Tuesday, October 11, 2011

The Accidental Mommy, Part 2

Once I (sort of) came to terms with the idea of being pregnant, I started obsessing and really started freaking out.  Everything I knew about childbirth came from listening to people talk about their terrible, painful experiences or watching the women depicted in the media, laying on their backs screaming.  I was determined that when the time came, I wanted to be numb from the neck down.

I reached a defining moment in my desire to be pregnant about 2 weeks after I got that positive pregnancy test.  I was sitting on the couch watching TV when I felt a warm wet gush.  I thought maybe I peed on myself.  I stood up and blood was running down my legs.  It was at that moment that I knew I wanted to be pregnant and was cursing myself for not realizing it immediately.  I started crying.  It was late.  My husband called the after hours nurse line and that's when we were introduced to the callous world of medicine.  The nurse said not to bother going to the hospital, that if I was miscarrying there was nothing they could do.  She said I could come in in the morning and they'd see if I needed a D&C.  Thanks for the hope there, Miss Nurse.  I went to bed, cramping and hemorrhaging, hoping for the best, but expecting the worst.

When I went to the doctor in the morning, they took my blood and said that my HCG still looked good.  The doctor did an ultrasound, and the baby's heart was still beating strongly.  Seeing that flickering light gave me unimaginable joy.  I had a feeling that my baby was a fighter and knew that everything was going to be okay.  It turns out the bleeding was coming from the vanishing twin.

It was during that visit that my doctor told me he was retiring in 2 weeks and that I needed to find an OB.  That was an adventure.  I spent the next 10 weeks of my pregnancy bouncing from OB practice to OB practice.  So many are run like assembly lines.  I just couldn't get in the groove of 12 or 14 doctor practices.  I got tired of explaining about my early complications and repeating myself.  The final straw for one big practice was when the OB couldn't find the baby's heartbeat using the doppler, looked concerned, said I needed an ultrasound, then left us in a room for over 30 minutes to panic and freak out before coming back in.  So much for a bedside manner...

I went to one of those boutique ultrasound places at 18 weeks to get an early peek at the baby's gender.  The tech was very nice, the facility was great, and I was so excited.  She told me I was having a boy and gave us pictures and a DVD with boy parts labels.  We went out and bought all sorts of blue clothes and started talking about boy names.

At my 20 week anatomy ultrasound at the hospital, the tech came in and asked me what I thought I was having.  I smiled at her and said:  I'm having a boy!  Within 2 minutes, she laughed and said, honey...that's a girl.  I'd gotten attached to the idea of having a boy and almost burst into tears in the room.  I held off until we got to the car, then I started crying.  I called my dad and again, he laughed.  He told me that girls were awesome.  I told him he was biased.  It turns out, he was right.

2 comments:

  1. I remember all of that! I think of all of us, your view of everything changed the most. I can still remember your posts about not being sure you'd be breastfeeding, and look at you still going stronger and longer than all of us! You had so many bumps in the road on your pregnancy with bettie and its clear to see that becoming her mother has enhanced you so much. You are hands down one of the best moms I know, and your assertiveness where your instincts were concerned may have made all the difference in how healthy and on par bettie is even though she was a preemie. I'm so excited for you to be headed back down this path, and to see where motherhood x 2 takes you :-)

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  2. I hurried as fast as I could to get there! When I did, Adam took me to the nursery and while I didn't actually get to touch the baby, I really wanted to do so. They were trying to get her temperature steady so they didn't allow any touching at first. I DID get to touch and hold her the next day but just for a couple of minutes, they were pretty strict about that. I saw her and was so reminded of you when you were born, little and a fighter! She was and is beautiful and you are a wonderful mother. Sometimes God does answer prayers that we didn't even know we had sent up to him. She is an answer to your prayers and the new baby will be an extension of your love just as Bettie is now. OXOX

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