On Gaining

I weighed 20 pounds more than I wanted to when I became pregnant with Hutchy.

Pregnancy Before and After

And then during my pregnancy I gained 60 pounds. SIXTY POUNDS.

The enormity of that statement is not lost on me.

It was so easy, gaining that weight. I barely did a thing, really. Which of course is my problem. I started out my pregnancy with the best of intentions for my health. I was determined to eat perfectly according to all the charts and pyramids, and buy all organic food, and go on regular walks and maybe even take up jazzercise. But none of that happened and by the time I was halfway through my 40 weeks I’d become lazy to such a pathetic degree that even trimming my toenails became a chore.

All of my good intentions fell to the wayside as I watched the numbers on the scale climb up and up. Every week I thought I couldn’t get any heavier, but I didn’t really do anything to keep it from happening. Oh sure, I’d take the odd walk here and there, but it wasn’t enough to combat the devil-may-care approach I took to my diet (consisting mainly of Rice Krispy Squares).

The funny thing is, for the first few weeks after giving birth I actually walked around feeling skinny! I mean, I’d been so huge for so long that when I no longer had a watermelon in my stomach I really felt like I could be a supermodel.

Hutch weighed 10 pounds 2 ounces when he was born (which is a surprise to no one, considering the aforementioned Rice Krispy Squares), so that was a dime down right there, plus I lost about that much in blood and guts when the delivery nurses violently attacked my stomach during those first few minutes post-delivery. I literally remember looking down at my stomach while I was still laying on the delivery table and Hutch was getting checked out and exclaiming, “I’m so skinny!”

By the time Hutch was one week old I’d already lost 25 pounds, and by two weeks I’d lost 40 by doing practically nothing but nurse my baby and cry all the time.

Which is good news, to be sure.

But the bad news is that my magical do-nothing weight loss has plateaued and I haven’t lost any since then, which means I’m still 20 pounds heavier than I was when I got pregnant and 40 pounds heavier than I would like to be. (Remember how I was up 20 before I even got pregnant?) Those days of walking around feeling like a whale are a pretty distant memory, as are the days of rejoicing for their passing. I don’t feel huge anymore, but I don’t feel thin either. I look lumpy and frumpy and I don’t fit well into clothes, period.

So it’s time to get serious. Hutch is 3 months old now and I’m feeling good enough to exercise, even though I really hate to do it. I’m also going to start eating right, keeping in mind that I am still nursing (but supplementing with formula because my body has decided it simply won’t create enough milk for my child to live on, and there’s a whole nuther blog post) so I can’t go too crazy with cutting calories—but I can change what calories I do eat to be more healthy ones.

Starting today I am cutting out all soda from my diet. I will miss it, but I miss wearing my old jeans even more.

I am drinking at least one freshly-squeezed veggie juice a day (think Fat, Sick and Nearly Dead).

I am eating oatmeal for breakfast (good for the ol’ milk-makers) and a salad of some sort for lunch (I’m looking at you, Olive Garden Salad Dressing of which my sister gave me a year’s supply last Christmas [best gift ever BTW]).

I’m staying far away from sweets. If they aren’t in my house I won’t eat them, and so I won’t let them in my house. I’m exterminating them. DIE, SWEETS.

And—the hardest part—I’m going to exercise to the point of sweating at least 5 times a week.

Anybody care to join me? I’d love to hear your pregnancy weight-loss success stories, or your favourite healthy snack, or how long it took you to get back into your non-stretchy jeans, or anything inspiring at all.

Also, have you ever had any sort of success with those fitness tracker things like a FitBit or a Jawbone or a Nike device that you wear around and pair with your iPhone? If so, did you like it? Poor Kyle and I are looking into getting a pair. I’m pretty sure they’re a bit gimmicky and I can’t see myself wearing one long-term, but if it motivates me to lose even 10 pounds it would be worth it.

