Thursday, December 17, 2015

The Main Event

As you've probably heard by now the birth didn't go as planned. Actually it was on the traumatic side, but since the outcome was good, how it happened just really doesn't matter anymore.

Everything started on Thanksgiving. You know how in movies and on T.V. anytime a woman is giving birth it's like she's sitting there peacefully doing nothing then she goes "OMG MY WATER BROKE!" Then she's carted off to the hospital, she's hooked up in a hospital bed and lays there grunting and pushing the baby out. Now there's a video floating around of a woman who gives birth in a car and she reaches down and says "I feel the baby's head! It's coming out right now!" and it all makes you think "holy crap when you're past your due date a baby just hightails it from between your legs!" Well that's called a precipitous labor and most of the time it's nothing like that. I was warned of this fact by the midwives but I really misunderstood the implications of that. On Thanksgiving day something else happened that paralleled my misunderstanding of the labor process.

I saw a caterpillar of a monarch butterfly, plump and wriggling from the underside of a leaf in it's telltale "J" shaped position. I read that the process of the caterpillar shedding it's skin and becoming a chrysalis took place over the course of a few minutes and I was intent on watching it happen. Past my due date, watching butterflies flit around my parents front yard with my own body about to go through a serious transformation nothing seemed more appropriate for viewing. I sat for around 30 minutes watching contentedly, nothing. I waddled in and out out of the house constantly, all day trying to catch this caterpillar in the act. Right as we were about to head home I caught glimpse of it doing it's thing and I was there when it's wrinkled skin fell from it's new green shell. Nice.

Although privy to this little show, it's lesson didn't occur to me until many hours later. Thanksgiving night had been pretty nice, Joshua had been playing Fallout 4 and I lay on the futon with my head on his hip enjoying watching him play, occasionally drifting off to sleep with a baby and turkey bloated belly. It had gotten pretty late and we went upstairs for bed, almost the second I laid down for some real rest I got some serious cramps. I thought maybe something I ate disagreed with me but after seeing a little bit of blood and something akin to strawberry jam (haha enjoy that visual!) it became clear that this was the main event and I was ready to fly down the street and meet our baby that very night!

For those of you who have never experienced contractions, at first the pain is comparable to the kind of cramps you get when you are 1 second away from shitting your pants with explosive diarrhea except there is no relief found from pooping, it just goes on and on intermittently so you lose your train of thought, Harrison Bergeron government transmitter style. If you want to experience something similar to contractions go eat at The Jones, their food tastes great and the choices are awesome but out of 5 visits or so I have gotten some form of food poisoning every time. (2017 edit update: you will have to get food poisoning elsewhere because The Jones was closed a year ago now due to having a dirty-ass kitchen and giving everyone food poisoning. Ain't that just the way? 😂)  It twists your entire stomach and takes your breath away, you want to fall to your knees but the jarring sensation would just make it worse. You can't walk or talk through them, your natural response is going rigid and high-pitched whining. I coped by sitting on my yoga ball and trying my best to breathe deeply and relax. You would never think relaxing could be such a difficult thing to do!

I woke Joshua, we went to Wal-Mart (literally less than a block away from our apartment) and bought a fruit tray for me to snack on during labor (this ended up being a godsend.) As we were checking out our cashier asked when the baby was due, I told her 3 days ago but I wanted to shout "RIGHT FRIGGIN' NOW!"

Fruit tray acquired, we sped off down the street as soon as I timed my contractions at at 5 minutes apart although not exactly 1 minute in length, sometimes only 45 seconds, but god the pain was enough to warrant some action from my point of view! After 9 months of waiting I'm more than ready to take this show on the road. I notified my midwife and she told me "they are 5 minutes apart but not consistently 1 minute in length? Just try your best to rest and go back to sleep, you will need the energy for true labor." Needless to say this wasn't the response I wanted to hear but I trust my midwives and I'm sure she's right, as much as I'd like to pretend otherwise.

We turned the car around and went back home. I apologized to Josh for the false alarm and he headed upstairs to sleep, meanwhile I paced around the living room doing all I could to keep cool. Once I was told to relax, try to sleep, and not pace around all night, the best I could do was lay down and try to watch Netflix, staggering up every five minutes unable to be still through a contraction. I recalled relaxation techniques from the birthing classes and tried to put some to use mainly deep breathing, now in the moments of dire need deep breathing meant squat. The closest to deep breathing I could get was a deep inhale then a high pitched squeal. The best relief I found was our yoga ball, I either stayed glued to it or shot up every 5 minutes to plant my butt on it and squeal. 

Time passes differently when you're caught up in waves of immaculate suffering. I watched so many things to try and ignore the contractions and fall asleep, when I say watched, I mean had playing on the computer while I glanced up occasionally. Time passed from 1am to 3am to 7am. Probably a dozen episodes of Archer, several episodes of Forensic Files, about half of some movie consisting of nothing but ocean footage and relaxing music, and in the early hours of the morning I topped it off with The Great Mouse Detective (a childhood favorite of mine.) Despite the searing pains I was able to notice a few things about The Great Mouse Detective that had gone over my head as a 5-year-old. 1: He is essentially Sherlock Holmes as a mouse. That realization made it a pretty good watch. I had  no idea. 2: The bad guy Ratigan is a really bad guy, like maybe one of the darkest in cartoon movie history. He enslaves a father by threatening to kill his daughter and sings a little song which includes a chorus of his followers asking "even meaner? you mean it? Worse than those widows and orphans you drowned?" I mean wow. Just...really? The rest of his song is talking about heists and burglary and things of that nature but drowning widows and orphans? You're sick Ratigan.  Sick.

Anyhow, this experience just goes to show that even in the midst of a sensation like a rusted kris digging around in your stomach every 5 minutes, if you're tired enough you will eventually be able to sleep.
 (what is a kris?)
A dagger that's even shittier to be stabbed with than your garden variety dagger. Ouch.
 Somehow in the early hours of the morning, I was able to drift into unconsciousness in 5 minute sessions of microsleeps. I guess coupled with the exhilaration and excitement of knowing the baby was nearly here it was enough to keep me "awake" through the next 12 hours.


Since I never actually had a large amount of sleep, I never "woke up" the next morning as much as I just gave up on trying to sleep. I figured daytime warranted a good reason to stop trying to rest and start trying to get things moving so I paced continually in the living room when not staggering to the yoga ball and sang along with Joanna Newsom songs until Josh woke up. From this point to the arrival at the birth center all I did was count the seconds, tell myself the pain would end, and wait for the right time to go. I also tried to listen to some soothing music to relax myself. As the song played I found my eyes watering and tears spilling over on my cheeks. I tried my best to wipe them away and hide them but they just kept coming so I blurted out "this song is too pretty."



(Was I crying because the song was pretty or because Life of Pi?)

 I spent innumerable contractions counting those 45-60 seconds, even the last 10 seconds seeming to stretch an eternity. I had no idea just what was in store.

Eventually around 2pm on Black Friday, the contractions became true contractions and we finally went to the birth center. There was a great deal of jokes made between Josh and I about Dixie being the big Black Friday bargain of the year. Turns out that horrendous pain only dampens my sense of humor a tiny bit. On the car ride there I squealed and whined out the open passenger window, wondering how onlookers perceived this sight.  Could they see my large belly? Could they know what was happening? Or did I just look like some crazy lady on drugs? I guess it doesn't really matter.

When we got there, the midwife checked my dilation and the baby's heartbeat, only 3-4 centimeters dilated it would still be awhile before active labor set in so she told me she would wait to admit me but Josh and I could get comfy in the birthing room and hang out until we were ready. Dixie's heartbeat however was troubling, when I laid on my back it dropped to a dangerous 120 normally in the 150s or so, it was advised that I just keep off my back. At the moment it seemed the problem only existed when I was on my back so she guessed that it was some type of compression on the umbilical cord but as long as I stayed off my back it shouldn't be a problem. The midwife who was on call is named Sarah, she had been my midwife for the last few appointments so I was happy to see her, although I like the other midwife a lot too and I probably would have been equally happy to see her as well. Everyone is great at the birthing center and the place itself is beautiful and easy to get comfortable in.
Old picture of the Birth Center, they now have rocking chairs on the front porch where the ladies can relax.


Sarah helped me deal with my pain much better than I had managed alone. She agreed that my use of the yoga ball was a great choice because it opens the pelvic floor, but she advised me to make deep resounding vibrations instead of my high pitched squeals. Not sure why but these were astoundingly effective and every 5 minutes (or less!) I had my eyes closed and I was humming a low "ummmmm" as if I was debating something. She also advised me not to count the seconds and wait for an end to the pain as much as I should embrace the pain and see it as bringing me steps closer to meeting our daughter. I said "I kind of tried that but it seems to make it feel even worse" to which she replied kindly but somewhat curtly "yeah....it's gonna do that but the good news is it really doesn't get any worse." With no further explanation on that I figured this was the name of the game and I was gonna have to suck it up and deal. This is when it hit me. This is what I have been waiting for. This was the test. This was the exquisite pain that I had told myself I would endure and come out the other end as a woman champion, mother. I always had the choice to back out and ask to be whisked off the hospital but I was determined to do this the way I had imagined. In my mind there was no going back on my resolution and this pain was inevitable so her advice was sound (as always) and it was in my best interest to embrace it and ride the wave. It seemed like a daunting task, but any daunting task can be accomplished with enough practice time and as it turned out, I had a full 25 hours to get it perfect.

