Clear head, wet clothes, dry eyes… Can’t lose!

November 11th, 2009 by stephanie

WasherDryerLet me preface this by admitting I am on major edge… and have been for the better part of the last week. I’m sure part of it is the trouble sleeping, compounded by the six or seven nightly trips to pee, with further complications courtesy of the aches in my hips, back and shoulders (did I mention that I literally lumber when I walk these days?), but whatever the causes, I’m feeling like I’m about to crack. My poor husband probably hates me (god knows, though I am continuously reminding myself otherwise, I feel like I hate him) and I am not at all pleasant to be around. Of course I try to keep my mouth shut most of the time and avoid people so the evil isn’t obvious… but it’s in there. And the hardest part is that I am beating myself up for it constantly.

That said, I don’t think I have anything to feel guilty about regarding the rant I just laid on the appliance repairman currently working in my laundry room. You tell me. Here’s the deal:

We have a relatively high end, European style all in one washer dryer that is meant to be energy efficient and very kind to clothes. It’s been great to us in the 13 or so months that we’ve had it, until, over the course of the last six weeks, it’s become increasingly less efficient. Clothes have required two (sometimes three) cycles to dry and now, they won’t dry at all. The machine will run for like 20 minutes (a typical dry cycle with this thing is 2 hours), then shut off… leaving the contents soaking wet. So today, faced with the reality that we cannot live without a dryer, we called a repair service. Being open to whatever time they chose, we were told they’d be here between 1 and 3pm. I am working from home this week anyway, so it wasn’t really an issue… beyond the fact that I did put off any heavy duty writing (choosing instead to watch a few episodes of Friday Night Lights — see title — for inspiration), simply because there is little I hate more than being interrupted when I’m in the flow.

How very zen of me, I know.

Point is, I organized my writing day (generally some variation on 12-7), around this service.

Anyway, 3pm rolls around and there’s no sign of the guy. I wait until 3:15 to call and I’m told that it’ll be another 20 minutes. 30 minutes later, the guy shows up and I’m totally nice… even though I get no apology. I lead him back to the washer dryer where he pulls it straight out and points for me to get the light for him. I would, except that I have a huge pregnant belly and can’t squeeze past him to reach it. He points again (did I mention the gruff Russian accent?), and I actually say “I would, but my belly won’t fit.” He looks up and notices that I’m pregnant. Gets the light himself with a grumble.

Now maybe it’s the fact that I’m used to people being nice to me (reminding me immediately of a song by a friend of mine called Pregnant Women Are Smug), but I’m already not loving the guy.

Anyway, at this point, I go to the room where the clothes that wouldn’t dry are hanging and bring him out a sample so as to show him what’s been going on (figuring that if he can see the result of a 20 minute dryer session, it may help). He doesn’t care to discuss it, but rather keeps asking me if there is heat when I turn the machine on (which I don’t really know since I am pretty sure that while there is heat involved, the mechanism actually sucks out the steam, which is part of the reason clothes that are dried in it show no signs of wear and tear). I try to explain this, but he’s too busy telling me repeatedly (as I stand there holding a wet tank top) that it’s not a dryer. Now I don’t give a damn about semantics, but apparently, more important than listening to me explain that the dryer function turns on but then shuts off after 20 minutes leaving the clothes soaking wet (this wet), it is imperative that he correct me — multiple times — for calling the thing we’re standing over a dryer. After going back and forth on this some more (Me: it’s always worked before, dried our clothes beautifully… Him: but it’s not a dryer!), I finally lose it.

“I’m 9 months pregnant!” I snap. “Don’t argue with me. I don’t care what the specifics are, it’s not drying clothes and I just want you to tell me what we have to do to fix it!”

You cannot imagine the shock on this guy’s face. I don’t even know what he mumbled at me, but it was some derisive “take it easy,” type comment, reserved I’m sure, only for women he believes are overly-emotional. For a moment, I felt guilty. Silly even (and I’m sure “silly idiot girl” is what he was thinking in his thick, Russian accented brain). Then I went back to my desk and took a breath. Within minutes, he was calling me to ask why the machine was turning on just fine, gesturing as if I was a moron for not realizing this was the case. “That’s what I was trying to tell you,” I said, feeling slightly vindicated, but still seriously hormonal. I explained myself for the tenth time in as many minutes… going back to the nursery to fetch the wet clothes as a demonstration tool when he was sure that I was crazy and just didn’t know how to turn on the drying function.

