Showing posts with label pregnancy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pregnancy. Show all posts

Aftermath

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Today is National Prematurity Awareness Day.

I have experienced the extreme ends of prematurity being the mom of two sets of preemie twins. My first set, Sam and Emilie, died due to being born too early. My second set, Henry and Eleanor, arrived at 35 weeks and came home from the hospital with me. I had steroid shots to develop their lungs, and they were fortunate and never needed NICU time. They both had reflux, and never caught on to breastfeeding, but that was it. No developmental delays or lasting health issues that often accompany being born prematurely.

We dodged the proverbial bullet with Henry and Eleanor, to have babies a month early with no problems. We weren’t so lucky with Sam and Emilie, who were with us for only an hour, born too early to even try to revive. I don’t get to watch them grow up, so I cannot tell you about the issues we face with them. Instead, let me be selfish and tell you how their prematurity affected ME. I know that some of my lingering issues are due to the entirety of our reproductive journey, but the loss of my first set of twins is always at the core.

I did not enjoy my pregnancy with Henry and Eleanor. I never had a baby shower, nor did I send out birth announcements. I did not bond with them when they shared my body, finding it easier to keep a mental distance in case they, too, did not survive.

I did not feel like Henry and Eleanor’s mother until they were three months old. I kept expecting them to be taken away from us like their brother and sister. I still have a difficult time accepting their good health, always wondering when the other shoe is going to drop.

I have a hard time congratulating friends on their pregnancies, my happiness for them overridden by my mind racing with fears of what could go wrong.

I have difficulty being around pregnant women in general. My OB/GYN’s office and Babies R Us can still fill me with panic.

A lot of prematurity stories involve the life-threatening ups and downs of NICU stays. But our story shows that prematurity can affect a family in a myriad of ways. For me, it robbed me of my children, and of being able to enjoy and participate in one of the most basic of life’s functions.

Science and research has saved a lot of babies who would have been lost even a generation ago, but we still have a long road ahead. I hope that some day no parent is able to make a list of prematurity’s aftermath.

Read more...

Becoming a Mother (warning: realllllllly sad)

Friday, December 5, 2008

Lying on the ultrasound exam table, my husband at my side clutching my hand, I watched with excitement as two babies squirmed in my womb, each one fighting for just a little more leg room in my belly. It was my twenty-week check-up, and each baby was being measured and examined from head to toe. I closed my eyes, when necessary so as not to find out the sex of each baby, clamping my hand over my face so I wouldn’t be tempted to peek. As Baby A yawned and Baby B rolled over, my husband and I were overcome with awe that we had created these two perfect beings and looked forward to a future of coaching little league and helping with homework.

“Well, we just measured your cervix two weeks ago, but let’s check it again, just to be safe,” the ultrasound tech said as she was finishing my exam. The room suddenly grew silent as the tech stared at the computer screen. Turning to us, she asked, “You’re seeing the doctor after this, right?” A small knot of fear appeared in my stomach as the tech finished and sent us next door to meet with my physician.

My doctor walked into the exam room with a worried look on her face. “We have a problem,” she said. “You’re three centimeters dilated.” With our hearts in our throats, my husband and I raced to the hospital, where we were greeted at the entrance and rushed to the high-risk obstetrics unit.

In the blink of an eye, I was lying in a hospital bed, my feet higher than my head, a monitor strapped around my belly and I.V. and catheter tubes draped across my bed. A million questions swam through my mind. Would my children survive? How can I have contractions without feeling them? How could anything be wrong when I had just seen my babies heartily kicking around on an ultrasound screen?

A swirl of people came and went. Nurses materialized to offer words of encouragement and to administer first one drug, then another, in hopes of calming my contractions. A neonatologist popped in to scare us with doom-and-gloom predictions (“Your children won’t live until at least week twenty-three, and then there’s risk of brain damage, blindness, learning disabilities…”). A maternal/fetal specialist appeared to discuss a cerclage, a stitch that could be placed in my cervix in hopes of saving my pregnancy. We nervously watched charts and printouts and physicians’ faces for signs that my labor had slowed and my cerclage could be placed.