From 2pm to 5pm I walked a nearby park with Joshua pausing every contraction to lean on him slow dance style and hum/moan, I sat and bounced on the smaller-than-yoga-ball birthing ball available at the birthing center, I attempted another series of mircosleeps, and I snacked on the fruit tray and some cheese that Josh had brought for me. The next time I was checked around 5pm, I was dilated to 5-6 centimeters and I had begun to handle the pain pretty well. I was pretty discouraged that so little could have happened in such a long amount of time but Sarah said it was good that any progress was being made so I shouldn't feel let down. My contractions began to grow longer, sometimes lasting several minutes with only 3 or 4 minutes in between but with humming, birthing ball, and mental visualization I could ride the pain to an unbearable peak lasting only a few moments, then come back down to await the next. I was finally admitted as a patient and allowed to use the birthing tub.

Sarah suggested that I visualize something like a circle growing larger or a flower opening, this would help me recognize my pain as a positive growth and help my cervix dilate. It's cliche as hell but I imagined a soft pink lotus unfolding it's multitude of petals. Just like her last bit of advice, this technique really changed the sensation for me.

The birthing tub at the birth center is large enough for two people and sits before a very large window covered by lovely teal drapes. The color scheme for the birth room I was in is calming and tasteful shades of teal and chocolate brown. Besides the large tub, the room also contained a king sized four-post bed beside which was a nightstand with a cd player, lamp and matching teal and brown lampshade, a teal vanity where a baby scale sat by another lamp, a changing table, an ancient looking wooden birthing chair and my best friend- the birthing ball. The only hints that the room was for medical use was a small metal cart by the door leading to the bathroom and kitchen area where cord clamps, blood pressure cuff, doppler, and things I couldn't identify lay upon it's  gleaming surface.

 I was listening to a cd called Rasa Devotion that I had borrowed from a friend just for the occasion and I had some lavender essential oil diffusing in a nearby burner I purchased, also just for this very occasion. Between the relaxing decor and environment, the warmth of the tub, the comfort techniques, the soothing music, and Joshua sitting behind me rubbing my neck and shoulders I figured I was finally starting to cope pretty well. At this point the contractions were lasting much longer than a minute, sometimes dragging on to 3 minutes or so with only a minute or two of relief in between but in the tub, I was finally able to handle them. Breathing deeply, I would ride the gnawing sensation up to a peak where I would hum loudly and envision the opening lotus, I would continue humming until it was over, then inhale deeply and relax. This is when I belatedly understood the message of the caterpillar/chrysalis. Just as I did with the caterpillar at first signs of changing, I rushed for the next stage. I got so amped up, adrenaline coursing through my veins, wildly pacing the living room but here I was now, over 8 hours later not even fully dilated. I took this as a sign that I need to work on my patience in the face of great excitement, and I filed this in the corners of my mind. I shared my connection with the caterpillar to Joshua and I recalled another animal teacher, my only previous experience with birth, I called her Meatball.

At our last apartment complex, I befriended and became the caretaker of a small group of friendly stray cats. My favorite of these was Meatball. Meatball was an extremely skittish apple-headed Siamese cat with a consistently worried look and sapphire eyes. I gained her trust over the course of months, tossing small bits of cat food to her until she became familiar enough to let me pet her and hold her. I waited for the next Operation Catnip to start up so I could bring all my new friends for vaccinations and spays and neuters but by the time it rolled around Meatball was obviously pregnant and I didn't have the heart to take her for a cat abortion, I decided I would help her have kittens and find them good homes once they became old enough. The weather had gotten pretty chilly so I set up a nest for her in our sheltered fire escape stairwell. A few old sweaters thrown in a wooden crate with one side missing, she took to it immediately and could almost always be found there. I went to visit her many times a day, bringing food and water and spending time petting her and talking to her. It was a wet and icy St. Patrick's day when Meatball was noticeably different. She was needy, scared, meowing in a pained tone, and keeping her head pressed into my hand. I figured she was getting ready to have the kittens and she wanted me to comfort her. I stayed as long as I could in that cold stairwell, late into the night until I simply had to go back in.

Now in my own moment of scared neediness I remembered being there for her and I remembered although she was obviously frightened and crying out, she was calm and she knew exactly what to do. And, so would I.

While I was in the tub Joshua and I were able to keep small talk and crack jokes between contractions. The simple act of mundane conversation helped relax me and brought a sense of normalcy, like we could be sitting on the couch in our apartment having a regular chat on any old day, not gritting our teeth in anticipation, on the threshold of a long awaited moment. I stayed in the tub doing pretty well for a few hours occasionally nodding off, Joshua catching my head in his always icy hands as it lulled over to the side or drooped forward. Sweet little things like this always show that he cares. Things seemed to be going pretty alright until Sarah came back in to check baby's heart beat. What she found was disturbing and she let me know that we may be in for some unexpected trouble.

Typically a baby's heartbeat slows down during a contraction while the baby is being squeezed downwards to the cervix then it speeds up to make up for the deceleration. Dixie's heart was speeding up to unsafe levels during contractions, even while I was seated in the tub. From this point on I was monitored closely, every hour or so. The troubling news pretty much wrecked my peace of mind and from that point on I could no longer cope with the contractions as well I had, every one was more agonizing and seemed to last even longer. I wondered how I had ever dealt with them in the first place. I got out of the bath and stayed on the birthing ball. At this point I had pretty much stopped talking.

Joshua briefly left the birth center to go pick up more snacks and get a sandwich for himself, back at the Birth Center I tried to take a nap on my side. When I woke I once again planted myself on the birthing ball and Sarah came around to check my dilation and Dixie's heartbeat. Three hours from the last check and progress had stalled completely. To make matters worse Dixie's heartbeat read dangerously high through a contraction, even while seated on the birthing ball. Sarah told me to stand so she could listen to her heartbeat through a contraction while I was standing to see if it would be any better. She extended her hands and helped me up from the ball, as my weight shifted to my feet and my hands clasped firmly in hers, I felt a gush of liquid. "I think my water just broke." It was 8pm.

With the amniotic fluid now dwindling we were now on a time limit which posed serious problems since Dixie's heartbeats were getting scary off target and labor had come to a standstill. Sarah told me she would have to call the OB/GYN (Dr. Buchanan) the BirthCenter works with and consult with him over what was happening. She said there was now a serious possibility that I would have to be transferred to his care, but she reassured me that he was a very nice guy and he would still give me choices for the birth instead of just push drugs and uncalled for procedures on me. As much as I didn't want it to be this way, I knew in my heart that I would be going to the hospital. I paced up and down the stairs of the old house, the wood floor felt warm and worn under my feet. I wondered just how many other laboring women had walked this same track before me. There was a birthing ball on both the first and second floor so I used whichever one I was nearest to when a contraction struck.

When the contractions first began, the most announcing I did was a vague Doom Paul "it's happening!" post on the old Facebook. Now approaching 11:00pm I still had yet to tell my parents, although Josh had without my knowing. I held off on telling them because I  knew they would want to show up at the birth center but from my point of view I really didn't want anyone except Josh and the midwife around, as I wasn't really in the mood to talk or be stared at. Birthing isn't exactly a spectator sport if you know what I mean. Well around this time they texted that they were already at the Birth Center and within seconds they were in the kitchen watching me nibble on fruits and asking me questions. Sarah was somewhat flustered by the sudden arrival of my parents and she could tell that I was uneasy as well so she pulled me into the birthing room to take my vitals again and ask how I felt about all this.
"I gotta ask you Kristine, who are these people that just showed up?"
"My parents"
"Did you invite them over?"
"No, not really. I didn't really want anyone here until maybe she was out already."
"Would you like me to ask them to leave?"
"No they will be upset but I don't really want them around talking to me."
"OK I can just have them sit in the other room"

This was a nerve wracking moment because I couldn't cope with the contractions anymore and I was getting more restless and anxious in my pain, I now had maybe a cumulative hour of sleep over a 12 hour period, I hadn't been able to eat anything other than fruits, I was worried about the baby and scared of going to the hospital, and I didn't really want my parents there but I didn't want to hurt their feelings. I no longer felt like the sure and powerful woman who had shown up at the Birth Center, I felt like a scared child unwillingly strapped on a roller coaster being whipped around turns and flipped upside down at unpredictable moments. Nothing was going how I planned it or wanted it but I knew I would have to make due. This was how things had to be.

I was so exhausted I really can't remember what happened until Sarah came back and told me that Dr. Buchanan did suggest that I be turned over to his care. So this was it. It was around 1:30AM and I was leaving the Birth Center, on my way to Shands hospital for some unknown interventions. Although I was disappointed that things should suddenly go so awry I was also relieved that my midwife was so professional and knew when it became necessary to change the game plan. I was sure that I was very close to meeting Dixie. I waddled down the steps of the birth center for the very last time, into the crisp night air with my parents and Sarah in tow.

Sarah drove ahead of us, leading us down the back streets of Gainesville en route to Shands hospital. There had been a gator game earlier that day and people were still stumbling around drunk in the night. I always hated seeing the football fans party wherever they pleased about town, completely unconcerned with who they inconvenienced in their joviality. It was a minor annoyance on top of fearful uncertainty.

When we arrived at Shands we parked right up front, once Sarah and Joshua had dropped me off at labor and delivery Sarah would leave and Joshua would have to move our car to the parking garage. Sarah urged me to ride in a wheelchair up to labor and delivery since Dixie's heart was not doing too well and my exhaustion was obvious. I was relieved because I honestly do not think I could've made the walk through my tiredness and the now mind numbing contractions. I began to not so much cope or fight or welcome the pain as much as resign to it. Pretty much everything at this point had turned into resignation.

