Categories
Baby Book Club Parenting This N' That

What is Baby Book Club?

I haven’t posted about the Baby Book Club in a few days, and to be honest, I’m still refining what I want this series to become.

But then I realized: I never actually explained what ā€œbaby book clubā€ even means.

So. Let’s fix that!

ā€œBaby book clubā€ isn’t an official thing. It doesn’t follow a curriculum. There’s no meeting schedule or membership list.

But it does mean something to me.

It’s a playful name that popped into my brain one night when I was getting excited about all the books I want to read with my daughter, and all the stories I hope she’ll get to discover as she grows. It’s about building a life where books are part of the everyday rhythm.

To me, the phrase ā€œbaby book clubā€ brings together two great things:

  • A love of reading and stories
  • And a sense of community, something book clubs have always symbolized

I’ve noticed the spirit of reading, writing, and book-loving communities feels like it’s fading a little in our culture. That makes me sad. So this series is one small way I’m holding onto it, and hopefully passing that love on to my daughter.

When I think back on my own childhood and teen years, I remember so many peaceful, joyful hours spent lost in books. Every novel was a new world, full of possibility and adventure.

Here are just a few of the series that held a special place in my heart growing up (some of them when I was way older than my daughter is now!):

  • Cam Jansen
  • Nancy Drew
  • The Magic Tree House
  • The Babysitter’s Club
  • Dear America
  • Redwall
  • The Boxcar Children
  • Harry Potter
  • The Rats of NIMH

(I also raided my mom’s collection of Danielle Steele and Nicholas Sparks books when I was around 11. I don’t think I’ll encourage that for my daughter. It wasn’t exactly age appropriate reading!)

This series is about sharing that joy, reflecting on what books have meant to us, and building excitement for what they might mean to our kids.

If you’re reading this, I’d love to hear from you! What books or series are your children loving right now? 

bookcases 1869616 1280
Categories
ADHD Journey Parenting This N' That

Pathway to Peace (Kind Of): My Anxiety Diagnosis and Medication Journey

This post is about my anxiety diagnosis and the medication I take for it, Sertraline, which is the generic name for Zoloft. I’m 33 years old and I’ve been taking Sertraline for about three years now. 

Below is the story of how I got there.

This isn’t a clinical explanation or a perfect before-and-after story. It’s messy and personal. I’m sharing it because sometimes hearing someone else’s unfiltered experience can be more comforting than advice.

woman posing on a rock after hiking
Image by summerstock from Pixabay

My Anxiety Diagnosis at 33: Why I Finally Sought Help

I know there are people out there who say everyone needs a diagnosis these days! Everyone needs a label!

Well, I’ll tell you what: saying ā€œI have anxietyā€ is a lot cleaner than saying:

Don’t mind me if I call you frantic because I think maybe possibly I left the stove on last night even though I checked it five times. Don’t mind me if I start involuntarily crying. Just ignore it and keep talking, and whatever you do, don’t say it’ll all be alright, or what’s wrong? That will make me cry more. Don’t mind me if I don’t text you back right away. Trust me, I saw your text and I thought of probably ten different ways to reply, and I appreciate you as a person, and I don’t want you to feel that I’m dismissing you or ignoring you, but I’m afraid of what happens if I open the door to this conversation because maybe you have a good impression of me and I’ll ruin it by saying the wrong thing, or maybe I’ll just generally say something and you’ll react and I won’t know what I did and then maybe the relationship will be over, so I guess maybe it’s better if it’s over now…

Yeah. I could go on, and trust me, there is a similar monologue for just about every mundane happening on any given day.

But in a crisis?

That rambling, nervous Nelly voice finally shuts it and despite the chaos and adrenaline, I can actually think!

So What Is Anxiety?

I don’t know! 

Is it unresolved trauma? Is it genetic? Just a different sensitivity level?

Does it really matter?

I’ll say this, and it only applies to my journey, I’m not suggesting anything about anyone else:

I’m glad I didn’t have the diagnosing type of parent. I’m glad that, despite the struggles, I had to fight it out for a while and came to a place of seeking diagnosis and medication on my own. I think I needed that foundation first.

