must be the most terrible mother in the universe.   ANd probably even more so when I share a sip of my cafe mocha and a little nibble of my brownie with her at the coffee shop where we meet my friend, and then saunter on to do the parenting radio show where I tout the importance of making wise choices with food for you and your family.

Sometimes I really do think I suck at all this.  It used to be when I didn’t enjoy something or I wasn’t especially happy or good at it, I’d give my notice and move on to the next thing.   HA!  Forget it.   Talk about a test in commitment and consistency.  No wonder so many parents are so tired.

I know I sound like IM the one whining now, which is why, even if I do have some time, I don’t write.  My own mother taught me “if you don’t have anything nice to say, don’t say anything at all.”  But MOMS might be better onto something.  If you stuff all that stuff down, it doesn’t go away.  It gets bigger and more unruly and then starts rearing it’s ugly monster head with thoughts like “you suck” and “people don’t like you anymore” and “your life as you knew it is over.”

If you let all the heavy shit hit the page, then maybe you can find the words that are underneath, words that, yes, might be blue, but think of all the colors of blue there are in teh world, all the things that are blue and just maybe you could shift from that sort of blue that keeps you huddled up inside yourself and fly into that blue blue sky.  Just maybe you’ll trust that, yes, hormones are a powerful thing, and they are coursing though you at speeds you can’t keep track of, and one day, they’ll level out, or disappear, and the cursor will be blinking it’s squinty little eye, and you’ll arrive at the page again, with words that speak of wonder and love and excitement of what’s to come.

(rant part 2) and the winner is…

August 8, 2008

hormones.

yesterday’s rant, while ringing with certain facts and truths, was definitely hormone driven. it is SO WEIRD to be driven to such a state and feel totally enmeshed in the madness of it.

It helped that Rob came home for lunch and rubbed my belly instead of getting on the internet to look at weather, and verbally reminded me of his love. a little TLC goes a long way in times like these.

it also helped to get out of the house and visit with a superb woman at the Coffee Plantation, our great little local coffee shop. I almost flaked out due to my terrible mood, but because Elisa Levy (a dynamic life coach, conflict resolution specialist, seminar leader and all-around great person) is someone i rarely see, i shook off the grumps as best i could and got myself out the door.

while most of the details of our almost two hour exchange are too private to share, i will say that spirit brought us together to hear each other’s stories. we both had things to say that we each specifically needed to hear. i parted Elisa’s company feeling renewed, inspired, reassured and somehow, purposeful above and beyond my own personal needs and wants.

I will say that she offered the perspective of a few pregnant friends who have called her moaning and groaning about their own out-of-whack pregnancy hormones, of the discomfort and discouragement that can come with the experience. while i’m not glad they have to go through this, it makes me feel better to know im not alone. there’s something about being pregnant that makes you feel like you ought to be always so grateful, always so upbeat, rosy, full of love. you have this magic new life forming inside of you, dammit! be glad! but the truth is, it can be really hard. it’s ok to have off days. and it’s ok to be real about it.

i will also say it’s probably not the best idea to invest all of your emotional energy in your male partner, who, let’s face it, is usually not of the same emotional make-up as most of your gender. you’ll start to hone in on all the “flaws” if you’re not careful, forgetting that these very things are what attracted you to him in the first place.

no….best to keep a few close girl friends close by who can relate to the moan of your hormones. and be grateful if you have a honey who still loves you even if you pinch his nose with your salt-smelly claw from time to time.

baby shower blunder?

July 25, 2008

after an interesting cyber-dialogue with my friend and former fantastic life coach Dolly Garlo about why we’re not having a baby shower, i wonder if i may not have shown much grace to some dear friends who have offered to host baby showers for Rob and i and this little being to be…..

first, let me express my original thinking, and do pardon any sarcasm. i am pregnant and hormonal, after all. and allow for a few moments of digression, too- i suspect i’ll have a few of those in the paragraphs that follow…(blame it on “pregnancy brain” and the fact, ive been told that though our bodies produce twice the amount of blood, our brains are 8% smaller when with child…)….

