Thursday, August 30, 2007

Mommy, WHAT'S THAT?!?!?


It has actually been raining today (yahoo!) And while it was steadily coming down outside, Natalya and I were baking cookies. Wyatt was looking out the back door at the birds and suddenly, Natalya says, "MOMMY! WHAT'S THAT?!??!" The last time she did this, there was a praying mantis on the window of the door.
I looked around the corner, and there, sitting on the back stoop, eyeball-to-eyeball with Wyatt was a HUMONGOUS woodchuck! I grabbed Wyatt by the collar so he didn't scare it and I was frantically looking around for my camera, while Natalya was saying, "But Mommy! What is IT!?" and I was saying, "It's a...it's a... where's my camera?...it's a ....hedgehog. NO, porcupine. No.... woodchuck!" I wasn't able to get my camera before he ran off, and back down into the culvert behind our house. I did get a very blurry picture with my phone, but it just looks like a big brown blur.
As I called my Mom to tell her of our interaction with wildlife, I looked out the back door, and he was sitting at the edge of the hill, looking back at our back door through the bushes. He was intrigued by Wyatt. And Wyatt by him!
Anyway, I found this picture on the 'net, and this is what he looked like. I can't believe it! A Woodchuck! And he was HUGE!! Probably ten pounds at least.

I know my name

I have a habit of calling Natalya all sorts of random pet names. WHatever comes to mind. Pumkin, Boo, little-bit, honey, sugar-plum, and so on. Yesterday I said, "come on Tootie Fruitie, let's go." As I walked down the hall, she trailed behind, and I heard her say "No mama! Not tootie tootie. Natalya!"

I swear this child is too smart for me!

Later, we were in bed and she was going to sleep when she smacked her hand on my chest and said "HEY! MOM!" I cracked up. All I could think of was that had her voice been a little deeper, I would be hearing that exact thing many times in about ten years!!

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Lily teaches Natalya to play hide-and-seek

I went over to Kristine's last night to watch Lily and Jasmine so Kris could go to a meeting, so Lily took the opportunity to teach Natalya how to play hide-and-seek. Here's how it went:

Lily: I'm gonna play hide-and-seek with aunt 'talya. (she calls her "Aunt Natalya" because she calls me "Aunt Brandy". She's a little confused. :))
Me: I don't think Natalya knows how to play hide-and-seek, you'll have to show her
Lily: ok
Lily: Aunt 'Talya, you want to play hide-and-seek?
natalya: OK! Hide-and-seek!
Lily: ok, cover your eyes like this [Lily puts her hand over her eyes]
[Natalya smacks her hands over her eyes]
Lily: now count
...Natalya starts counting: 3,4,5,6,7...
Lily: then come find me!
Natalya ...8,9 [as she runs after Lily with her hands over her eyes, still counting!]

I was laughing so hard I had tears streaming down my face. I finally grabbed Natalya's arm and held her and told her we had to count to ten then go find Lily. So we did. Then I had to show her how to "hide". I showed her to hide in the tent they had set up and so every time after that, she hid in the same place. :D

When it was her turn to seek again, Lily came tearing down the hall and hid in the office. I could hear Natalya counting, then her voice, "lily?" "Lily?" "LILY!" Finally she came down the hall shouting for Lily. I said Natalya, you have to find her, she's hiding. So Natalya walks over to the little Dora couch and picks it up, "Lily?"

Oh my gosh. I haven't laughed so hard in ages.

What next?

Woke up at 2am and I was sweating bullets. Checked on Natalya, who was whining and she was sweaty too. I laid down with her and finally she went back to sleep- checked the thermostat and it's 83 degrees in here, but set on 75. Air is coming out, but it's not cold.

I've been having on and off problems with the a/c for months, but it's never just gone out. So I flipped the breaker and turned off the ac for a bit, then turned it back on and thought i felt cold air coming out so i went back to bed, after turning the fan on myself.

Natalya wakes up at 7am (after I've had about 4 hours of sleep, waking up every half hour) and it still doesn't feel cool.

Check the thermostat- 80 degrees. I think the only reason it dropped those few degrees was because it's cooler outside.

UGH!!!

What Next?????

Monday, August 27, 2007

A SIDS loss

I went to CVS to pick up a prescription and when I pulled up to the drive-through window, there was a notice taped to the window that one of the women who worked in the pharmacy lost her son at 6 weeks of SIDS. There was a picture of her and her son.
Considering my state of mind recently, this was not what I needed to see. I remembered this woman, seeing her pregnant, due a little before me, when I went to pick up a scrip for Natalya several months ago.

