Archive for the 'fears 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. (warning. NOT a warm & fuzzy post)….

August 7, 2008

this picture is a clue to the new pet name ive been given by my partner.

maybe it’s true. and it’s true that i got a sweet “love note from baby” today reminding me about gratitude. and i certainly have so much to be grateful for. and am beyond anxious and excited to meet this little person within.

but let’s get real people. being pregnant isn’t all rosy glow. maybe i’m an ass for saying so, since i’ve more than a few friends who are forking over tens of thousands of dollars to see if science can help them make a baby, and others who wonder if they are missing out by not heeding the biological call when they could, being more focused on their careers.

but if i don’t allow myself to be authentic and express what’s happening to me right here, right now, i just might implode. or fall into that terrible funk and have a much harder time getting out. wallowing isn’t pretty. so, at the risk of sounding like a total whiner or exposing too much, here goes nothing…

first, can we stop with the diarrhea? are the probiotic smoothies, bananas, and cheese not enough to keep it all in and in working order? can i eat anything and not have to run to a bathroom twenty minutes later? i nearly pooped my pants in Publix the other night. not kidding. not that i wish for constipation, which most pregnant gals suffer from. pick your poison, i guess. and what about the random, uncontrolled farting in public? that’s just so much fun! i’ve mastered the art of pretending “who me?” when people look over my way, mortified that a cute pregnant woman could make such a thundering noise out of her behind. nice.

by now, i’m used to waking up to go to the bathroom a gazillion times a night. no problem. even mastering the tuck and roll i have to do to get myself with the 25 extra pounds out of bed without pulling out my back. what concerns me is the time in between the shuffles to the toilet. i lay there for what seems like an eternity, feeling utterly alone. is that normal? i’m not sure, but it’s far worse than the pain in my hips and back.

i know that if i regard each moment from a spiritual perspective, i can surrender and trust that it will all lead me to the exact place i need to be, that i am, in fact, already in the exact place i need to be.

but sometimes it’s just so difficult. i’m tired. and a little depressed, too, i think. hormones? or real life stuff to be considered?

i keep writing and then erasing. i read what i’ve written and feel mortified that i am complaining so much. how do you express yourself about problems you are having, true and real feelings, and still claim responsibility for making the changes necessary to shift it all?

my books: either finish writing them or dump them. enough procrastination and self loathing. money: make your own. start teaching again, pick up some freelance work. set intentions of going back to captaining part time after the baby gets a bit bigger. meals: stop acting like suzy-homemaker when you don’t want to be suzy-homemaker. ask rob to help make some of the meals on a regular basis. friends: stop hiding. CALL them. make plans and see them. weekends: if rob wants to stay in out of the sun and be on his computer all weekend, that’s his perrogative. go out on the water by yourself. call the many good people you’ve not seen in months and do something, anything, to get you off your ass and smiling. have more fun.

i think that’s the biggest problem for me. i am not having very much fun. very little, in fact. it’s all been so serious. dealing with the continual physical shifts and what’s necessary to stay healthy for both baby and me, researching the basic things we need for her in terms of care and products, and planning for the birth… all of which i seem to be doing alone.

maybe it’s normal for the guy to hang back. and i know it’s my own fault for not being more persistent in asking for more support, thinking that the breadwinner does enough by trudging off to work in the morning. but that is a 1950′s mentality and it just doesn’t work.

from conversations i’ve had in the past with girlfriends who’ve been in these shoes before, i know this isn’t new news. so for all you men out there who wonder why your partner gets so crabby come the end of the pregnancy, consider being a little more participatory BEFORE the baby arrives. ask her specific questions, read the books she buys, don’t wait for her to start building the moses basket rocking stand by herself before you jump in and definitely don’t moan about a callous you got from the screwdriver while doing so. she just might feel some relief knowing you really ARE emotionally interested and invested in her and the new person she’s about to squeeze through the most private of places of her anatomy.

and another thing. when the baby comes, don’t forget about also nurturing the woman who grew the baby. it’s been a long 9 months (almost ten!). in fact, a little nurturing before-hand goes a long way to keeping her cheerful.

I’m optimistic things will shift. they always do. but even optimistic people are entitled to their bad attitudes now and again. so yeah, call me crabby. just be careful not to get too close or i might swipe at your nose and pinch it off.

nature vs. nurture

June 3, 2008

Tuesday
June 3, 2008

I dreamt women were aggressively pitching their sexual interest at Rob while he made his inquiries for his new job at Mosquito Control. I woke feeling anxious, out of sorts, maybe even a bit worried. May seem silly, since Rob is probably the most integrity-filled man I know. Even if he were attracted to someone who was interested in him, I suspect it highly unlikely that he would ever even think of doing anything about it. I know my childhood and some of my own adult relationships are filled with examples of infidelity (their end, not mine), so perhaps this is residual, brought on by being pregnant, hormonal, sensitive, and a little concerned that maybe my morphing body is not as beautiful as I would prefer to think it, but lumpy and strange, bloated. Rob says he loves my belly, but I wonder if it isn’t strange for him to look over at me, with the blue veins running across my ballooning breasts, my swollen belly hard and moving on its own, my rear end widening to support it all. It has to be a little unnerving for him.

