Monday, October 5, 2020

Labor for Baby B2 Part 2

It was about 7:30pm. We got lost trying to get to the parking deck we were supposed to be in. I still wasn't feeling many emotions because I was in shock this was happening, but I was having some mild contractions. We finally parked and started the walk to the hospital. We had been instructed to take in any and everything we might need. Once you entered, you couldn't leave...if that's not ominous, what is?!? Two nurses stopped us on our walk in and suggested we take the shuttle to the door. They said it would be a long walk otherwise, so we backed up and waited for it to come around. I sat behind Kevin on the ride and that's the first time it hit me what was happening. I cried on the ride. I was scared. It wasn't supposed to happen this way.
When we got to the front doors, we had our temperature taken and were each given a mask to wear. They didn't have my name on the list, so there was some confusion regarding that. Kevin had to go over to a separate area and remove his mask to get a photo taken so they could print his information on a paper sticker visitor badge. And then we were off to the elevators to ride up to the labor and delivery floor. On the way up, the elevator lurched and dropped a little. I almost peed my pants. We were scared we'd be trapped inside, but alas, it started moving again. We got to the floor and answered some Covid questions via speaker before the doors opened to let us into the labor wing. Then we had to be admitted, which involved me signing a ton of forms (which I read because you can't trust anyone these days, especially in such a weird time). I think the nurses and staff were frustrated at how long it took, but I wasn't signing anything I didn't read and I was starting to get salty about the whole ordeal. Finally we were ushered to our room and told we had to wear our masks the entire time. Umm, that was a big ole fat "no" for me. If I was going to be pushing a baby out, I was going to have to be able to breathe! The nurses secretly agreed without verbally saying anything. However, until I was tested for "the Corona", I had to wear my mask. (Kevin was supposed to wear his mask the entire time also, but at some point his came off too and he never put it back on. He was also never swabbed for the 'Rona.) 
First I was asked to undress and put on a gown. I needed to pee, so I asked if I could do that and they were thrilled to collect my urine for a protein test. I got in bed and the whole ordeal began to unfold. I don't remember the exact order of things, but you'll get the gist. It was around 9pm.
Nurses were geared up in scrubs with gloves, head coverings and masks on. But on top of that they had these thin transparent yellow gauzey gowns that covered everything and clear face shields (I refer to this getty-up as their hazmat suits). I'm glad the gowns were so thin...I know for a deadly virus, it was doing a lot of protecting! They had to wear that until I had a Corona swab (basically a q-tip a foot long swabbing my brain) that came back negative. So, in marched the "Corona team" in their hazmat suits to swab my brain. I guess, in retrospect, I could have refused to be tested, but the nurses were probably grateful I was so they could eventually remove their hazmat gear. I want to say there were three or more of them on the "Corona team", but there could have only been two. I took a deep breathe and they inserted that entirely too long q-tip up into my brain. It had to be there for 10 seconds. The longest 10 seconds I've ever counted. My eyes welled up, I felt like I had to sneeze. I also had that sensation you get when you dive down too deep in a pool and you get bubbles up in your nose, you need to get back to the top for air and you can't get there fast enough. To say it was horrible, well... The test came back negative and everyone removed their hazmat suits. There was joy in the room!
The midwife from WBWC came in at some point and laid out the plan for everything. I was getting magnesium to make sure I didn't have a stroke or seizure. Magnesium makes everything in your body relax (also the exact opposite of what you need your body to do to contract and push a baby out), so this made me a fall risk. I couldn't leave the bed. They were also going to start Pitocin to get contractions going and that would increase up to 20 by some point. (I didn't know what that meant and we exceeded 20, so I really have no idea?). I was going to have a foley bulb inserted to dilate me and potentially help my water break. And we were going to have a baby.
Next came IVs. I asked for a kid's "port" or whatever the piece that stays in your arm is, because I know my veins are small and in the past I've had to be poked a lot with no luck. Well, this go-round my nurse tried two spots and couldn't get it. Excruciating pain and Kevin was in the corner with his back to me while I pretended to have "normal" conversation for his sake, so he wouldn't pass out. When she couldn't get it, she called in backup and that nurse tried with no luck and then finally got it on the 4th try. Those dang things have caused me more pain in both of my labors than anything else. The bruises from that specific torture were still around 2 weeks after birth.
Bruises two weeks later
The magnesium was started in the port. It gave me a super warm sensation all over and made me flushed and was supposed to make me feel loopy, but I don't remember the loopy until the following morning/next day. I also had fluids.
At some point after that the anesthesiologist came in to introduce himself and have me sign 500 papers that detailed the drugs he would like to inject into me that I was denying. I don't think he gets a hard NO very often. Poor guy looked offended. He offered to come back. I think he had a glimmer of hope. I knew I wasn't going to see that sucker again.
