When Eggs Go Bad...

A blog about recurrent miscarriage, life's little obstacles, and fuckwits.

Because I said so

It was the possibilities I lost

That day. Those hours, those years

Of football games

And packed lunches;

Of watching through the rain

To see you trudging

Wet and shivering from school.

Kissing you, steaming by the radiator as you dry,

One eye already on the TV.

 

“Mum, why can’t I?!”

“Because I said so.”

 

And later, head bent over school books

And secrets you think I am too old to notice.

 

Who would you be?

 

I did not lose a baby that day.

I lost you. And the possibilities.

That loss, stark against the antiseptic white and hospital green,

Like a living thing. You were not.

 

But you were.

And were loved.

Because I said so.

(c) Liz Smith, 2008

10 September 2008 in In which she waxes philosophical | Permalink | TrackBack (0)

This time...

This time 10 years ago, I had just left my psychological bully of a first husband. I didn't know it yet, but within months I would be embroiled in a desperate attempt to keep custody of my daughter. I eventually got shared custody, which brought daily misery to my life until just this year.

This time 5 years ago, I was recovering from an 8 week stint with viral meningitis. I was so desperate to have a normal Christmas that I made my partner take me to our work Christmas do. I think we managed to stay out until 9.00pm.

This time 3 years ago, partner had become husband and we had dreams of starting a family.

This time 2 years ago, we celebrated Christmas while grieving 4 lost babies and wondering if we'd ever have a child together.

This time last year, I had lost another baby, but its twin was alive and well inside me. I wondered whether he would come before Christmas. He did.

This time this year, I have had nearly a year with my precious boy and his amazing big sister who is turning into a young woman before my eyes. I have seen my husband be a daddy. I have heard a young voice call him dada.

This time thing. This wibbly-wobbly, timey-wimey, heals-all thing. It's really rather amazing, isn't it.

Happy Holidays.

05 December 2007 in In which she waxes philosophical | Permalink | TrackBack (0)

Prayer?

This time last year I was terrified. I had just discovered that I was pregnant, and the godawful waiting to see if this one would survive had begun. I remember so vividly the ice that would run through my veins every time I went to the loo. Working up the courage to pull my knickers down, in case I saw blood. And the couple of times that I did see blood, the gut-wrenching grief. Grief in anticipation; grief in memoriam.

I remember each visit to the Silver Cervix club, getting up on the table and shutting my eyes. The chilled gel (do they refrigerate the stuff?), the pressure of the scanner, listening for the telltale sound of the doctor catching her breath, or clicking her tongue. The sound that might indicate that all was not well.

I remember the doctor putting her hand gently on mine and saying, "You're terrified. What can I do to help you have confidence in this pregnancy" and knowing there was nothing she could do. If she couldn't guarantee a healthy baby, then I would remain afraid.

As my pregnancy progressed, the terror lessened in the second trimester only to return full throttle in the third, when my thoughts turned to cord accidents and unexplained stillbirths. I sobbed on my midwife's shoulder as I confessed to feeling no joy, no excitement, only dread.

And when I gave birth, my body shook uncontrollably. I knew it was the epidural that I'd been given to facilitate an external version and ventouse delivery of my stubbornly posterior baby, but the shaking reminded me of fear, and so I was frightened again. When my son finally emerged, the firs thing I said was "He's not crying, is he OK?" Even in the face of medical personnel who were clearly not at all worried, I fully expected God or fate or whoever to be reminded of my presence and thus of the need to hurt me.

My son is now 4 and a half months old, and I sobbed secretly last night at the thought of losing him. What used to pass as prayer is now a half-formed, primal chant: pleasedon'ttakemybabypleasedon'ttakemybabypleasedon'ttakemybaby.

Please don't.

10 May 2007 in Lump in the Throat | Permalink | TrackBack (0)

Keeping Abreast...Or Not

Six weeks have flown by. it's amazing how quickly they have passed. My little 7lb 7oz newborn is a strapping 11lbs (I'm estimating) and is becoming more aware and interactive by the day. The growth is a particular achievement given that the poor child has a good case of Gastroesophageal Reflux and therefore honks up much of any feed he is given. With baby Gaviscon he is doing much better, but he can still do a fairly impressive puke, and it almost invariably lands on the one bit of clothing that I have not covered with a burp cloth or on my freshly laundered sheets. Such are the rewards of motherhood.