In the end, when all was said and done (it’s nearing 5pm as I write this… the ONLY thing I’ve written all day), he witnessed a version of the problem (the computer went from saying it had two hours to saying it would be done in 5 minutes), and figured out (I hope) what needed to be done to fix it. But it wasn’t until that moment, when he was ready to explain what he’d have to do, that my guilt and embarrassment (both of which are generally monumental these days) were assuaged and I became certain that this problem was not in my head, or my seriously compromised endocrine system.

Rather than giving me the specifics (cost, time, etc.), he asked if I could get my husband on the phone.

Now this could have spelled disaster. However, the one upside to my constant self-analysis/judgment is that I am able to stop myself when I fear I’m going too far. So… I didn’t laugh, smirk or freak out in any way. Instead I simply (and sweetly) explained that said male person to whom I am married was in a meeting. Then I assured him I was authorized to… well… authorize any repairs made in my own house.

The dryer now seems to be working fine. The repairman was actually super nice for the rest of his stay (though he is on the phone speaking in Russian as I type this, so he could be putting a curse on my head), and I think the $250 it cost to have him essentially clean a filter will be worthwhile in that I will be able to dry my clothes again. Now if only I can dry my eyes so easily going forward through the rest of this pregnancy, we’ll have really made some progress.

PS — There was no late fee applied for my missed credit card payment (see previous post). In fact, I got a really nice note back that night assuring me it would all be taken care of. So apparently, the pregnant excuse can occasionally work.

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Can’t Do Attitude

November 6th, 2009 by stephanie
Oh, that my sleep were so peaceful!

Oh, that my sleep were so peaceful!

So today, for whatever reason, exhaustion set in. Okay, perhaps being 33 w 5 d pregnant is reason enough, I don’t know. What I do know is that I attempted to write, got completely stuck in the same ten page space where I’ve been for two weeks and had to go home, where I curled up on the couch with my pregnancy pillow (which I still think looks like a big poop) and fell asleep… for two and a half hours. I s*@t you not. By the time I woke up, it was 5:30 PST and I was late making my credit card payment, which I learned was due by 7pm EST. I wrote them a note hoping not to get hit with a late fee. I used the pregnant sleeping excuse.

Anyway, while a nap alone would not normally be enough to alarm me, the level of sheer exhaustion I experienced today makes me nervous. Am I nearing the end of my capable stage? For the time being at least? This weekend we’ve got MAJOR work to do in the nursery (you know, like sifting through all the stuff we’ve been given, arranging furniture and figuring out what’s left to buy so we can buy it) and next week, in addition to finishing all of that, as well as completing the transition of one wall of my dining room into my home office, I’ve got to switch over to my fall wardrobe… which will be interesting since I barely fit in my long narrow closet. And did I mention breaking through that writer’s block in the previous paragraph? Yeah, that’s the scariest part of all. Dashiell has taken my brain and turned it into a mish mosh of self-hatred, self-judgment, massive excitement and mommy love. There’s no room for a pilot script. And since this one isn’t offering a paycheck either, there’s little in the way of motivation. Still, it has to be done before he arrives, lest I be sample free for next year’s staffing season. Maybe Dashiell can be my sample. Look what I made! Yeah, right.

So what’s a seriously pregnant girl to do when all she wants to do is lay around, but laying around results in an ever-increasing to do list that spills out into every area of her life? Me, I’m working on not being too hard on myself. Which might be the biggest challenge of all.

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Maternity Wear and My Momentary Lapse (into Reason)

October 30th, 2009 by stephanie

First things first. Totally unrelated to my current state of mind, I’ve included a pic of myself trying on a formal maternity dress ordered from Isabella Oliver online. I share it in case any other preggos are looking for evening wear and find it difficult to discern what works based on the statuesque stick figures with baby bumps displayed in the pictures. My Limey and I are going to The BAFTA Awards next week (leave it to me to be the size of a house the first time I get to go to a big Hollywood Awards shindig… albeit a British one), and I was thrilled to find something that wouldn’t have me feeling like a (pot-bellied) tree amidst the twigs.

Straight from the package...

Straight from the package...