The "child doctor" came in next. That's what I call this guy who couldn't have been a day over 16. He started his conversation with, "Can you tell me what preeclampsia is?" I wasn't aware that I was a contestant on a medical game show, and I was really VERY salty at this point, so I clapped back with something like "yeah, my blood pressure is high and you people think I'm going to stroke out or have a seizure, so here I am being hooked up with magnesium pumped into me to have a baby." Wrong lady, child doctor, wrong lady. He did some back-peddling and explained to me exactly why things were going the way they were and told me I could opt out of the magnesium if I wanted to. REALLY?!? because it had already started and everyone was super sure I was about to die without it.
Then "Big Hands", that's what I now called the WBWC midwife, came in to strip my membranes and/or insert the foley bulb. These might have happened at the same time or it could have been two separate occurrences. All I know is "Big Hands" had REALLY big hands. And when she inserted them in my vagina, it felt like she was pushing her big hands all the way through me into the bed behind me. Kevin had to look away again. I was contracting and flexing my muscles and almost fighting against her because it was painful. She ended up having to use 3 different alligator clamps (also known in the medical field as a speculum) to insert the foley bulb, which was placed at 11pm. She commented that she couldn't get something out of the way or get around something or something. I wasn't really caring what was in the way, but Big Hands needed to get this mandatory bulb in me and leave my presence A sap! The bloody alligator clamps remained in the room sink until after the baby was born and this was neither pleasant to look at or sanitary (in my opinion)!
Pitocin was started after the foley bulb was in and labor artificially started. There was finally a bit of a break with people coming in and out of the room and we were asked if we wanted to be part of a COVID-19 study. They would take blood from me and from the baby just after birth and do something with it. At first it sounded okay, but then I just decided I had had enough at that point. I wasn't even supposed to be in the hospital and I wasn't okay with my minutes-old child being used as a science experiment. Luckily, the nurse was super understanding and said that was totally fine, she would just tell that team not to come in the room.
We "rested" from around 11:30pm-2am. When I did have my eyes open, it was nice to look out the windows at the dark night sky and see lights (of a parking garage or something else) in the distance. (I'll also note that blood pressure meds were ordered for me, but my blood pressure was in the normal range the ENTIRE time I was laboring...so was this really preeclampsia?!?) I was having contractions, but was trying to sleep through them. I wasn't supposed to leave the bed for anything, because you know, fall, hit head, die. But I refused a catheter. I'd had one for a procedure years ago and it hurt more than anything that's ever happened to me in my life and I can tolerate pain pretty well. That wish was honored as long as I had two people supporting me to go to the bathroom, and as long as I continued to void on my own. So, I went multiple times throughout the night. Once on my own with just Kevin-and I was reprimanded! Oops!
Midnight
1AM
2AM
The Pitocin continued to increase, the magnesium was coursing through my body. The contractions were coming on nice and heavy. The monitors for the baby on my belly were uncomfortable and pressing into me. The blood pressure cuff was tightening up every 15 minutes. There was really no way to rest as people continued to come in and out of the room. The foley bulb came out just after 2am.
All of the nurses had these walkie-talkie devices hanging around their necks or clipped to their scrubs. They acted like hands free phones. So an incoming call would say, "Call for Marissa, do you accept." and the nurse would say "yes" and then they could talk to the caller. Sometime after the foley blub came out, or maybe it was after my water broke, Big Hands called my nurse and said something along the lines of, "Just checking in and wanted to see if Victoria needs me for any reason." The nurse relayed what was happening while I stayed silent, because it was her call. But in my mind I was saying, 'where are you and what the F are you doing? Taking a nap? I'm in labor and you're the midwife assigned to me. Of course I need your assistance. You're supposed to be delivering a baby!' When my nurse got off the phone she asked me if I wanted the midwife and I said, "Yes.". HAHA! Much more simple than the outrage in my head!
3:10am: Pitocin at 14, 3cm dilated
3:12am: Pitocin at 16
My chart says at 4:45am I SROM'd (Spontaneous Rupture of Membranes) for clear fluid and quickly became more uncomfortable. Basically, my water broke. But by this point, contractions were heavy enough that I couldn't even pretend to sleep through them. I was up and down to the toilet frequently and very uncomfortable. Pitocin was at 22.
The nurse, bless her sweet heart, "conveniently" had to change my sheets at one point, which allowed me to get out of bed and labor standing up. Another time she found some sort of cushion-y thing and took off my sheets to put it underneath so I could have a softer "experience". This let me stand up and make hip circles, sway, etc. while holding onto Kevin...which was "not allowed". So much better than being uncomfortable in a bed and longing for the tub.
I said out-loud so many times, "I want to get in the tub." "Why can't I get in the tub." "Why would anyone choose to be laying in bed laboring?" "Can I get in the tub?" All of the discomfort would have been fixed if I could have labored in the water and I was so upset that I couldn't. Again, a fall risk...but if I'm sitting down, is it considered a fall? At one point, Big Hands was in the room and I made some comment about how I longed for the sweet, sweet waters of the bathtub. Instead of sympathetically agreeing that this was a bad situation and not my birth plan and she was sorry I couldn't labor in the tub, she decided to inform me of the reasons why I couldn't get in the tub...namely because I was hooked up to magnesium and my blood pressure was a concern. Very clinical. No bedside manner, no understanding of my displeasure with this horrible plight. I had been fairly quiet up until this point, but I snapped back, "It was a rhetorical question." I might have said more. I might have ended with "lady." But the message was clear. I understand it, I'm just not pleased with it and if you could humor me and play nice, that would be peachy. Kevin will note that this made everything really awkward in the room. If you know me, you know that I don't (and didn't) care.