Sarah wheeled my through the halls of the hospital up to labor and delivery. She checked me in at the nurses station then gave me a big hug and departed. A nurse wheeled me into a room and before I knew it I was in a hospital bed with 4 or 5 nurses rushing around me poking I.V.s into me and putting sticky things all over my body. They addressed and joked with each other, not me, I was only spoken to to answer medical questions. I felt more like a project than a person but I understood that I am 1 out of maybe 20 women they were caring for on that floor, whereas at the Birth Center Sarah was there just for me. We were at the hospital now, I had to accept things would be different but it was a little traumatic how different it was. I imagine the switch is comparable to a home-schooled child suddenly switching to public high school. Despite how I felt I was well taken care of. A nurse asked me if I wanted an epidural to which I quickly responded "YES!!" at this point I figured since it was already not going the way I had planned and I had already suffered contractions for over a full frickin' day I deserved some damn drugs. We're at the hospital, give me the western medicine! The nurse scurried off to get an anesthesiologist.

Joshua left to park the car in the parking garage and once all the nurses had done their jobs and disappeared it was just my parents and I. Despite how I felt earlier I was now happy they were here. Now that all the nurses were gone the fetal heart monitor starting making a horrible loud beeping noise, it really stressed me out because no medical professionals were around and I didn't know what the noise meant and I had no way to stop it. It beeped and beeped and really pushed me over the edge with worry, this went on for a good 5 minutes before someone came back in and turned it off. They didn't seem alarmed by it so I figured I had no reason for alarm myself, but while I was waiting for a nurse or anyone to come in and turn it off I was thinking "oh god Dixie's heart is giving out right now and no one is even in here with us!" In case you haven't noticed, worrying is a favorite pastime of mine.

Joshua came back from the parking garage shortly after the OB/GYN came in. His name is Dr. Buchanan and at first I was a little confused by his appearance as he comes in wearing scrubs but with a grey and red hoodie over it and some old basketball shoes. Before I see the the scrub pants I imagine he looks more like a sports coach than a doctor. Later on he asks me for my birth date and immediately responds with "oh very good, Aquarius. Me too" This was such an Aquarian thing to say and notice. After he shared that with me his appearance and funny mannerisms made sense.

Just as Sarah had promised, Dr. Buchanan gave me a choice. He said since my labor was stalled we could either induce it with pitocin, get an epidural, and try to delivery vaginally or get a spinal and go ahead and do a c section. Although earlier I had said I wanted an epidural I didn't realize that different drugs went with different procedures and I just wanted some dang drugs. The room fell silent for a minute or two while I thought about it until my mom broke the silence by suggesting I choose the c section. I had seen and read enough birth scenarios to realize that pitocin often put the baby in fetal distress and since her heartbeat was already wavering, much to my dismay, I had to agree with her and choose the c section. I was terrified. Despite c sections being common and relatively safe, I was 90% sure that I was going to frickin' die. This had now literally become the exact opposite of what I wanted and what I imagined, this had nearly become a nightmare. After opting for a natural birth I read a lot of stories about the benefits of natural birth, which as a foil, often share the negatives of interventions; the least of which missing out on the natural chemical rush of post birth bliss and instant skin to skin contact, the most like Game of Thrones- everyone dies. I'm thinking I'm going to die of amniotic embolism, possibly infection, hemorrhaging, anything.  Dixie would more than likely be fine but I was toast, I had to make the choice for her. Since she is new and I am old and my life doesn't really seem to be going anywhere anyway I tell myself that even if I did die it's better than her dying all because I was too scared to be cut open. (spoiler alert: no one died!! :D ) I became as dramatic as possible and had Josh stand near me so I could hold his hand. I told him I was scared, it was an understatement.

Shortly after I told Dr. Buchanan that I wanted the c section I was wheeled away from everyone into the operating room. My gown was opened in the back and I was sat up on the operating table getting prepped for the spinal. I was really dreading everything about this part because I knew a needle would soon be going into my spine and I would be feeling every millimeter of it until the anesthesia was injected. Getting the spinal was probably the most horrifying part. I was told to scoot to the edge of the table and arch my back, really letting my spine stick out. My face was placed in a head rest thing and I was poked in the back and they asked "does this feel like the middle of your back?" This kind of upset me and I wanted to say "how the hell should I know ya'll are the medical professionals who are able to see it, don't ask me what the hell?!" but I ended up saying "yes." even though I was so nervous that I suddenly wasn't even sure what constituted as the middle of my back. I began to worry that maybe it wasn't the middle and now the anesthesia wouldn't work properly and I would feel myself get sliced open and blah blah, but you know, I worry a lot and none of that happened.

In the moments between getting the spinal and having Dixie pulled from my insides I reflected on the differences between this situation and how things were at the Birth Center. Instead of a tastefully decorated relaxing room I was now propped up on a hard cot like thing in a blazing bright and sterile white cube. I thought of Sarah, who spoke gently and firmly, but would always go quiet and let me focus through my contractions, now as I hummed and breathed through a particularly bad contraction I was ordered to sit still while a needle pierced my spine. Righteous. As my arms were strapped down to my sides in crucifix position I longed for the freedom of mobility given at the Birth Center, and I remembered the comforting warmth of the birthing tub as the anesthesia took effect and I began to shiver uncontrollably.  The anesthesiologist was a really nice guy who talked me calm through the shaking and strange sensations. He poked me with a small wooden stick and asked if I felt it. "yes, yes, yes, and no" once the stick poked me below the waist. Ok it was time.

Joshua was invited in and he quickly sat beside me and held my hand, he didn't dare take a peek beyond the drape, although he was invited. Dr. Buchanan and nurses stood on the other side of the drape and began working away. I didn't feel a single thing but I was fully conscious and clear headed (apart from the fear) and listening to their conversations. They joked and conversed and talked through it lightheartedly, it really calmed me down as I realized they have done this millions of times. Conversation so ordinary and comforting, it could've been exchanged over an office water fountain instead of my trembling body. I waited to feel the first cut, at least the pressure of it, something. I looked at the lamp above hoping to catch a reflection of the carnage on the other side of the drape but it was fogged plastic and the light didn't refract well enough to form any real images on the metal behind it, I'm sure these lamps were designed like that on purpose. I waited and waited and waited to feel the first cut, I wondered what they had to do for prep that was taking so long until I felt a spatter across my ribs. I was already open! And had been for I don't even know how long!

It was only a matter of minutes now until I heard a cry!

A nurse held the crying and flailing baby before us for a second before they took her to the corner to get cleaned up. I was expecting something a little horrifying, let's be honest newborns look kind of crazy like frozen chickens, but she was already beautiful. Red skin, a round little potato head, eyes shut tight and a gaping screaming big mouth. When she did open her eyes they looked darkest blue, like hematite. I loved her! She had a loud droning cry ending in a pitched squeak. She was so squeaky! She sounded exactly like a dog toy! I couldn't believe it! I squeezed Josh's hand and smiled. I don't remember but we probably said something to each other along the lines of "we did it!"

Once she was cleaned up a nurse handed her to Joshua and asked me if I wanted him and the baby to wait for me in the recovery room where only one visitor is allowed at a time or go meet the grandparents back in my hospital room. I figured I would be right behind them so I said just go to the recovery room, I didn't realize that my abdomen was still filleted open and the closing process would take about 30 minutes more. Joshua, the first person in the world to hold and comfort her (apart from the nurse but that was a business hold not a love hold) got to spend some good alone time with his daughter. The doors closed behind him as he entered the recovery room, beyond their limits he could hear grandma protesting her denied entry. "That's bullshit!" she said.





Monday, November 9, 2015

Any day now

Dixie is due any damn day now. I'm officially tired of being pregnant and ready for her to come out. My general "doneness" with pregnancy now far outweighs any fear of death and pain, besides what is life without chilled, raw escolar and runny eggs?

I find myself perpetually angry lately. Maybe it's all the extra mom hormones getting me ready to be a mamabear, maybe it's just society in general pissing me off as per usual.

We went to the Micanopy fall festival on Halloween. It was great fun! We walked around, said "wow this stuff is hokey", ate gyros, and bought some kettle corn. It was hilarious to see the dead little town filled with so many people. On that particular day Josh and I were just another set of heads down the bustling street, where every other day for many months before we had been the only souls in sight- apart from a few wandering elderlys drifing in and out of the equally elderly antique stores.

One thing made me endlessly upset that day that continues to make me upset. Pregnancy is a vulnerable time, leading up to a lifetime of expected infallible strength. If there was ever a time to help a woman out it would be during her pregnancy or shortly after. Apparently everyone at the Micanopy church is so decrepit they can't remember their childbearing years and thus they denied a pregnant woman use of their restroom. I'm sure Jesus up in heaven winced and put his palm to his face when those old folks on the front porch told me "there are plenty of porto-potties up the street and we only let church members use our bathroom, it's an old thing." That doesn't even make any sense. Also I guess you didn't know that pregnant women have a stronger sense of smell than normal people and you have basically told me to go piss myself and banished me to an hour long vomit-fiesta by denying me use of your facilities. That's very kind and christian-like of you to turn away someone in need. Oh wait it's not.

Now when you're all sitting up in the church on Sunday morning spouting hallelujahs and amens, the whole world, the good Lord, the Blessed Virgin, the Holy Son, Buddha, Shiva, Vishnu, Krishna, Rama, Kali, Muhammed, Abraham, Moses, Joseph Smith, Yahweh, The Great Mother and the Horned God, Tom Cruise, and the Pastafarian deity the Flying Spaghetti Monster (in his name we pray) all know that you ARE WASTING YOUR TIME AND LYING THROUGH YOUR TEETH.
Ugh. You guys are so rude.