I don’t want to write much about Rob or my relationship with him out of respect for his privacy. It’s one thing to journal, another to write and then post it on the web. But it is a curious subject when it comes to pregnancy, the idea of sexuality, of attraction. We are, after all, animals, with (hopefully) a higher sense of consciousness. We (especially men) are hard-wired to want to mate, pro-create, and most animals are not monogamous. I wonder if there is some small part of a man’s mind when his partner is pregnant that gets turned off, if he starts wondering what it would be like to be with other women, if he feels a sense of lackluster because he is no longer challenged, no longer in pursuit.

Or maybe he feels pride, a sense of really belonging. I don’t know- I’m not a man and I’m with one that, like most men, keeps me guessing at what goes on in his head. And really, it’s not his job to have to reassure me. I’m sure one of the challenges of being with a woman, a pregnant one, no less, is the necessity of letting them know how you feel about them. Women, by nature, are quite good at this, we are the reigning champions of nurturing.

Which brings me back to the whole concept of taking care of yourself. If you are properly taking care of yourself, you don’t need anyone to tell you you are ok. You tune into that place within and simply know you are. Do not let your mind get carried away, be careful what you tune into. The dream might have seemed real, but it was not. Rub your belly and put on some pink lipstick. And remember that you are as kissable as the day you two first met.

is it really worth it?

March 9, 2008

Sunday

Five days. How do five days pass without me writing a thing? It passes with foggy confusion, long bouts of nausea, loud and smelly gas, ripping belches and extreme indigestion. And this is me feeling better. It’s the stuff they don’t warn you about or a woman may never choose to purposely procreate. Hang in there, say my Mamma friends. It’s worth it.

I do notice myself looking at babies and children in a way that I never have before. The newborn in the grocery store, with the perfect curve of its little nose, sleeping as if still in utero. My own has started to swell a bit, a hard bump that makes wearing most of my pants uncomfortable. I vainly pray my belly will be my only body part that grows. Just you wait, says another Mamma “friend,” ‘til you hit six months and start eating cookies and donuts and ice cream and gain sixty pounds. Gee, thanks, I say. I know I’m still shy of the four-month mark, but at least my ass still fits in my favorite pair of jeans, even if I have to do the hair elastic trick with the button to keep them closed without suffocating me.

Too bad I can’t say the same about most of my shirts. I’ve jumped from a B to a D cup, and officially have the sort of breasts some women pay big dollars for. I have no idea why they do this, as every shirt I try on makes me look like I belong at the Red Garter unless it’s a size large enough where I look like I’m wearing a tent.

Food has been a funny thing. I’ve always had a bit of a problem keeping up with eating well-balanced meals, if I even ate at all. My idea of food would be carrot sticks while sitting at my computer or brunch at Camille’s that would hold me over all day. Thankfully Rob has jumped in on that end, feeding both me and baby-to-be no matter how odd my requests. The first few weeks were easy for him in that sense, as I couldn’t eat a darn thing without wanting to toss it back up. I was one of those who actually lost weight in the first three months. Now I’m on the pendulum to the other side, craving things like raw potatoes and popsicles. Not at the same time, though I’ll admit I just polished off a small package of bread stick crackers, a peach and am ready to dig into a baked potato with sour cream. We lunched at the Hogfish Bar & Grill and ate the quintessential basket lunch: fish, shrimp and chips, all deep friend complete with tartar sauce. But at least I didn’t fill the cart up with pop tarts and frozen pizza when Rob stocked me up for groceries before he heads back home.

Home. His is Mystic, where he caretakes a property for a wealthy couple rarely there. He does his job well, both on that estate and elsewhere, drove to the end of the road here in Key West as soon as he heard I wasn’t well, arrived quietly in the night and snuggled up with me in my sick-bed. He watched me through my nausea, and then he nurtured me through pneumonia. He drove me to my performances at the Red Barn each night, varnished and glued my materials for my exhibit since I no longer safely could and rubbed my back endlessly when I woke coughing blood and green gunk in the night. These are just a few of the many ways he showed his love and support during his five week stay. The word gratitude falls short of just how exactly I feel about this.

So far what I think this pregnancy has done best is to lead me to a deep sense of humility. I feel powerless to the physiological changes that are occurring inside of me, not to mention the emotional onslaught the hormones are incurring. With humility comes a letting go. I may not have the perfect plan or ideal scenario in which to bring this child into the world, but I have faith and my daily meditations, which lately I only have the energy to do while still laying in bed. And I have a partner I respect and admire, who I sense I can trust despite the fact that there is still so much about him I’ve yet to know. These things, coupled with love and a good attitude, ought to be more than enough. Yes, a blessing indeed, however ill or nervous I may tend to feel each day.

Still, this is by far the hardest thing I’ve ever done. I hope I’ll start feeling well enough to think straight again, to go back to yoga, to enter that poetry place where all things feel divinely holy. For now, it’s all I can do to get through the day, to fall asleep and dream deeply, without waking six times to pee.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.