Sep
08

Seriously… 10 hours of sleep, and I only get up because my body can’t sleep any more, despite it’s desires to do so. I’m ok with being mostly unproductive during these weeks, but the wanting to sleep and not being able to is annoying. Of course, so is the complete and total lack of appetite, despite the distinct need (via nausea and fatigue) to do exactly that. So… Summary of the first trimester so far? Distinct internal conflict.

I’ve always been sensitive to smell, and this has just increased that – as expected. Jason finished the steps for the car yesterday (as in finish/waterproof), and the garage REEKS of finish. Like, I can get so far as opening the door before pulling it shut. VILE! I’m happy food hasn’t smelled that bad, but the thought of some textures (mayonnaise, for instance) – BLECH!

And, today I started the search for a provider. Make that, “today I started banging my head against a dumber-than-usual brick wall”. Ok, ok – I’ll grant you that I have high expectations, and I’ll grant you that they may not be reasonable. But it doesn’t seem to me too hard to fathom that I might want to meet a potential provider and determine whether or not I feel comfortable with their philosophic approach to pregnancy and birth – BEFORE becoming their patient.

In a normal world, you want a new doctor, and you don’t generally interview. References from friends and family (maybe the internet) is standard, but you generally do a trial-by-fire type of evaluation, and dump them in favor of a new doctor if you don’t like their service. Well… It’s a little harder when you have about seven months to evaluate them, and less and less chance of being *able* to safely switch providers the longer you evaluate them. Not to mention that this person may (or may not!) play a vital role in one of the most important moments of your life. I want to know the person before I agree to a service agreement (essentially).

But NONE of the OB’s I tried calling, and only some of the CNM’s (certified nurse midwives) attached to hospitals do meet & greets. Both birthing centers threw an hour long (free) appointment at me, encouraging me to get a feel for the place first, and even suggesting a couple of hospital-attending CNM’s if their facilities end up not being a good fit for Jason and I. I REALLY want to try to be impartial, particularly as I know Jason has a preference for a hospital (and we have a tour set up for the first of three hospitals we’re going to check out), but the service levels and approaches are making it hard to remain free of too much bias.

The thing is – I’m a female. No matter what else I’ve done in my life, my body was bred for this purpose – to grow and birth another person. It’s what the human race does; we fuck, we birth. I am not in some sort of precarious medical condition that needs to be mitigated every step of the way. This is the job my body was supposed to do, and while I may need support and observation going through the process, I do not need to be managed. I’m not sick – I’m just pregnant.

Sep
07

Zomg, it’s a “husband post”!

So, thus far- Tiffany is sleeping a lot.  We’re trying to get some cleaning and purging done to get prepared for the push to baby-safe the house and make a nursery materialize in here somewhere.  And we should set up the tripod somewhere so that we can start constructing the time-lapse photography!

I’ve found that, not surprisingly, I’ve fallen into the typical male pattern of prenatal care opinion, and the assumption that we should have an OB and give birth in a proper hospital, etc. – even though I’m totally open to the general concept of a midwife and the notion that a comforting and relaxing environment for the mother is really important.  What is surprising to me is that I’ve managed to cling to this faith in western medicine when it comes to obstetrics when I don’t have faith in them to manage most general health issues.  Don’t get me wrong, doctors have a good deal of value, but most of what I’ve encountered in the medical profession is diagnosis by flowchart and treatment by pharmaceuticals with annoying side-effects.  Still, the what-if’s of the whole process make me want to mitigate any potential problems.  It will be interesting to see how our hospital tours and midwife interviews and all of that go.

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Sep
07

I have almost entirely lost track of holidays, now that I’m not working a 9-5 M-F job. I’d lose track of weekends, but those are the days that I don’t have to try to get Jason up and out of bed. But it is indeed a holiday. My first class of the day was canceled, but that’s ok – I’m quite tired.

We told everyone about the pregnancy yesterday. Jason’s parents were very happy – somewhere between excited and speechless, but we did take them by surprise while they were at a dance convention, and had never mentioned that we were trying. Our friends were all very happy as well, though I think a little surprised that we didn’t wait longer. I gotta say, teaching yoga is easier now that I don’t have to pretend I’m doing modifications for no good reason.