Granted, who knows how I’ll feel in an hour (nevermind next Thursday), but you get the point: I liked this enough to post a less than flattering cell phone self-portrait. If you’re not familiar, Isabella Oliver’s clothes are fantastic looking and not outrageous. Not cheap, but if this dress is any indicator (in terms of fit and feel), worth it! Though it’s hard to tell with my master photography, the material (”caviar black” is the color… ooh, la la!) is slightly shiny and super soft with built-in side pockets (a favorite attribute of mine when it comes to evening wear). Plus, it has adjustable panels that mean it can be worn in multiple ways: around the arms to form cap sleeves, over one shoulder for an uber-current feel or, as I have it here, wrapped below the bust to create a strapless! Obviously I have yet to dress it up/form a look around it (I just wanted to see if it fit), but I think it’s going to be a keeper. And if nothing else, I can tell myself it’s three dresses for the price of one. Translation: J will just have to take me out two more times, to places fancy enough to wear it… before I pop.

Now, onto more pressing matters. Or not, as you’ll soon see…

Having spent the last two days feeling considerably better than the two before, I find myself faced with a dilemma: what the hell am I supposed to blog about? After all, it’s no wonder that the great books, movies and songs are about inner conflict and doubt, heartbreak and disappointment… albeit sometimes linked to finding faith despite them.  Nobody cares about someone who is getting along quite nicely, thanks. And that’s where I am today. Reasoned. Relaxed. Absent of judgment or self loathing. Not too worried about accomplishing anything. Aware that there are things to do, but willing to let them slide for the day. Content. I guess you could say that I’m giving over to the master, who in this case happens to be all of 4lbs, 13 oz (or was as of Monday),  and resides in my belly.

Trouble is, that leaves me with nothing to say here. Not only is drama more interesting to read, dear reader, it’s a hell of a lot easier to write about, too! Whenever I’m struggling at whatever level (whether in a really dramatic or impossibly comedic sense – both of which seem to strike my life relatively often), the urge to wax philosophical takes hold. When I’m not in crisis however (a rare state, I must admit), well… what is there for me to ramble on about? At the moment, I can sum it up pretty simply: I’m fat. I’m tired. My hips hurt… Who cares?

Though it’s taken me 32 weeks, 5 days to figure it out, I can finally see that there is no rhyme or reason to growing a human being. Some days are good, some days are bad, some days vacillate back and forth. I’ve just got to learn to relinquish control.

Easier said than done, no doubt, especially for someone like me. Yet, though I know this seemingly sane state of mind can’t last for long, for the moment, I’m going to try my best to enjoy it. How, you ask? For starters, there’s a stack of Netflix on the dining room table with my name on it!

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Confessions of a (stalled) self-starter

October 28th, 2009 by stephanie

A few things you need to know about me (the non-pregnant me) in order to appreciate this post. Generally speaking, I am an extraordinarily driven, high energy, achievement oriented soul. A mixed bag really, as while possessing these traits allows me to get a lot done when I’m in a good space, they also contribute to the fact that I’m seriously intense, oftentimes opinionated and generally prone to work-a-holism. Translation: for better or worse, I derive my worth from what I accomplish… and therein lies the present problemo. These days, I am not accomplishing anything. Worse still, I feel no inclination to do so.  In short, I’m not quite in that “can I just hole up and cry?” place, but I could definitely benefit from some… something. Now if only I could figure out what that something is (since copious amounts of Chateau Neuf and/or luxious, exorbitant spa days are out of the question), perhaps I could console myself. In the meantime, I’m stuck.

These days, my overall approach to existence seems to be “why bother?” Not that I don’t want to be existing, but that I don’t know who it is that has inhabited my ever-expanding body, so why should I attempt to do things for her? I have no motivation to write and I have even less desire to socialize. After all, there’s no doubt I’m pretty lousy company. At best, my friends must find me one-note and dull, and that’s to say nothing of how horrible I feel for my husband, who has to scramble to interpret my every fluctuation. Yet, while I’m intellectually aware of what I’m like to be around sometimes (I mean, let’s face it, there’s an implicit upside to dealing with a person whose blog is called Mood Swings), I find myself constantly annoyed that he’s not perfect… As in, what the hell was I thinking marrying a man who isn’t psychic?! Isn’t reading my mind part of the deal?!

All of this admitted, being generally self-aware, I know that when I’ve felt blah (okay, crazy)  in the past, I am well served to take even better care of myself — both physically (which I do generally anyway) and also emotionally/mentally. Along those lines, going to the gym and having goals/setting intentions to give me direction and purpose usually improve my state of mind. The trouble is, going to the gym requires the fortitude to leave the house, and being driven requires actually knowing what you want. In other words, in order to self-start, you kind of have to know where you’re going, or at least have a general direction. At this point however, beyond having a baby in the room I know I have to finish (but don’t have the strength, artistry or time on hand to face) before he gets here, I have no clue what my life is going to look like two months from now… or a year from now… or ever again, really. Beyond cute little hands and feet, dimpled legs and arms and tiny outfits with hooded ears (I have to confess, those things completely melt me), I don’t know what to set my sights on. And so it is that I’m floating aimlessly toward motherhood… with that status as my only discernable defining characteristic.