At one point I was asked a question and I couldn't answer it. I even responded in some capacity saying, "I don't know" or "I can't decide". I just remember the nurse saying "It's so good that you can't make up your mind, it means you're in active labor." What a positive thing to hear! She was such a calming presence and gave me encouraging words throughout labor which was WAY more than Big Hands ever did. God Bless Labor and Delivery Nurses!
Around this time I was getting back into bed from the bathroom. I was so uncomfortable. The fetal monitors on my stomach were pressing into me and I was feeling agitated and trapped. I mentioned that to someone, but before they could change things about them, I ripped them off. This did not make Big Hands happy. When I got back in bed, it was 5:21am. I got on my knees and was grabbing the top of the raised bed, hugging the head of the bed for support and resting my head on the top of the bed looking towards the wall (but with my eyes closed).
I was very uncomfortable and I remember thinking 'I haven't felt the urge to push yet and this is pretty painful...it's going to be a long labor if I'm not even feeling like pushing yet.' The nurse said something reassuring to me. I now can't remember what it was and that kills me because she was the person in the room that with her one encouraging statement allowed me to continue on. It was something simple like "you're doing great." and it was EVERYTHING! And I was also thinking if the pain continued, I might have to call in the anesthesiologist-I was starting to feel defeat. But I'm also so stubborn and wanted it my way. If I could get to the pushing stage, I knew I'd be fine, but it didn't seem like that was going to come anytime soon. I was silently pleading with God. 'Lord, give me endurance. Give me strength. Help me do this.' And just then, out of nowhere, I felt the urge to push. It was 5:34am and my medical records say I was "spontaneously bearing down". I remember Big Hands saying something about the head being there, but there being something in the way. I think she asked me to push as she helped move something inside of my body out of the way. I was completely dilated with the baby's head at +2 at 5:36am and in a push and a half, baby B2 was born. Seriously! I did my spontaneous push and the push to get the "thing" out of the way and baby was here!
The sweet nurse exclaimed, "Oh Boy!" and I just knew it was a boy. I said, "What? It's a boy??", and she said, "Oh, I don't know, I was just excited." None of the night nurses thought a lady coming in to be induced at 9pm would have a baby before shift change at 7am. I managed to flip around in bed into a sitting position as baby was completely delivered and we learned it was a baby girl! She came into the world with an arm straight up in the air...GIRL POWER...and caused a 2nd degree tear. As she was put on my chest, I was instructed to give a small push to deliver the placenta and attempted breastfeeding right away.
Hormones were coursing through my body. I had the shakes and I was so cold. The nurse brought in warm blankets, but I remember saying aloud to myself, "I'm on a warm beach, I'm on a warm beach." I was trying to imagine the warmth so my body would relax and not tense up. Little girl was also cold and was grunting.  She came so fast, there wasn't time for the fluid in her lungs to get pressed out.  So the NICU team had to be called in to evaluate her and put her under some heat lamps to warm up. In no-time she was okay (although the grunting continued for weeks) and I was getting stitched up. I tell you what, shots of lidocaine in your lady parts is almost the worst part of the whole ordeal, so I happily got stitched up with some areas not numb because the shot hurt more than just feeling the needle.
We had time to cuddle and attempt breastfeeding and then the sun was coming up and I was so, so tired! 
I don't remember many details after that. I slept as much as possible. I was a zombie from the magnesium that I had to stay on for at least another 24 hours. Pitocin was cranked up to 250 to prevent postpartum hemorrhaging (a risk with preeclampsia). And sweet baby, now named Elizabeth Violet, was drowsy from getting the magnesium in the womb as well!
I was starving!! and that's when we learned I couldn't eat anything solid for the next 24 hours. (Yes, they do try to kill you when you go to the hospital!) Apparently when on magnesium, you can't have solids. However, I was exhausted after giving birth and so hungry and needed those calories to help my milk come in. It was a ridiculous rule, in my opinion. And the nurses agreed to an extent! They allowed jello and broth and popsicles and even sneaked me some chicken noodle soup with a few noodles. Bless them! Because my chart said no solids, Kevin couldn't even order food. The nurses had to change my chart to allow him to order food to the room so we wouldn't be charged for a separate non-patient meal. Ridiculous!
Over in the afternoon, I got up for one of many trips to the bathroom and got really hot and just knew I was going to pass out and/or vomit. I told the nurse and she got me back in bed and flat so fast, I felt like I flew there. She had ice packs on me and got me to a "normal" state so fast, but at that point, I was still so loopy from the magnesium and didn't want to experience that sick/passing out feeling again...so I just wanted to sleep and not move. However, I couldn't even get comfortable before we were asked to pack up to move to the antepartum floor. That's short for "you had a baby, but there's still something wrong with you." And our hospital saga was not over...