Posted in change, Cutting Back, health and vitality, I hate change, pregnancy, what I'm about, woe is me | 3 Comments

On Loving

I wonder how many women give birth and don’t immediately feel a tsunami of motherly love toward their babies. I wonder how many women might feel guilty about that. I hope not many. But probably a lot.

••••••••••

I was in shock all throughout my delivery of Hutch, and I didn’t get to hold him immediately because of some complications with his being overdue. I felt quite left out as I laid there on the table, legs sprawled, nurses kneading my uterus, the doctor stitching up my torn and bleeding nether regions, all the while craning my neck for any glimpse I could catch of my slimy squirmy baby. When they finally laid him on my chest I felt a huge sense of relief and an overwhelming wave of amazement, but no burning ball of flaming love like I had been led to believe I would or should feel.

Cue guilt.

Kyle and Hutch

As I watched Poor Kyle with our son over the course of the next few days I was both delighted and envious of his obvious love for Hutchy. How come I couldn’t act like that? The few times I tried to gush and coo the way Kyle did, I just felt like I was putting on an act…and for who? Eventually I decided it would be better to act the way that felt natural to me, even if it wasn’t the typical motherly way, because at least it was sincere. If Hutch couldn’t have a mother who loved him unconditionally I felt at least he should have a mother who was real.

And it’s not that I didn’t love him. Because I did. But I was also terrified of him. Here was a tiny little life that depended 100% on me (okay, and also a little on Poor Kyle) to keep him alive and thriving. It didn’t help that Hutch and I struggled with nursing from the get-go and that on his fourth day of life he’d lost too much of his birth weight and became dehydrated because my milk hadn’t come in. When I called the doctor’s office to explain what we thought was the problem I had to give Poor Kyle the phone because I broke down into hysterics when I said “I think something’s wrong with my baby.” It was the most responsibility I’d ever felt and it rattled my very core. Every day during that first week around 6 or 7 p.m., when the sun started to set, I felt overcome by a surge of such unbelievably intense panic that I broke down and wept—wept.

Nights were the scariest. They were so dark, so looming, so unpredictable. Would I get to sleep? (A little.) Would I wake up in a puddle of blood? (No, thank heavens.) Would my milk come in? (No, not really.) Would Hutch eat? (As much as he could.) Would I swaddle him correctly? (Eventually.) Would I wrap him too tightly and suffocate him? (Haven’t yet.) Would he sleep too long? (Sometimes.) Would he not sleep at all? (No, knock on wood.) Would I do absolutely everything right and still wake up to a dead baby anyway? (I can’t even entertain that notion.) The unknown was horrible and I crumbled under the weight of all those dark lonely hours facing me every evening. I remembered the carefree girl I’d been only days before and I missed her so very dearly.

I worried that what I felt was postpartum depression and that I’d probably never be the same. I worried that even though I knew I loved my son, that my type of love was somehow wrong—spurred by the fear of something bad happening to him and the knowledge that I might not be able to stop it from happening. I worried I might never love him the joyful way I wanted to love him.

I worried about Hutch and I worried about me worrying about Hutch and I worried about Poor Kyle worrying about me worrying about Hutch.

••••••••••

The first night I went without crying—a week or two after bringing Hutch home–was a great day for our family. I told Poor Kyle that I hoped it wasn’t just a fluke. After three or four days without a panic attack I began to feel like we were finally in the clear. I was still scared of Hutchy dying (I think I’ll always be scared of Hutchy dying), but the fear didn’t paralyse me like it had at first.

Even still, it took a few weeks after that before I finally experienced the blessing of looking at my son and feeling as though my heart might actually burst with love for him. It wasn’t after any great bonding session. It didn’t happen because of any specific thing he did or sound he made. I don’t even remember where I was when it happened. All I know is that one day I woke up and couldn’t wait to get him out of his bed. And that when I held him in my arms or propped him on my legs and studied his tiny, perfect little features, I felt I’d known him forever.