It’s like all of my positive core qualities have been wiped out while all of my neuroses have been magnified. Do you hate me yet? Because between bouts of excitement over the impending arrival (who I imagine to be an amalgamation of my currently absent best characteristics and those of his father… all wrapped up in a – please god – under 9lb package), I most certainly do.

I guess at the end of the day (and this rant), all I can say is this: Poor Dash to one day have his mother’s insanity documented for him on the internet. But since that is indeed a fate that is part of his future (and god knows his birth won’t be the end of his tenure as my subject matter), here’s to hoping I return to some semblance of normalcy.

This way I can hold it all over his head as part of the unsettling (and magical!) experience I endured to bring him into existence.

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Baby (Mama’s) Breath

October 23rd, 2009 by stephanie

BadbreathAs everyone knows, pregnant women have bloodhound noses. What no one seems to talk about however, is that we also have bad breath… or at least some of us experience it at some point by the third trimester, a development which is nothing to sneeze (or breathe) at, considering our noses and mouths are essentially adjacent. Anyway, for whatever reason, I am presently embarrassed (and yet somehow compelled) to report, that I am now one of those women. Consequently, not only do I notice my husband’s shoes, the garbage disposal and the litter box from 1500 square feet away, there’s an ever present bacterial odor within millimeters of my nostrils. Thank god the morning sickness has passed, or I’d really be in trouble!

Joking aside, like most of the other side effects of expectation, the sudden halitosis is supposedly due to hormonal shifts. Being particularly sensitive to smells anyway (even before my pregnancy), I’d be lying if I said I weren’t especially annoyed with this new development (I’ve brushed and flossed four times today already!), but I suppose it could be worse. As of yet (knock on wood), I don’t have stretch marks, varicose veins, anything more than the occasional spot of acne or any truly horrific preggo-issues really, save the apparently evident mood swings to which anyone reading this has been witness (the upshot of which is that when I’m good, I’m very, very good).

Needless to say, I am aware of my good fortune. And I’m grateful. The trouble, however, is that as social creature who is not only inordinately chatty but extremely conscious of hygiene, I now have one more thing to be self-conscious about. As if looking like I’m about to tip over with my feet swelling out of my shoes and a walk that is more of a waddle wasn’t already enough! Now my single-mindedness, shortness of breath, strangely assembled clothing and penchant for bailing at the last minute due to sheer exhaustion are further complicated by giving off a foul smell when I open my mouth! I guess the best I can do is to hope that what comes out isn’t especially snappy — hormones don’t just affect my breath, they affect my words.

Meanwhile, there is some solace to be taken in the fact that I now have an actual, practical use for all that off-flavor gum leftover from the hospitality bags we gave out at our wedding.  After all, I may prefer Soothing Spearmint when given the choice, but I will suck it up and deal with Artic Chill in times of crisis… femininity, identity or otherwise.

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The Profundity of Peter Rabbit

October 22nd, 2009 by stephanie
Getting under the fence is just the beginning!

Getting under the fence is just the beginning!

Ever since I entered my third trimester, J and I have been reading to Dash at night. But what initially began as something we thought we should do for our child (if for no other reason than to further familiarize him with our voices), for me at least has evolved into a revisiting of my own youth (and a little bit of psychosis).

It all began with Frog and Toad Are Friends, which was followed by a series of baby books gifted to us by a colleague of J’s and then, happily, Oh, The Places You’ll Go. Though the longer books take us a few nights to read (in part because J loses interest and secondarily because I run out of breath after about three pages), the morals are always the same. Be good to your friends. Clean your room. A is for Apple… you get the idea. None of them has made me cry… or think about anything deeper than iambic pentameter.

Or at least that was the case… until last night’s foray into Beatrix Potter.