Anyway now that I got some of that anger off my chest I suppose I can give you a real update.
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I don't remember where I left you all hanging when it comes to the goings-on of our general life. But we have moved out of Bruce's house and into our own apartment. I am finally the stay at home woman of the house and I think I do a pretty good job of making a mess and generally hanging out all day until the last 30 minutes before I have to go pick up Joshua when I clean really really well then go "ohhh myyy god I was tidying all dayyyy" :(

My belly hurts a lot from being giant. Most everyone I meet says "wow you look so tiny to be that far into pregnancy" what they don't understand is that I am a petite and typically semi-athletic person so comparatively, on my frame, yes this is HUGE. If I'm only in my underwear and turn sideways I can see where the curve of my incubation chamber ends and my normal body shape begins. Under this layer of baby, I'm mostly the same.
I still get around quite well and have  small trouble getting up and down and bending over. I'm also still quite active (when I want to be) occasionally walking to the park, doing quick squats and workouts on my yoga ball, and cleaning and tidying up like crazy. The biggest drawback is that I am often tired in the middle of the day and wide awake late at night after only an hour of sleep. Luckily for me as little as a 30 minute nap quickly remedies this.

I'm gonna take a nap right now actually. ~12:55 PM
Ok now I'll finish typing ~3:27

Guess it was more than 30 minutes....

It's really nice to have our own place again, we're really finally mostly set up. We still need a couple of large or semi pricey items to have things just right but it's functional thanks to my parents who bought us a nice futon which is surprisingly super comfy as a couch and a bed. My parents justified this gift as claiming they were tired of sitting on the floor when they came over, ha ha. I have one piece of furniture still in Micanopy, my beautiful display clock, one of my most favorite things, but we will need to borrow a truck to get it over here and things are functional without it. However I sure do miss seeing my favorite trinkets.

If you've ever been to any of my apartments you know that they usually resemble something between a zoo and a museum. Things hang on the wall and line the shelves and tables that have no real relation to anything else int he room save that they represent a time or place.  A couple of antiques or old mugs and glasses given as gifts or saved from childhood, numerous paintings done by me or family, arrowheads, wooden boxes, strings of fake flowers, photos, wine bottles, clay figurines, vending machine toys, and several mementos from our time living on the road; all things that remind me of a certain moment in time. Small moments which would have vanished entirely if not for the solid reminders that house them, all coming out of boxes once again to be places lovingly in view.
While the museum aspect beckons us (I'm sure it only creates a sense of "wtf is all this shit" to strangers and visitors) into the past, the zoo parts urge you to be mindful of the present as all over this house small lifeforms are living their small lives day to day. Water burbles from 4 tanks housing fish or amphibians, crickets chirp from their box unknowing their only purpose here is a nutritional one, cats creep along the furniture, small eyes watch your movements, and tiny lungs pump or filter air.

Have you ever been in an empty house? A house with no other humans and no pets? It feels awful to be the only living thing in an enclosed area, like a literal dead zone, no chirping, no burbling, and no other lifeforms around to justify any sudden thump or creak. To me, it's really scary and I'm likely to rather stand outside than be there alone. At my house, there is always something watching, something living, something moving and breathing, something crawling, creeping, or swimming, something to talk to, and something to make you laugh. Most importantly, at my house you are never alone. Even if you were to wake up at an ungodly hour and creep down the stairs for a drink of water, when you turn on the living room light you'll find some small soul awake and sharing the lonely hour.

Our newest addition is a siren that we have names Simon. I'm really unsure if it's a greater or lesser siren because he didn't come with any identification or care guides. Actually, like many of my pets Simon came by chance.




I've always firmly believed that if you are bored you should go outside as often as possible because it's the only way to increase your odds of something interesting happening. Your house is for the most part (not counting freak accidents) a neutral ground where nothing will happen unless you let it happen, nothing comes in unless you open the door, and nothing changes unless by aging or your hand. By going outside you put yourself in an uncontrolled environment and anything could happen.
By increasing our probability of something unexpected happening, we found Simon.

What we needed was a large piece of driftwood for the fast-paced aquarium upstairs. Something to provide a hiding place for the couple of speedy, nocturnal pictus catfish. Yes you can buy pre-treated sinkable driftwood at aquarium stores but usually it's very expensive like around $60. For a soggy old branch? No thanks. Instead we find our own driftwood and treat it at home by boiling it for several hours to kill any harmful microorganisms and leech out any remaining tannins that may turn your water into a shade of dark tea. It costs nothing but a little bit of time. We found and treated the driftwood in our gourami tank so we set out to Newnan's lake to find another. After a quick walk around the lake shore we were able to find 2 nice pieces of wood. One more of a long branch we plan to mount bromeliads on and the other a wet, partially decomposed bit of log. Joshua being the clever guy he is brought a trash bag to put wet wood in so we wouldn't have to just let it soak into the trunk. We bagged up our prize and headed out to run some errands. When we returned home we opened the trunk and found something black and slimy resembling an eel squiggling around in my trunk. At first it appeared like it could've been a snake, but it was slimy and my careful noting of animals at pet stores helped me identify it as some type of siren. Gills, no back legs, eel like tail. Somehow this little thing was up inside the wood (which really didn't seem to have any holes in it) and managed to make it's way out of the wood and out of the trash bag into clear view. Since we had been driving around for awhile and sirens, though capable of  being out of water for quite awhile, are fully aquatic amphibians we put him into a little bucket of treated water.

Here's where having lots of tiny pets came into play. We already have everything to safely house him temporarily. Water treatment for amphibians, amphibian food, reverse osmosis water, a small tank, large river stones, and a chunk broken off the wood we found him in. We set him in a little betta tank and watch him curiously, soon discovering he is missing a front leg. You know how it goes when you find a hurt animal, you can't just release it now. Well we could because sirens, like other critters in the newt and salamander family, can regrow missing limbs buuuut being that I have seen sirens in reptiles stores and read up a little about them, finding them to be hardy and interesting pets we decide we will just keep him. Besides we already have aquarium sand and a 10 gallon tank! So we make a few small purchases, a filter, a light, and some $1.00 anacharis and he is swimming about comfortably and eating salmon pellets. We also learn that he would enjoy a cricket every now and then and we have plenty of those. So now Simon is here.

Dixie will have a lot of interesting friends once she gets here and I hope being exposed to so many small pets gives her a great curiosity for the world and a deep love and sense of compassion for all lives.

Except ants and mosquitoes and cockroaches, fuck them, they can die.

Monday, September 21, 2015

Acceptance

I finally accept this.
It's so real now with my giant stomach and the baby gifts rolling in that it seems harder to imagine a mishap than a smooth birth. While I was worried before I've seen it and heard about it over and over again; the natural process, the baby shower, the early labor, the stages of labor, the transition phase where you say you won't be able to do it, and ultimately baby being here with a few great pushes. There was never any reason to doubt and now time will take it's course and she'll be here with all of us.

9 weeks to go. Gosh.
Looking back I'm pretty happy I made this blog, even if I didn't use it all that much and I haven't able to make any money off of it, it really helped me relax to put all of my fears out into the world and out of my head. Should you ever get pregnant I hope you do the same.

Now in the third trimester I can give you a run-down of how every trimester went.

1rst: feel disgusting 24/7, all foods make you barf, worry you lose more weight than you gain because you are barfing and not eating but don't worry you will gain weight later. Everything smells like rotten garbage, everything makes you throw up and you wanna punch people in the face for dousing themselves in perfume and cologne or not wearing deodorant. Diet consisting of plain ass bread maybe some cheese slices and grapes.

I spent this trimester:
  • worrying about miscarriage and genetic defects,
  • watching crime documentaries and worrying about the safety of the child once it's born,
  • vomiting,
  • heaving, 
  • having really sore boobs,
  • being angry at the police for giving me a bullshit ticket when I dindu nuffin',
  • getting food poisoning and going to the E.R.,
  • moving from one apartment to the next, 
  • oil painting,
  • and laying around with bad migraines.
2nd trimester: feel amazing, mostly forget you are pregnant, feel proud that you haven't really gained a massive amount of weight, be proud of tiny baby bump, be relieved because all the genetic testing is over and all signs point to a real baby and not a potato. Pee your pants when you sneeze or laugh. Find out the gender and get super excited, watch "The Business of Being Born" and switch to midwives at the birthing center instead of OBs at the hospital. Diet consisting of hot sauce on everything (get lit Dixie!), a lot of eggs and cookies, grapes, ranch dressing and vegetables, and banana smoothies.

I spent this trimester:
  •  Moving from apartment to Bruce's house
  • doing yoga
  • worrying about my anatomy class
  • worrying that I will be a shitty worthless welfare mom
  •  hanging out with friends
  • playing frisbee
  • gardening
  • starting to sew
  • enjoying getting kicked from the insides
  • worrying about complications during labor and still birth.
3rd trimester: It's only one week in so I can't really say too much yet but so far, headaches are back, feel tired a lot, feel large and heavy. Have magically gained a shit ton of weight and feel sad cause I had just achieved a flat stomach before I got pregnant now I'm back in the fat-suit. Blood tests show my iron and vitamin D levels are shit so have to take a lot of supplements. Midwife says I have gained all the weight I am supposed to already and anymore would just make me a fat-fat so have to watch what I'm eating. Oh and become really emotional over anything, like crying because "puff the magic dragon" came on the radio.
Diet consisting of hot sauce on everything still (she doesn't even flinch and I don't get heartburn, [this is a bald baby]), many eggs, grapes, whatever I can get my hands on. Supposed to be protein snacks but quick and ready to eat proteins are not in easy supply.