Sunday, September 27, 2020

Labor for Baby B2

They say every labor is different and I can't find the lie.  To say this one did not follow my birth plan is a huge understatement.  It was anything but ideal.  But we have a healthy baby and a healthy mama to show for it, so I'm thankful!

Let's go back to early May.  I was still getting along with the best of them, but I was really large...I felt larger than I looked...and there was at least one day where I had a really bad headache in the afternoon where I needed Kevin's help to take care of Coralie so I could rest (potential foreshadowing?).  But Coralie and I were still trucking along with "home school".  We learned about camping.  Read books about it.  Watched a Daniel Tiger episode about backyard camping.  Drew pictures of campsites.  And we even got out her fishing pole and went searching for some water to fish in.  That ended badly when a very excited Coralie tripped on the way to the pond and bloodied up her knees.  I had to carry her most of the way home until Kevin came to save us!  Thank goodness for s'mores to save the day on that one!
We got outside most every day so she could ride her bike and inspect ladybugs. We went strawberry picking and I was cooking meals each night. 
Mother's Day we had a special breakfast from Jubala that we took to the Raleigh Rose Garden to eat.  We walked around and looked at the flowers and then went over to Pullen Park to walk around and so Coralie could watch the fish and ducks in the pond.  Things were "normal".

Sunday evening of Mother's Day, I stayed up WAY too late.  I must have been looking at Instagram or something else, but I didn't get to bed until almost 1am.  This was a VERY poor decision because I felt tired all Monday.  Even so, I did my normal activities with Coralie that day.  We opened her new Kiwi Crate and played with that. 
My dentist's office had just opened up after being closed for awhile because of Corona and I had called to try and get an appointment.  I had missed my cleaning in April and knew if I didn't go before the baby was set to arrive on June 1, that I probably wouldn't make it for a LONG time.  They had an appointment that same afternoon, Monday, May 11, so I went in.  Our dentist takes blood pressure readings before each visit and mine seemed to be high.  The hygienist took it again, but when it was still in the high range (138/91), she said not to worry, we'd take it at the end of the visit after I'd been sitting for awhile.  This seemed fine to me.  I had been rushing to get there and it was hot outside.  I had turned the car off and waited in the heat to get the text that it was "Covid safe" to enter the building, so I had no doubt my BP was high.  I had my cleaning and completely forgot about checking it again.  I got up and went to check out and then remembered, so I went back to sit down and have it taken again and it was 146/93.  Why would it have been lower when I missed the "rest" window?  Oh well.
I left there and picked up dinner from Bonefish Grill (they had had too many orders on Mother's Day and wouldn't allow us to order, so this was our consolation) and went home to eat.  I don't remember anything to note about that evening, but I didn't get in bed until 11pm (late again) and I was up in the middle of the night worrying about my blood pressure, looking up preeclampsia and concerned about the seriousness of it and stressing about if it could lead to having a c-section, because that seemed like the worse case scenario.
So, not much sleep Monday night and Tuesday morning Coralie was able to go back to school for the first time in 7 weeks.  We packed her up and got her off and I had a list of things I needed to do including packing a bag for the hospital, getting oils together for a friend, cooking dinner for a friend who had a newborn and TAKING A NAP.  This was most important, but couldn't happen until the other things did.  I wasn't feeling "right", but I'm sure a lot of that was lack of sleep and anxiety about what was going on with my body and this deadline of needing to get everything done.  I wasn't super hungry for lunch and I went to the bathroom a few times...almost as if my system was clearing itself out.  I was pretty sure the baby was coming soon.  I got a glorious nap, thanks to Kevin cooking the meal for our friends and when I woke up, I had a scheduled tele-health appointment with a midwife.  I hopped on that call as Kevin was leaving to get Coralie from preschool.