what do you think of when you hear the words “baby shower”? i don’t know about you, but no matter how sweet the babe that follows the shower, most of these parties i’ve been to have involved some forced “oohing” and “awing” while thirty rounds of things like onesies, diaper genies and breast pumps were passed around a circle. men, if invited (aka forced by their partners to come), would sit half glazed over in the background, reaching for another rum punch, wondering when the chocolate turd in the diaper game would be over so they could eat the candy bars.

now, i KNOW there’s a slew of generosity that goes on with these parties, too. the fact that friends are so willing to dip into their pockets to help supply mom and dad to-be with the things they need for their upcoming bundle of joy is exceptionally generous and commendable. and i KNOW that most people are just thrilled to their bones about the miracle of a new baby around the bend.

but there are those that aren’t. i know because before i got pregnant, i was one of them. really, when i thought about having children, it occurred to me that, aside from the physical pain it would bring, giving birth to a four year old and skipping the whole drooling, pooping, floppy-necked baby part would be ideal. because while i love most kids and have been a day-care provider, babysitter and full-time nanny to some wonderful children, babies just never really interested me. ( i suspect my ADD and inability to be still for more than five minutes has something to do with that).

i’m sure i’ll be changing my mind quite soon. (if not, prescribe me some good anti-depressants, holistic as i may be!)…..

baby showers can also be triggers for those that, try as they may, can’t get pregnant. i know this to be true because i have a few friends who tearfully put their own scenarios aside and muster up the chutzpah to attend these parties and show their interest and support in yet another friend who is having the very thing their body won’t seem to produce. they, too, reach for another rum punch. it’s painful to watch.

then there’s the “stuff” issue. i know we live in the day and age of internet, online ordering and baby registries, but there are those that insist that you absolutely need the big plastic high chair shaped like winnie-the-pooh or secretly scoff at your interest in attempting natural infant hygiene and show up with a three month supply of disposable diapers. or try to convince you that you will absolutely roll over on your baby if you co-sleep with them and please, for the sake of the baby, consider not returning the crib they ordered for you that they figured you were too humble or forgot to put on your registry.

at the advice of a dear friend with a two-year old, i surrendered to the idea of a baby registry. it was actually quite helpful, and forced me to really consider what we would need for our bambina. after scouring amazon.com for hours and hours and more hours and googling the finer details of some of the products there, our list consists of about 25 things, ten of which are snap cloth diapers to ward off any potential glares while out and about in public during unsuccessful attempts at practicing natural infant hygiene (and no, the leg warmers aren’t because i think they’re cute and i want my baby to be a reflection of the modern dancer in me… they’re literally to keep her little legs warm. pants don’t allow for quick access when it comes to natural infant hygiene). as far as i can tell, there is very little out there that baby really needs.

there are just GOBS of baby things out there, cutely and cleverly marketed for parents who want to give the very best to their babes. the thing is, IS it the best? i used to be in marketing and i can sniff the B.S. a mile away… and most of the stuff out there smells a little funny to me. but, to each their own. my fantastic prenatal care provider Marina put it pretty simply: “what babies need is skin, your breasts, and love.” that Marina sure is smart.

so after all that, here’s what i’m thinking: I DO want to have a baby shower, but more like the kind they had in the old days, when folks came over AFTER the baby arrived. that way we can introduce our new family member and our selves as parents to our dear ones and let them shower us all with love. forget about all the stuff…we want more LOVE.

ok, ok, and if they want to bring a frozen lasagna or a casserole or two, that’d be fine by us. i hear new parents like that sort of thing since they can scarcely keep awake to cook for themselves. i’ll let you know when we get there….

a dad’s sacrifice…

July 22, 2008

As tropical storm Cristobal followed hurricane Bertha in bringing six to eight foot swell up along the Rhode Island Coast, my sweetie grit his teeth and installed the Graco infant car seat that’s been sitting in our living room for the last three weeks into his Chevy truck. I’m thinking about what I can sew over the stupid six inch “warning” label permanently silkscreened across the padding two inches away from where our baby’s head will be (and interestingly not in any of the photos of the product when we ordered it), Rob is thinking about the www.nesurf.com forum he was looking at earlier and all the good surf he’s missing out on.

Which makes sense why the surf-punk tunes are perhaps just a tad too loud for our quiet neighborhood at 9:00 on a Sunday night. Rebellion, in its most miniscule of forms, is occurring.