Being that my favorite bedtime stories as a child were those of Hans Christian Anderson, I was aware that children’s tales could have a darker side, but with all the paint by numbers vanilla entertainment that dominates our culture (let’s face it, I live around the corner from The Grove), I think I’d blocked out just how complex they could be. Indeed, while I don’t exactly remember The Tinder Box (or the original, non-Disney version of The Ugly Duckling), I knew that they weren’t sweet stories. Still, that wasn’t enough to prepare me for The Tale of Peter, that poor little bunny, who loses his blue jacket (with the button!) and is forced to hide in a watering can half filled with water, all the while fearing for his very life. Admittedly, we got only about half way through before my lungs ceased function, but from where I left off, I was unable to tell whether Peter’s was a cautionary tale or an adventure. Really, it was a little bit of both… just like life.

Which is a lot for a volatile pregnant woman (or at least this volatile pregnant woman) to handle. Keep in mind that on my last two visits to the doctor, I’ve taken to nuzzling pictures of babies dressed up for Halloween in the waiting room magazines.

So I admit it. I’m sensitive. I’m reading into things. I’m seeing meaning where there is none… unless, in fact, that’s actually the point. I’ve underestimated this whole experience of pregnancy and parenthood and Peter Rabbit may have just been the turning point in my perspective. As December approaches (and little Petey runs for his life), I’m realizing just how big this thing is I’m getting into…. And what a game changer it is.

Up until now it’s been easy to think of Dash as a helpless infant… what I haven’t thought about is the little man that he’ll grow into and how quickly that transformation will happen. Before I know it, he’ll cease being the object of all my hopes (or, as I intend him to be at first, my personal billboard) and instead become a living breathing little being, capable of critical thinking. My desire to protect him will be forced to compromise with reality and he’ll have to make choices of his own. Though I suspect he’ll never have to fear that he’s actually going to be eaten (unless The Road is an actual prediction of the future – or he’s really freaked out by my proclivity for biting), he will have hopes and dreams and dilemmas and fears and scariest of all, free will! And there will be nothing I can do to stop any of it!

Here I thought reading was for him. Instead, it’s clearly been for me. A career-driven A-type by nature, there were many things I expected to have a huge impact on my life. None of them – not any of my few accomplishments or many failures – has even compared to this.

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Boo, hiss, blah… help!

October 16th, 2009 by stephanie

The past few days, I’m feeling moderately depressed. Is it circumstantial or is it hormonal? That is the question. Odds are, it’s a little bit of both. From my experience in relationships, when one partner is having a tough time, the other one is meant to be there for support. Trouble is, both J and I are in need of some TLC these days and thus, neither of us is fully able to give it. And so the distance sets in. I feel alone. He doesn’t talk. He is man. I am woman. Only in the most primal sense, we can’t even get that right since I’ve gotten so huge (and uncomfortable) I have no idea how we’re supposed to be able to have sex anymore.

Somewhere deep down, I think doing the deed regularly would help matters… bring us closer… (even if there is a baby foot nestled in my ribcage the whole time and the very act itself has devolved into a slapstick comedy of errors), but I can’t even come close to summoning the interest. Let’s face it, I can’t catch my breath at night and when I wake in the morning, my bones ache courtesy of relaxin. Dash has an uncanny ability for telling exactly when I’m falling off to sleep, taking it as his cue to practice for a 2024 run at gold in floor exercise and I’m back to peeing at least three times a night, only now, my bladder (too compressed to fully function) has about all the power of a prune (and is likely about that size). With that in mind, how am I supposed to tolerate (nevermind actually enjoy) what would sadly amount to further prodding–by a person twice my size? Did I mention the stabbing pains in my hinterlands? To think, I used to complain about getting a Brazilian!

Indeed (and however ironically, considering how we got here), I am NOT in my sexual prime. And I’m terrified I won’t return there for some time… two things that only serve to deepen my despair. Where has Stephanie gone? And will somebody put her back when this whole thing is over?

As if being in total discomfort and existential crisis 24/7 isn’t enough (we won’t even get into the economy, the job market, the reality that I may be forced into de-facto stay at home motherhood at a big cost to my lifestyle… and ego), I still resent J for not trying to get it on with me… despite the fact that I know he’s just being courteous! (Besides, who in their right mind would want to f*@k me right now in the first place?) I’m aware that I’m sending mixed messages… and the code is so complex, I can’t even decipher it myself!

Finally, add to this whole debacle that I have about this much energy and even less tolerance for the myriad of ridiculous things that annoy me and one thing is clear. Six weeks into my marriage, I am not the best wife. And I hate myself for it. What’s even worse is that I have no idea what to do about it… except, that is, to wait, which is inordinately difficult for someone with my proactive personality type. Patience is not my virtue, but I know I’ve got to find some way to implore it… and that way cannot involve Xanax, Ambien or any worthwhile amount of red wine. Don’t French babies drink while in utero? Argh!!!

