Archive for the ‘Labor & Delivery’ Category

Pick a Gender, Any Gender!

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009

Alright, I’ll go first.  When I was pregnant, I totally wanted to be pregnant with a baby BOY.  Not a girl–no way, thankyouverymuch.  I know how I was growing up, and there’s no WAY I wanted to be near that strain of my karmic payback.

As it turned out, I did have a boy.  In fact, I had two.

(And now I realize that my karmic payback came in the form of  daily hazardous waste cleanups.)

But when I was a few months pregnant, I was still having fun guessing which gender my child might be.  I kind of had a “gut feeling” that it was a boy, and my coworkers and friends were convincing me that this was probably accurate.  So, good; at least my gut is trustworthy.  (Too bad it hates my jeans and is constantly trying to roll out.  But now I’m getting off topic…and maybe gross).

But all this talk was making even more curious and I was entirely too impatient to wait for my sonogram.  Naturally, I turned to Google, which is “up there” in the trust zone with my gut and sound medical advice.

After a few clicks…BEHOLD!  I’d  found the Chinese Pregnancy Chart!

chinesepregnancychart

After talking again with my co-workers, prodding for inappropriate information (”So, what month were you fornicating with your husband…wait, it was your husband, right?  Actually, never mind…just the month is good.”) I crunched some numbers (okay, more like I made up a number) and concluded that this thing was like 90% accurate! (50% of the time!)

No, but really, it totally lined up with both my boys.

But also, I was starting to feel a little silly.  I mean, what if my gut (you bastard) was wrong?  Or the calendar?  Could I really sue the Chinese?  Because what if it didn’t work out?

Doctor: Congratulations! It’s a boy!

Parents: Ah, rats.  So much for that.  Eh, we’ll keep it anyway.

Doctor:

This kind of internal soul-searching called for some  MORE googling (yes, it’s a problem) and I found a SLEW more of these gender-predicting techniques.  Some of my favorites:

  1. Sexual position–missionary will help you concieve a girl, and (yes, I quote) “doggie-style” for a boy.  Why?  Because girls are boring and men are, um, dogs?  Is it just me, or does this feel sexist? It’s making me want to burn my bra or something. But not my nice, lacy one from Victoria’s Secret.  Maybe that one from Target, however.
  2. Sperm Prediction–Is this even true? Female sperm are “hardier” (good LORD) than male sperm?  Because one site tells us that having sex a few days before you ovulate will, ahem, “weed out” the skimpy male sperm and the females (the dying ones, presumably) will be left to catch that egg!  Um, yikes.
  3. Caloric intake–more calories will result in a boy and fewer, a girl.  What?  Like, after the fact? Bitch, PLEASE. We are not picking up what you are laying down.  (Did you test this with extra intake of Captain Crunch and cookies?)

Of course, science and technology suggest it’s only a matter of time before we can, in fact, choose our baby’s gender.  Which would’ve been cool if I were planning on taking over the world or something.  It seems like it would be a bit reminiscent of building an army of clones.

But really, a vending machine would be the MOST convenient, in case any of you scientists out there are listening. *wink*

My Birthing Story: Take One

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009

One of the best parts about having a child is meeting your child for the first time, all the great gifts, the doting, the pain meds… — ok, let’s be real: it’s getting to brag about your birthing story.

gavebirthsign

Obviously, with my first, I had no idea what to expect.  I took the classes, so I had a general notion that I wanted a natural birth, and well…that was it. Oh right, and it was supposed to HURT.  Sure.  To be honest, I wasn’t even all that anxious about the pain.  (Shocking, really, if you know me at all.)  I suppose it was because this event was going to be just SO far out of my experience zone that I had nothing to compare it to.  So there was nothing really to fear.  What you don’t know, eh?

Anyway, my due date was January 12, and I had my last day at work scheduled for January 13, 2006 because “NO ONE ever has their first baby EARLY!” I was told.  (The unsolicited advice starts early, as I’m sure you know already.)