Despite his grin-and-bear-it attitude, and his general good spirits about most everything, he goes to bed with a stomach ache. I do my best not to fall down into the funk with him (what good is co-dependency?), and reassure him that someday, hopefully sooner than later, we will find a perfect caretaker position that involves warm sea-coast with waves, lots of tropical plants, and owners who will embrace a family with an infant and three cats.

In the meantime, he can’t get enough of the internet and the weather reports. I hope his patience holds out, that he believes in the image he sent me when he first found out i was pregnant, that it will happen, someday, and we will all be in our flow, with water flowing all around us as we play.

being pregnant: what helps…what doesn’t.

June 12, 2008

things that have helped me feel better so far during this pregnancy, in no particular order

*going slow, napping, and doing less during the day

*lime-flavored popsicles, raw potatoes, chocolate anythings, mangoes & big juicy pears

*hugs

*having a very supportive partner who changed his whole life to be here for me

*having a wonderful space to retreat in for the next four 1/2 months

*weekly massage trades

*eating lots of coconut oil and rubbing it all over my body. no stretch marks and no constipation.

*supplements and vitamins: papaya when my belly hurts, b12 when im nauseous, my nightly (before bed so i don’t feel sick all day) prenatal and dha, and iron when i remember to take it. oh, and cranberry tablets and stevia to replace sugar so i dont get a UTI, and udos oil and brewers yeast on my salad to help quell sugar cravings

*yoga. especially for my lower back, which hurts like a mofo.

*swimming, in the sea and in the pool

*improv dancing and playing with choreography

*sex. obviously a good way to stay connected to my sweetie, helps me feel still attractive and apparently keeps the cervix stretchy so it doesn’t tear during delivery (yikes!). quote from melissa doucette: “sex every day makes for an easy delivery.” from a gal who HATED being pregnant. “it sucked. all of it.”

*emailed “love notes from baby” (sign up at www.lovefrombaby.com)

*daily meditations and my connection with the dharma. helps keep the mind from spinning out

*blaming bad days on hormones, and keeping my sense of humor intact

*petting the kitties

*reading about waterbirths, natural infant hygiene and co-sleeping, learning all i can about non-mainstream choices of parenting so i’ll feel more confident when the time comes to put it to practice

*remembering that women have done this for thousands of years

* doing things the way i want

*getting a good kick in the ribs from baby sea bean to remind me who’s really in charge

*wearing yoga clothes or a swim suit all day, every day

*eating more chocolate

what doesn’t help

*eating more chocolate. if i don’t cut it out, im going to end up with gestational diabetes.

*doing too much research on the web. so much fear-based info out there! it takes away a woman’s sense of personal power and puts it all in the hands of the hospital, which treats birth like a medical emergency rather than a natural, organic event

*advice, horror birth stories and other buzzkill baby conversations. some from complete strangers! makes me never want to leave the house.

*offers of used baby items from well-meaning friends. we are two virgo minimalists doing a house sit with very little personal space or storage and have no idea where we will live a month after the baby comes. it’s awkward to say “thanks but no thanks”….but them’s the facts, jack

*going slow, resting, napping, doing less. makes me feel guilty and challenges my sense of self-worth, which i now realize i equate with “working hard.” (someday i’ll truly let myself realize that making an entire human being inside my own body IS hard work)

*brewers yeast may slightly curb my sugar cravings but it also gives me tuba farts

*isolating myself from everyone

*worrying about where we will live come november

*worrying that my irritating qualities will seem magnified to this new person coming and that she won’t like me

*having less than three months left before delivery and not having a clear birth plan or any of the things we really DO need ordered and ready

*worrying that i won’t finish my book before she arrives and i’ll blow the agent deal with sharon

*wondering just how damn big my boobs and butt will get and wondering if it’ll all come off later

*worrying that rob won’t be attracted to me after seeing an entire human being exit out of my wahine

*worrying my hormones will go out of whack and ill get post partum depression

*wondering why i suddenly am not sure about a name

* worrying and wondering too much, not trusting the flow, forgetting that this being picked us for a reason and that all will be perfect as it is.

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