The midwife I was scheduled with happened to be an acquaintance from college (God wink) and we had been in a wedding together post-college, so I knew her...at least better than any of the other midwives.  She was the first to bring up my blood pressure.  She was concerned because at my last in-person appointment, it had been slightly elevated (135/82).  Honestly, if she hadn't brought it up and if she had been any of the other midwives, I might not have shared any of my concerns.  As it was, I opened up to her about my readings at the dentist and we went over all of the symptoms of preeclampsia (horrible headache, pain under your right breast where your liver is, extreme swelling or unusual swelling, vision changes, protein in the urine, etc.).  I didn't have any symptom except the high blood pressure.  Because she knew me, she leveled with me.  She wanted me to come into the birth center that evening to have my blood pressure taken there and if it was high, I was going to have to go to UNC to be induced.  She encouraged me to pack a bag.  I could decide if I wanted to be induced that evening or the following morning, but I needed to go get my blood pressure checked that day.  All of this was happening as Kevin was coming in the house with Coralie, so I had to fill him in on everything.  It didn't make sense to drive all the way to Chapel Hill for a BP reading and then come home just to potentially drive back in the morning to be induced.  Regardless of what my readings would be, we needed to prepare then to go to the hospital.  We were both in a daze.  It didn't seem like time, it didn't seem real.  We put on Little Baby Bum for Coralie and Kevin finished up some work while I called our doula and our birth photographer and "packed".  Because of the Covid guidelines, if we ended up in the hospital, neither of them would be able to come.  They needed to be notified (in case I happened to birth at the birthing center-which silly me still thought was an option) of the hiccup.  Both ended the call telling me they would be praying for me...man did I need that in that moment!
Pictures we found on Kevin's phone days later.  Coralie was busy while we were planning logistics.
After packing for myself and throwing some stuff in a bag for Coralie, Kevin had to pack.  Seriously things were moving in slow motion.  It seemed like I didn't know what to do next.  Nothing made sense.  We got a call from the midwife on duty at some point asking us if we were on the way.  I don't even think we had left the house yet, but we gave her an estimated time of arrival.  I think I called my mom to fill her in and my sister, who was going to watch Coralie.
The original plan had been: birth at the birth center.  I could only be there for a max of 12 hours, so at most Coralie would be with my sister for 12 hours, but after the baby was born, Kevin would get Coralie and bring her over to meet her new sibling.  Since I didn't know what my future had in store, I didn't know how to plan for another scenario.  The birth center plan was the only one I had accepted.
We packed the car and off we went to Chapel Hill, but first we swung by our friend's house to drop off their dinner.  It was my biggest concern.  I couldn't have a baby without getting them the food we promised them.  Mamas with newborns need to eat!  So, after swinging by Apex, we arrived in Chapel Hill.  Coralie screamed and cried from the moment we left our house until we got to Apex.  Thank goodness I wasn't in active labor (God wink) because that would have tipped me over the edge!  She knew something was up!  As we were getting closer we decided to drop her at my sister's so she would be taken care of.  We had originally planned to take her with us to the Birth Center and get my BP taken and then take her to my sister's on the way to the hospital (if we had to go).  We were in serious denial that the hospital was an option.  At the last minute, we decided to drop her off first.  She was thrilled because her cousin was there to play with her.  I don't think she minded us leaving her at all.
When we arrived at the Birth Center, I was taken to a 4th birthing room (that I didn't know about) and was asked to get comfy sitting on the bed. 
I think I went to pee in a cup before my blood pressure was taken, but then I moved to a couch with my feet up on a stool for my first BP reading.  It was high- 160/100.  I guess to humor us all, the nurse left the room and asked me to rest and they'd take it again.  The second time, 15 minutes later, it was just as high 158/97.  The midwife on call instructed us to head on over to UNC, don't stop for a bite to eat, nothing.  From my lips to you...if you're ever asked to do this, stop for the cheeseburger.  Seriously!  It would be a LONG time before I could eat again.

Tuesday, September 8, 2020

Round 2 Bump Pics

17 Weeks             18 Weeks

20 Weeks             22 Weeks

25 Weeks             26 Weeks

27 Weeks             28 Weeks

29 Weeks             30 Weeks

31 Weeks             32 Weeks

33 Weeks             34 Weeks

35 Weeks             36 Weeks

37 Weeks and going to have a baby!




Tuesday, September 1, 2020

Pregnancy #2

I'm back!
I just re-read my last post on memorizing motherhood and man, I remember that day so vividly and WOW, there have been so, so, so many hard days since then.  I found myself crying again because even on the bad days, I love my littles so, so very much!  Yes, little(S).  We have a new little one, so I need to go back and fill you in on my pregnancy.