My heart ached for her, and I almost lost it.

As I was sitting there, I saw her through the window, come in to see the pharmacist and they both started crying.

It happens every day, everywhere.

A Lesson In Banking

Friday, I was checking my account balance for my checking account, and I am overdrawn: $105.94.
As I check further into the matter, $105 is overdraft fees. This morning I went to talk to the bank, because I couldn't figure out how I was getting charged three overdrafts for being 94 cents over. Literally. 94 cents. I knew one thing was over because I made a mathematical error, so I was ready to suck it up for one fee, but three!!??

So here's the deal- let's see if I can explain this so it makes sense-
I made several purchases in one day, the last three were one $84, one $25 and one $13ish. The $84 and $25 ones and then the $13 one. When I made the purchases/transactions, for the first two, the merchants pulled their money aside and "held" it. When the $13 one went through, I only had $12and change left and it went over. Ok, my fault, end of story, right?

WRONG.

The two for $84 and $25 didn't "clear" the bank, the money was only "held".
So essentially, the merchants pulled the money from my account to "hold" it and make sure they got their money, but didn't complete the transaction, they only started it. So...by the end of the day, I had one overdraft for the last transaction, and -94 cents in my account (plus the $35 fee from the bank for the overdraft).
On Friday, the two merchants for the $84 and $25 transactions decided to complete the transactions and "clear" the money. But I was overdrawn. SO those two transactions overdrafted. Even though the merchants already had pulled their money, they hadn't "cleared".

The branch manager told me that this happens to people all the time because people don't realize that merchants are essentially processing two transactions for one transaction.

BUT because I had a "courtesy credit" for an error back in May they wouldn't work with me on these. Even though they're not my fault. The bank chooses to charge me $105 for a 94 cent overage.

And this is legal??? Even Clark Howard never told me about this! (even though he does say not to use debit cards, so I can't fault him).

Sunday, August 26, 2007

Natalya sings a song

Natalya is learning to love to sing. She will walk around the house singing songs she's heard and songs she has made up. Yesterday I was looking at the youtube link to The Hairbrush Song from Veggie Tales (because I had it stuck in my head) and Natalya watched it ONCE. Once was all it took, all night she was singing "oh where oh where oh where oh where oh where....is my hairbrush?!"

Wanna see it for yourself?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=39JhknN12K4

Natalya hates to sleep

Natalya has a new ploy to get up at night. She waits until I turn the light out, then a few seconds later, I hear a little voice: "Mommy, I'm HUNGRY!!" and if that doesn't work (which it doesn't), "Mommy I have to go pee-pee in the potty"
Now, both of these are very clever, because i don't want her to starve, but at the same time, I don't want her to think that she can get out of bed by telling me she is hungry. And I want her to tell me when she has to go to the potty, so I don't really want to ignore that one because we are trying to get her potty-learned, but again, i don't want her thinking she can use that to get out of bed.

My clever child.

Thursday, August 23, 2007

Sacrifices


Doug just left for the road again. Man, I hate it! I'm going to hate it even more when Natalya wakes up in the morning and realizes he's gone. She just misses him so much when he's not here.
While he was home this time around he was able to go to Kindermusik with her yesterday and to gymnastics with us today. I know she enjoyed him being there and I think he enjoyed being able to go. She was so cute today! She figured out how to do some of the things- "pencil hops" and "bear crawls", it was so exciting to see her figure it out and look so proud of herself!

Maybe one day we'll get this thing figured out, or find something different because it really sucks that he has to make this sacrifice, that we have to make this sacrifice for the family.

Sunday, August 19, 2007

38 weeks

At least, that's how far along I should be. Instead, less than two hours from now, I will be marking the 7-week mark of losing Margaret. It is particularly hard right now because Natalya was born at 38 weeks and two days- knowing that at this time in my pregnancy with Natalya, I was about to have a healthy beautiful baby- well, it's hard.
Every day I think about her and I wonder why this happened to us.

About a week or so ago, Natalya came up to me, lifted my shirt and kissed my belly, saying "baby be born mama". I almost broke down. I told her that the "baby was gone" and she accepted that. She hadn't mentioned a baby since I came home from the hospital so I didn't try to explain anything to her. I don't think she's at the age to understand everything. We told her a baby was coming, but I don't think she quite grasped it. Had we come home with a baby, she would have remembered us telling her that, but not having a baby, well, it wasn't anything different as far as she was concerned. But her kissing my belly like that almost broke me down.