We headed to Jen & Chris’ Labor Day party, and I was very appreciative to get to use the guest room and take a nap (after taking a nap on the couch). It will be nice when I can go more than eight hours without needing serious sleep. 🙂 Or trying to figure out what to eat despite not being hungry.

Sep
05

(Well, of fetal life – 6 weeks if you’re talking gestational.)

Ok, I’ve discovered at least one reason why I’d be ok with telling people sooner, rather than later – I want to sleep, but social obligations prevent it! The “I’m sorry, I’ve been up for 14 hours and am beat; I need to sleep” thing just doesn’t seem so honest and true if no one knows you’re pregnant.

I’m a little curious how many people have guessed, however, since it’s not like there are no outward signs. Jason commented today that … well, it was a little apparent than my breasts were bigger. Of course, wearing an underwire instead of a sports bra kind of makes most of the difference, but still. He was all the more amused when I made him feel them – I discovered yesterday, they FEEL WEIRD. They fill like water balloons now, not the … well, the way they felt before. I just hope they remember that there’s a good long time ’til they have to start doing anything, though!

Sep
03

It still doesn’t quite feel like I’m pregnant. Don’t get me wrong, I still have the bloating/tenderness, and whooboy is there a lot of fatigue. But it just mostly feels like being tired, not like being pregnant.

I am incredibly happy that I have the luxury of taking a nap in the afternoon when I am feeling tired, and can sleep for 8 to 10 hours at night. Housekeeping is taking a back seat at the moment, but it’s hard to describe how exhausted I have been feeling. It’s not too horridly impacting, but only because I’ve got the time for it.

My doctor appointment was yesterday, and it was nothing more than blood draws, urine samples, and a couple of questions. I asked about providers and she noted that an OB or a midwife would be just fine. Nothing in my medical history makes me a high risk, so find where I want to deliver, and find a provider who has privileges there. I’m very much in favor of a midwife, and open to a birth center, but Jason is not so down on the idea of going somewhere that doesn’t offer the option of an epidural or other pain killers. (He quoted Susan in Coupling: “GET. ME. A FUCKING EPIDURAL!” :P)

It’s also horridly weird to not be able to tell anyone. I have told my health providers and my yoga teacher (because I was doing things a lot differently in class this past week, and realized that it’d be a lot easier to just let her know). But I’m not really sure when I want to tell anyone else. I’m thinking that I want to wait until I see a heartbeat (and, of course, I don’t really want repeat ultrasounds), because it still doesn’t entirely seem real to me, and I worry about telling people and then bad things happening, but who doesn’t.

Aug
30

Got a positive pregnancy test two days ago – Friday evening.
By my calculations, I’m 18 days pregnant (18 days fetal life, 5 weeks gestation*).
Weird.

That’s pretty much it.

Just weird.

Certainly planned, but let’s just say that we are quite the efficient pair, when it comes to timing.

I haven’t been having a whole lot of symptoms – a little bit of ‘constipation/bloating’ and tender nipples. That’s about it. Well, aside from being more tired, but I’m already tired a lot of the time, so it doesn’t seem like a qualitative change. And I’m certainly getting tired from exercise a bit more easily. But nothing that screams “YOU’RE GROWING A TINY HUMAN!”.

I’m still a little detached about the whole thing. But it mostly seems a bit overwhelming and huge, and I’m sure I’ll find the excited stage soon enough. Jason, however, is definitely getting towards the excited stage, and built a set of steps so I no longer have to lift Neo out of the car (he’s over 25 pounds, after all). So we’ve both started reading the books that I already have on hand, thanks to my prenatal yoga teacher training.

The last really weird bit at this point is not being able to tell anyone. Oh, we could, but all we have is an over-the-counter pee-on-a-stick test (which, granted, was pretty clear) – no blood tests. And I’m pretty NOT far along. My doctor’s appointment for the blood work to confirm is on Thursday morning, and assuming I get the results the next Monday, I’ll be six weeks (gestational). Not really sure when I want to tell. Waiting three months seems like an awfully long time, but at six weeks… The nubbin’s got a heart beat and limb buds are only starting.