Through drugs that made me see double and too weak to roll over in bed, my labor was stopped and I was taken to surgery the next morning to get my cerclage. Through a fog of pain and drugs, I heard the doctor saying things had gone well, and now we should just hope for the best. I settled into my hospital room, ate popsicles, threw up popsicles, and greeted my mother and sister (or two mothers and two sisters; I was still seeing double), who rushed to town to accompany my husband in his bedside vigil.

That day blended into the next day into the next. Life became a nervous routine of medications and blood pressure checks and ultrasounds. I watched hours of television, not really following the programs as my mind drifted to the countless best-case and worst-case scenarios that played through my head. I knew now that I had a son and a daughter, having caved in during one of my post-surgery ultrasounds and asking to learn the babies’ genders. No more were they generic babies I was trying to save; I had a little girl and little boy whose lives depended on me. Instead of praying, I found myself silently talking to my children, as if I could will them to stay in my body.

After five days in the hospital, a glimmer of hope surfaced; I had stabilized and was doing well enough to go home. As my family struggled to remember all our parting instructions—How often to I take my antibiotics? Do we check my temperature in the morning or evening or both?—we were cautiously optimistic as we arrived home and turned my bedroom into a makeshift medical ward. We celebrated with ice cream and allowed ourselves to think that maybe we’d be one of the lucky families, telling our son and daughter stores one day about the scared they gave their mom and dad.

But then, on my second night at home, I noticed blood. My husband blew through red lights as he and my mother sped me back to the hospital. My husband and I were ushered into an exam room, where we silently watched cartoons, not wanting to speak, as if speaking about our situation would suddenly make it real. Finally, a young intern came in to confirm our fears. The cerclage was failing, and I would have to deliver. Our children would not survive.

As dawn broke, my husband and I practiced saying the names we had hastily agreed upon for our children. “Sam and Emilie.” “Emilie and Sam.” I struggled to realized that I would read these names on a tombstone instead of birthday cards and letters to Santa. The day went on forever and ever, each tick of the clock slowly bringing us to a conclusion that we didn’t want to face.

The delivery was quiet, almost reverential for my tiny son and daughter who would not be with us for long. There were no shouts for me to push, no excited snapping of photos. Sam came first, giving a small cry that immediately shattered my heart into a million pieces. Blinking back tears, my husband cradled his son, whispering, “Hi, Sam,” and my mother and sister counted his ten perfect fingers and toes. Emilie soon followed, her sweet face bruised from her delivery. As the doctors and nurses gingerly administered my postpartum care, I wanted to scream at them to leave me alone and didn’t they realize that my children were dying and couldn’t they come back later? I tried to burn images in my brain of my husband with his children and my mother with her grandchildren and my sister with her niece and nephew, knowing there would be no family pictures in the years to come. My husband stared in amazement as his daughter clasped her finger, and we all said our good-byes as quickly as we had said our hellos. Finally, my son and daughter were gently placed on my chest, and through their translucent skin I watched their hearts slow down and ultimately be still.

As swiftly as Sam and Emilie entered my life they were taken away. I had dreamt of baby showers and birth announcements but was instead given funerals and obituaries. Yet these tiny people and their brief lives had an impact on my life that no one else could ever duplicate. Sam and Emilie had made me a mother.

Read more...

Timeline of Suckiness

Friday, September 5, 2008

So I promise that this blog will mostly be about silly stuff like how Eleanor laughs when she toots and boring stuff like what we did over the weekend, but I do want to record things about our journey to our current happy, contented state. Because the four years leading up to Henry and Eleanor were definitely NOT happy and content. We pretty much lived in a state of “How could things get any worse? Oh wait, here’s how” for four years. I know everyone reading this (hi, Mom!) probably already knows our story, but let’s refresh with a little timeline, shall we?

April 2003

Andy and Jennifer decide to have babies. How hard could it be, right? Jennifer doesn’t like to ovulate and is prescribed Clomid. Clomid turns Jennifer into a raging bitch, at one point prompting her to tell Andy, “I can’t even look at you right now.” Still, after four months, they manage to get pregnant.