I absolutely LOVED being pregnant with Coralie.  Other than horrible heartburn (that gave her a full head of hair) and some swollen ankles in the last month or so, I can't remember too much difficulty with pregnancy.  I did randomly pass out twice in bed, but..well, that wasn't that big of a deal.  Ha!  This go-round, I was ready for the same.  We found out I was expecting in late September 2019 and just about 5 weeks in morning sickness started.  I had the same amount of morning sickness this time and the only thing that made it harder was I had to feed a hungry toddler, so I couldn't just ignore food if I "wasn't feeling it".  I had to face the smells every. single. day.  I vividly remember having to leave the room many times when Coralie was eating and just crying because it made me feel so sick, but then crying harder knowing I had to go back in just in case she choked.  This was all made MUCH harder by Kevin's travel schedule.  I think there was a period of two weeks where he wasn't home and I was exhausted and nauseous and chasing a very determined toddler around wiped me out!  I remember many mornings where I just camped out in the driveway in a chair and watched her play while I chewed on rice cakes and drank lemon S. Pellegrino (which I now can't drink because it makes me feel ick).  
The only thing that made anything better was Wendy's baked potatoes.  I couldn't stand to think about food, but when I got a craving for one, it was a serious matter and it was delicious!  I also really enjoyed a Bruegger's Bagels Better Bacon Cheddar breakfast sandwich and could stomach them as well as anything, so they were a "go-to" for awhile.  And there were days I needed a Zaxby's kiddie fingerz meal with fries or else!  Speaking of cravings...with Coralie I wanted sweet tea.  I'd buy a large one from Bojangles on a Monday and leave it in the fridge all week taking tiny swigs throughout the day because I wanted it so, so badly, but I didn't want the caffeine.  This time, I also had a sweet tooth after morning sickness passed, but, I wanted ice cream in the evenings and mini blueberry crullers with my coffee for a mid-morning snack and gummy bears ALL THE TIME!  Trader Joe's Scandinavian Swimmers were life!

In November, Kevin had a work trip to Arizona and we tagged along to see some friends that live out there and so I wouldn't be alone at home AGAIN.  On the flight out, I got a horrible headache that made me sick on my stomach.  At points during the day I thought I was going to pass out it hurt so much.  Nothing really made it better, but it would stop hurting and give me relief and then come on with a vengeance again.  I would get flushed and have chills and felt awful!  It was all I could do to get us all through the airport to a rental car and then I rode with my eyes closed the 2 hour drive up to our friends house because my head was throbbing.  It was touch and go that evening feeling like I was going to get sick, but I went to bed early and woke up feeling fine.
The rest of the trip was great.  I had no additional symptoms, so I chalked it up to a mild bug.  It wasn't until we got on the plane back home that I had any other symptoms.  The entire trip was fine until we landed at RDU and then as we were taxing to the gate, all of a sudden I got really clammy and told Kevin I was about to get sick.  The next thing I knew, I was vomiting in a bag he miraculously got positioned in front of me and I was down for the count for the rest of the day and the next.  It was all I could do to walk off the plane and wait on a bench for him to drive around and pick me up.  (I'll also note for my own purposes that earlier in this flight was the last time I nursed Coralie.  We were down to just before nap each day and just 2 weeks shy of nursing her for 2 years...a huge accomplishment for both of us!  I wish I had better memories of our "last time".)  This time I didn't feel well the day after, but in no time, I was back to normal.  Was it altitude?  Lack of sleep with waking up early to catch flights?  Not having my normal *small* amount of caffeine?  These "episodes" happened again in December when we traveled to Vermont.  I was fine on the way up, but Coralie got really sick on that flight...so maybe I held it together for her sake?!?
But on the way home, I felt bad and only felt better after a long night of rest.  Again, later in December we traveled down to Key West for Christmas and it happened on the way back from Key West.  Except this time I started vomiting before we even left the hotel to get to the airport.  I had a splitting headache that made me sick.  It took every ounce of grit in me to get home.  I really thought I was going to die in the Atlanta airport.  I walked off the plane from Key West and only made it to the next gate before telling Kevin I couldn't do it.  I sat down, thought I was going to pass out and proceeded to vomit.  He had to get a wheelchair and I think I held Coralie in my lap while he very swiftly pushed us and all of our luggage to the next gate.  The constant movement was horrendous.  The bumpy floor in a moving seat that you couldn't control was beyond torture and I really just wanted to end it all right there.  The tram was a nightmare...I was vomiting along the way...  We finally made it to our gate and I laid out on the airport floor (something only a desperate, sick person, clinging to life would do) and slept until we had to board the plane.  After a good rest at home, again, I was back to normal and since we didn't travel anymore, this phase of pregnancy ended.  By the end I chalked it up to anxiety and stress about traveling (and potentially getting sick) and lack of sleep, but who knows what was really going on. (Maybe a clue for things to come?)

