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Monday, December 20, 2021

Incoherent

 So that whole uterus thing? Yeah. It's gone. I'm not really in a coherent place when it comes to my feelings on the subject. I'm angry and sad and guilty.

The short of the medical facts: I kept bleeding after my c-section. Had an amazing recovery otherwise. I was driving by 13 days out. Walking 5 miles around the local lake at 3 weeks out. I felt awesome. But the bleeding didn't stop. And I kept getting positive pregnancy tests through 6 weeks post partum. So we did a scan, and no surprise, there was retained placenta. I was booked for a d&c at 7 weeks post partum. If you've ever had surgery, you know that when they have you sign the consents, they describe all the terrible things that could go wrong? With d&cs, they always mention the risk of uterine perforation. I've had at least half a dozen before and been ok. I wasn't ok this time. My OB ruptured my uterus, despite ultrasound guidance. That earned me an emergency hysterectomy. Do not pass go. Do not collect $200. Do not keep your uterus. 

They attempted to do the hyst laparoscopically, but there was too much scar tissue, so they reopened my c-section incision and did it that way. Thus I have both the abdominal and the belly button incisions. 

I'm angry because I didn't want to have a hyst, and my OB did nothing to avoid it. I feel as if this entire pregnancy, she's wanted to be sure I never attempted pregnancy again, so she was relieved by this outcome. That might not be true, but it's how I feel, with some reasons behind it. I'm also angry because even if I still had a uterus, I know I couldn't ever be pregnant again. If I had known how awful E's pregnancy would be, how she'd have NICU time, how I'd be away from the twins for so long, I never would have gotten pregnant with her. I'm SO glad I didn't know, and she's here, but since I do now, I would never transfer my remaining embryo. Thus I shouldn't be upset about the hyst, but I still am. I'm angry that it's not my choice. 

How do you grieve losing something you no longer needed, but still deeply wanted? How do you grieve the fact that you wanted to still need it, but you lost not only the need for it, but the thing itself? And how do you cope when you feel that you shouldn't be grieving at all, because even if you had the thing and the need, finances and space and age would prevent you from using it? We can't afford a fourth, we can't fit a fourth, and we never wanted a fourth, so being unable to transfer the last embryo should not make me sad. And yet, grappling with all of this, I feel sadness. 

As for the guilt, I feel guilt over that day 7 embryo. He deserved a chance and he'll never get it. More than that, though, I feel a larger guilt. When I was in the hospital trying to reach viability with Quinn, I started bargaining with the universe, or God, or the devil, or anything that might listen. I promised to be a nicer person if my daughter could live. I offered money. I offered my house. As the days passed and I got more desperate, what I was willing to offer grew. By the time she was born, I would happily have traded away years of my life or limbs off my body for her survival. If god, or the devil, had walked into my hospital room and offered to trade my uterus for Quinn's life, I'd have said yes with no hesitation at all. None. And now here we are. Baby E is alive and well and I don't have a uterus. It's a trade I'd have readily made. So I feel guilt that now I have her here, I'm angry over the loss, when I'd have happily accepted that loss to have her. I know that doesn't make sense, but as I said, I'm still not coherent. I'm just hurting. 

Wednesday, December 15, 2021

The Wrath of the Diaper Gods

 It's official. I have been smote by the diaper gods for my pridefullness. 

E is at the age where blowouts are pretty frequent. No matter how careful with diaper positioning and configuration (wings out, no accidental folds), she wiggles and poops a lot, hence, blowout city.

Yesterday morning I got her up, changed her, paying attention to properly securing her diaper, and fed her. Then, as she sat on my lap and I attempted to burp her, I felt it: the type of seismic rumbling that means baby will need a new diaper ASAP. Before I could even stand, my nose confirmed what my hand had suspected, that my dainty little girl had created the kind of poo that would likely require a bath, followed by a change of diaper (hers) and outfit (hers and mine)!

When we reached her changing table and I examined her clothing, I was stunned to find no yellow anywhere. The diaper had held. In my mind, I immediately started congratulating myself. "Oh yeah! You rock. You can diaper like a pro. That's a diaper of the week award there!" I told myself.

I carefully placed a clean diaper under the old one, then unfastened it. I have never before seen a diaper so full - front, back, side to side, completely filled. In my head, my cocky self-accolades grew louder. "Look at that. That's diaper of the month. Diaper of the year!"