So far I have been:
  • skating through an easy but annoying bio class
  • watching american dad
  • feeling generally fatigued and a little unwell
  • sewing many cloth diapers and a few tiny dresses
  • receiving lots of nice gifts from friends and family
  • watching my garden grow
  • perpetually uncomfortable
So that's a nice quick run-down of how things have been. For a summary of a pregnancy blog, I have stayed pretty realistic. Despite my crunchy tendencies like choosing midwives over OBs and making cloth diapers, and intending to breast feed for several years, this blog is relatively devoid of that wishy-washy hippy mom stuff. Not once did I say anything was "magical" or mention "divine feminine energy" or refer to myself as a "fertile goddess."
I hate that stuff and I'm really glad this blog didn't turn out that way. Seems as time has gone by I have answered my own question asked by a previous entry. "Will I still be the same?"

The answer is yes, and no.

Just because I cried when "Puff the Magic Dragon" came on, doesn't mean I didn't laugh about it right after because I recognized that I was being a sappy pussy.

Yes, I'm sewing a lot of baby dresses and diapers, but they are black and grey with dragon silhouettes or made of Joshua's heavy metal band t-shirts, not pink frills.

Sure, I spent money on newborn clothes when I said I wouldn't, but I take special pride in picking out outfits fit for young ladies and not clothing for "baby tramps" with glitter hearts all over.

So yes I have changed, as was inevitable, but it's not as bad as I feared. All in all, I'd say I'm still my salty self.

Wednesday, September 9, 2015

Fear of Death : Fear of Living

My last entries have been culminations of my fear of living. Fear of being a shit mother with no real career or purpose, fear of having my daughter recognize me as a nobody, and fear of being chastised for my lack of contribution to society. Apart from all that, as the due date gets closer I now deal with the very real fear of death during childbirth.

In little over 2 months I will be faced with the very "psychedelic" experience of childbirth. There's no real reason to suspect that this should bring about my demise, yet there is also no guarantee that it won't. I suppose I could also reason that realistically I could die at any moment, for any reason, and there's small proof that childbirth should up the ante at all. As a matter of fact I nearly died the other day when a large branch snapped overhead and crashed a few feet away while I was taking out the trash, but this occurrence doesn't keep me curled up in fetal position in the corner of my room.

I once said I wasn't afraid of dying because it's easy to do and everyone does it, but when faced with the possibility (even at a chance of 1 out of 8,000 to 30,000) it's not so easy to believe. It's not fear exactly like you get afraid of bugs or being alone in the dark, but a deep sadness to think you could be prematurely separated from those you love. There was several times where I had wanted to die. Looking before me, I faced nothing but endless obligations with no joys in sight, but now there is a lot on the horizons and I would be an incredibly angry ghost to be taken out of the game at this time. So should I win any kind of raffle, let it be the one at Hogtown reptiles for the $50 store credit, not the death during childbirth lotto.

Anyhow, no mortal can cure my anxiety so there is no point in reassuring me unless you have personally called up God and Jesus in George W. Bush style and they straight up told you that Dixie and I would be 100% ok.

If I should die let me know in advance so I can stop doing my homework and go to the beach instead. I'd hate to spend the last few months of my life scrawling away about photosynthesis.

Alright it's done. With this extraction of my fears from my head to the internet, it's pushed away and locked into a deep dark corner  with all my other fears of failures and shortcomings and unexpected negativeness.

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Annie is helping me plan my pre-halloween baby shower. Please show up so it's not just a bunch of older family members sitting around and tittering about my giant belly. I'd really like to have fun.
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So what else can I update the world on? Not much. Time unravels into the distance and the due date draws ever nearer. I am beginning to imagine that this is actually going to happen. Everything will probably actually be ok.

I feel sore a lot, tired a lot, and a little bit mopey. When I feel good I clean like crazy.

Monday, August 17, 2015

Hippie Concerns

When I signed back on to blogger today there was some kind of notice about
European law requires and European Union blah blah I don't know I did not read it.
Maybe I will be Euro-arrested
Good thing I will never be able to afford to travel to Europe anyway.

So here's the update.
I haven't been writing a lot because there hasn't been a heck of a lot going on out here. If you follow me on Facebook do you remember where I recollected my dream of being stuck on a space station for an indeterminate amount of time? Well that is what Micanopy is like; quiet, standstill, isolation. Floating in an unchanging pocket of time where nothing happens and no one is around. (Apart from my best buddy/baby daddy and favorite cat pals)  No friends out here, no family and everyone lives juuust far enough where there has to be a definite plan to do something before the gas usage is justified. Sorry I love you, but sitting around and staring at a TV screen at someone's house is not worth $20 of gasoline. Let's make a plan to go on a hike, now you're talking.

While time passes slowly and uneventfully out here it so happens that this is perfect for pregnancy and transitioning to motherhood. (This statement justified by my midwife.) Today was our last monthly check-up. I told her today that I knew the third trimester was on the horizon because suddenly, just last week or so, I have begun to feel extremely tired relatively quickly. She congratulated me on being observant of the changing in my energy levels and told me I'm doing great to listen to my body and slow down without swamping myself with guilt over perceived stagnation. She said a lot of women have trouble slowing down and detaching themselves from their schedules of school or work or whatever, but once the baby comes you will be forced to into a sort of stagnation so it's good to get used to it and fall into a natural rhythm. This really made me happy as I had felt like poop about failing to /hatefultone "better my life" or  whatever /end hatefultone before Dixie got here. I felt bad that I was not doing anything "productive" but as Joshua put it growing a whole person inside of you is pretty productive. Besides, Dixie's birth is not a due-date for having our lives in perfect order. I have the rest of my life to figure out how to dupe people into relinquishing their tiny green paper rectangles unto me and my family.

One awesome thing did happen. Joshua will be starting next week as a plumber's apprentice and while he will be getting real technical training, he will also be paid about $200 more weekly than the shit restaurant did. He is so excited! He has bought himself a plumbing guide and has been studying like crazy. We have been assured by the plumbing boss man that despite common belief, you do not get constantly covered in shit all day. So yes, we are really excited to have some real income! Although I am still taking a few classes, I'm undecided on my major now but Joshua has voiced his want for me to be a stay at home mom (don't sweat your tits my classes are online)  which I could not be happier with hearing (because I was hoping this would be ok as I have yet to find a job where I don't lose my temper or feel my soul beg for sweet release into the endless abyss of nothingness rather than listen to customers).  My favorite thing to do is keep the house in order and what could be better then staying with your child? Currently there is a lot of shit-tier feminists who bash stay at home moms, and there is great pressure for every woman to get out there and go to school and get a career-based life. This is all fine and dandy, but who is raising the kids if it's frowned upon now for women to stay home with them?  Total strangers? Joshua and I believe this new pressure for women to immerse themselves in the almighty dollar game and leave their homes and children is a conspiracy to effectively raise thoughtless obedient children.....who grow up to be thoughtless obedient citizens. We are told it is empowering to discard "traditional gender roles" but really what is more empowering than being the queen of your realm?

Anyhow enough conspiracy talk, I will reveal plenty of our family ideals (like sitting on toilets vs. squatting to poop) in the future and you can argue them as they are presented. As all young mothers I will undoubtedly have opposition in my views on rearing babies, but I will also have support from all other paranoid, anti-establishment, semi-neo-hippie moms.

Anyway, the birthing center is great and unlike my visits at the hospital, I leave there feeling strong, confident, and happy. My midwife felt around on my stomach, measured my stomach, drew some blood, and we listened to Dixie's heartbeat. She then went on to assure me that everything was going perfect. My weight gain, perfect, Dixie's size and heartbeat, perfect, my recognition of easy exhaustion, perfect, and our due date incredibly convenient. Dixie will be born in late November so I can be nice and chilly when my stomach is as big as a beach ball. Our midwife dispelled another fear of mine as well.

As you know Josh and I have moved from a two bedroom apartment to a single room in his father's house. While we aren't ones to hoard possessions there is a serious lack of space in our bedroom and I was dreading figuring out a place to put a big ass crib. I read contrasting information  on whether or not a baby could just sleep in a bassinet our midwife assured us that this is totally cool and even encouraged since she can be right next to us without being in the bed. She went on to say that by them time Dixie outgrows the bassinet she will be sturdy and safe enough to sleep with us in the bed. This is awesome information as we were filling out the registry I was getting worried over what I actually needed any what Toys R Us was trying to trick us into thinking we need. I'm sure in the future we will have to get one but it can wait until we move somewhere where there is a little more space. Why does a newborn need a while giant bed anyway? In Finland babies sleep in boxes you know. The two biggest and most expensive things people tell you you will need is a crib and a changing table. Oddly enough you need neither. The changing table will save your back, but a bassinet (or any safe appropriate surface) with a wide changing pad is every bit as good, if not better because the pad is portable!

In conclusion, the birthing center has really been my kind of place with focus on all the hippie concerns I have. So thank you for existing Birth and Wellness Center, I will see you in the third trimester!

Friday, July 31, 2015

How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Play Frisbee

On nearly every single previous post you can practically taste my anxieties. I'm not going to tell you that I've found a new and exciting way to never worry again but something Joshua said has stuck with me and locked my worries in the closet.