One consequence of the need for medication is that I weaned the small one onto bottles for all but two of his feeds at 3 weeks. I went cold turkey. All the websites and books tell you to cut out feeds gradually, but patience has never been my strong suit, and I decided I wanted it over and done with as quickly as possible. Cue two days of a couple of b**bs like boulders and wearing cold cabbage leaves in my bra to stave off mastitis (it really works!!).

I maintained a morning and evening feed for the next 3 weeks, but every time he would bring massive amounts of the milk back up, usually soaking himself in the process. So, today, we had our last ever breastfeed. He fell asleep looking like a little milky drunk, happy and peaceful; I sobbed my heart out. I will almost certainly never breastfeed a baby again, and I thought my heart would break with the grief of having to let go. Oh, I know I could keep it up for longer, and Lord knows the tit Nazis would excoriate me for not nursing him until he's in his twenties, but my son and I have mutually decided that this is the right time. He isn't terribly interested when he breastfeeds, whereas he can pile back 5 oz in a bottle with aplomb; and I am looking forward to carrying around something slightly smaller than twin cantaloupes. But, my God it is a poignant decision. Still, I had Mr B take some lovely photographs, for my eyes only. Something to look back on and smile.

I know there will be many other milestones where I will weep at having to let something go. One day he will go off to school, stop wanting mummy cuddles, as me to drop him off round the corner so his friends won't see that he has a *gasp* mother! That's the buggery of parenthood: we are forever bound to our children, but from the moment they are born, they are moving away from us, becoming ever more independent until they need us only a little bit.

So I am going to go watch my sleeping son while I still can.

04 February 2007 in Lump in the Throat | Permalink | TrackBack (0)

Delivery Notes

I think I had better write this now before it all fades into that dreamlike obscurity of all labours. They say you forget the pain, and it's true: you do. I have a diary entry (I think it's the only entry I made) from when the Badeggs Daughter was born 14 years ago talking about how much it hurt. But by the time I got pregnant with my son, I had a sepia-tinted picture of her birth, in which the pain wasn't really that bad.

On Monday the 18th of December, I had a false labour. I had woken up with fairly regular, though painless, contractions. By 7.30 we called the midwife (how lucky are we; she lives literally a minute's walk from our door) who examined me and found that I had almost fully effaced but was only just starting to dilate. Nevertheless, the contractions were regular and strong enough that she felt confident that labour would establish later that day. Mr B was due to give a talk in London about how people use online resources to search for information. It was a real career boon, but he had to ring up and make his apologies. Far better, he said, to miss the speech that to miss the birth of his first (and almost certainly only) child. The contractions lasted all day, getting stronger though still remaining fairly painless. At 8pm the midwife suggested a warm, relaxing bath. By 8.30 the contractions has eased off and by 10.30 they were gone entirely. We were so disappointed!

I was supposed to have been at work until the 20th, but by the next morning, I was again having bouts of contractions, so we made the decision that I shouldn't go back. if I went into labour at work in Kidlington, I'd be a long way away from Wallingford Maternity Unit and if it coincided with rush hour, well... SO I stayed home and waited. And waited. And waited. Nothing. Your sister drove me nuts asking me when I thought labour might start, whether it would be before Christmas, etc. She even talked to you through my belly telling you to get your buns out here!

At 4 am on Saturday the 23rd, I woke thinking that my waters may have broken (actually, I hoped it was that because the alternative explanation was that I had wet the bed!). I waited an hour and felt mild contractions again. I told Mr B but urged him to go back to sleep as I figured it would take a while for things to get started. I went downstairs to make a cup of tea and noticed some premixed pastry out on the counter. (I had intended to make some mince pies the day before but had forgotten and left the pastry out.) Still assuming it would take hours for contractions to really get going, if indeed this was the real thing, I started cutting out pastry circles for the mince pies at 5.10. At 5.15, standing in the middle of the kitchen, my waters broke for certain in a massive gush. I dashed to the downstairs loo and hollered to Mr B. The look on his face when I told him what had happened...I wish I had had a camera.

Contractions started immediately, two to three minutes apart and they hurt! We called Wallingford and agreed with the duty midwife that I'd have a cup of tea at home, get dressed and then come straight in. When we arrived at around 6.30, they showed us into a delivery room and the midwife examined me to find that I was again mostly effaced but this time 2-3 cm dilated. I had a bath which helped to slow the contractions a bit but when I got out they became relentless. I was hardly getting a break. I used Entonox (gas and air, or nitrous oxide) which helped for a bit but the contractions soon overtook its effect. I then had a shot of Meptid, which took the edge off but not enough. A second examination at 10.30 showed I was now fully effaced but no more dilated. At that point, I asked to be transferred to the John Radcliffe Hospital in oxford where I could have an epidural. Turns out that was a very good decision.