I grabbed her feet and lifted her bottom, while pulling the old diaper out and away from her. After setting it carefully away from her kicking range, I began reaching for a wipe when she decided to pee. Niagra Falls has nothing on my sweetie. The torrent was unstoppable. It overflowed the clean diaper under her. It saturated her outfit, the changing pad, the changing table, and my sleeve. And although it was "just" pee, since I hadn't wiped her yet and she was covered in poo, all that residue washed away in the pee deluge, leaving yellow lakes everywhere it touched. The adorable outfit I'd been so happy to see clean moments earlier? Now a sodden yellow mess. 

Thus, let me say, "I hear you, Diaper Gods. I bow before you at the altar of the diaper pail. Never again will I be cocky, lest I need to do more time in the confessional of the laundry sink, speaking to the priests of Oxyclean."

Tuesday, December 14, 2021

Big Sisters

When I was admitted at 31w3d, everyone was planning delivery at 31w5d. I didn't want it, I didn't feel heard, but without a voice, I couldn't change it. My goal, my only goal, was to reach 32 weeks. It was the difference between Friday and Monday. It meant crossing the threshold into a gestational age where the long term outcomes are the same as those of term babies.

I'd been having contractions for so many weeks by that point, with many of them very painful, that I thought reaching my original 36 week date would be impossible. Still, I wanted 32. 

My past antepartum stays had been at the large university hospital. They have a dedicated antepartum wing, with specialized nursing, a surgical suite, and all the support you get when you're one of a dozen patients in a childrens' hospital. There were social workers, chaplains, a weekly support group, a lending library, crafts kits made by volunteers to keep the moms occupied, and other things to help time pass. There was also a level 4 NICU, which is why I'd stayed there before with Quinn and during my 27 and 29 week stays with T and A. That hospital isn't where my OB delivers, though, and it's farther from my home. Once I crossed the 30 week mark, I could deliver at my local hospital, which has a level 3 NICU. That's where I went at 31w3d, and so that's where I spent my 5 weeks of antepartum care. There was no support system there. I was just the lone woman in the L&D ward who was trying to stay pregnant, rather than deliver. I was an oddity. 

I saw my living kids four times. Picnics in the hospital parking lot, next to the freeway. It was the highlight of my stay. Here's the one photo DH got of us together.


The hospital I was at has many rooms, but only two that have two windows. One, on the right side of the hallway, is reserved for moms trying to deliver med free. The other, on the left side of the hallway is used for antepartum moms, or loss moms. That's where they put me this July. That's also where they put me in November 2016 when I came in to deliver Alexis and Zoe. That's the room my oldest girls were born in. The room they died in. 

I had mixed feelings about that room. Practically speaking, it was a great room. Spacious, renovated, a full sofa bed for DH to sleep on. Two windows, and as decent a view as any at the hospital. Emotionally speaking, it was a blend.  Over those 5 weeks, I laid in the bed and remembered being there years before, the morning the girls were born, watching the sunlight stream in the window across my belly and knowing it was my last day with them. I remembered the intense emotional pain. I remembered the physical pain. Those were not pleasant things to remember, especially when scared for the baby I was carrying. At the same time, I felt close to Alexis and Zoe. I felt like they were watching over the baby and I. It was the perfect example of a concept I struggle to remember: AND. Being in that room was heartbreaking AND comforting at the same time. It feels contradictory, but it wasn't. It was right, somehow.

As for the results, I think I have my oldest girls to thank for reaching 36 weeks. There were days when I had to stop working and lay flat to get the contractions to stop. Days that I had to skip showering, because standing up that long made them regular and painful. Days that the paper where I tracked my contractions filled up before noon, and I told DH to have our nanny stay late in case I'd need a c-section that night. Knowing what I now know about baby E's lungs, I don't know if she'd have made it had she come at 32 weeks. She probably would have had CLD, and she definitely would have been transferred to the other NICU without me. That almost happened with our 36 week birth, so they could place a chest tube. I also know now, from what my OB told me, that my uterus had thinned, close to the point of rupture. Had the contractions been any worse, or had I tried to wait another week, our ending would have been quite different. I choose to believe that my oldest girls watched over her, and me, and kept us safe. I am forever grateful to them for having been a part of my life and for continuing to be one, even if they aren't physically here. 

While it's not my happiest memory, here's a photo the day before my c-section. I was so relieved to have made it, even if I was wearing leopard print pants and trying to fit all my toiletries onto a pedestal sink! 



Monday, December 13, 2021

What I Have and What I Don't

Let's start with the end, the most important part. What I have and what I don't have. Today, I have a beautiful, amazing, 4 month old daughter. She is sweet, happy, constantly smiling, and she sleeps well. She's a unicorn of a baby that I never would have dreamed to ask for. I feel so much joy every time I'm with her. 

Today I also no longer have a uterus. Not by my choice, unless you feel that choosing between death and a hysterectomy is a 'choice.' 