IMG_2917

And then it was like I’d woken up from a long, fuzzy dream. Like I’d somehow missed his entire first 30 days of life. I can remember bits and pieces of those days—like how empty I felt when Poor Kyle gushed and I could not, or how petrified I felt sitting at the kitchen table trying to eat a piece of sweet Taber corn someone had brought us for dinner—but I couldn’t remember what it felt like to hold my newborn, or what Hutch had sounded like, or smelled like, or even really looked like those early days. I snapped out of a daze and lo, there was a month-old baby in my arms.

IMG_3035

•••••••••

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Today I mourn the loss of those early days. I’m sad that missed so much of his tiny little life. But more powerful than my sadness is my relief—my joy!—that I really am past it. That I’m here now, that I get to cherish and remember these days, and that I can say with total surety that I love my baby exactly the right way for me.

Hutch and Me

This is joy.

Posted in awesome., introspection, kid stuffs, parenthood | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

On Showering

20130922-234748.jpg (Token Hutch picture that actually has nothing to do with this post.)

They really weren’t kidding when they said how difficult it would be to squeeze in a shower when you have a baby.  This is in part for two reasons:

1) Yes, newborns sleep a lot, but just because they’re sleeping doesn’t mean a mom necessarily can. There’s a million other things that have to be done during that time, including but not limited to sweeping mopping meal-making pumping washing pump parts eating drinking 3+ litres of water washing clothes sorting clothes folding clothes putting away clothes taking walks baking lactation cookies eating lactation cookies and these are just what I thought of during the past 30 seconds.

And yes, from time to time, I do choose to sleep at the same time Hutch sleeps.

In fact, of the myriad of things I have to get done in any given day, showering is basically at the bottom of that list when I’m prioritizing by order of Most Crucial to the Smooth Running of This Household (and Health and Wellness of My Son).

2) When the rare 10 minutes rolls around that I can spare for a shower, I’m always a bit baffled about what to do with the baby. The first time I attempted it, I left him asleep in his bassinet three rooms away from the bathroom. Five minutes into the shower I thought I heard him crying so with shampoo not even lathered in my hair I turned off the water, wrapped up in a towel and walked wetly down the hall to check on him, only to find him sleeping soundly. Annoyed (with my overactive imagination, not with my innocent child), I got back into the shower to finish. Five minutes later when I was officially done, I turned off the water and Hutch was screaming. I felt horrible that he’d been all alone and sad like that. He probably thought I was never coming for him.

When I mentioned this problem to a friend of mine she said she just takes her baby in the bathroom with her when she showers and lets him hang out in a bouncy chair or bumbo.

I thought that seemed like a good idea until I tried it. First of all, which way do I point him? If I point him facing the shower he’ll be able to see me and know I haven’t abandoned him in a dumpster…but on the other hand he’ll be able to see me totally nekkid. And sure, he sucks on my b00bs 8-10 times a day, and six weeks ago his face was literally squishing itself right out of my hoo-ha, so he’s not a TOTAL stranger to the female anatomy, but it still feels kinda weird to have him looking at me totally nekkid.

On the other hand, I could point his bouncy chair toward the bathroom wall, but then he’s staring at a blank wall for 10 minutes and he’ll probably think I’ve abandoned him in a dumpster anyway, so what’s the point of bothering to take him into the bathroom in the first place.

On top of which, I like a pretty hot shower so there’s a real chance he would suffocate in the steaminess of the room; it’s a legitimate concern in my head, even though he would be near the ground and heat rises and he’d probably be fine.

It’s quite the dilemma.

Posted in failures, hutchface, oh brother what next, parenthood, Uncategorized | Tagged | 4 Comments

The Hutchface

People keep asking me if Hutch is a good baby.

I don’t really like that question. It reminds me of the Barenaked Ladies song “What a Good Boy,” [which by the way is one of the greatest songs ever written, if you ask me, which you kind of did since you are reading my blog]…

When I was born they looked at me and said, What a Good Boy, What a Smart Boy, What a Strong Boy […] We’ve got these chains hangin’ around our necks; people wanna strangle us with them before we take our first breath…

I don’t like the idea of labelling my son as “good” or “bad” or anything relative like that. If I call him good it might be too much pressure for him, and if I call him bad that’s just mean. I prefer to state the facts and let people come to their own conclusions.