An ambulance took me to the JR (the most uncomfortable ride of my life) and we arrived at around noon. By then I had moved to 5-6 cm dilated, but I still opted for an epidural. By then I was in so much pain that I didn't even feel the needle go in.

By 2.15 I was fully dilated and the midwife, Erika Kirk, had me start pushing. To me, the pushing bit lasted, oh 15, 20 minutes. In reality, I was pushing for 2 hours before she called in a consultant. It's all a bit hazy now, but I know that they let me rest for 30 minutes to see if the contractions would help the baby descend a bit more, then I pushed until 6.15. At that point I was told that I would need a ventouse extraction. The baby was fine, but he needed help coming out. The consultant, a rather rough woman, said she would be able to do the procedure in the delivery room, as opposed to theatre, and she left the room to prepare. A few minutes a later, a kind looking man in scrubs came in and I was told that he was the big boss. I'm not sure why the change was made, but he was so much nicer than the woman that I was glad whatever the reason.

Dr Chowdhry examined me and said that the baby was in fact in a back to back (posterior) position. He thought ventouse was still an option, but he would have to attempt to manually turn the baby first. They would do this in theatre as there was a chance that I would need a Cesarean section if he was unable to turn the baby. My epidural was topped up: great in that I felt absolutely nothing from the waist down, but awful as it made me shake uncontrollably. The theatre itself was cold (even the staff thought so), which made the shaking worse. All of which conspired to convince my brain that I was scared (OK, I probably was a little scared anyway). Poor Mr B was escorted into the OR after all the preparation was done and walked in to the sight of me hooked up to various machines and at least 15 people milling about. He says that the fact that all the staff looked relaxed and not worried was the only thing that kept him from panicking.

Dr Chowdhry did his turning bit (this apparently involved two hands up my hoo ha at one point and giant forceps at another) and got the baby turned into the right position. I was told to push and felt the faint, painless sensation of something moving inside. A quick snip later and the head was born, followed closely by the body. And suddenly my son was lifted up at 7.02 pm, silent but a healthy pink that let me know he was OK (I asked anyway just to make sure). He was cleaned up while I was stitched up, and given straight to Daddy (I'm still miffed abut that; neither of my children had skin to skin time with me before being given to their fathers, though in these circumstances I understood why). Mr B tried to show him to me, but it was hard to get the right angle. Eventually, though, I finally got to see and kiss Rory. He smelled like lavender, a smell I've never much cared for until now, and had two stork bites on his scrunched up little face.

We were taken to an observation area when I was able to put Rory to the breast (he took to it tolerably well). Mr B and the Badeggs Daughter hung around for a couple more hours, parents were notified, and eventually I was taken up to a private room where I actually managed a few hours of sleep. I was discharged on Christmas Eve and home in time for Carols from King's College (one of my favourite Christmas Eve traditions).

Two weeks later, my stitches are healed and I'm hardly sore at all any more. I'm within 7 lbs of my pre-pregnancy weight and can fit into my normal size jeans as long as they have some stretch to them. Rory is growing well. Although he has colic in the evenings, which wears us out, the rest of the time he is a pretty chilled out baby. I could look at him all day long, and some days I do.

06 January 2007 in Lolapalooza | Permalink | TrackBack (0)

Sometimes Things Work Out After All

Rory was born on 23rd December, 7.02 pm, weighing 7lb, 7oz. Full head of the most gorgeous golden-brown hair, and blue eyes that will almost certainly stay that way. The Badeggs Daughter has made it her sole aim in life to make sure that his little baby buttocks never rest on anything other than a lap.

Mr B and I are overjoyed and under-rested.

Full delivery story to follow. It was a doosey, but I think he's worth it...

Roryaged10mins

29 December 2006 in Lump in the Throat, UFO is a GO! | Permalink | TrackBack (0)

Plans

We've decided to go to hospital after all. Throughout most of my pregnancy, the idea of a home birth has felt absolutely right. I could picture it in my mind and was really looking forward to it. But now it doesn't feel right, and when Mr B and I stopped to think carefully about it, we realised it's just not that important to us. My main reason for wanting to have the baby at home was to be in my own bed shortly after delivery. The OB assures me that if all goes well with the delivery in hospital, I can discharge myself after 6 hours, so I could be back home quite quickly anyway. That was enough to sway me, and once I allowed myself to make that decision, I felt a hundred times better.