I also will never have the experience of taking a baby home with me on my discharge. My beautiful, happy little girl spent her first days in the NICU, on a vent. That sucked. 

I think the complete story of the last ~9 months is too long to fit in one post, so perhaps I'll start at the beginning for today. Let's go back to where I left off before. I had a TAC. In total honesty, thanks to the anti-nausea meds during surgery, the best I ever felt in the first and second tris were the days immediately after the TAC. I was low nausea for a while and it was so wonderful that the pain of abdominal surgery when pregnant was just a nuisance. Then the nausea and the vomiting came back. I kept throwing up into the third tri, and the nausea was debilitating.

At 26 weeks I started having contractions, but they slowed with tocolytics and L&D sent me home.

At 28 weeks, I had a routine growth scan, and the OB thought they saw bleeding on the baby's brain. I was referred to MFM and spent the 48 hours between appointments terrified, learning what my options might be if baby had had a catastrophic brain bleed. MFM found no issues with the brain, but did find an umbilical varix, a dilation of the umbilical cord that raises stillbirth risk. I was advised to repeat scans every 2-4 weeks, and schedule delivery at 36 weeks if it did not resolve. Surgery was booked for 36w2d.

At 29 weeks I had bad, painful contractions and returned to L&D. They found a UTI, gave me antibiotics, tocolytics, and a course of betamethasone for lung development. I was basically placed on home bedrest at that point. 

At 31 weeks 3 days, the contractions were consistently 8-10 minutes apart, although not at all painful. I had promised my OB that I'd call in if the tocolytics didn't stop contractions within a day, so I called in. Was told to come to L&D. L&D confirmed frequency, and at that point I was told I was getting the second round of betamethasone, magnesium for neuroprotection, and a c-section 40 hours later, as they would not risk going any longer with these contractions. That put the intended c-section date at 31w5d. Same as the twins. I knew what a 31w5d delivery and NICU stay looked like. I did not want that.

I lost my shit. I pointed out that the contractions were NOT painful, and that I was not ok with a c-section until that changed. I said that loudly, and repeatedly to everyone who came to my room. No one listened to me. OB said I was at risk of uterine rupture. I asked for an MRI so we could see if there was thinning to actually determine risk. OB said it was MFM's call. MFM wouldn't agree and said it was OB's call. OBs changed three times due to shift change and none listened. By some miracle, contractions slowed to 4 an hour by about 36 hours out. Still, no OB would come talk to me. Thirty minutes prior to my c-section time, anesthesiology was in my room talking about the plan for surgery when my nurse finally got the call to cancel the section. The agreement, though, was that I remained in-patient until delivery, which we all expected would be by 32 weeks.

I did continuous  monitoring for days. I never had less than 2 contractions an hour. Sometimes they were painful, but not frequent. Other times they were really frequent, but not painful. At those times, I tried to keep the monitors from picking them up. 32 weeks passed, and I was still pregnant. Then 33. I hadn't seen my kids since 31w3 days at that point, since they weren't allowed in the hospital due to COVID. I got permission to take a wheelchair ride to the parking lot, where we had a picnic together. That became our weekly routine: parking lot picnics once a week. I kept working from my hospital bed, dropped monitoring to twice a day unless more contractions started, and held my breath. There were days when we came damn close to surgery, but always slowed things down enough. The varix resolved. Five weeks passed. I asked my OB if we should try to delay delivery by a week, since 37 weeks is better than 36 for baby, but honestly I was starting to have more painful and much more frequent contractions by then, so I was somewhat relieved when she said 'no.'

Surgery was at 1:30 pm at 36w2d. It wasn't until they were prepping me that I realized how scared I'd been the whole time. Scared of rupture, of a more premature baby. Scared of the middle of the night section, without my husband. Scared my twins would stop loving me because I'd been gone so long. Scared I wouldn't get to be with my baby because of prematurity. 

Everyone assured me that since I'd reached 36w2d, I'd get to hold the baby and have her in my room with me. Baby girl was a great 6.5 pounds. I got to touch her little feet through the plastic surgical drape and tell her I loved her for two minutes. Then the NICU took her for evaluation in the OR, with the intent of giving her back to DH and I to hold while surgery finished. But she couldn't get her oxygen levels up enough. So I was told she was going to the NICU for CPAP. And off she went with DH. And I sobbed on the table while a very nice nurse held my hand. Honestly, I'm sobbing again as I write this.