October 2003

Andy
and Jennifer go to their 12-week appointment only to find out instead of a baby they have a blighted ovum. Oh yeah, and Jennifer also has a weird lump on her left ovary that needs to be checked out, mmmkay?

December 2003

Weird lump turns out to be dermoid tumor. Dermoid tumors can sometimes grow hair and teeth, but sadly, Jennifer’s didn’t. Jennifer wakes up from surgery to find out not only is she now missing one tumor, she’s also missing her left ovary and left fallopian tube, too.

January 2004

Andy
and Jennifer are gluttons for punishment and decide to try to get pregnant again. Jennifer goes back on Clomid, Andy goes back to trying to avoid her wrath. Three months later, Jennifer’s right ovary morphs into Superovary, spitting out two eggs. Andy and Jennifer are shocked and thrilled to learn they are pregnant with twins.

July/August 2004

Jennifer learns at her 20-week ultrasound that she’s dilated 3 centimeters. The next week is frantically spent trying to save her pregnancy—a rescue cerclage, turbutaline and mag sulfate—but Samuel Elias and Emilie Anna are born on August 4, 2004. They each live for about an hour. Andy
and Jennifer become parents, but in a way they never imagined.

January 2005

Grieving and not sure what the next step should be, Andy
and Jennifer decide to start trying for another pregnancy. After three months, they take a break, go on vacation, come home and book an appointment with the fertility specialist.

June 2005

Before they can start fertility treatments, surprise! Jennifer finds out she’s pregnant. Without drugs, even! But after a few weeks of monitoring because something doesn’t seem right, surprise! Jennifer has internal bleeding! Surgery discovers that an ectopic pregnancy has burst, rupturing 75% of Jennifer’s right tube along with it. Out comes the ectopic along with Jennifer’s right tube.

September/October 2005

Andy
and Jennifer pay the equivalent of Luxemborg’s GNP to the fertility clinic and start their first round of in vitro fertilization. Eight weeks later, after over fifty injections, bloating, surgeries, ultrasounds, and blood tests, they find out they were unsuccessful. Andy and Jennifer are quickly losing hope and decide to take a reproductive break. They go to Paris and eat crepes.

July/August 2006

Andy
and Jennifer decide on a whim to do another round of IVF. Track marks soon reappear on Jennifer’s stomach and rear end. Superovary is a rock star and spits out 21 eggs, seven of which become embryos. Two embryos are transferred to Jennifer’s uterus by a female fertility doctor, while an embryologist, nurse, and Andy look on. Andy and Jennifer realize there will be some interesting “birds and bees” discussions in their house if these embryos develop into people. Ten days later, bleeding and convinced she’s not pregnant, Jennifer finds out she’s pregnant. Two weeks after that, Andy and Jennifer find out they’re having twins. Again. Panic ensues.

October 2006

Determined not to lose another pregnancy, Jennifer goes under the knife and gets an abdominal cerclage. While awake, she’s cut open and a stitch is placed around her cervix. These babies are staying put, and Jennifer now has the 6-inch-long scar to prove it.

March 2007

At 35 weeks, measuring 46 weeks pregnant, Jennifer has contractions and high blood pressure and has a c-section two weeks ahead of schedule. Eleanor Jean and Henry Nicholas were born one minute apart, small but healthy. The world breathes a sigh of relief.

.........................................................................................................

And there you have it. Hopefully I haven’t made too light of our situation. These truly were the worst four years of our lives. Am I still angry that we had to go through all of this? Absolutely. Am I also a little bit grateful? Absolutely. If we hadn’t had these experiences, I don’t think I’d see Henry
and Eleanor as the true miracles they are. Every day with them is so much sweeter because of how hard we had to work to get them here.

I’ll write more in-depth about Sam
and Emilie later, but for now, it’s back to our regularly scheduled programming.

Read more...

  © Blogger templates Newspaper by Ourblogtemplates.com 2008

Back to TOP