So when I was busying myself with organizing baby clothes on the afternoon of December 31st, I didn’t pay much attention to my irritatingly-frequent Braxton Hicks.  After a few hours, however, I did start to write them down.  At about 7pm, I let my husband in on the events.  And just in time. Not a few minutes later, a painful one caught me by surprise.

“Oohh.  I think that was a real one!”

Still not concerned—I was told this takes HOURS, sometimes like A DAY—I went in the living room to sit down.

Let’s just say, that within 30 minutes we were on our way to the hospital, my husband running every red light in town.  Remarkably, on NEW YEAR’S freaking EVE, there were no cops around to pull us over/provide a police escort.

I think we were both a little bummed.

Now, my children were both born at military hospitals, which meant in this case that I was the only woman in the labor ward that evening.  I think that makes me pretty fortunate.  However, no one—NO ONE—could have told me that at the time.

You know, because I was in LABOR.

And though I didn’t know it at the time, I was in active labor.  Rapidly active labor.  Astonishingly fast labor.  Intense labor.  Like, DON’T SMILE AT ME or tell me HOW EXCITING! right now, labor.

By the time they got me on the table (after asking me questions like, “Oh you’re bleeding?  From where?”  REALLY? I DON’T THINK IT’S MY BIG TOE, NURSE LADY.), I was dilated to 3 or 5 centimeters.

Remembering my plan for “no drugs,” I tried to, um, hang in there. Right.  This lasted about 35 more seconds.  I turned to my husband:

Me: I know I said no drugs, but OHMYGOD this hurts really bad!

Husband: [Really being a trooper, but suddenly quite pale.] WhWh-yeah, whatever, whatever you want.

Me: NURSE!

Well, it was too late, apparently.  They checked me again and I was at 7 or 9 centimeters.  And though I would have paid MILLIONS for a little bit of horse tranquilizer at the time, I’m glad that my labor speed made up for my faltering resolve.

No time for a bed, apparently, as I had to walk myself over to the delivery room (stopping for a contraction every few feet or so).

Oh, did I mention that the doctor wasn’t here yet?

Right, so, I’m on the bed and suddenly declaring all those typical things that I’m embarrassed to admit I said:

1. “I CHANGED MY MIND! I CAN’T DO THIS!”

2. “I HAVE TO GO TO THE BATHROOM!”

3. “YOU DID THIS TO ME!” (Totally kidding. I definitely did not say that one.)

Oh, and then…

4. “Um, where’s the doctor?”

Like clockwork, she arrived as I began my first push. She walked directly into the room and into the scrubs the nurse had open and waiting for her.

Then I pushed three times.  And really…it’s true…the pushing, the pushing is really so less worse than those peak contractions.  Pushing through the pain—at least for me—felt kind of good.  Like flossing your teeth.  A good pain.  (Well, kinda.)

Then I had my baby.  Then I started sobbing.  And then I noticed how his nose, with lots of white dots on it, looked like a tortilla chip.

PlusOnetortilla

If it helps to know, I’ll say this, and only because this always sounded like the absolute worst part of labor to me: I did, ahem, “tear” a little.  Ripped?  Yeah, yeah I did.  But guess what?  NO PAIN.  As in, didn’t eve know it happened.  As in, didn’t feel it at all, ever, until it was starting to heal.  And then it was just glamorous, er…awkward, itching.

That was it.  Sure, healing is, um SORE, but dudes.  You’ve just been through LABOR.  Suddenly, even an amputation doesn’t seem like *that* big of a deal.  I was even up walking to the nursery about an hour after I delivered.

Which was about 10:31 in the evening, about two hours after I felt my first contraction.

So, years removed from my labor pain, I can talk about how freaking LUCKY I am that I have such fast labors.  In fact, I just talked to my neighbor the other day, who was like, “Yeah, I only had to push for three hours…”

THREE HOURS?!

I pushed three TIMES.

I am a fortunate woman, even if it was too fast for narcotics.  Either way, however, the pain—as bad as it is—is TOTALLY worth the kickass braggins rights that you retain for all eternity.

Start making your sign, ladies.