Luckily, the one and only thing I know I can truly count on at the moment is that this too, shall pass. Just don’t remind me of that fact because I’ll be honest… your use of bad cliches (in reference to my situation… or anything else for that matter) will definitely piss me off.

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Timing Is Everything (or Science v. My Intuition)

October 13th, 2009 by stephanie
When oh when will Dashiell arrive... or at least when is meant to come?

When oh when will Dashiell arrive... or at least when is meant to come?

Before I get into my recently re-ignited concerns over when, exactly, my little bundle of joy is going to make his first appearance outside of my womb, let me start by saying that the results from our fetal MRI are in, and as predicted, Dashiell’s brain is just fine. So fine, in fact, that when my OB called yesterday to inform me there was nothing to worry about, she actually told me that MRI reader had called her and questioned why she’d ordered the procedure in the first place. I don’t know whether that’s more reassuring for me or for the hospital who gets to bill my insurance, but whatever the case, the quote was this:

“Yeah, his ventricles are prominent, but everything looks normal.”

Translation: Dashiell has a big brain… just like his mommy. Yes, we’re back there again. Except, as I mentioned above, something about my perception of all of this has changed. Though I’ve been assured that it’s not the case time and time again, I’m thinking that my son may not be the uber-baby everyone in my medical circle is predicting and that instead, he may very well be  due a few weeks before my EDD of 12/21… which would make him only slightly larger than average.

Now, I understand that early ultrasounds are extremely good predictors of a baby’s due date and the one that we had in the beginning of the second trimester (which has been my doctors’ point of reference during all of these subsequent tests) is probably reliable… But there’s something to be said for a mother’s intuition, too. And I’m just not totally sure I’m buying it. Here’s why:

Prior to all of these concerns about Dash’s giant head and off the charts growth, I always had the feeling I was a little ahead of schedule. I felt fetal movement sometime around week 14-15 (when it’s not said to start until weeks 17-18).  My feet and hands started swelling in July — way before week 27 when What to Expect warned of it. In fact, just about everything in “America’s Pregnancy Bible” happened to me roughly two to three weeks before they told me to expect it. Ironic that an agnostic mom-to-be doesn’t quite trust her baby bible? Perhaps. But the widely accepted guidelines have never been quite right in my case and I always found it curious, particularly when Dash started growing so rapidly. Then again (I told myself), every pregnancy is different. Or at least that’s what the book keeps reminding me, and since my doctors have all assured me that the EDD is right and Dash is just big, I’ve gone along for the ride. Let it suffice to say that I’ve never been able to make that leap from agnostic to full-on non-believer… despite an ex who liked to read me Richard Dawkins in bed. But it is in my nature to question. The same has been true of this pregnancy. (See of Brains and Balls for example.)

Anyway, that’s precisely where I was yesterday (vacillating), when things took a turn. On the heels of the call from my doctor, I started feeling slight cramping. The first rumblings of the prophesied Braxton Hicks contractions I assumed, and as such, nothing to be concerned about. That is until I felt sharp, stabbing pains in my nether regions. Not just like one or two pokes or prods, but like repeated jabs, throughout the afternoon and into the night. A search in the aforementioned What to Expect When You’re Expecting for—forgive me if this is TMI—vaginal pain, turned up empty handed (except as it related to delivery and post-partum discomfort). My handy Mayo Clinic Guide to a Healthy Pregnancy however, did make mention of the phenomenon… as a normal (and indeed, expected) part of pregnancy… in week 33.

You know, three weeks ahead of where I am now. A week in which (were I to be there now), Dashiell would be tracking as only slightly larger than normal.

If these pains are the pains of which the mighty Mayo speaks, they’re related to my cervix preparing to dilate. In first time mothers this can take quite a while… like as long as six to eight weeks. Nowhere does anything say it could take ten… which is what I’m supposed to have left in this pregnancy.

The point is, whether it’s rational or not, I am thinking I need to be ready for Dashiell’s arrival earlier than anticipated. Am I just crazy and paranoid (two oft-forgotten side effects of pregnancy)? Maybe. But with my belly growing increasingly heavy and my middle of the night bathroom trips once again on the upswing, I’m still glad we got the crib and dresser put together this weekend… and I’m determined that we’ll have everything altogether by Thanksgiving, just in case.