Of course, I had hoped to use a birthing pool in early labour as pain relief, and since there is only one in the hospital maternity unit, it's unlikely that I'll get to use one. But even that's just not important enough. My losses have primed me to expect the worst and be grateful if it doesn't happen. I need, for my own sanity, to be near to high tech medicine for that 0.001% chance of something going wrong. After all, I've been in that tiny percentage before.

The OB confirmed that Bad Boy has started to engage (1/5th apparently) and she predicts that I will deliver at 38 weeks as I did with Badeggs Daughter. That would be next week! God I hope so. It would be bliss to spend Christmas without the world's biggest bauble (that's ornament in Amerispeak) poking out in front of me!

Things to remember about 37 weeks:

  • Little feet poking out of my side near my ribs
  • The feel of a full term baby wriggling around trying to get comfortable; it feels like ripples must feel to a pond.
  • Baby hiccups. They've gone from tiny little pulses to great quakes that shake the whole bed!
  • The way my midwife talks to the baby when she feels my abdomen. She shows such reverence and joy at the thought of that new little life.
  • Mr B listening to the heartbeat by putting his ear up against my belly, and how he then pulls back and kisses the spot where he's heard it.
  • Badeggs Daughter watching and rewatching the episode of Friends where Rachel has her baby, and how she keeps saying: "Oh!!! That's going to be you soon! I can't wait!". And how she drags her friends over to see how big I've got when I collect her from school.
  • The tug-of-war between desperately wanting to get this baby out but knowing that this is the last time I am ever likely to be pregnant. I'll miss it.

13 December 2006 in UFO is a GO! | Permalink | TrackBack (0)

Flipper

Bad Boy has turned and is now head down. This news should make me very happy, seeing as it means a home birth is now absolutely possible, given that all is still well. But I had a bit of a meltdown with the midwife yesterday. I'm really struggling with fallout from my previous losses, feeling terrified that something will happen to my son if he's not removed promptly from my womb, and soon. The midwife told me that she would refer me for an elective Cesarean if I'm finding it this hard. Now, quite why I should be irrationally concerned about the risks associated with a natural birth and not at all concerned about those associated with an elective C-section is quite beyond my capacity to understand at this moment. I am what is commonly referred to as a basket case, and am unable to make sense out of pretty much anything right now.

Mr B thinks that if I go for a section, I may end up feeling like I have somehow dodged a bullet--i.e. temporarily cheated God out of an opportunity to break my heart again--and that it will come back to haunt me. In essence, he thinks I should stand up to the school bully (God, that is) and go for the home birth, complete with birthing pool, Abba on the stereo and champagne in the fridge, as has been the plan since I made it to 14 weeks. And given that he is a lot smarter than me, I am inclined to go along with that plan.

I'm off to the OB-GYN today to get the final go-ahead to have the home birth. While I'm there I might just broach the idea of a planned section or even a planned induction just to cover my bases. But for now it looks as though Bad Boy will make his appearance at a date and time of his choosing, and not mine. I just hope he's as impatient as I am.

07 December 2006 in Lolapalooza | Permalink | TrackBack (0)

A Funny Turn

I'm not sure whose body I'm carting around, but it's sure as hell not mine. I have my suspicions that it belongs to a cat-burgling bowling enthusiast as I seem to have somehow secreted a large and exceedingly heavy bowling ball about my person. I'm not doing a spectacular job of hiding it, either.

At my last midwife appointment, all was well. Blood pressure normal, pee normal, measuring precisely where I should be, and Bad Boy's heart rate was good. The only problem at this point is that he is still in the breech position. There's still plenty of time for him to turn, I'm told, but it does raise the issue of a possible Ceasarian section. Nevertheless, everything looks good, and I should be basking in these last few weeks of pregnancy, right?

Um, no, not so much.

The ghosts of my dead babies apparently have not yet been laid to rest so I have spent the past week becoming more and more anxious, peaking at terror on Tuesday when I was convinced that Bad Boy had died. I hadn't felt movement for several hours, it seemed, and usually I am pummelled on a fairly regular basis from within. I ended up in my office, door closed, prodding my belly and begging him to move. He did. I cried.