The facts are these:

• Hutch rarely cries unless he needs something, which thing is almost always very apparent, and which we can usually (knock on wood) address to his satisfaction within a matter of minutes.

• Hutch doesn’t smile often. But when he does it looks like this:

Baby Hutch Smiling

• I am addicted to that face.

• I mean, how could I not be? Just look at it:

Baby Hutch in Carseat

• Despite the above facts, Hutch does sometimes have hard days. Those times look like this:

Baby Hutch Looks Sad

• And this:

Baby  Hutch Crying Velour Track Suit

• But more often than anything else our baby is neither very happy nor very sad, but instead just incredibly chill (and okay, maybe just a TEENSY bit suspicious of every living soul he comes in contact with):

Hutchface Collage

And those, my friends, are the many faces of Hutchy Boy. The Hutchface.

Is he a good baby? Is he a bad baby? I don’t know.

But he’s our baby, and we love him to bits.

Posted in hutchface, parenthood | 6 Comments

A Hutch is Born

Baby Hutch 4 Weeks

It has been four weeks to the day since our baby was born. I guess now’s as good a time as any to tell the world the story. (Actually, now’s not really as good a time as any…three weeks ago would have been better but I’ve been in a bit of shock you see. My sincerest apologies.)

On Friday, August 9th I went to the hospital to be induced at exactly 41 weeks pregnant. I was extremely nervous to give birth in the first place let alone to be induced, which I had heard made the contractions come harder and faster with fewer breaks in between, and therefore made me very nervous to deliver our baby without an epidural, which I’d been hoping to do.

Why did I agree to be induced then? Because a) I was sick of being pregnant, and b) my doctor looked me straight in the eye and said that if I didn’t get induced at 41 weeks my baby could die, and that if I waited even three more days she would make me sign a waiver saying I understood that and wouldn’t sue her.

It was a scare tactic and even though I knew it was a scare tactic it didn’t make me feel any less scared. So yeah, I got induced.

41 weeks pregnant
The final pregnant photo, taken just moments before we left for the hospital.

We left at 6:00 am and I cried—sobbed, really—the majority of the 30 minute drive there. Poor Poor Kyle was so excited to have a baby but he couldn’t even show it because I was sucking all of the joy out of our lives with my terror. I still feel bad about that but you have to understand that childbirth has been one of my lifelong fears the way some people are afraid of heights or spiders or small confined places. I was face to face with my life’s greatest fear and I was not coping well at all.

I remember looking at all the familiar landmarks on that drive, thinking how the next time I saw that billboard it would still be advertising $1 McDonald’s soft drinks but I would have a baby. How everything would be the same except nothing would be, really.

At 7:00 I was dilated to a 2 (where I’d been for a week), so the doctor broke my water and we began the waiting game for contractions. Unfortunately, she saw a bit of a greenish tinge to my amniotic fluid which meant our poor little overdue baby couldn’t hold his poo in any longer and he pooed in utero. What did that mean, I asked. It meant that I would be asked to stop pushing for a minute when his head was out of my crotch but his body was still in (there’s a lovely image for you) so that the doctor could suction out his mouth and make sure he didn’t inhale any, and that as soon as he was completely born he would be whisked away to a team of NICU staff who would do more of the same.

So I don’t get to do immediate skin to skin? And I don’t get to wait until the umbilical cord stops pulsing to have it cut? And I don’t get to let him try to nurse within 10 minutes of being born?

Nope. All of my hippie hopes and dreams for this delivery were going up in smoke before my eyes. I felt so helpless because I knew I needed to give up on them for the good of the baby, but I also felt so sure that those other things were good for the baby too. And since I didn’t want to be giving birth in the first place I felt I deserved to have at least SOME things go my way.