On top of all of this, we had dear friends that were about 10 weeks ahead of me in their pregnancy.  In early October they went in for their anatomy ultrasound and were blind-sighted and devastated to learn that their sweet girl didn't have a heartbeat.  This wrecked me.  Like, completely tore me up.  We hadn't yet announced that we were pregnant and the sadness we walked through with them and the fear of loosing our own little one did a serious number on me.  With Coralie I said early on, "The Lord gives and the Lord takes away.  Blessed be the name of the Lord." and it was my mantra.  I felt prepared to face whatever might come because I knew miscarriages happen and there are difficulties in pregnancy and I knew that whatever happened, God had my best interests in mind even if I didn't understand.  But see, everything was fine.  I was comforted and didn't have to stress and worry, but I also didn't have the reality of a loss.  This time, I couldn't even say, "The Lord gives and the Lord takes away." because this sweet baby was no longer here and the reality was it could happen to us too.  I was so fearful that I didn't even accept that we were pregnant for a REALLY long time.  And it took even longer to be joyful about it.  In fact, I don't know that I ever embraced being excited about my pregnancy because the fear of loosing it hung over my(our) head the entire time.  Our friends were so gracious.  In the midst of their pain, they were truly happy for us.  And that broke me too!  Every week at church I would cry endlessly through the music.  One song in-particular still makes me well up-Yes I Will-Vertical Worship.  Yes I will, lift You high in the lowest valley; Yes I will, bless Your name; Yes I will sing for joy when my heart is heavy; For all my days, oh yes I will.  Ugh.  Our people were going through the unimaginable and they were singing these same words and choosing to believe them when they were breaking inside.  It was just too much.  The same week they lost their babe, my Great Aunt Mildred passed away.  The grief was unavoidable.  
We didn't even share with our families that we were pregnant until almost 15 weeks.  Even that was hard!  We wanted to share with Kevin's mom and dad at the same time and they were both here for Coralie's birthday party in December, but both of their spouses weren't, so we were delaying.  And then Kevin's mom guessed it and started questioning him about it.  Which caused us to tell everyone, but it wasn't how we wanted to tell and everything just felt really wrong with the whole thing.  It was disappointing.

Excited or not, fearful or not, sick or not, my belly got bigger and it got harder and harder to carry a toddler up and down the stairs.  I was uncomfortable sitting and laying down, but fine standing.  Except standing all day was tiring also!  I had to be adjusted regularly to manage the slight uncomfortable pain.  I was also having body work done again to make room for a growing baby.  These appointments were some of the few moments I had for just me.  Coralie was going to preschool two days a week which allowed me to "nest" a little and FINALLY unpack some boxes and move into a house we've lived in since December 2018.  (We have had SERIOUS house issues, but that's another story for another time.)  Things were grooving and then in mid-February my anxiety got the best of me again.  My sister had been sick with a fever for about 12 days and eventually went to the hospital where they ran a myriad of tests to try and figure out what was wrong with her.  The "flu" just wouldn't go away.  Well, it turned out that she had Cytomegalovirus-CMV.  A virus that many babies/kids have and can pass on to adults.  It shows up differently in everyone.  It can be as serious as her condition or so mild, you don't even know you're sick.  Because she was sick, I had agreed to take her little girl for up to a week until she got better.  Well, Kevin came home on Valentine's Day from traveling for an extended period of time and he was sick.  Coralie and I were feeling just a little bit down, so I had to back out of our arrangement.  I didn't want to get her little one sick.  Around that same time my sister got the CMV diagnosis.  She and my mom had been saying Cytomegalovirus, so I didn't put two and two together.  My friend who lost her baby had contracted CMV (I only knew it as that) while pregnant and that's what terminated her pregnancy.  In turn, I got tested (in November) to see if I had ever been exposed...because by our age "everyone has been exposed to CMV."  Well my friend hadn't and it turned out from my own blood tests that I didn't have the antibodies either, so I had never been exposed.  My fears skyrocketed in February, but I honestly think it was a God thing (I call them "God Winks") that Kevin came home from his work trip sick.  I could have easily gotten CMV from my niece, which is likely how my sister got it.  When Coronavirus came on the scene, I wasn't a bit concerned.  I didn't have time to worry about that, I had to worry about not getting CMV.  This meant from about mid-February on, I didn't see my sister or my mom.  I was "quarantining" before it was a thing.
Daddy's home!
And the stay at home orders for Coronavirus were, in part, a blessing for our family.  It took Kevin off the road, so he was able to help more at home when I could no longer bend over the tub to bathe Coralie.  He could help during the numerous meltdowns that happened each day, which completely wore me out.  We were able to go for walks around the neighborhood at night and spend some time together before our new nugget arrived.  Something we hadn't been able to do since well before Coralie was here.  I know it's hard for him to work at home when Coralie wants to be with her daddy all day, but he has gotten to spend so much time with her and see so much of her life during this time that he would have missed otherwise.  Especially for the 7 weeks she was home when her preschool was closed.