Again, I’m not suggesting anything for anyone else. If my daughter displays signs of anxiety, I’ll take what action seems most appropriate at the time, and I wouldn’t try to recreate my own experience for her. Not to mention, that would be impossible!

Ha!

I’d have to get her a bunch of siblings, start her off with a disciplined mother from a well-organized family, kill off that mother from cancer (no thanks, knock on wood), add a second marriage, add some additional kids, add a messy divorce that never ended, and on and on it goes.

It’s ridiculous to think I would approach an entirely different set of circumstances with the thing that seems to have helped me. Now that that’s out of the way…

The First Signs of Anxiety I Didn’t Recognize at the Time

I don’t really know if I was an anxious child. Per my father’s stories about us as kids, I don’t think so.

i told the counselor i was considering asking my doctor about sertraline. she just shrugged and said, sure, maybe it’ll take the edge off.(2)

The first memory I have of what truly seems to have been anxiety is from when I was a senior in high school. The church was having a ā€œcelebrate the seniorsā€ thing, where the families made those fleece tie blankets, and then we all stood up there draped in the blanket while our parents put their hands on our shoulders and somebody said some words.

I have no idea what was said. I just remember getting extremely hot and uncomfortable. I didn’t want them touching me and couldn’t stand the thought of us all pretending to be a happy family (although now as an adult, I realize there are plenty of families who aren’t ā€œhappyā€ but are perfectly fine, so yes, I was probably being dramatic).

I just couldn’t take it and found myself making a scene by bolting for the little back exit door in tears. I went upstairs and hid in the preschool until everyone was gone, including my own family. I’m pretty sure I then drove somewhere or drove home, but I definitely don’t remember ever having a conversation about it with anyone.

Living With Anxiety: What It Really Feels Like

Fast forward to the job I was working three years ago as a financial coordinator in a healthcare setting. Prior to that, I had quit my first job. I had stopped jobs before due to things like going back to college or moving, but I had never just quit.

(Well, now I’ve gotten too good at that, but that’s a different story.)

I thought I was all set. The new job was task-based, semi-professional but still relatively active and urgent. It was post-Covid, so we wore company-supplied scrubs (thought that would eliminate social anxiety and decision fatigue), there was a gym nearby I’d use at lunch, and in many ways, it was a good job. I thought I had figured out the formula.

And yet, that dragon anxiety, or whoever she is, reared her head.

thus i take the medication

Involuntary tears. Analysis paralysis. Overwhelm. All of it.

Another thing about this job: a whole bunch of women in the office were taking Sertraline. Sounds kind of laughable, right? Like I just decided to succumb to peer pressure and jump off the cliff with them?

Not quite, but I did get to hear a lot of first-hand experiences. One woman described the day she dropped her 6-year-old son off and just drove away. She eventually came back, but the anxiety that prompted her to do that was what led her to talk to her doctor.

One final notable aspect of this job: the health insurance was cheap, and I could easily see a counselor for a small out-of-pocket copay.

So I figured, why not?

From ā€œMaladjustedā€ to Diagnosed: The Insurance-Driven Labeling of Anxiety

I’ve never gone to a counselor for any significant length of time, but on and off I’ve seen different people. I’ve never felt like oh wow! after a session, but the conversations often helped shake things loose. Sometimes just anticipating the appointment was helpful.

a cartoon image depicting talk therapy
Image by poli_ from Pixabay

With this counselor, we did telehealth sessions, even though she was local. Was she helpful? To some extent, yes. But she also seemed to be practically snoozing through sessions. Her questions and comments also weren’t particularly perceptive.

Still, two important things came out of those sessions.

1. The Medication Suggestion

I talked about my previous job, which was unorthodox, abrasive, and even, though this word is overused, toxic. (Long story short: lots of behind-the-scenes personal connections. Small town stuff.)

At the time, I was wondering if my experiences at the previous job were affecting my perspective at the current job.

I told the counselor I was considering asking my doctor about Sertraline. She just shrugged and said, sure, maybe it’ll take the edge off.

That nonchalant response did not endear her to me, but it did kind of help. I’d built up medication in my head as this terrifying, life-altering decision. Her casual response helped me realize maybe it’s not such a big deal to ask my doctor.