It’s exactly that sense of entitlement that gets me into messes all the time. I should learn.

They found my blood pressure to be too high (which was a surprise to exactly nobody, given the level of tears I was expelling at an alarming rate), so the nurse was instructed to monitor it. Which she did. Diligently. For the next 10 hours. It never went down on its own so I had to be given medication for it (more interventions that I worried would affect my baby). Also because I was induced I had to be strapped to an IV and to fetal heart rate monitors. What I didn’t realise going into it was that I would be hooked up to all those things THE WHOLE DAY. It made any sort of movement at all really difficult, and especially the kind of movement I’d been planning on using to cope with the pain in place of the epidural.

When I realised that, I cried some more.

I also agreed to let a student nurse watch right before the doctor broke my water. I thought that just meant she would watch the water break, but as it turned out what I agreed to was letting her stay in the hospital room with us the entire day until the baby was born. So because of my high blood pressure and the induction, I automatically had two extra people hovering around me the whole day…they only left for lunch breaks and even then they got replacements to come in and hover some more. I hated it. I hated being attached to so many machines and I hated being hovered over and feeling obligated to make awkward small talk for what seemed like eternity.

So right off the bat my experience was disappointing. I held it together when the nurses were around but any time they stepped out to trade shifts I made sure to get a good cry in.

Anyway, the next four hours passed uneventfully. The hospital brought me breakfast and lunch but I couldn’t eat a single thing, not even toast (highly unusual for me, you know). I tried to nap but couldn’t do that either, for the stress, despite having only slept two hours the night before, again for the stress.

The pitocin to induce contractions didn’t seem to work so they kept having to up my dosage. Finally they bumped me up to the maximum amount and then at around 11:00 I felt the most horrific urge to both poo and pee at the same time. (I’d made sure to eat a lot of fruit the few days before because pooing during delivery is another huge fear of mine and I wanted to be nice and cleaned out for the big push. So I’d already pooed a couple of times that morning and thought it was unusual I needed to go again.) I went through the huge ordeal of getting unhooked and hobbling to the washroom with my IV to sit on the toilet, and lo and behold—nothing came.

I thought that was weird but what do you do, right? So I went back to bed.

A few minutes later the exact same sensation hit me again, so again we unhooked everything and again I sat on the toilet and again—nothing.

Around that time it occurred to me that I was probably having contractions. Only I was so surprised because I always assumed that contractions would feel like period cramps, but no! Not for me! Why had nobody ever told me that contractions feel like the most horrific need to poo (like, stomachache-level need) and the most stinging UTI-urge to pee both at the same time? I don’t know, but I blame every woman who’s ever felt one for not preparing me.

Once I figured out I was contracting I decided to try some of my hippie pain coping techniques. They all failed miserably. First of all I couldn’t do yoga because of the machines. I tried bouncing on a birth ball but it was so low to the ground it hurt my knees. Leaning over the back of the bed was more uncomfortable than anything else. Walking was a nice distraction but dealing with contractions standing up was a bad plan—plus I was only allowed out of my room for 20 minutes before I had to come back to be strapped up to the machines again. And I straight up forgot to try my essential oils.

Around 12:30 our doula arrived. We hired a doula because I’d read it was a good idea to do so, but our doula was also our childbirth class leader and by the time we’d sat through 15 hours of classes with her we were sort of having second thoughts about whether we even wanted a doula. However, we’d already paid the fee so I wanted to get my money’s worth, even though Poor Kyle wanted to just go through it without her. Anyway she got there at 12:30.

Poor Kyle was amazing and never left my side until the doula and I basically kicked him out to get some lunch at around 1 p.m. But even then he was only gone for a half hour.