I worry about a lot of things. I worry about all these weird gun men in my town deciding to spray a barrage a bullets and blow Joshua's brains out. I'm worried about my entire family dying all at once in a horrible, fiery car crash. I'm worried about finding my cats still and motionless, curled up dead somewhere around the house.  I'm worried about a major tank collapse so my whole fishy community goes belly up. At least I'm not worried about anatomy anymore. Funny thing is, with childbirth looming in the future you think I would be scared of the possibility of my own death, but this is not so. I never worry about my own death because if I were to die, I would just be dead so I couldn't be upset about it. And though I'd hate to leave a daughter and husband-type I know they have an excellent extended family to look out for them.

I told Joshua how much I was worrying and he told me not to because whether I worry or not what, things will or won't happen. My worry does not affect the outcome of any of these situations, it only puts me under great distress and outs ugly worry winkles on my face. Why worry if everyone I love is going to die? If they die, they die and I can grieve when the time comes but there's just no point in worrying.

I used to worry about my cats more than anything. Due to the wild nature of pets they are prone to horrible and gory accidents, things that (most) humans have enough sense to avoid. Sometimes when one of them was sleeping I would cry into their fur and pet them softly, all too aware that our time together was incredibly brief. Of course I don't like doing this, crying preemptively over the death of your cats is simply uncalled for, and the cats don't really like me making ugly sobbing noises over them and getting their fur all wet while they're trying to sleep.

In short: cry when something bad happens, if you cry preemptively about everything then you will never be happy.

In locking away my fears to face them at appropriate times, I have found myself a lot happier. Without worrying, the sun still comes up, the moon still comes down, and Dixie still kicks the living daylights out of my insides. So really, things are good now.

Joshua and I have taken to playing frisbee, it's a decent work out, it gets us outside, and it's incredibly satisfying to see that plastic disk fly through the air. I don't now why but these frisbee games feel really special to me. To see Joshua smiling in the sunlight, feeling the smile on my own face. Our laughter and prompt apologies as someone makes a horrible throw and the disk is sent careening away. Every second of our frisbee games is cataloged in my mind as moments to never forget. I hope to still remember the feeling of pure and simple joy while outside, pregnant with my baby's father, throwing the frisbee around like there's nothing we'd rather be doing. I wonder if this is how all dogs feel about frisbee.


Onward (incomplete)

Well I failed.
But I've never felt better about failure.

This class used to give me panic attacks. I spent so much time studying and dreading the next class that I wasn't enjoying my pregnancy or my life. Now that it's out of here I have a lot more time, I focus easier on my other class, and most importantly I don't feel like I'm gonna have a heat-attack at any given moment. Though I have failed I feel more hopeful, mostly because whatever my next endeavor is, undoubtedly it will go over better than that did. As for my next endeavor, it's looking like I may sit out the next semester at Santa Fe. Unless I can find another single semester class (one that isn't excruciatingly difficult) school will directly conflict with the whole birthing and being a mother to a newborn. Most fall classes will be ending in December, one month too late. Then again do I really wanna waddle around campus in the last trimester? No. I really don't.

So until later, what I'm doing is what I will be doing. Just what I wanted, existing, and nothing more. Having all this time on my hands seems ideal to start a project or two. We were considering building a chicken coop but is backyard construction an ideal hobby for a pregnant lady? Yeah why not? OK I'm gonna do it. I have $400 worth of Santa Fe money and only one extremely easy basic computing class. Plenty of time, and I've built a chicken coop and scratch yard before. So yeah maybe that will be a thing.

In case you hadn't heard, I took an oil painting class last semester and I was pretty successful. I got an A and was urged to keep painting by the teacher and fellow classmates, who seemed to really admired my work. The thing with painting is that you have to do a lot of practicing before they're worth even $20, and I don't really like having dozens of sub-par practice paintings strewn all about the place....but you gotta make em to surpass that. I still do have all my supplies but I don't know, that is still up in the air. Also it tends to be messy.
I painted this watermelon by myself with some quick instruction from Lisa. I think I did such a good job on it because I really really wanted to eat it and I told myself I couldn't touch the model until the painting was done.

Then there's this blog. I enjoy writing but really I wish I could write fantasy stories, not a dull account of goings-on in my life. The thing is, I don't really know how or where to start. I was hoping Santa Fe offered some kind of creative writing class but alas, it's only journalism. A perfectly boring and respectable alternative to something fun and interesting. Heh. Isn't that just how college is? Takes the fun right out of everything.

My dad gave me a guitar, I still have two ukuleles, and a violin. I could practice those, I pretty much suck at all of them right now. So...yes there's a lot of room for improvement.

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In other news, I said this would never become a product endorsement blog but the time has come where I found a product so amazing I would be a big bitch not to share. Anyone who has been pregnant or is pregnant knows that sleeping turns into bullshit. Between your back hurting and legs thrashing, being harassed from the inside by a parasitic tyrant, and finding a comfortable position to support your belly sleep really goes out the window, until I found this baby. Just look at that prego lady, she looks comfy as shit, it's cause she is. I mean you'll still  be kicked from inside and you'll still need to kick your legs around but at least you will be comfy. Really really comfy.

I mean of course you could  just use 3 or 4 regular pillows but good luck keeping them in place when you toss and turn. The first night I had this I slept so good I dreamed I was at a college pool party with tribal glow paint on my face, in-line skating underwater in a pool with an partially exploded coke can. Yeah it's that extreme.

Ch-Ch-Ch-Changes (incomplete)

In case you couldn't have guessed, I'm not wearing goth clothes and lolita dresses through pregnancy. Truth be told I haven't worn that stuff in quite awhile, and the few outfits I did have were reserved for special outings. Overall though, my style is the same since pre-pregnancy, mostly geared towards laziness, comfort, and mobility. The only difference is now how people view me. I guess being pregnant means you have to wear nothing but oversized t-shirts.

When I look at my reflection straight on, my boyish figure has disappeared. Hips has grown where there was once horse-flanks adding a strange curve I have never before seen on my body. Even when I got fat I still never had much hip, so I think this is a delightful change. Looking at myself from an anterior view, things are much the same despite having gained 15lbs or so it doesn't really look like I'm a big fat-ass, but when I turn to look at my profile I am shocked and uneasy every time. I'm 23 weeks now and growing steadily, still much more growing to do, but when I see myself in the mirror I wonder "how in the fuck?? What the hell??" According to the mom-website that e-mails me about weekly changes, Dixie is now the size of a spaghetti squash and it's pretty much what my swollen belly looks like. I don't think I'll ever grow accustomed to this new body. I hear afterwards I have saggy boobs and stretch marks to look forward too, I guess I had better enjoy it. I will never look this good again my entire life.

Considering looks and style but concerning mental changes, something strange happened to me the other day. I showed up at someone's house with a friend of mine. Inside a wild ass mom-party was raging. Four or five women, all mothers and their children all hanging out and getting turnt up together. Some mothers were drinking and the children varying in ages from...(excluding my friend's infant son) I'm going to say 4-6 because I'm not too familiar with children and what they look like at different ages... were running about and having a a blast. Maybe it was because some of them were tipsy but I got a lot of remarks about my "style." One woman said she liked my whole "thing" and another called me "edgy." I'm not sure how I felt about that, I certainly don't feel edgy and I wasn't at the maternity store like "where is the most badass, edgy, and hardcore maternity stuff ya got??" I don't know. I probably would've taken it as a compliment in my teens and early twenties but now....I just don't know. I wasn't trying to be anything apart from cool, comfortable, and mobile.
Here's the edgy outfit, and the edgy dirty mirror.

Where I was complaining before about the in-between stage of not quite looking pregnant (just looking like I had a beer belly) now I finally look obviously pregnant and it's a whole new world of thoughts and social encounters. That thing that all pregnant women loathe has finally begun happening to me, people reach out and touch my stomach without permission or warning. So far, it has only been family which isn't too horrible, but it is a little awkward. Despite looking tough (I guess), I'm really mostly a passive pushover so I don't think I'll ever have the heart to tell people to lay off the goods.

Another realization of mental change occurred when I went to Hogan's Heroes to get a late night sandwich. Let's be real, I know I'm hot *wink* It's probably all I have going for me, but when someone flirts with me now it's just....bizarre. The guy at the counter, perhaps he was being overly friendly, but it seemed flirtatious to me with a lot of smiling and glancing my way and asking a lot of unprompted questions about my night. I wondered "who the heck flirts with pregnant women?" Someone who either has a very specific fetish or likes damsels in distress, because what pregnant women isn't in distress? It's distressing seeing your abdomen extend and feeling exhausted! Some women get up in arms about being catcalled and flirted with, personally I like knowing that I look good enough to risk a sexual harassment lawsuit. It lets me know I'm doing something right :).
I guess feminists would disagree and say that I have many other positive qualities that I should look to for validation and the patriarchy has tricked me into viewing my looks as an all-encompassing sign of success....but...come on, I just discussed my academic failures, this is all I have OK, don't belittle it! Anyway I used to like it...now it's just unusual.

Boobs are back to D cups, this is still smaller than they were before the reduction surgery. As long as I don't hit triple D again I'll be O.K. I don't even care if they're ruined, before my surgery I told the doctor to take them all the way off, no cup because I hate them and they get in the way when you run or dance or jump or do anything.

I'll never forget the day I got a coupon in the mail for a free bra from Victoria's Secret. For a poor girl like me, this is a seriously big deal. Those bras are a far cry from the flimsy Walmart shit I usually ended up wearing and having my massive boobs spill over the top to produce the unflattering "quadboob." When I got down to VS I asked where the Triple D's were and the women told me they didn't carry sizes that large and I had to go to Cacique. Well not only do I not have a coupon for Cacique but also.....THAT IS THE FAT LADY STORE!!!! So! I have to shop at the fat lady store because I have massive mammaries? Nothing else on me is plus size! Needless to say, my heart sank!