2. The Diagnosis Debacle

After a couple sessions, I got a notification to sign a document: I’d been diagnosed with adjustment disorder. This sent me into a (now hilarious) spiral; I thought I’d been labeled a maladjusted loon. I prepared a big response to talk it out with the counselor.

Her reaction?

ā€œI just had to write that for insurance.ā€

Uhhh.

A few sessions later, I got another diagnosis: general anxiety disorder. I didn’t sign it. I canceled my next session and never went back.

Was it an official diagnosis or what?

I guess.

I still think it was odd and unprofessional to drop that on me without a real conversation. But after talking with various professionals since, yeah the shoe fits. 

would i rather

And honestly, I don’t care. The result is what matters: Sertraline helps me feel more even and relax more easily.

I also truly believe it helped me get through pregnancy, birth, and post-partum relatively unscathed.

Finally, I think it makes me a better mother. I still intellectually have all the same worries in the world, but I’m able to tone down the emotional side of it, and be present and gentle around my daughter.

I’ll never know of course, but I don’t think that would have been the case without medication.

But, I’m getting ahead of myself.

Talking to My Doctor About Anxiety Medication

The conversation with my doctor was the opposite of the counseling experience. Even after the counselor’s rather dismissive comment about medication, I still had it built up in my head quite a bit: what if the doctor thinks I’m drug-seeking? What if I cry? (Spoiler: I did.)

Ultimately, the doctor was very kind and supportive, almost too much so. Overwhelming in a different way. (My theory is that since I didn’t grow up with an affectionate parent, I find big displays of support unsettling.)

She suggested Sertraline, and said it’s a very common prescription for women (what does that say about this country?), and that side effects are mild unless you’re on a high dose.

What It’s Like Taking Sertraline (Zoloft): Three Years Later

My experience on Sertraline has been very positive. I don’t feel it ā€œkick inā€ or anything, but I do believe it’s helped me better navigate life. It is a pretty gentle medication, compared to things like Xanax, from what I understand anyway.

I used to be skeptical of medication. But here’s where I’ve landed:

Modern life in the U.S. is unnatural in many ways: low on physical activity, low on quality community connections, rampant hyper consumerism and emphasis on independence to a fault.

I have tried asking myself: what are my alternatives to participating in it?

There aren’t many good ones, though I’m working on it. So if I have to participate, why fight the thing that helps me do what I don’t want to do, but have to?

It’s like owning a car. I hate owning a car. It’s a giant scam. But there’s no public transportation where I live, so I own one. That’s how I think of the medication: a tool that gets me from A to B for my sake and my family’s sake.

Would I rather get from A to B on a bike and later nap, snack, and swim with no medication required? Maybe decompress with friends and family over a delicious and healthy dinner? Take regular vacations from work?

Yes. But I don’t live in that world.

I haven’t yet figured out how to make enough money to live in that world and our culture certainly gets further and further away from that world for the middle and working class every day.

Thus, I take the medication. And it helps.

Looking Ahead: The ADHD Chapter Begins

So what about the ADHD diagnosis? 

That came later.

Stay tuned.

a mountain landscape
Image by Sabine from Pixabay

Interested in personal experience posts like this? Read about my birth experience here, or my musings on my ADHD diagnosis here, or even my post about the blues here.

Categories
ADHD Journey Entrepreneurial Endeavors This N' That

I keep looking for a shortcut that doesn’t exist.

My dad likes to say that it takes ten years to recover from big life events. 

Every bone in my body rebels against that statement, like, ā€œbut I can’t wait ten years!ā€

seated woman looks out the window at an ocean view
Image by Alessandro Danchini from Pixabay

Well, it’s possible and probable that he’s right. It could take five years or ten years, and that’s if we’re lucky. 

In which case, my resistance to the idea doesn’t really change the reality, it just puts me in pain.

And I am trying to spark some big transformations in our lives, yes, I am. I have been mentally pushing hard on these entrepreneurial ideas we have. I have been resisting the urge to settle down, put the mask back on, and work at a job beneath my abilities simply because I know that otherwise I have to find a way to work with my rhythms and damn, they can be difficult. I can’t do big brain work, as I like to call it, in an 8 to 5 job. It just doesn’t work.