I honestly thought I had come to terms with my earlier losses. After the unrelenting anxiety of the first trimester, I had spent the second trimester and 6 weeks of the third feeling good about everything; confident, even. I have no idea why suddenly I should feel this sense of doom. Maybe it's the small skull and crossbones magnet that appeared mysteriously on the floor last week. Mr Badeggs stuck it on the fridge, assuming it belonged to the teenager (I think he's secretly hoping she's a latent Goth; I believe he still has some black nail varnish from his own youth that he can share). But Badeggs Daughter professes to know nothing about it, and it's definitely not mine or Mr B's. The really spooky thing is that a similar small skull magnet made an appearance in our old house and that one, too, belonged to no one. Mr B disposed of said skull and crossbones this morning. (I asked him to remove it from the house, but he tossed it in the bin. I can see I am going to have to dig it out tonight and hurl it into a field somewhere.)

I suppose at the root of the matter is the fact that I am still angry that we ended up losing so many babies in a row, something that happens to only 3 women in a thousand. When someone tries to reassure me now by telling me that something is exceedingly rare, I just laugh bitterly. Rare maybe, but someone still has to suffer it, and God has indicated in no uncertain terms that I am his bitch. So I guess I am waiting for the sword to fall.

I wake up in the middle of the night for yet another trip to the loo and end up lying awake worrying about cord accidents and excess amniotic fluid, and not enough amniotic fluid, and the excessively cruel incidence of 'unexplained stillbirths' and it's all I can do not to race to hospital and insist they remove my baby from my womb so that I can physically watch over him. Not being able to see what is going on inside me is a source of extreme agitation, and I know I must be passing those feelings on to Bad Boy. The poor child will be a nervous wreck by the time he's born. He'll come out like some tiny Woody Allen, looking pale and slightly terrified of life.

I have decided that if he stays breech, I'm definitely going for a C-section. The hospital would support a 'natural' birth (read stirrups and forceps), and my midwife has even said she'd support me doing it at thome (ass pointed skywards; very dignified). But for the latter, as much as I'd like to do it, I'd also need to hire an independent midwife who has experience of breech birth and at £2500 it's out of the question. And, frankly, given my (admittedly irrational) worries, I just want a quick swipe of the scalpel and to have my baby in my arms. If it means 6 weeks or more of pain and discomfort, so be it. I have people to help.

I hope this anxiety quells itself, I really do. I've been going back for acupuncture to try to turn the baby, but next session I am going to ask for treatment just for me. if Bad Boy doesn't want to turn, I'm not going to try to make him.

Wish us luck.

30 November 2006 in In which she waxes philosophical | Permalink | TrackBack (0)

Pregnancy-a-Go-Go

I am now so large that certain countries wish to harpoon me. I daren't wear white lest small children stick carrots on my face thinking I'm a snowman. I can no longer put on my socks without pretending I'm a circus contortionist. And shaving any part of my lower body has become an exercise fraught with danger as I blindly wield the blade and hope for the best. Yet I don't have any stretchmarks. It can only be a matter of time.

I've reached 32 weeks today. That means Bad Boy could put in an appearance any time between 5 and 10 weeks from now, and boy am I hoping for the lower end of that scale. It's impossible to get comfortable, take a deep breath or stay away from the loo for more than half an hour at a time. And the heartburn. Dear Sweet Jebus the heartburn...

At home, the cat is perplexed. He clearly senses something is up and he has never before been so affectionate with me. I think he knows his days of being picked up and cradled like a baby are numbered. (He glowers when I do it, but he never actually tries to escape.)

Mr B, the most patient man on the planet, is verklempt that he can't really do anything to help in terms of the physical side of pregnancy (though the advance birthday present of a shiatsu massage seat was a damn fine effort). Last night he asked me, rather plaintively, whether there was anyhting he could do. I asked him whether he knew how to perform a Caesarian Section. And I was only half joking.

Nevertheless, this time last year, we were still grieving over our third miscarriage and wondering whether we'd ever have a baby. Now, I could be as little as 5 weeks away (always assuming God is busy smiting Republicans and hasn't got a little trick up his sleeves). So every time I grumble, I do remind myself that my current discomfort is a joy compared to the pain we went through last year.

And then I grumble some more because, well, I'm an ungrateful bitch.

08 November 2006 in Lolapalooza | Permalink | TrackBack (0)

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