In recovery, I kept asking to pump, since feeding within the first 2 hours is critical to establishing milk supply. They kept telling me no, because the baby would be back to me at any moment and we could try breastfeeding. But she never came back. After two hours, they wheeled my bed to her NICU bay, and I got one absolutely glorious hour of skin to skin with her, before I was taken up to my hospital room on another floor. At some point that night, after I said goodbye to her, her lung collapsed and she went on the vent. It would be days before I could hold her again. 

So  that's part one. Baby girl is glorious and worth everything I've been through. I certainly didn't get the pregnancy or post partum experience I'd hoped for, but I have no regrets about having another living child. Maybe the picture below can help you understand why.  This picture reflects her personality, always smiling and happy.



Monday, March 29, 2021

Not As Uneventful As Desired

 Yesterday was my tough day, reaching the same milestone in this pregnancy that marked the change of my life in Alexis and Zoe's pregnancy. I wanted a boring day. I didn't quite get it.

The day overall went well. I studiously avoided going into the bathroom where my water broke in 2016, and also made the conscious decision to not wear the pants I'd laid out for myself, which coincidentally happened to be the exact ones I was wearing that past morning. (Side note: Adidas warm ups, you are now at least 12 years old, get tons of use, and are showing no wear at all. I'm damned impressed.) Those behaviors might not be the most well adjusted, but I can live with that. 

I passed breakfast and lunch uneventfully. DH usually takes the kids starting at dinner time, since food smells are tough for me. He takes them on a walk after dinner now that the weather is improving. They left as usual. 

I got a bit worried when bath time arrived and they weren't home from their walk yet, however there were no text messages to me. I got vastly more worried when I heard DH's voice asking as he came down the stairs "Is Mommy still up?"

Turns out they decided to go to the playground. I'm too risk averse to do that by myself with both kids at this run-in-opposite-directions stage, but DH has a different risk tolerance than I. So, playground. One part of the playground has a platform from which you can slide down a fireman's pole. DH did this to reach T more quickly when she needed help. Apparently A was watching. DH was helping T when Aaron climbed up to the platform and took a flying leap off the edge, without grabbing the pole at all. 

Good news: the playground had a new, thick layer of tanbark down, and A was wearing his full snow suit, which provided good cushioning. The bad news: his face hit the tanbark and he got cut up. Pupils were fine, he could correctly answer questions about what he ate for dinner, and after a relatively small amount of crying, he seemed fine if clingy. He played and behaved fine through bath time, and when asked what hurt, just pointed to his cuts. He seems fine this morning.

All's well that ends well, and this seems to have re-set DH's risk tolerance a bit. Still, a lot of ugly 'what-if' scenarios ran through my head. DH is/was prone to nightmares, during which he'd start screaming loudly. I usually have to wake and calm him. Since doing EMDR, they've dramatically decreased in frequency. Last night, though, at 2 am, he had another.  

Ok, Universe. We've gotten the 'eventful' part out of the way. Let's still with 'boring' from here on out, eh?

Saturday, March 27, 2021

Not An Easy Day

 Tomorrow is going to be a hard day. Tomorrow is Sunday. Sunday is the day I hit a new week of the pregnancy. Tomorrow, Sunday, I'll reach 17 weeks. 

The last time I turned 17 weeks on a Sunday was October 2016. Zoe's water broke right around 7 that morning. That was the start of a lot of changes in my life, my outlook, my values. While I'm thrilled to be the person I am today, with the life I have today, I'd give anything to go back and have an uneventful 17 weeks the last time it happened on Sunday. 

I am hoping with every fiber of my being that the most eventful part of tomorrow's 17 weeks will be me giving shade to whoever it was that ate the last gluten-free chocolate chip cookie in the house. I am also sad and scared. I miss you, my girls. Please keep watch over your newest sibling, no matter what happens.

Monday, March 22, 2021

It's Clearly Not About Me

 ​​​​​In previous pregnancies, we’ve always shared fetal sex as soon as we knew it. We’re not doing that this time. “Why,” you ask? Two words: my mother.

After we lost Alexis and Zoe, at some point during a conversation with my mom, she shared that “everything would turn out all right, because I had a dream of you holding a baby boy, so I know you’ll have a living baby.”

Let’s unpack that for a second. One, when you’ve lost two children, nothing ever in the world will make it “all right.” Nothing. Remove those words from your vocabulary when talking to a loss parent. Seriously. Dick move #1. Two, I had wanted girls. Badly. My mom knew this. My mom has always shared that when SHE was pregnant, she wanted a girl. This would suggest she might have some empathy about sadness over losing girls and having boys. Nope. Dick move #2. 

I sat with that for a while, and then told her that while I appreciated that her words came from a place of love, the reality was that in order for her dream to “come true”, we had to lose our girls. We never wanted three kids (ha!), and if we’d had two girls, we never would have had a boy. In this context, I asked her not to bring it up again.