When he got back I decided I’d had enough of the contractions. I asked to get checked one last time just in case I was somehow at a 10, but no luck: I was at a 5. Depressed, I decided I could not do 5 more centimetres and asked for the epidural despite feeling like a disappointment to myself and probably Poor Kyle (who said he didn’t care either way and that he’d probably have gotten one ages sooner). The epidural was terrifying, but terror was the order of the day for me so by that time I was getting quite used to it. The anesthesiologist was there within 30 minutes and 30 minutes after he got started my contractions just disappeared. (He did nick a bit of my bone during the process, causing me to jump and shriek but apparently it didn’t cause any lasting damage.)

After about an hour of no contractions I started to feel tiny tinges of pain again, which was quite perturbing to me. I felt that if I’d sold out to get an epidural I wanted to sell out COMPLETELY and feel NOTHING. They gave me a button and told me to push it as often as I wanted to top off the drugs. I pushed it every ten minutes. Just to make sure.

Blah blah blah, nothing exciting happened then until around 4:00 when the doctor came back to check my progress and said I was dilated to a 10 and ready to push.

Just as simple as that: you’re dilated to a 10 and ready to push.

I pushed for nearly two hours and the only thing that hurt was my head and chest from holding my breath for so long. The nurses had to literally keep their hands on my stomach to tell me when I was having a contraction. Poor Kyle stood holding my right leg for me and the student nurse was holding my left. The doula was by my head feeding my ice chips between pushes.

The strangest thing about pushing was how mellow it all was…in the movies there’s always this dramatic music and the woman’s voice is muted but you can tell she’s basically screaming. I didn’t scream at all, but I did grunt a bit I think. And nobody was shouting at me to push or not push, they were all just quiet and supportive, saying things like, “Good job,” or “There’s part of his head.” Not even with exclamation points, just statements. I kept looking around for the drama, but there was none to be had.

I didn’t want Poor Kyle to watch because that’s something you can never un-see (I know I wouldn’t want to watch him take a giant poo on a sterile table [I didn’t even want to feel the baby’s head when it was out, even though our doctor and doula told me too—I believe my exact words were, “That’s disgusting.”]), but he kept sneaking peeks so finally I just gave up. He watched the whole thing and in the end I was glad he did because afterward he got to tell me all about it but I never had to see a thing.

Newborn Baby

I was also glad because when our baby was born Poor Kyle gasped and said, “Whoa,” like he’d just seen a miracle or something, and although it was simple it was probably the rawest emotion I’d ever seen come from my husband. And it made me happy.

First Family Picture

So now I’ve written 2,000 words about the birth of our son when really all I needed to do was post a few pictures and say this: Hutchinson Fairbanks was born on August 9th at 5:20 p.m. weighing in at 10 pounds 2 ounces and measuring 23.5 inches long. Baby Hutch is healthy and strong:

10 Pound Baby

Poor Kyle is healthy and strong and totally in love:Poor Kyle with Hutch

And me? I’m healthy and strong and utterly floored that this tiny creature came out of my body.

Oh yeah. And I’m in love, too:

Hutch and Me

Posted in hutchface, parenthood, pregnancy | Tagged , , | 9 Comments

Pregnancy Update: Week 40.5

The update is this: I am still pregnant.

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I weigh more than Poor Kyle at his Big Weight (the weight where when he sees that number on the scale he knows it’s time to crack down and shape up). I don’t feel very good physically, emotionally, or spiritually. I am really scared to give birth and even more scared to be a parent for the rest of my life.

And now it’s bloody August.

Posted in pregnancy | Tagged | 4 Comments

Maternity Leave in Canada

Noteworthy:

I stopped working to take (legally acceptable) advantage of the Canadian Unemployment Insurance System.

How Maternity Leave in Canada Works

Maternity leave in Canada works like this: a pregnant woman who’s worked a certain number of hours in the year prior to her pregnancy is entitled to 17 weeks of paid maternity leave followed by 35 weeks of paid parental leave. From what I understand, the difference is that maternity leave is for a woman’s healing and general well-being, while parental leave is for actual childcare. The 35-week parental leave is allowed to be split between two parents of the new child in any of the following combinations: I could take all 35 weeks while Poor Kyle continued to work, Poor Kyle could take all 35 weeks while I continued to work, we could each take 17.5 weeks while the other continued to work and then switch roles, or we could both take 17.5 weeks together.