I don't know when it gets easier. I suspect the next two to three weeks will be as hard as losing her was, since her original "due date" is fast approaching. I am hoping once that milestone is gone, and once we finally hear something from the hospital, things will get easier, at least I really hope so.

Bribing your kids

It's all about the bribery.

Natalya has been peeing on the potty regularly (if she's not wearing bottoms) and occasionally she'll ask to take her diaper off to go pee. BUT she had stopped pooping on the potty and started asking to have a diaper on to go poop. grrr.

I had a coupon for some of those cottonelle flushable wipes and they have some for kids with doggies on them. I bought some of those and now when she goes poop on the potty, she gets to wipe her bottom with the doggie wipes.

IT WORKS!!

She has pooped in the potty every day since we got them. She just came to me and said, "mommy! It's dark in there, come turn light on" and she was talking about the bathroom- so I walked with her to the bathroom and she said "look mommy- poo-poo in the potty". Sure enough- poo in the potty! WOOOOHOOOO
So we got out the doggie wipes (which I have to hide in the top shelf of the closet or she finds them) and she was so excited! Then we did the poo-poo in the potty dance- and she is walking around singing "poo-poo in the potty" and dancing.

*whew* a bribe that works and doesn't involve candy!

It's amazing the things you come up with as a parent. But if it's one less diapr I have to change, we're doing good. She runs around naked at least half the day so she can practice with the potty. :) Now, just to get her to figure out how to pull down panties/trainers to go. She hasn't quite gotten that figured out yet.

Saturday, August 18, 2007

Reason # 462 why I hate Doug driving a truck.

He was supposed to be home this morning after being out two weeks. He was going to pick up a load in Delaware and do a split load- meet someone else and trade trailers, so he'd bring an empty home and the guy would continue the load to Florida.

Well, the guy's truck got sold and he wasn't going to have a truck until Monday. Doug's dispatcher was "looking into it" and was supposed to call him back. Doug didn't hear anything, and called Friday night to find out what was going on. His dispatcher had left and night crew said "we don't know, take it up with weekend crew". So he waited until this morning, "we don't know, you have to ask your fleet manager Monday". ARGH!
He sat from yesterday evening until 6pm tonight waiting for the load to be ready, and now he's taking it to Florida. Great miles (over 1,000, yahoo!), but he doesn't know when he's going to be home. They don't like the drivers to take weekdays off, so now it may be next weekend before we see him. That's three weeks out!

BOO!!!

Feeling Hot, Hot, Hot

As you all know, here in the south, we are experiencing record-breaking heat. It's miserable. The highs here haven't been below 100 in weeks, plus humidity. UGH!
If Natalya and I have to go somewhere, I sing to her "Feeling Hot, hot, hot. I'm HOT! You're HOT! He's HOT! She's HOT!" She finds this very amusing so now I'll hear her walking around the house singing "I'M HOT!" Ha!

If she's in the room with me, she'll point to me and say "You're hot!" then point to herself and say "Natalya's Hot!" To Lacey "She's hot!" to Wyatt "He's hot!" All of this performing is often accompanied by her wearing her sunglasses, sometimes pushed up on her forehead.

It cracks me up.

Friday, August 17, 2007

Natalya's observations for Aug. 17

Kristine has a Scion, white with green and black stickers all over it. Today, as we were driving to Wal-Mart, Natalya says "look Mommy! Car like Aunt Kris's!" And there across from us is another white scion with green and black stickers all over. She has seen other white scions and never made this comment, but the one that really does look remarkably like Aunt Kris' car, she notices, even though she doesn't see Aunt Kris' car all that often.

Then, this evening, she called me "Mommy Kincaid". :D
I was teaching her her name earlier this week. If you ask her her name, she will say Natalya. Sometimes she will say "Natalya Kincaid". If not, you can ask her "What's your last name?" and she'll tell you "Kincaid". She was smart enough to put together that if my name is "Mommy" :) and her last name is Kincaid, then my last name must be Kincaid.
I couldn't believe it!!

She is also now counting to ten correctly without missing any numbers, and will say er ABC's, skipping a few here and there, and can recognize about 2/3 of the letters. (At Wal-Mart: "Look Mommy! a 'W'!! and a star!!")

My baby's growing up!