Then I got pregnant with Quinn. Until the NIPT, I was convinced I was carrying a boy. I foolishly mentioned this to my mom. She burst out with her dream again. I reminded her of how hurtful that was and asked her not to bring it up again. Alas, we all know how Quinn’s pregnancy ended.

I don’t remember her mentioning it during A and T’s pregnancy, but after they were born, there was an “I told you so” type moment where she raised it as I was cuddling A. Gloating that your daughter lost enough babies for your prophetic dream to come true? Ultimate dick move. 

During our IVF rounds, she told me she’d had a new dream of me holding a baby boy, so she thought it would work out.  Thus, we are not sharing sex. I want neither gloating that she’s right if it’s a boy, or being reminded of her dream repeatedly as her way of “warning” me, if it’s a girl. I will deal with any comments after the fact if/when baby is here safely.

All this pisses me off. I want to be able to talk about baby with appropriate pronouns. I want to share this information. I don’t want to worry about accidentally spilling the beans. I get so little joy in pregnancy that it really makes me angry to have this taken away. I’ve advocated, bluntly, for myself to no avail. I love my mom, I’m grateful for the million other ways she’s amazing. More importantly, my kids love her, so I have no intention of cutting her out until birth. It’s just a lousy, no-win situation. It’s not about her, but she’s determined to have the last say, so suddenly it is about her. 

Tuesday, March 16, 2021

Abdominal Cerclage, Round 2

 My first abdominal cerclage was an awful experience. The hospital wasn't great, I was in the 8s and 9s on the pain scale, my digestive system broke down on me, and I wasn't ready to return to work four weeks out, although I did.

I was scared stiff about how this one would go, given that I already felt like hot trash from the HG. It was a breeze. I would do it again, no hesitation, if only because whatever the anesthesiologist gave me afforded me three, gloriously nausea-free days! So, here's the recap. This was with Dr. Sumners, and Ascenion St. Vincent Hospital in Indianapolis.

Tuesday: Flew to Indy.

Wednesday: Pre-op appointment. I had a detailed scan, looking at baby and cervix. After that I met with Dr. Sumners, several of his nurses, and another doctor who was shadowing him. He told me at this point that he was planning to place both a single TAC band, and a TVC. He never said anything, but I could see when watching the ultrasound that the lower portion of my cervix was already dilating. We discussed my pain from last time, my allergies, and timing for disability leave. He was thoughtful about my concerns and had sound responses. He told me he wanted me on anti-contraction meds for 48 hours post surgery.

After he left, his nurse walked through things with me like the pharmacy I'd use to fill my prescriptions (pain meds and anti-contraction meds). I had sent Dr. Haney a 3 page summary of past surgeries and pregnancies. The nurse expressed her appreciation that I had that together and she didn't have to pull it from my hundreds of pages of charts! She was also really sensitive and didn't make me rehash all past pregnancies, but said she'd fill those in from the summary I gave her. That was a thread with nearly everyone I worked with: real sensitivity to my past losses. I appreciated that a lot, as I find I rarely experience that compassion. 

Thursday: Surgery day. I had to check in at 6:45 am for an 8:45 surgery time. The hospital was relatively empty, with just my mom and I and two pregnant ladies who were clearly checking in for c-sections. I was taken back alone for pre-op. Changed out of all of my clothes (but held onto the piece of Quinn's blanket that I had brought with me until the last moment). Was told I have great veins and had an IV placed. The nurse spent nearly an hour going through my full medical history. She was extremely thorough, which was nice. Everyone agreed to put 'Zofran' as an allergy on my chart, to ensure that I'd be given something else instead. We discussed the best tapes to use for that allergy. There was a TV in the pre-op room, so when she left I turned on something mindless.

Dr. Sumners and the Dr who had accompanied him the previous day came in. He assured me that he'd been practicing on the patient before me! I was asked to confirm what surgery I was there for. 

The anesthesiologist came in next. We discussed my issues with Zofran and preference for Reglan. I brought up some of the pain control options, and the fact that morphine makes me puke when I take it orally/IV post op. He listened to me, but kept trying to steer me back to what he wanted, which was standard spinal and post op PCA. In the end we agreed on a nerve blocking medication, decadron for nausea, a standard spinal with morphine, and Norco for post op pain medication. That was an awesome combination. The worst my pain ever got was a 5, and most of the time if I laid still, I didn't feel any pain at all. Best of all, the nausea went away. I can not convey how awesome that was. I could lay still and feel good and human again, even right after surgery. Such a difference from last time!