I have had success doing physical jobs within that frame work, and I do enjoy that quite a bit. I have no problem working in manufacturing, or cleaning, or food service. I really don’t, and in fact I love that those jobs are a natural weight management tool for me (as opposed to seated office jobs which make me feel like I’m wearing someone else’s body).

But, one caveat with those jobs is that after a while, my brain runs on overdrive while I do the physical work and that tends to result in me dreaming up some scheme to leave the job anyway. I can’t get the monkey in my brain to quiet down.

Add to that, if you’re an employee in one of these jobs, it can be difficult to bring in enough income to support a family, particularly if you’re not all that good at the social and political maneuvering required at many jobs to secure raises.

As usual, I digress, but all of that is an explanation for why I’m resisting that urge (compulsively resisting I might add), to apply for a regular job, one of those that doesn’t pay great, but at least the benefits are cheaper than the Marketplace. But at this point, I don’t know if I can be a ā€œcompliantā€ (a word my former boss loved, which I think says a lot about him), employee. 

So I’m sitting here, asking myself, how can I truly settle in to the understanding that the transformation I want could take a decade or more to happen?

How can I truly help myself to grasp that there is no quick fix coming? No lottery win? No unexpected inheritance (an idea that makes me feel queasy anyway, plus I don’t have rich relatives, but I’m including it because it’s a fictional trope)? No surprise bonus (I’m not even working a job where that is probable)?Ā 

Just a whole lot of one step forward, two steps back in our future.

Can I stomach that? Can I truly take the uncertainty without trying to find a way to cheat, to trick the universe by secretly hoping for a miracle?

How can I live with the idea that the cavalry isn’t coming?

Can I accept that it’s just me and my husband (and baby and cats) painstakingly stacking one block on top of another while the universe shows up as an irate toddler who keeps smacking at the blocks, pissed at us for trying to build a little tower?

Can I stand it?

Do I have a choice?

colorful blocks form a castle
Image by N H from Pixabay

Let’s switch tactics. 

Let me ask myself this: what would I do differently if I truly understood that all of these hopes and aspirations were likely to take ten years or more to come to fruition? 

TBD.

Categories
ADHD Journey Parenting This N' That

Can daycare save our sanity? (Short answer: still hoping).

can day care save our sanity? kids playing at a daycare
Image by Rosy / Bad Homburg / Germany from Pixabay

My baby girl is almost 5 months old now.

We weren’t planning to put her in daycare just yet, mostly because of the cost. I’ve been working part-time in the mornings, and my husband works nights, so we figured we could make it work for a while. I thought daycare might be something we could consider if I found a higher-paying, full-time job.

Also, she’s still pretty little. (Even though had I not quit my job in December, I would have had to put her in daycare as early as 6 weeks.)

But then I sent an email to a daycare on a whim. My husband had been struggling with the accumulated lack of sleep and starting to make silly mistakes at work, and I was starting to feel hectic and rundown too.

This particular daycare only takes four babies in the infant room. By chance, I emailed right when they had an unexpected opening, and I happened to be the first person in line.

illustration of kids playing at a daycare
Image by Rosy / Bad Homburg / Germany from Pixabay

I thought we should give it a try. I hoped that if I could make some extra money during the afternoons, then maybe somehow things would work out.

I also secretly hoped to get some exercise and alone time in. (As a neurodivergent person, that alone time literally restores my ability to function. I don’t know how else to say it.)

But of course, first I had to see how she would do.

I was nervous. My husband was too. I was in daycare as a baby, along with my siblings, and I think we turned out fine. (And if you’re reading this blog and thinking ā€œyou’re not fineā€, well, my siblings are much more successful adults than I am, and they were in daycare too.)

child playing with blocks at a daycare
Image by Markus Spiske from Pixabay

Still, I read many opinions online about the ā€œbestā€ age to start daycare (apparently after the age of one), and I was really apprehensive about leaving my daughter with strangers.

What reassured me was the fact that this daycare only takes four babies, even though they’re licensed and could easily take more for profit. The owner’s toddler son is in the toddler room, and the infant room teacher has a young child of her own. Everything looked clean and organized. On the day I visited, I didn’t hear any crying from any of the babies or toddlers. They were all just happily playing or napping.