*sniff* *sniff*
She had her first gymnastics class at the Y yesterday. She was very hesitant at first, but when they started doing somersaults I asked her if she wanted to try it and she said "YEP!" so she went over to the teacher and took her hand and did it without any mommy interference.

Then when it was time to go to the bars- to hang upside down and do flips she went over there while I stayed across the room, I was so proud of her! She was very good too- the other kids were running around like maniacs and the teacher told them they had to sit down and wait if they wanted a turn so she plopped down and didn't move. Of course, she had a turn, then sat back down, and the other kids were running around and the teacher was calling them to come over to have a turn and they didn't, and it was a little irritating because Natalya was looking at her very patiently, like, I am sitting, you said only kids sitting could have a turn, so can I have a turn? Finally the teacher let Natalya go again because the other kids were ignoring her. ah well.

She had so much fun she didn't want to leave! I had to try to explain we were going back next week.

I can't believe how big she is! I am so proud of her.

Monday, August 13, 2007

In Rememberance

I went to the hospital today to pick up Margaret's official hospital pictures - they were provided free. I also picked up my placenta since the lab completed their pathology of it. We still have Natalya's placenta in the freezer, and one day the plan is to bury it and plant a tree, so hopefully we can now put them together. I like the thought of that so that's likely what we'll do. I hope to have results back within the next few weeks so we can find out if there was anything to be learned from her death, or if it's going to be chalked up as "one of those things".

I couldn't look at the photos right away, but I did look at them after I got home. Each time is hard, knowing that the child in the photo was my child and she is no longer with us. I also wonder what happened each time I see them, and I want to be able to find out so I can put that part to rest.

Sunday, August 12, 2007

Is your child gifted?

Well, I already say the answer to that one is yes, but I've had verification. :)

If you think your child may be gifted...you may well be right! Research indicates that the majority of parents correctly identify their gifted children!

If your child’s:
Language is advanced
Memory is like glue
Sense of humour surprises
Perfectionism is frustrating
Sensitivity worries you at times
Preference is for older or adult company
Obsessive collections clutters your house
Drawings have amazingly intricate detail

…or most of the above seem somehow familiar, you can have him or her tested by a local specialist in gifted children – give your child an advantage and yourself peace of mind!


Granted, this is a company that helps you keep your smart kid from getting bored, but the info is accurate from lots of sites I've been to. :)

www.cleverkidsconsultancy.com

Saturday, August 11, 2007

6 weeks gone

I hate Saturdays...and Sundays....and Mondays.

I look forward to the Saturday that I don't think "well, this time 6 weeks ago". Because that's what I'm doing now. As I was putting Natalya to bed, reading her a story, I thought, this time 6 weeks ago I realized that the baby hadn't moved in a while.

I know this may never happen, but I am certainly looking forward to the Saturday that it doesn't hit me quite so hard, the Sunday that it doesn't hurt so much and the Monday that I don't think of the only time I got to hold my second-born in my arms and leave the hospital, remembering being rolled out in a wheelchair, my arms empty, and waiting for Doug to bring the car around while I watched another father loading flowers and congratulations "it's a girl" balloons in his car while his wife sat in her wheelchair holding a carseat with a newborn baby in it.

The Terrific Twos

I am renaming them the "Terrific Twos".

My two year old has definitely turned two. Her moods are up and down and I believe she is trying to drive me crazy. But for every annoying, crazy, irritating, make-me-want-to-pull-out-my-hair moment, there's at least two incredibly cute/funny/sweet things to counter it.

Perfect example: yesterday: we are playing in the living room, coloring, reading books and so forth. I get up to go do laundry and she follows me. And suddenly starts screaming her head off for me to pick her up. Now I am not going to give in to screaming. Once you do that, you're in trouble. But she never just asked me to pick her up, just started screaming. Then, got herself so worked up she was sobbing and snot was dripping down her face, saliva down her chin (she was doing that on purpose, I saw her work up some spit then push it out with her tongue). It was a mess! And the whole time she is screaming so loud I am getting a headache. I am telling her, Natalya, if you want me to pick you up, you need to say, Mommy, please pick me up. I am not going to pick you up while you are screaming. About fifteen minutes later, she gets the picture and asks me to pick her up in her normal, breath hitching, voice. So I did. She's so hot and sweaty at this point, I am getting hot holding her, so I go sit on the couch with her in my lap. She climbs off and starts screaming for me to pick her up again.