I was moved to antepartum a few hours post op, and they did a doppler check so I could hear baby's heartbeat All sounded good. They insisted on clear liquids only, to give my digestive system time to recover. I made sure to get a full dose of Miralax in, along with as much apple juice as they'd give me! 

During the day, I drowsed in and out, thanks to the meds. I didn't get much overnight sleep, because I was having my blood pressure measured every 10 minutes. It kept being very low (80s over 50s), so the alarm would go until I pressed the call button for the nurse to come in and silence it. A few ties the alarm went off because my heart rate was high - basically any time I rolled over I'd get THAT alarm, too. Frustrating. 

Friday: Around 5 am Friday morning, after not sleeping due to alarms, I realized I was having contractions. I also realized that I hadn't been given the anti-contraction medication since right before they wheeled me back for surgery, almost 24 hours ago. It's supposed to be taken every 6 hours. I asked the nurse and she said there weren't orders. I told her there should be and asked her to contact the Dr since I was contracting. She asked me to wait for rounds around 9 am and I told her I wasn't comfortable with that. It took about 2 hours, but she asked the resident, found out I was supposed to be taking it, and gave it to me.

Around 9 on Friday morning the nurse removed the catheter and I got up to pee. Side note: last time I had a TAC, peeing burned like the worst charley horse you could imagine. This time, almost no pain at all, despite the fact that they'd removed a lot of scar tissue from my bladder. So, so grateful.

When getting up, I made it to the toilet just fine, sat down just fine, even peed a bit, but realized I was going to pass out. I needed help to get back to bed. I tried to get up and walk an hour later and it was the same story - almost passed out. Since my blood pressure was still 80/55 this wasn't surprising. I asked them to let me have solid food, since being NPO, then clear liquids only for 36 hours was a lot. After I ate something around lunch time, I tried walking again and was able to toodle around my hospital room without issue. That, plus the fact that I'd passed gas and urinated, meant I had met discharge criteria. 

Normally, Dr. Sumners has you come to his office for an ultrasound post-discharge. Unfortunately the u/s room was in use, so after a few hours, a technician came and wheeled me to the ultrasound in antepartum. We checked that baby was still alive- yes, and that my cervix looked good. She said she was getting some swelling in the way, but it looked good. Overall the most pain I've felt the entire time was when I had to lay down on the ultrasound table, which didn't have any rails, and then get my legs into stirrups. The tech tried to help, but I wasn't clear what I needed and so it hurt. After that I confirmed meds quickly and my mom drove me back to our extended stay hotel. The hotel hadn't gotten the promised wheel chair, but I was able to walk in, up the elevator, and up to our room by myself. 

Saturday: I kept up with Norco and nausea medication every 6 hours. As mentioned, as long as I was still, I felt really good with minimal pain. Slept well, too, thanks to the meds. Got a shower and it was so much less traumatic than either my first TAC or my c-section. I was able to put my own socks on! I had to sit down on the toilet to do it, but I did! Even dried my hair a bit. Did laps up and down the hotel hallway every few hours. 

Sunday:  Got up, got a shower, had cereal for breakfast, then headed to the airport. My mom had arranged to have a wheel chair waiting for us at the rental car return, and I was grateful. I could have walked a decent amount, but not all the way to our gate. They got us there, with only a small snafu when my mom went in the pre-check line while I got the regular peon line despite still having her luggage. The screener pulled her bag, because it had cashews in it! Go figure. She had gotten us bulkhead seats, so I didn't have to shimmy into a tight window seat, which made the flight home easy. I have never been so appreciative of grab bars in airplane bathrooms!

There was a waiting wheelchair when we landed, and that took us to the curb where my husband was waiting. I took one last norco when we got home, and that was the last narcotic I needed. 

Monday - Thursday: I slept in our guest bed and kept up with tylenol and my nausea meds every 6 hours. Getting into and out of bed, and rolling over in bed were hard, but kept getting easier. By two weeks out, I have mostly normal use of my body, although my uterus still hurts. 

So, in TLDR terms; What went wrong: Already dilated, needed TAC and TVC, lots of scar tissue, nicked a vein, didn't get my anti-contraction meds, had super low blood pressure, was missing a wheel chair. 

What went right: TAC in place. TVC in place. Baby and mama both have heartbeats still. Much easier recovery than last time, despite being pregnant. 

I would absolutely recommend anyone with cervical issues/cervical insufficiency/incompetent cervix reach out to Dr. Sumners.

Monday, March 15, 2021

Gift Horses and Role Models

 ​​​​​At Christmas, the husband and I had the start of an interesting conversation that I feel the need to unpack and think through. It’s also one that I’d love to hear others’ perspectives on.