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Of Showers and Strollers

October 7th, 2009 by stephanie

BabyshowerSo this Saturday, 5 weeks to the day since our wedding, is our (co-ed) baby shower. A soiree that I am at once grateful and excited for, but that has likely also (when considered in combination with the series of events that led up to our—shall we say recent—nuptials), given the bulk of our friends further cause to hate us, at least for the time being. I mean, even I understand why less than half the invitees have RSVP’d (even though it’s totally inconsiderate to the couple who has been kind enough to throw it)! Didn’t they just have a Stephanie and James event like, yesterday? Then again, this is Los Angeles, land of last minute flakes and the no call no show. Need an example? A certain friend of mine RSVP’d to my wedding not only two weeks late but with a guest (even though she is 24, single and was invited solo…), which I was totally cool with. Then she didn’t bother to come at all and hasn’t called me since. So I guess you come to expect it, even if it never really sits right… with me anyway.

That said, I still feel guilty for being such a demanding friend this year, however inadvertently. All I can say to assuage that guilt is… you think it’s a lot for you? Try being 5’3” and carrying a surprise 10 pounder… in the first year since 2005 that you haven’t sold a script when you’re still adjusting to the fact that you’re married now and have to think about someone else’s feelings on a daily (scratch that – minute by minute) basis, while in a constant state of hormonal flux that not only removes your sex drive, verbal filter and sense of identity, but makes it impossible to get in and out of your car (or up off the couch)! Did I mention I had a flu that lasted two months (and literally kept me in bed the whole time) at the top of the year… while on deadline for the last job I did have, only to wind up being treated for a hormone disorder in March before winding up pregnant in April, just as I was starting to feel like myself? Or that in February I bought a full loaded two seater Z4 that I’m going to have to sell since you can’t put a car seat in the front of a sports car? (Translation: feel sorry for me, buy me things, or at least check the “no” box on Evite!)

Yeah. 2009 has been one for the record books. But you know what the proverbial they say about when it rains… And in my storm-ravaged, sanity drought of imbalance, little Dashiell is a much needed shower of joy. Which (now that I’ve gotten that out) brings me back to Saturday…

In the process of preparation (read: putting together a baby registry), I’ve found myself overwhelmed by information, learning about a whole host of items I never even knew existed and then trying to decipher which I really need and which of those are best. But just as I seem to settle on something, I will find out I hate it – or that there’s something I like better, or that I’ve chosen poorly. In some cases, I even know I’m choosing poorly (or at least naively)… Yes, I registered for a camel colored ergo baby carrier and I don’t care if he throws up on it. It’s so much more stylish than the dowdy black one and that’s why the Tide pen was invented! In other cases, I think I’m playing it safe by relying on the experts. Then, I see the expert recommended co-sleeper and, well, it’s huge and hideous and there’s no way I’d put it in my bedroom, so I have to start over again. All of that said (and believe me, I could go on like this forever) perhaps most indicative of the frustration and confusion of indoctrination into this brave new world of baby gear has been my experience deciding upon a stroller.

For the whole of last week, I was super hot on the Orbit Infant System… Now let me be clear. Though I do have pricey-ish taste, I’m not the super trendy type, and I had not in any way intended to seek out a $900 stroller. But after going to Right Start in Santa Monica and trying all of the offerings they had on display (determined not to spend more than $500), it was the one—and only one—I liked. It was light but incredibly sturdy, easy to collapse and a smooth push. Highly rated and brilliantly reviewed and it even looked nice. For god’s sake, the display picture had a woman in an airport pushing the stroller with one hand and pulling her luggage with the other! Having tried it, this actually seemed realistic to me. And while I completely recognize that I was falling for branding aimed at my exact demographic, it not so subconsciously made up for the inevitable trade in of my aforementioned Z4 for some kind of station wagon, by proving that I could still be glamorous after all.

I couldn't find the display photo in the terminal, but you still get the idea...

I couldn't find the display photo in the terminal, but you still get the idea...

Then James liked it too. With a foot between us and a different set of ideas about what we wanted, the fact that it checked off all of both of our boxes was saying something. So we decided to suck it up and register for Orbit… knowing no one was going to buy it, but hoping we’d get a few gift cards that would lower our out of pocket cost or that maybe we’d be lucky enough to find it new (or gently used) on Ebay. At last, a baby-related decision we knew we wouldn’t regret (other than committing to banking Dashiell’s cord blood).