*sigh*

She finally realized she could sit on my lap and we could read books quietly, without screaming.

But then yesterday, she also did several extremely cute and funny things. She has learned to climb up on the changing table (great.) and likes to look at the geckoes. So I amchanging out the dogs water and she climbs up, lays on her side, with one arm propped up, and one leg up, like a little adult. She's also wearing her sunglasses. I ask her what she's doing and she turns to me, tips her glasses down on her nose and looks down at me over the rims. I about died. It was so funny.
Then last night, she was talking to Grandma on the phone and was laying on the bed, leaning on the pillow, with one knee crossed over the other, and she's bouncing her foot up and down. My two year old, going on 22. :)

Her new obsession is coming to get me and saying, "Mommy! Come look at [whatever the object of interest is]. Come look, I show you." and grabbing my hand to walk me into the location so I can see said object. The best one was when she said, "Mommy, come look, I show you poo-poo." And walked me into the bathroom- where, she points in her potty, and sure enough- poo-poo!! So then we had to do the poo-poo in the potty happy dance.

It's amazing how life changes when you have children. I now dance over poo.

Wednesday, August 8, 2007

New York

I'm going to New York!!

I can't believe it, I am SO excited!!

Some of my Mom friends from online are getting together in New York at the end of September. One of the moms happens to live in Atlanta and she has some extra skymiles she is going to use to get me a ticket so I can go too! We are going to be staying with one of the other moms so we don't have to pay for a hotel (YAY!).

This is a MUCH needed vacation as well as a super-cool opportunity to meet some Moms that are like family to me, giving me tons of support over the last two+ years.

I CAN'T WAIT!!!!!!!!!!!

Rights of mothers

There are laws that you will never know about until it happens to you, and unfortunately I am now aware of the laws of "birth certificates" and "death certificates" of stillborns.

A stillborn child is not issued a birth certificate. Even though the child is born, just not born breathing.

I will be issued a fetal death certificate. Because in the US, a baby is a fetus until birth, and because the baby died in utero, she is considered a fetus.

Most states do not issue any kind of birth certificate for a stillborn child. Some issue a "Stillbirth Certificate" and some issue the much more preferable "Birth Certificate resulting in Stillbirth". The state of Georgia will issue a "Birth Certificate resulting in Stillbirth" if you request one, but it is not standard, and should be.

So, to recap: my child was born. She just happened to not be breathing. To add insult to the injury of losing my sweet baby, the government does not recognize my birth, thereby not recognizing me as a mother to my baby girl. Even though my body bears the scars of a birth, my breasts are making milk for the baby born still into my arms and my arms ache to hold the baby I carried for 7 months, I am not a mother.

I am a mother of two and will be until the day I have more children, no matter what our government says.

Dreams

A few nights ago I dreamt that Mrs. McCulley was telling me that she was watching Margaret and I shouldn't worry. It was a very realistic and comforting moment. I woke up feeling at peace for the first time in a long time.

Several of my Mommy friends from the internet have lost children, but after birth. One of them, Courtney, lost her twin sons Anthony and Grant, after they were born premature, and another of them, Marie, lost her son Jared, to SIDS.
This morning a friend of mine said she had the following dream/vision:
in one of those half-awake states, I had this wonderful vision of Marie's Jared and your Anthony and Grant welcoming Margaret and the 4 of them playing together.

I do believe that spirits contact us in dream and both of these are very comforting to me.

The loss of a child

I guess I better go back in time a little to June 30, to fill in the background of our loss since I didn't officially start this blog until yesterday, though I've been talking about this and blogging elsewhere for a while now.

On Saturday, June 30, I was putting Natalya to bed, reading her a story, when it occurred to me that I hadn't felt the baby move in a while. When I started to think about it, I couldn't actually remember when I had last felt her move. I got scared. I hoped Natalya would fall asleep quickly so I could go drink some juice and poke and prod my belly to try to get some movement. Deep down though, I already knew. I knew she was gone. I didn't even know she was a she, because we had not had an ultrasound, but my gut told me the baby was gone. Luckily Natalya fell asleep quickly and I went and drank a huge glass of orange juice, ate two cinnamon rolls and jumped around some (as much as a 7-months pregnant Mommy can, at least). Nothing. I called my midwife - who was getting married that day- and asked her what to do. She told me to do the same thing I had already done, wait thirty minutes, and call her back if there was no movement. I drank more oj, and still nothing. I called her back and she said to go into the ER and have them check for a heartbeat, but at this point, it was confirmed in my brain. I called Doug to tell him that I was headed to the hospital b/c I hadn't felt movement and that I was going to call his dad to ask him to come over and sit with Natalya.