As background, if “love languages” exist, mine is NOT gifts. Husband’s is NOT either. When we were younger, I’d put a lot of thought and money into gifts for him, and in our earlier dating years, he often didn’t reciprocate. In marriage, I found myself constantly being the one to have to come up with gifts for all the parents, or watch him scramble and spend double or triple on X-mas eve to get something for his mom and brother. X-mas eve, when I usually needed his help getting the house ready for guests, and since he was out, I didn't get that help. I decided enough was enough and suggested to all family that we stop exchanging gifts. Everyone except for his mom (whose love language might be gifts) was really happy about this.

Now we have kids. I look forward to giving them presents because of the obvious enjoyment. This Christmas the husband suggested that we needed to start giving each other gifts again to ‘role model’ appropriate gift giving to the kids. I had an almost visceral reaction against it, and I needed to process why in writing.

First, I think it’s more important to role model that consumer spending is not necessary, beneficial, or necessarily good. Giving X-mas gifts just to give gifts is probably the biggest example of conspicuous consumption or consumer behavior I can think of us engaging in. It doesn’t add value, it doesn’t bring joy, there is really no benefit at all that I perceive in giving a gift just to give a gift. Or in receiving a gift just to receive one. I don’t want my kids to learn consumer behavior, I want them to learn to identify when spending brings them or their loved ones value, and focus on that spending. 

Second, I wonder what lesson I'd be teaching. The lesson of waiting to the last minute and spending far more than necessary for an item that could have been purchased elsewhere or earlier for less? The lesson of bailing out on helping with joint responsibilities because you put off your own too long? The most charitable interpretation I can give for this last minute approach is that DH is aligning his values (of the convenience and lowered stress of not having to think of anything until the last minute) with his spending. I don't think procrastination is usually a beneficial life skill, so I'm not enthusiastic about modeling that. I am equally unenthusiastic about modeling a situation where one partner, the female one, takes on all the mental and practical load of gift giving. 

I think I'm also bothered by this idea of modeling love as shown through gifts. I have quite a few friends whose families showed love via gifts and not much else. I don't want that. I'm not really worried about that, as I'm pretty confident these kids will know they're loved and that their parents love each other, but it's a trap that I've witnessed too often to feel great about repeating.

There's something else that bugs me about this, and I can't even put my finger on what. Maybe someone else has an idea. Having said that, the great news about being married to a die-hard procrastinator is that I can be confident that unless I decide to do what he's asked and start giving him gifts, he won't actually do it himself, so this is all a moot point! 


As I've let this draft sit, I think I've figured out what the 'something else' is. I think the last, perhaps biggest, thing that bugs me is that we'd be doing this because it's a societal norm. I *really* don't like doing things just because they're norms. I want my kids to learn to evaluate their options and decide based on their own values and preferences what they'll do or not do. I don't want them feeling as if they have to conform just to conform. Not to say that non-conformity is the path to happiness, but I think my life has been vastly easier ever since the point that I stopped giving a damn what other people think about my actions/appearance/beliefs, and focused on what was intrinsically important to me. I desperately hope I can give them the self confidence to find the beat of their own drum and take joy from following it.

Monday, March 8, 2021

An Update on 13

 I've been silent for a while. That's compliments of yet another HG pregnancy. I had forgotten just how bad HG is until around 7 weeks, when I had that moment of stark, animal terror as I was throwing up continuously and realized I needed to take a breath but my throat was still full of vomit and there was a real possibility I'd suffocate if I tried to breathe. I had forgotten that terror from last time(s). HG is really, truly horrendous.

Despite the HG, things have gone relatively well. We did a CVS at 10w4d, with the hope of getting full results back before my scheduled abdominal cerclage at 12w4d. It was difficult that early, especially because apparently I do have a lot of bowel that was in the way (further proof that I really am full of shit!), making it very hard to find a safe spot to draw the CVS sample. Both FISH and microarray were normal, so off to Indy I went for a TAC.

The TAC wound up being more complex than expected. At pre-op, I was already dilating in the lower cervical segment. As a result, the surgeon placed both a TAC and TVC. Double whammy. They also found my bladder was adhered to both my uterus and abdominal wall with scar tissue, which had to be cleared. During the clearing, the nicked a vein. Despite all that, and despite being pregnant and puking and having to fly home, my recovery has been light years easier than my last TAC. Go figure. Maybe I really did get gluten contact before that one as I've long suspected. I'll try to do a full write up later, in case it ever helps someone else.