I’m taking it all. For the record.

Poor Kyle would love to take some of the paid parental leave but his manliness (and fear of utter mockery at his guy-centric workplace) prevents it. For my part, I feel like nine months of growing and carrying this child entitles me to at *least* the next nine months off, and I’m perfectly fine with the extra three bonus months from the Canadian Powers That Be. The fact that these twelve months are actually paid is just a lovely little (okay, huge) cherry on top.

I’m not exactly certain but I believe in the United States women are only given 6 weeks of maternity leave (but maybe it varies from workplace to workplace). At any rate I feel like the luckiest girl in North America right now.

•••••••••••••••••••

My last day of work was a week ago and I will admit it feels strange not going in every day. I thought it would be like summer vacation from school, but it feels completely different somehow. I guess it’s because I know my days of freedom are numbered. It’s only a matter of time (four weeks until our due date but even still I’m pulling for an early birth) before I will be sleeping in two-hour intervals and covered in sour breast milk from sunup to sunup to sunup, day after day after day. Summer vacation days too are numbered, but going back to school for another semester or two (or twelve, or even med school) is totally different than giving birth and being a parent forEVER.

Bigger commitment.

Anyway my mental state during any given day is usually one or more of the following:

• trying really hard to channel good vibes to get this baby to be born two weeks early
• making every attempt to avoid looking at any part of my face or body in a mirror because I don’t like what I see (denial is the best medicine)
• FREAKING OUT because of aforementioned big commitment and afore-aforementioned aversion to big commitments
• stressing over not having acquired the appropriate baby gear for the birth of the child (I’m not talking gadgety unncessary stuff like bottle warmers—I’m talking car seat, sleeping place, etc.)
• trying to sell George Jettson but also trying not to because then we’ll just have to stress about what vehicle to buy next, and no matter what it is it won’t be my $60,000 Volkswagen Touareg dream car so I don’t even care anymore
• wondering/half-stressing about our lowered income (the 12 months are paid, but only up to about half of my regular salary)
• crying (snot-nosed, shuddering, gasping-for-air SOBBING) at the strangest provocations, like the day I noticed two tiny drops of colostrum leaking out of my…well…just look it up okay?
• FREAKING OUT about labour and delivery
• FREAKING OUT about postpartum recovery (mainly the torn-to-shreds, constantly-bleeding-and-possibly-passing-giant-blood-clots-for-6+weeks-out-my-crotch bit)
• FREAKING OUT about breastfeeding (I am not nor will I ever be the kind of woman who thinks breastfeeding is “beautiful” or “a wonderful bonding experience.” It’s cheap and nutritious and that’s why I’m planning to try it. But it creeps me out and I hate the very thought of it.)

Basically it’s just a whole lot of freaking out and simultaneously trying to guilt my baby into being a good boy for mama and popping outta there early.

Also: my ankles are now cankles. My hands are swollen to the point of not being able to wring out a rag anymore. My back just aches all the dang time, chiropractor and massage therapist aside. My formerly-innie belly button is outing itself a little more each day. My backne is indefatigable.

These aren’t complaints; they are facts. I know I don’t have much right to complain because as far as pregnancies go, this one has been a walk in the park (knock on wood). I haven’t thrown up even once for heaven’s sake (knock on wood). So I’m trying hard not to complain. But I do intend to keep it real on this blog, and so you can trust I am being honest when I say that MY BACKNE IS NO JOKE.

And, before I sign off, for those of you who don’t already follow me on instagram and for those of you who care, this is what I look like now:

36 Weeks PregnantAlso noteworthy: I don’t really brush my hair anymore. Overrated.

 

Posted in Canada, Married Life, pregnancy | Tagged , , , | 7 Comments