I remained very calm.

I called Phillip (who was a t Kristine's house) and asked him if he could come over and sit with Natalya so I could go to the hospital. It took him about half an hour or 45 minutes to get there and by midnight I headed up to the ER. They took me up to Labor and Delivery Triage rather quickly and as I was walking with the nurse up to triage, she was telling me, "We'll put you on the monitor for half an hour or an hour, and if everything seems fine you'll go home". In my head, I was thinking, you are assuming everything is fine, and I am being irrational. You guys are probably used to pregnant women coming in and panicking because they don't feel movement, but the baby is sleeping. This is not the case. I wish it was, but it's not. Still calm, I nodded my head and said "okay".

She sat me on a bed and gave me a gown to get into. After she came back, she had the monitor and the cold jelly stuff. She squirted the jelly on my tummy and put the monitor on me - and shifted it around. Then shifted it some more. Then said "sometimes the baby is reverse and it's hard to get the heartbeat from this angle, is it head-down?" I said "yes" still thinking in my head that she was not going to find a heartbeat. After a few minutes of this, she says, "I'm going to go get the doppler, I'll be right back". She leaves and I can hear another woman in triage who is complaining- LOUDLY- that she's in pain and so forth. I wanted to go smack her. She is whining about being in early stages of labor (so early, she was being sent home, so really, how painful could it be??!) and I was about to have to go through the delivery of a stillborn. I wanted to shake her and tell her to Shut it. At least she still had her baby.

The nurse comes back and puts the doppler on me. Several minutes of searching and she says, "I'm going to go get the sonar". She leaves and I am trying to figure out whom I am going to call first to tell them we've lost the baby. Several minutes pass with me listening to little miss complainer across the way, and then the curtain opens and it's the nurse, along with another nurse, the sonar machine and a doctor. Yep, I think, they know. They get me set up and then put the sonar on my tummy. I can see around the nurse, to the machine, and I see the perfect profile of my baby's face. Still. No movement. It is the first time I have seen my child because we did not have an ultrasound done. And there is nothing. The profile is remarkably like Natalya's and I can feel the tears forming. They expand the shot to include the chest and there's no heart movement. I can't stop the tears, and I close my eyes and turn my head away from the image of my unborn child. The doctor grabs my hand and holds it tightly, speaking very softly to tell me what I already can see with my own eyes, and knew in my heart. "There's no heart tones that we can tell. I'm so sorry, so very sorry." One of the nurses has unshed tears in her eyes and all three are looking at me with such sympathy it's almost unbearable. Both nurses have their hands on me, one on my arm, and one on my leg, and the doctor is still holding my hand. He asks me the legally required questions, have I taken any drugs, have I been physically abused and so forth. I say no, everything has been fine. They ask me if I have had problems with this pregnancy, or with my first child, and I say no. The doctor asks me if there's anyone that can come be with me and I say "no. My husband is a truck driver and he's on the road. He was supposed to be home earlier today, but he is scheduled to be home in the early am. I need to call him." I then ask the doctor what happens next. He says they will admit me and do an official ultrasound and then induce. I tell him that I will not induce until my husband can be there, even if that means I have to go home and come back. They ask if they can get me a phone to make some calls and give me some privacy, and I ask if it's ok if I use my cell phone. They say it's fine. I finally let go of the doctor's hand and they all troop out.

I call Doug, who had been sleeping and ask him how soon he can be there. I am trying not to cry, and not being very successful. I tell him "We've lost the baby and I need you here. When can you get here?" and start bawling. I can hear one of the nurses crying for me outside the curtain. Doug says he will call dispatch and try to get the trailer he is hauling picked up so he can get to me quickly. Luckily he isn't far away. Then I proceed to call my Mom, who is sound asleep, and tell her the news, asking her if she can come down in the morning to take care of Natalya throughout the process. She says she will do whatever I need and will call me when she leaves in a few hours. I then call a friend in California and tell her what has happened so she can update my online friends, who I know are worried, after I posted that I was going to the hospital before I left.
The nurse comes back to move me to a room and I have pulled myself together. She pushes me to the room and then helps me get settled. She looks at me and starts crying. She is young, I would guess early 20's, and she leans over and puts her arms around me, crying with me. She says that she is so sorry and asks if I want someone to sit with me until my husband can get there. I say no, I will be okay. She tightens her arms and squeezes me then heads out, wiping her eyes.
Time marches forward, then the doctor comes to check on me, the ultrasound tech comes in to do the u/s and the lab guy comes in to draw blood. I ask the u/s tech if she can see what sex the baby is. "I'd rather know now than later, if at all possible" I tell her. She says she will try to see. After about twenty minutes of her rotating, probing, scanning and so on, she says "the baby's legs are together, I can't really tell. I'm sorry". What was supposed to be a fun surprise is now something else I have to cry over at birth.