I'm 14 weeks now. Sore but not in agony. Scared but not terrified. Finally also nauseous, but not constantly vomiting. So, progress. I continue to hold my breath and beg the universe to keep this little one safe until a planned delivery in late August. I am still concerned about an accreta diagnosis, especially after hearing of the amount of scar tissue found during the cerclage, but that will not come until my anatomy scan in another month, so I try not to borrow worry. 

Here was the day of our CVS, working on thumb sucking. 


Thursday, January 14, 2021

Up to 13

Our first ultrasound was moved up to today. I started spotting brown again this morning, but I'm also throwing up. As far as prognostic indicators go, that seemed to cover all possible bases. 

I haven't believed in intuition since I totally miss-guessed Quinn's gender. At the same time, my last two twin pregnancies, intuition said it was twins. This time, same thing. Intuition said twins, even though it was an unmedicated pregnancy and they're so unlikely in that situation.

Intuition wasn't completely off. One gestational sac with a FHR of 120 and a CRL equivalent to 6w1d. One completely empty sac. A vanished twin.

I really, really, really didn't want twins again. I didn't want the extra sickness. I didn't want the hospitalizations and prematurity. I didn't want an in-pregnancy cerclage on a uterus pregnant with twins. I didn't want the financial implications of another set of twins.

I didn't want twins. Why, then, do I feel so devastated about this? 

The doctor said everything was perfect. I'm more than a bit concerned about the CRL, but I know that's subject to measurement error. I also know that a heart rate of 120 bodes well. I'll remain nervous until the next ultrasound in two weeks. Hell, I'll remain nervous until delivery. I'll also remain sad about our little Baby A, the one who didn't make it. These were babies 12 and 13, if I'm counting. That's just too many babies to lose and not be sad, no matter what you think of twins. For now, I'm hoping that come August I'll be able to tell myself '13 babies, 3 healthy, living children.'

Monday, January 11, 2021

Reflections and Cynicism

 The events in my home country have really shaken and saddened me. In my cynicism, I've often said that other humans never fail to disappoint me, but this goes far beyond that. 

The questions I keep turning over in my mind is: how could a reasonable person believe that the election results were fraudulent? How could a reasonable person attempt to subvert democracy while simultaneously claiming to do so because others have subverted democracy? I certainly understand how a reasonable person could be upset and angry with an election outcome that countered their preference. I understand how they might want to look for a way to achieve a result they liked better. I don't understand how masses of people could wholesale believe in such a massive hoax and turn to insurrection to 'resolve' the matter. There's the true fraud perpetrated this election: the fraud of the incumbent claiming a victory that was definitely not earned.

I wonder if the culture of avoiding things that upset us is somewhat responsible. I'm part of an IF group. That group maintains a separate place for members to discuss 'success.' However even in that separate place, some people were getting upset over the details of others' success. What options did they have? They could have avoided the success discussion all together. They could have acknowledged that other people get the things they want, and that's not a reason for anger. Instead the group decided that those reporting on success could no longer provide any details. Rather than saying "Hey, I want to have a success like that, and it kills me that I don't, but I'm happy for you." they said "Find someplace else to celebrate so I don't have to feel pain because of you."

Now we have part of our country who can't stand being faced with the pain of not having their candidates win. They can't stand it to an extent that they're rioting and attempting to violate the very democratic foundations of our country. Maybe the time has come for each of us to say "Hey, there are some things in life that I don't like. But rather than deny or avoid or get angry at those who have what I want, I'll focus on doing what I can to improve myself and my environment through reasonable and legally appropriate means." Alas, I'm too cynical to think that most people are willing to take on that level of emotional work. 


Friday, January 1, 2021

Repeat Beta

I had my second beta draw exactly 48 hours after the first. With the first result being 655, I figured I needed 1310 or thereabouts.

Beta #2 was 1608. 37 hour doubling time.

This was an unmedicated cycle of a 41 year old. It can't be twins, right? 

The ever amazing betabase shows the following for twins:

15 dpo: 376
16 dpo: 565
17 dpo: 835
18 dpo: 1200

For singletons:

15 dpo: 197
16 dpo: 294
17 dpo: 425
18 dpo: 616

My results:

15/16* dpo: 655

*This is possibly 16 dpo if I ovulated within 12 hours of peak LH test and tempted too early the next morning to catch the progesterone rise. I usually temp just after midnight, so that's possible. I was testing twice a day with LH strips, so I'm very certain of the surge timing. That means I can't be any later than 16 dpo.

17/18 dpo: 1608

We had two reasons for going through IVF. One, so I could do a pre-preg TAC. That's not happening. Two, so we wouldn't risk twins again. I know that given my age I should be much more worried about seeing ANY euploid baby with a heartbeat, but these numbers have me scared.