(So, this all means that you aren’t reading this anywhere near the time I’m writing it. Enjoy! 🙂 )

Aug
30

I’ve been pretty exhausted, and my backpacking trip plans have been withering and dying as I don’t want to do a solo trip, so for today’s last hike of the -a-thon, I convinced Jason to come with me to Cougar Mountain. Again. 🙂

We did our standard four mile loop, getting Neo some exercise so he can be “a good dog is a tired dog”.

It was also fairly uneventful, aside from the way down.

We ran into two balloons, tied to a box, underneath a tree. They were pirate balloons! (Oh no! Forest pirates. Argh matey, walk the limb!) A little sign noted it was for someone’s birthday, and sure enough, it wasn’t long until we started seeing little kids (oh, five or six? I’m bad at estimating kids’ ages) running up the trail, adorned with plastic pirate swords and belts. Occasionally we’d see an eye patch or vest, too. And lots of parents walking along side them. Now that’s how to have a fun birthday treasure hunt, argh!

Aug
26

This time, we made it to the top. It was a pretty warm day, and we ran into a lot of people in both directions, but slow and steady got us there! Not really anything particularly fascinating to report other than a summit register at the top. Really? A summit register at the top of West Tiger 3?? Oookaaaayyy…

Aug
21

Thursday, Neo and I hit West Tiger Mountain 3. Hoping to avoid reroute induced missteps like last time, we headed straight up West Tiger 3 trail. And up it felt. I was lagging, Neo was ok but not springy, and I turned around a little over a mile in. It got us out, which was good. And I had a very good nap that afternoon.

Sometimes, the hiking doesn’t work. That’s ok.

Aug
18

At a very slightly earlier time, we all made it out of our tents, and eventually around the breakfast … well, logs. While the fish continued to jump up over the lake to catch their breakfasts, we nearly emptied our packs of food, all the lighter for the march out.

The trip out being mostly down hill, we made excellent time at first, reaching the fork for our home of the previous night very quickly. We maintained the quick pace for a while, as we started decending down into the valley. The dappled sunlight proved to be tricky, however, as Steve took a hard fall over a root hidden in the shadows, slamming his chin into the ground and eating a mouthful of dirt. Once he felt he was ready to continue on, and the pace picked back up, the nausea that I almost felt coming on really did assert itself. When we stopped a bit later, I tried having a bit of a snack, in case it was a blood sugar issue, but not long thereafter, I was throwing up on the trail. I tried to shout out to Sue to let her know I was still behind (as I let the group know I wasn’t feeling well), but it’s amazing how much breath you don’t have when you’re throwing up. I slowed down significantly, but there was nothing for it but to keep going.

A Blurry Last Day

A Blurry Last Day

It hit me one more time, at an overlook where everyone stopped for a break, and there really was nothing left in my stomach, but it was still unhappy. At this point, in order to make this more doable, Sue traded me out some plain water for the Nuun (an electrolyte replacement water additive that I’ve had many times in the past) watered I had which would no stay in my stomach, Steve took my remaining water and tent to get about nine pounds out of my pack, and Bill took up rear guard, to make sure I was ok. All that remains in my memory is keeping one foot in front of the other and counting my breath. At one point, everyone regrouped, Bill took the car keys, trading positions to be in front, but eventually, we all met back at the car.

Twisp Restaurant Refuel

Twisp Restaurant Refuel

Twisp Restaurant Refuel

Twisp Restaurant Refuel

After a bit of initial cleanup and first aid on blisters and scrapes, we packed back in, and Bill drove us up to Twisp for lunch at the Twisp River Brew Pub. Fortunately, I was feeling well enough to think about food, and the waitress talked to the chef to turn what is ordinarily a madras curry into something gluten and dairy free, but also nice and easy on my stomach. Real food tasted wonderful. The others partook in the home brewed offerings the pub had.

There were just two more stops on the way home, or gas and for ice cream. And so, we ended back at the park an ride where we started, five hatchbacks lined up with hatches open, redistributing gear, giving our final hugs, and heading home.