Several hours later Doug calls and says he is headed home. I have not been able to call Phillip to tell him what's going on because he doesn't have a cell phone and we don't have a home phone. I tell him he'll have to tell his Dad, and that my Mom should be there around 9am. He later calls me from home and I ask him to bring my camera and a few other things. They'd given me cervadil and cytotech to induce and we are waiting for it to kick in. When inserting the cervadil, the nurse checked me and said I was already 1cm and very soft, so she thinks my body was already preparing b/c it realized that the baby had passed. I started contracting immediately, every minute. I dealt with it for a bit, taking a shower and talking with Doug (who had arrived at the hospital at 5am), and then around 9:30 they came and gave me a second dose. The contractions were right on top of each other and going going non-stop. I asked for some stadol and after that I slept some and amused Doug by talking about the things floating off the table and the size of his head (hallucinations, FUN!). I didn't want to get an epidural b/c of the possibility of a c-section and b/c I was at that same hospital when my sister-in-law gave birth with an epidural, and I knew how it would go (flat on my back, feet up in the air, etc) and I didn't want to do that. I did eventually give in because I was contracting every minute and there was no telling how long it was going to last, I didn't think my body could take it.

So the anesthesiologist came in and did the epi and then I got to start the process of laying on my back. Over the next many hours, nothing changed. I was at 1cm, and got to about 4cm by late that night. I will never have another epi as long as I live unless I have no choice. At one point my blood pressure bottomed out and I was frantically buzzing the nurses to get me laying down on my side b/c I was about to throw up or pass out. I think it was 81/40. I was numb from the bottom of my ribs down and couldn't move or feel anything, It was awful. I couldn't move to alleviate the pain in my back that was so bad I wanted to cry, so I had to keep getting the nurses to come in and roll me from side to side "Like a rotisserie chicken". It was horrible. I'm glad I did get it for what it's worth though, because I ended up having contractions every minute for 17 hours. It did allow me to get some sleep though.

A bit later, the nurse came in with the paperwork for us to fill out, and told us that after she was born, they would take the baby and clean her up, then bring her back to us so we could spend as much time with her as we wanted to. She asked if we wanted to see her before they cleaned her and we said yes. She also talked about our options of autopsy or not, and we spent some time talking about that, finally deciding that yes, if there was information to be gleaned from her death, then we wanted to know what it was, to find out what happened, if possible.

I was desperately missing Natalya. I had been hearing the woman across the hall on and off yelling in her labor and suddenly I heard her baby crying and I lost it. It was the first time I cried heaving sobs. Doug put his arms around me and I cried and cried. Finally, knowing I needed to hold my living, breathing baby girl in my arms, Doug left to go get Mom and Natalya and bring them back for a bit.

A bit later the nurse came in and asked me if I tried to move or something before Doug left (she was looking at my heart rate/pulse monitor) and I said, "No, but I cried a lot".

I napped some and when they got back, Natalya walked in and said "MOMMY!!!" "Mommy go bye-bye!" She did not like me being there at all. Doug put her in my lap and she gave me big hugs and kisses and made me feel so much better. They stayed for a bit, then Natalya wanted to leave and get something to eat, so they left and I slept some more. That was when the blood pressure dropped, and so I felt nauseous and they gave me more drugs. I swear my bloodstream was probably one huge cocktail of drugs. I don't even know what all they gave me, and I didn't really care. Doug finally came back later and I was all drugged up so I couldn't really talk, but was listening to him talk to the nurse and she told him about my incident.

More time passed and nothing happened. I was still contracting every minute, so they couldn't give me any more cytotech or any pitocin b/c they didn't want to stress my uterus, so we had to wait. At around 11pm, it was determined that I was fully effaced so they went ahead and broke my water to help dilation (still only 4cm). I went back to sleep and so did Doug.