Then, on Saturday we learned that Consumer Reports had issued a warning about the safety of the Orbit System’s car seat. In two of six trials (or something like that) it came unhinged from the base. Wtf? (Said we.) If you can’t count on the experts, the pricetag or parents who own it to indicate a product is worthwhile, what the hell can a first time parent count on? Consumer Reports, apparently. Of course Orbit has gone to great lengths to combat the bad PR, issuing a response to this warning that basically says it’s BS, but CR has stuck by their findings, and so for me, regardless of who’s right, I could never live with myself if I bought a stroller system I’d been warned against by a non-profit agency… no matter what the saleswoman at Juvenile Shop (who no doubt works on commission) tried to convince me of when I showed up explaining that I needed to find something else instead. God forbid something were to go wrong, I’d never forgive myself. And even if the thing worked perfectly, somewhere deep down (whilst sailing through Terminal 5 at LAX effortlessly), I’d have to question my motivations. Who spends $900 on a stroller that they know may be defective—besides nearly everyone in Los Angeles I mean?

Luckily for me (as I experienced on Saturday), the Italians also make strollers (known as Peg Perego). And by some miracle, they’re not only chic, sturdy, tested safe and well-reviewed, but they’re also well within my budget.

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Who Knew I’d Relate to Accidentally on Purpose? (OR: Things to Share with Fellow Preggos)

October 5th, 2009 by stephanie

What is that phenomenon called when you buy a blue car and start seeing blue cars everywhere? I can’t remember for the life of me (though I am certain it has a name), but I know I must be experiencing it, because everywhere I turn I am bombarded with all things pregnancy and babies… and naturally, as a pregnant person obsessed with babies, I feel irrationally touched by them all. Baby animal pictures in emails? Dads with their toddlers in Whole Foods? The fall line of shoes at Nordstrom (which are only pregnancy related in that I can’t wear them this season)? Been there, cried about that. Whether it’s the fact that my hormones are in flux or that my life is in transition doesn’t seem to matter. The point is, I’m hyper-sensitive to everything and everything seems to relate directly to me and my life.

Only child syndrome? Perhaps. More likely, this (tendency toward making giant leaps in the name of personal identification) is what you can really expect when you’re expecting. You’re creating a life after all… why shouldn’t everything in all of life be all about you?

That said, as prone to seeing irony where none exists as I may be these days, there is no escaping the fact that I’m an inadvertently expecting TV writer (who uses her life for inspiration – like every single day) and this fall, there is a new show on CBS called Accidentally on Purpose which bears at least one major resemblance to my life. (Go ahead, take a guess!)

Maybe I'd like any show where it's the girl who gets to pick between two hot guys from different generations...

Maybe I'd like any show where it's the girl who gets to pick between two hot guys from different generations...

Now I’d be lying if I said the show caught me by surprise (I happen to know and admire the creator, so I paid attention as it made its way through last year’s development season – before I got knocked up), but it is true to say that as a non-watcher of network sitcoms, I did not expect to like it… especially after I got pregnant! (Make no mistake, I was hatching series ideas from the second I peed on the stick… and someone else’s success with the subject matter all but dooms my own.) Yet, somehow, I’ve found myself hooked. I mean, let’s face it. I don’t even have to stretch to relate to it (beyond occasionally wishing I were six feet tall and blonde like Jenna Elfman, that is). And these days,  there are very few things that aren’t a stretch for me… literally or figuratively. So that helps.

Does it hurt that the baby daddy is this super hot 22 year old? Or that Jenna Elfman’s Billie has a more age-appropriate ex played by the still supremely sexy Grant Show (with whom I was in love in high school when he was on the original versions of 90210 and Melrose Place)? Probably not. But it’s also a fun, funny, fantasy escape from reality that simultaneously makes you wish life were as simple as a sitcom (who doesn’t want a sardonic Scottish best friend and a gorgeous San Francisco apartment?) and be immeasurably grateful that you didn’t have a one nighter with a post-pubescent who picked you up in a round of barstool spin the cell phone (unless you did, of course).

So, anyway, with that in mind (and the promise that I won’t plug things in future blog posts… unless I find I really like them!), I’d be willing to bet if you’re pregnant, in need of a little levity and not opposed to studio audience laughter (which is so evident I mistook it for a laugh track!), it could become your favorite fall series… or at least your secret guilty pleasure. For me at the moment, with the stress of Friday’s test and the pressure of organizing my nursery, it’s a little bit of both!

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