Boy-howdy, first catcalling then fat-shaming? My blog is getting edgy! Don't kill me Tumblr I am a bisexual female minority!  (and I'm never serious)


I'm not the only one to be going through changes. My mild-mannered Joshua is turning into the berserker prince from my favorite story. The other day at the springs we had established a nice shady spot by the water and at the foot of a large tree. It was close enough so we could still keep the site in view from the water, and dangle our feet in from just few paces away. It was pretty perfect, until a group of 6 people or so all showed up, sat directly beside us, and simultaneously lit up cigarettes and began puffing away like the little engine that could (die of lung cancer.) I decided we should relocate, Joshua was furious. He began spouting all kinds of anger, talking about robbing people who deserve it and fighting those guys or telling them they were assholes and all kinds of other stuff. While it's true they are assholes (who decides to form a chain smoking gang around an obviously pregnant woman?) I always avoid a fight.





Saturday, July 18, 2015

Giving Up and Giving In

Well friends, I've been really busy with my anatomy class.

 Not sure if I discussed this with you all or not, but my plan was to get a quick certification in medical coding and billing so I could work from home with Dixie and make some decent money. Well that plan looked great on paper and quickly shut-up anyone when they asked "but what are you gonna do now?!" It made me sound clever and showed that I had forethought during this pregnancy to ensure that my daughter has a mother who was worth a crap. However I overlooked one slight detail in this plan. I forgot to factor in the truth, that I am dumb as a sack of bricks, and maybe after all might not be worth any single or multiple craps.

As Annie put it "we were unfortunate enough to grow up in a time where people told us that we could do anything and be anything we wanted if we just tried really really hard." Well I honestly believed that. I never wanted any job in any kind of medical because I don't want to help people and I'm not interested in the slightest, but I just wanted to make a decent living working from home and it seemed coding and billing fit that need. However even if you try really really hard you can't force a square peg in a round hole and you can't force a dumb dodo bird to learn anatomy in a single semester class.

I did believe that I was smart, now I believe that I was just cocky and I probably have a bright future ahead of me in the new and exciting career path of "crazed armed robber."
Until now there was never a class I couldn't pass if I had put forth any real amount of effort. The key there was putting forth effort at all, since I usually never cared enough to try. But for the previous exam I had studied and taken notes every single day, I have used quizlet, I have made flashcards, I have read the notes over and over, stared at this screen till I felt my eyes were going to bleed, then on the day of the exam I was relatively confident. Well next class period we were getting ready to take the second exam but not before we could take a look at our grade for the previous exam. All that preparation, all the confidence and I had just BARELY BARELY passed with a low C. The professor then explained that 2 questions everyone had gotten wrong so she gave us 4 extra points for free. Without those 4 points I probably would have failed. If you fail one exam you automatically fail the class. I even felt good about that exam.

Needless to say I wasn't half as confident about the 2nd exam and I am sure as shit that I have failed already. Yet here I am, studying, and taking notes, part of me still foolishly believing that I might have made it, like relatives of those in Hiroshima believed their loved ones may have survived the atomic bomb.

Anyhow scrapping what seemed like a good plan is tough, especially when you don't want to piss off your financial aid.

Discussing this with Joshua one night, he made an excellence point. "I know you're just doing this for Dixie but is it even right? I mean you've just got off medications for anxiety disorder so you decide to plunge into one of the hardest classes offered at Santa Fe while in your second trimester of pregnancy?" Well when he put it like that it made me realize that I was probably fooling myself all along and I will have to slide through this class and get an F or D (because dropping it will kill my financial aid) then figure something else out.

I will have to make other plans to make money. I could always hit the pole again, or just be a full blown prostitute, or maybe I should cook crystal meth...anyhow my horizons are still limitless as you can see thanks to my superior knowledge and excellent learning skills. Anyhow I guess I have a good while to get something started, even though she may be born into poverty, babies have no notion of socioeconomic classes and I have until she is maybe 5 or so until she realizes that her mother is a good-for-nothing dirtbag!

Ok so I am a great hairdresser. I could just get my license renewed and do that, but it's not from home and I don't like the scene. I'm not social (or particularly friendly) and I don't care about fashion, but I can give a great haircut and some fancy dye jobs and color corrections. If I'm desperate and I decide to sell my soul to fashionable Satan I will do it, but crazed armed robber is still higher on my list.

"So what about this blog?"