An hour and a half or so later, I woke and felt like I needed to flip again, so I buzzed the nurse and she came in, decided to check me first. I was fully effaced/dilated, with the head "right there". When she said that I did feel a little pressure, but not much. I was dreading delivery b/c I couldn't feel anything and knew I was going to tear, badly. The nurse woke up Doug and told him we were going to get started. She called the dr and the nurses all came in and started setting up. It was very surreal. I was in perfect clarity, watching them set things up, and couldn't feel a thing. This was in direct opposition to Natalya's birth, when I was so focused on my body and Natalya that I didn't pay a whit of attention to what was going on around me. They raised my bed up to the bloody ceiling and put my legs up in the air. Doug was standing on my right, holding onto my arm. The head nurse comes over and asks me again if we want to see her before they take her to clean her up. Reminding us that she has a lot of fluid under her skin and that she won't look "normal". We say yes.

Okay, they tell me, and they start with the counting/pushing stuff. I pushed about 10 times or so, and out she came. I will never forget seeing her for the first time. She was blue and so tiny. Her eyes were shut and her lips were partially open. The nurse said "It's a girl" and showed her to us so we could see her body. Doug and I both started crying, gut-wrenching sobs. I don't know about him, but I felt like my heart had been ripped out. Doug and I hugged each other as best as we could with me being up in the air lying on a table and they covered her with a blanket and took her away. I remember being shocked when they covered even her face with the blanket, and had to remind myself she was not living.

The doctor starts stitching me up and I asked him if it was bad. He said yes. Great. He asked if I had had any other vaginal births. Yes I said, my daughter was 8lb 10oz. He was surprised. I guess I healed well. Doug finally let go of me and sat down, feeling light-headed. I asked the doctor if there was anything he could see at birth that may have caused her death. He said no, but asked if I was RH-. I said no and the nurse looked at my file and said, "She's AB+" meaning there couldn't be an RH incompatibility, so that wasn’t it. Then he asked if I was rubella immune and I said yes. So no, he didn't have any ideas. The doctors left and Doug and I were left alone.

A bit later, the nurse came in and cleaned me up, I was starting to get a little feeling in my right leg, thank goodness, but it was slow. She said I had a LOT of amniotic fluid and that it was a light brown color, instead of clear, but it didn't have an odor, so there was no infection. But that was a sign of something "wrong". Beyond that, we'd have to wait for autopsy and placenta pathology reports. She asked if we were ready to see her, and we said yes. She left and then came back with the baby.

We had talked about her name a little, and we decided on Margaret Elizabeth. Elizabeth after my grandmother and Margaret after Doug's grandmother.

They put her in a little gown and brought in a little memory box they made with her footprints and a "wisp" of her hair and some other things. She tells us she was 5lb 3oz and 16" long. A big girl for 31 weeks. We took some pictures of her and I held her for a while. I can still feel her in my arms. Sometimes, like now, when I think about her, it's as if there's a weight of baby in my arms, and that's when I feel something missing from my life. Doug then held her for a bit, then placed her back in the isolette, covering her with a blanket. I could see him struggle over whether or not to cover her face with the blanket, but he ended up not doing it. I was glad.

Tuesday, August 7, 2007

The stages of grief

It is said there are five stages of grief. Since losing my daughter at 31 weeks, still at birth, I have been through several of these stages, and apparently not in the right order.

Denial? Check.

Depression? Check.

Currently, the stage is ANGER.

I am ANGRY. Super angry. Why did I lose my daughter? How dare God or fate or destiny or whatever controls the state of things take my child away from me. I am just angry all the time. I get angry seeing and hearing other pregnant women talking about babies. I get angry when I hear pregnant women complain about being pregnant, whining about how they want it to be over and complaining in general about their pregnancy. I want to yell and scream and shake them. I wish I was pregnant. I wish I had a child kicking me in the ribs and keeping me awake at night. I wish I had heartburn, sciatia and RLS thanks to my wiggly unborn baby. Pregnant mamas have a right to complain and vent, some of these mamas are my friends, my good friends. AndI hate feeling angry at them, but I can't help it.

I am also angry at mamas with newborns complaining about their child not sleeping, not eating, not nursing or taking a bottle, or whatever complaint is handy. I wish I had a newborn that was not wanting to eat or sleep- at least that would mean I had a breathing baby in my arms, and not a box of ashes on my dresser.

Is this my right to be angry? Yes. But I have been keeping it to myself for fear of hurting someone I care about.

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