Also in February, I took a nap one Sunday afternoon and woke up with extreme tooth pain.  I may have been grinding my teeth, but there was no other significant event to cause the pain.  It was so excruciating that I couldn't comfortably drink liquids for days.  Hot was painful.  Cold was even more painful.  Even room temperature water hurt.  In order to take my prenatal vitamins at night, I had to drink out of a straw and basically force the water down my throat, not letting it touch any of my teeth.  If it did, there was a throbbing pain so intense, I had to sit with my eyes closed for up to a minute and allow it to pass before I could function.  Many times I thought I was going to pass out from the pain.  It was seriously THE WORST!  I went to the dentist after a few weeks and they couldn't find anything wrong, but the biting I had to do there to find which tooth it was set me back pain-wise for another two weeks.  It did get better, but was still causing me pain weeks after the baby was born.  It was most likely the ligaments in my mouth that stretched out with pregnancy and was as if I had a very sore bruise under and around the tooth.  Just another "uncomfortable" thing.
Pausing during weekly belly shots because my tooth hurt so bad from smiling.

Unfortunately, after Coralie was born, Baby + Co., where I birthed her, closed.  This left a huge void.  I wanted to birth at a birthing center again and the only option was Women's Birth and Wellness in Chapel Hill.  We went in for an info session/visit in early October (the day after my dear friend had to deliver her stillborn baby) and I was immediately turned off.  The presenter, who was a midwife, was great, but there were a few digs about Baby + Co. that just didn't sit well with me.  We had such an AMAZING experience at Baby + Co. and hearing that was like criticizing family.  Without any other birth center options, we stuck it out, but each visit I repeated my disappointment for the place.  It just didn't "feel right" and there's no other way to put it.  It was truly a "gut" thing.  On my first visit, after learning about my 3rd or 4th degree tear with Coralie, it was suggested that I just go ahead and book a C-section for this birth.  That turned me off so much!  A tear that bad a second time can lead to other complications with my bowels, but obviously we were seeking out a birth center for a reason...a C-section was not an option for me.  Visit after visit my disdain weighed heavier.  By the time Coronavirus was a "thing" and telehealth appointments were a regular occurrence, I was beyond thrilled.  I didn't have to drive the almost hour to get to WBWC just to feel "blah" about the whole ordeal.  
There were some sweet moments too!  Coralie got to participate in finding the "heart beep" and using the doppler on my belly as well as measuring my belly.  Some of the midwives were super nice and Coralie was always really excited to tag along to appointments.

Other memories: Mid October Kevin was gone and I was so sick with morning sickness and grieving our friends' loss and dealing with never-ending days with Coralie...we were sitting at her "colors table" and I saw on a news highlight on my phone that a cousin of mine had been shot and killed.  I was just beside myself.  I remember just crying and crying.  But the thing that stands out is me loading up Coralie to go to Moe's for dinner that night (the only thing I could stomach that day).  The whole thing was a disaster.  I cried into my food and she didn't eat much of hers, but she desperately wanted her "drink".  I had filled up the kid's cup with water and she was more into that than her sippy cup.  I just remember her refusing to get in the carseat and me loosing my temper.  There were little birds in the parking spot beside us nipping up crumbs.  She was upset that I wouldn't give her a colorful cup with a red lid filled with the same liquid her "normal" cup contained and I was upset about lives lost while trying to be grateful for the life inside me that was causing such nausea.  And yet both produced the same tears. #memorizingmotherhood  
And then there was the silliness of me ordering maternity StitchFix boxes for outfits for Easter and Charleston and maternity pictures.  Clothes that I shouldn't have purchased and we really didn't have the money for, that were worn once and packed away.  I wanted a nice dress for Easter.  Easter that we spent at home in "quarantine" because churches were closed and we had nowhere to go.  And a comfortable dress that I was pumped to wear for a babymoon that we were planning in Charleston.  It would have been a long weekend away.  The first time I would have ever been away from Coralie for a night (in 2.5 years), but something we planned to do before the new munchkin arrived.  A trip that was cancelled because the whole world stopped for a virus.

All-in-all, I can't complain too much about the pregnancy.  I still enjoyed being pregnant although it was made much harder and I was more tired and uncomfortable with another little one to keep up with.  The emotional toll was hard, but we made it.  They say every pregnancy is different.  Every delivery is too...