Well I can make money off it once it has been active for at least 6 months and that's if adsense even accepts it. There are so many mom blogs and lifestyle blogs out there, I read that they are no longer even eligible for adsense but still I have to believe. But have you even ever made money off of adsense? It's not a lot, I'm talking cents. If I really got it going and wanted to make real money I'd have to do whack shit like product endorsements and trial reviews and pimp my page out on every facet of the interwebs, and goof around on youtube like some pewdiepie or ray william johnson asshole. (I didn't capitalize their names because they don't deserve it) I'm hesitant at selling myself because I don't believe in endorsing poor products at rip-off prices. What do I really have to offer to the world anyway?
~~~~~

My grandfather is a successful business man. He owns a local accounting firm and I've heard him casually discussing millions of dollars over the phone, more money than I will ever get my greasy hands on. Just yesterday he was discussing what it what like to have a family and he said "you know people are so busy nowadays working for this and that and trying to achieve goals and get the ball rolling on big projects- all for their family, but by the time they accomplish anything (if they ever accomplish anything) their children are all grown up and moved out. We shouldn't be so caught up in other things that we forget that family is what's most important."
Anyhow it gave me a glimmer of hope because I have no plan, no career path (that matches what I want), and my chance for education is drying up like a puddle in August, but I do have a family.

Wednesday, July 8, 2015

The big gender reveal

Since you are here, chances are you have already seen my facebook post, if not, we're having a girl!
Sorry no pictures this time! 

Yesterday was a really good day, it began a little crazy though.

 I've gained about 10 lbs which is right on target for halfway. While biologically it's great, in the mirror I have been utterly horrified. As someone who had gotten really fat once before in her life then lost a lot of weight, it's scary to see myself balloon up once more after all of my hard work. However since I was able to do it once, I'm confident I can do it again when the time comes.  The most notable toll of this extra weight is my big fat neck makes me snore and has given me sleep apnea.

The night before yesterday (is there another way to phrase that?), I slept particularly badly. My stomach was hurting and I couldn't breath. I tossed and turned all night, too hot, too cold, crampy legs, painful back etc. By the time I got to really good sleep it was nearly 6 am, at which point some dodo bird (I have recently been using this as my favorite derogatory term.) started repeatedly calling Joshua's phone to inform him that he wouldn't be coming into work. This made us realize how balls it was to actually be a manager. Joshua wasn't even scheduled that day and really didn't give any fucks about it, but the new kid had to tell someone. That someone is kitchen manager, even on his day off. That's annoying for kitchen manager, but for manager's restless waifu who also hears the phone ringing off the hook, it's a crime punishable by beheading. In summation I slept poorly so I woke up late which later affected something else.

I awoke to the smell of bacon but when I made my way into the kitchen there was none for me. Joshua said he was right about to head into town so which I responded "without me? OAO" So I rushed to get dressed, whined about him not leaving me any breakfast then we flew out the door. I later learned he intended to leave me half of a sandwich but he ended up eating it. At least he thought about me.

Joshua had to visit his dad in physical therapy and I went to get lonely breakfast at Perkins while they did that. I love eating at Perkins and generally being anywhere where there is a lot of old people. As I come in they stare at me, sometimes disgusted because I have a nose ring and tattoos I guess. I really love this because it provides me with an opportunity to show them how wrong their assumptions are. I talk to every waiter and waitress kindly and graciously, using my best southern manners with words like please, thank you, sir and ma'am. I hold doors open and wait quietly and patiently, occasionally I strike up small conversation with the elderly patrons. This particular breakfast I decided to study my anatomy book while waiting on food, the look on the wrinkled faces of the couple next to me was priceless. Haha, I just wrecked your stereotyped expectations!

Since breakfast is ruined by pregnancy I had to order something I usually wouldn't go for. Chicken biscuit with gravy, scrambled eggs, paper thin bacon, and undercooked hash browns. I ate the chicken biscuits (well the chicken and gravy part) and left pretty much everything else since it wasn't very good. I started thinking about quotes from Ratatouille that have begun to fit my new eating habits. "If I don't love it, I don't swallow." After the mediocre breakfast I went to the rehab center to pick up Joshua and visit with Bruce.

Upon reaching the rehab center I was one sneeze, cough, or belly laugh away from peeing my pants. So when I was greeted by the staff, it was my first address. "Hi welcome, what can we do for you?" The woman I'm speaking to is dressed nicely in a long, flower print dress and her black hair in a tight bun. I assume she is probably the administrator since she isn't wearing scrubs like the other women around "I really have to use the bathroom" Probably assuming I'm just some weirdo off the street not even here to visit old people she gives a puzzled look. "ok well I'm here to see someone too but first I really really have to use the bathroom." The admin points to basket on the reception table and tells me to grab the key and points to the bathrooms. A nearby woman in scrubs asks if I'm pregnant and I tell her I am. "You better give her the key to bathroom A, if she goes in B she's gonna get sick." The admin makes a sour face like her family had just been insulted and she hesitantly hands me the key for A. I hurry off  while thanking the nurse over my shoulder. "Thank you for being honest! It's really easy to make me sick and I just had breakfast!" 

When I leave the bathroom and go to the front to give them back the keys the admin confronts me. "Just so you know, there is nothing wrong with the other bathroom." The helpful nurse is nearby and she makes the big mama "mmmmhmmm" noise complete with sassy head sway before telling the admin "the key is right there, you can see for yourself!"
While I understand the admin's want to have her facility come off as clean and respectable, you gotta be honest. How ya gonna let a pregnant woman use a bathroom you know is nasty? I could've barfed everywhere so intensely that I would have peed myself in the process. Come on!

After a brief visit, Josh and I head to the mall. As I previously mentioned my pudgy new look isn't exactly my favorite and I had been feeling pretty sloppy. All of my best t-shirts and skirts had stopped fitting a few weeks ago and I was left with the unflattering dredges of "fat day" clothes. I know they're just fabric strips meant to hide your shameful nudity, but when you feel down about the way you look some new clothes can really make a difference. Joshua knew this and took me to the maternity store to buy some clothes that are actually flattering during pregnancy and now I look great again! I wanted to post some pictures of my new clothes here but I couldn't take full body pics by myself and Joshua didn't get home till later! I know I always talk about what a great baby-daddy he is but it's because I really mean it! It really meant a lot to me that he helped me get all dressed up and feeling good about my new body, instead of letting me go about my days looking like a bloated troll. 

When the shopping was done we got lunch at Cymplify. Everything there is for hippies or rabbits and tastes entirely too healthy. A lot of their foods don't even have cheese but nut spread substitutes for vegans. I imagine this is what Californians eat. If you like flavors besides "nut" and "leaf" and I suggest you just go elsewhere. There was a pretty pitiful garden out front. Joshua took note and began hatin' loudly. "Who maintains that? They're doing a terrible job! What  piece of shit!" I see a sign posted in the garden that says it was made and maintained by Buchholz Special Ed. classes so we have a tiny un-PC giggle at that. I guess after all these years I'm still going to hell. 

Once the ultrasound appointment comes around, we are yuckin' it up in the waiting room. I notice it's dead quiet and somewhat somber in there, apart from Joshua and I snorting and guffawing. I tease him because he is telling me all kind of facts about espresso, all while mispronouncing it "eXpresso." He then sees some knitted things hanging on the wall and asks if they are socks, they are baby hats. I tell him they are for identifying your baby girl when she is bald as hell for the first years of her life. (just as I was) As I look around and notice we are the only ones talking and laughing I start to wonder if the other parents in the room think we are too silly to be good parents. I decide anyone who thinks that is too joyless to be a good parent. 

Soon we are called back to the ultrasound room and I'm instructed to lift up my dress. I am embarrassed that I chose a lacy thong and now had to flash it to this elderly ultrasound tech. I feel like a dodo bird for my choice of garments but she says that dresses are convenient and soon my pubic area is covered by a white paper cloth. The tech. squirts warm gel on my stomach and it all begins. At first I can't really tell what I'm looking at, she zooms in so close that is just looks like fuzzy shapes. After a few minutes she points out some little body parts and I'm able to identify them. Heart looks great, nice straight spine, legs curled up, one arm reaching up and one back below. Finally the little thing uncrosses it's legs and we see the goods. The tech. tells us it's a girl. She snaps a photo of her genitals and types "it's a girl" on the screen, then presses enter several times so it spams across the photo "it's a girl!! It's a girl!! It's a girl!!" Joshua giggles and for the first time, I fully grasp that unbridled joy and my eyes begin to swell with tears under my glasses. I tell myself that I'm sure everyone cries at this visit and it's totally acceptable but I still don't want to look like a softy and I hastily try to wipe them away, but they keep coming. As the tech. continues looking around in there and pointing out different parts, my responses become muffled squeaks as I hold back sobs. I can't wait for it to be over now so I can just let it out. 

Joshua says he's happy it's a girl but he's sad that he's gonna have to kill little boys in the future.

In the hallways after the ultrasound we jump up and down like teenage girls. We hug and giggle and kiss and I cry into his shirt. Then we both have to use the bathroom, where I discover that not only had I flashed the ultrasound tech my undies but in my haste to leave that morning I had put my undies on inside out and the tech. had undoubtedly seen that too.

I guess I am a dodo bird.

Some other things happened, but after the gender reveal the rest of the day was kind of  hazy.
I gave myself a pedicure, ate some freezer burned cheese sticks, and studied for the upcoming anatomy exam.



Monday, July 6, 2015

milemarker

Sorry for the lack of updates until now. Life has resembled a disheveled and bug-infested hellscape until a day or so ago. With much thanks to friends and family, well William, Jordan, and Annie. (And Carley for volunteering, even though it never happened) we are finally all moved in.

The fish are safe in a pre-cycled quarantine tank while their real planted tank continues to get biologically established in our room. The day before we moved the tank I noticed a single flower had grown from an Anubias plant. It broke my heart to uproot it and move it because it was the first flower to bloom in the tank in a very long time and I would really be upset to kill it. However it too has made the move with no real damage.
Planted tank still cycling, Anubias flower off to the right. Don't know why I didn't try to get it in the picture?


The cats are here and learning to get along with each other. After three days of hiding and territorial hissing, Memphis and Walter have become friends again. Just a few minutes ago they were sniffing  noses. Djinn now has 2 little nerds he likes to intimidate and harass. Sorry Walter, but it's kind of nice that Memphis gets a break from all the bullying, now he has been napping in our room without the frequent Djinn attacks.

"I'm the biggest and the baddest"
All of our stuff is here now. It's scattered all around and stashed in boxes and crammed under the bed, but it is here. Arranging it all neatly and in easy access is another issue entirely. I was able to unpack our bedroom essentials and get our bathroom setup. Beyond that there really is no room to set up any of our other stuff so under the bed has become a vortex of boxes; the contents destined to be forgotten until a much later date when their reopening will be like Christmas morning, except it's all already your favorite things.
Half of the bedroom

The several boxes of miscellaneous items left in the living room have been an endless source of frustration.  Seeing them all over the place, contents spilling out like gory organs, is like a homemaker's nightmare. I want them to be put in their homes, but currently they don't have them so I'm considering just throwing them away. Don't look at the stuff too much and start thinking about what uses it has and how much you like it, just accept that it has no place in this house and bag it up and take it to the dump. It would be the fate of everything that doesn't fit under the bed if not for Joshua.
Last bit of our stuff with Walter for scale.

Perhaps it's because it's his father's house or perhaps it's because the tile floor makes my feet swell and hurt within minutes, whatever it is Joshua has been working magic in what was a filthy dump. He has cleared areas for us to put things, thrown away pounds of garbage and broken duplicate items, brought unfinished projects or neglected items to new life, and most importantly made me feel comfortable in a place where I wanted to curl up in  section of swept floor, spray a protective ring of Lysol around me and cry myself to sleep. (Fun Fact: I have OCD so it's difficult to feel at ease somewhere you consider dirty.) Just last night, even after working a full 9 hour day, Joshua came home and sorted a massive pile of dusty cobwebbed bullshit, then cleared a lovely wooden bookcase for our room. At last I have a storage option for more of our boxes, it looks like this whole uprooting thing is finally coming to a close.
Massive pile of cobwebbed bullshit to the right. Memphis hanging out on the cleared pool table.

Since unpacking has come to a stalemate, I've been throwing myself into my school work. Right now I have a 90 in both classes and I intend to keep them there if possible. Santa Fe has really kept me positive through all of this. Concentrating on my school work has been helping me forget about my surroundings and the massive to-do list hanging over my head, also it gives me a way to better my life when my body is too sore to do any real physical work. I tell myself if I push myself in my school work all of our lives will be better. I can get a coding and billing certificate, work from home at a real person's job, and actually make a decent living. I tell myself that... but I'm too much of a realist to really believe a degree or certificate means instant employment. I also write this blog because occasionally a few people will tell me they like my writing and it makes me think perhaps I could be an author. I mean I've read a lot of really shitty books in my life and if those guys are authors well who's to say I can't be? I'll do whatever I can to stay on top of this game that no one wants to play, but not playing means giving up what we call civilized humanity. With a baby, I will have to play. Life is hard and it will be hard, there's no reason I deserve an easy ride. I don't deserve anything except....

The right to choose the kind of labor and delivery I want. My medical files have been reviewed and I have been accepted for prenatal care and natural delivery through the Birth and Wellness Center. My gender reveal ultrasound is tomorrow at 3:30 and in two weeks, I begin prenatal care at Birthing and Wellness Center. I am really excited but just as I said in a previous blog I think some of my joy is withheld because I feel like something horrible could still happen in the last few months. I have always been afraid to put too much of my heart into anything, because when my heart is broken I don't recover well. I start smoking cigarettes burying myself in other destructive behaviors, comforted only by the fact that I am slowly killing myself. Anyway, fears aside, what happiness I let myself feel is sheer empowerment. I want to have a natural birth because as I've said before I don't deserve any comforts or easy rides anymore than any other woman. Since women have been giving birth for hundreds of years without pitocin and epidurals and hospital beds why am I such a delicate flower that I can't do what my body was designed to do on it's very own. I hear there is nothing like the searing pain of childbirth and often the natural pain relief techniques don't mean squat when the baby is on the way. It seems strange but I'm looking forward to the pain as well as the child. The only way I can describe this way of thinking is that to me such an intense and monumental pain seems exquisite, a true reminder of what it means to be alive. I view it as obtaining some sort of martyrdom without actually having to die. (though you might *wink*) There's just something to be said for suffering on another person's behalf. I hope I can keep this attitude through labor and delivery.