On her first day, my husband and I brought Ellie in late. We were procrastinating. The teacher reminded us we’d need to be on time moving forward. Whoops. First day, and the parents are already in trouble.

The teacher said hello to the baby, and my daughter stared at her for a few minutes before grinning. And that was that.

I spent the rest of the day glued to the daycare app, refreshing constantly for updates. Every photo showed my baby girl smiling. When I picked her up at the end of the day, she was still smiling: happy, alert, content.

I think she liked it. The environment was fun and stimulating. I think now that she’s getting older and more aware, it’s boring to be home with mama and papa, who are always tired. 

So, we got through the first hurdle: the first week. And she did great.

I felt a sense of relief. My husband, bless his heart, sent me a text saying ā€œthis is a new chapter, things are going to get better now!ā€

I love him for his optimism, but it drives me nuts when he makes such declarations. In my crazy brain, he’s tempting fate and inviting trouble. At the very least, he’s counting chickens that haven’t hatched. 

And here we are, week two. Guess where my daughter isn’t?

At daycare. 

Because she’s sick. 

We’re all sick. 

Which means I’m not working, so not only do we have a daycare bill, but I’m also not bringing in my regular income, let alone any extra.

Preparing to leave your baby with strangers is hard.
But once you get past that, don’t forget to mentally (and financially?) prepare yourself for the fact that your child will get sick at daycare, and everyone in your home will probably catch it too.

illustration of mean daycare germ
Image by OpenClipart-Vectors from Pixabay
Categories
ADHD Journey Birth & Postpartum Reflections Parenting This N' That

The Crowning of a Blood Moon Princess: Our Mostly Positive Birth Story

Fair warning: some details below may be TMI for some readers. It is a birth story though, people. And it’s not that graphic.

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Image by Andreas from Pixabay

38 Weeks & Feeling…Not So Fine

As I was getting close to the end of my pregnancy, I was trying to find positive birth stories to read online. 

A kind of terror develops at the end of pregnancy, or at least it does for some of us.

One poster on a Reddit thread referred to the feeling as feeling like she was waiting for her own execution.

That’s a little rough, but otherwise describes it pretty well.

Birth is such an unknown, and it can truly be a life or death event for you and/or the baby.

Some people like to say things like, ā€œmillions of women have done it,ā€ or, ā€œyour body was made for this.ā€ 

But many women have not survived it. Let’s not sugarcoat that.

It can be dangerous. Full stop. And my heart truly, genuinely goes out to anyone who has experienced any kind of loss related to pregnancy, birth, postpartum and beyond. 

And while many moments of the saga I’m about to relate are humorous, I just want to pause first and acknowledge the above.

The Search for Something Neutral to Read

There seemed to be two kinds of birth stories widely available online:

  1. The horror stories
  2. The ones where women claim to have done it all naturally without so much as a twinge of pain, and maybe even orgasmed or whatever.

Look, if you are one of those incredible unicorns who had the latter experience, I’m happy for you. 

But I just really wanted to read some regular stories. 

And my birth story turned out to be pretty regular, after all, for which I’m so unbelievably grateful.  I’m going to share it here. 

The Pressure Increases

I went for one of my regularly scheduled appointments on a Monday during, I think, the 38th week. My husband had just started a new job, and I had quit my job back in December and was trying to make up for the lost income with grocery delivery driving. 

Things were a mess, but it was a relief not to have to play nice office girl at the end of my pregnancy.

Anyway, at my appointment, my blood pressure reading was a tad high, and for some reason it caught my attention that it had been steadily increasing over the last few visits.

I wasn’t yet into dangerous territory, in fact, the nurse referred to it as ā€œyour blood pressure is normal, so that’s good,ā€ but I mentioned to my OB/GYN that it had been creeping up over the last few weeks. 

She agreed that it was possibly concerning, and told me to come back the next day for another reading. 

In I went the next day after trying very hard to be ~relaxed~ the night before. 

Side note: I did realize that in the days leading up to this, I had been feeling a certain pressure, almost a rage feeling, in my head while completing my delivery trips. 

I had attributed it to stress, but it was probably the developing hypertension.

Anyway, this time, my blood pressure was higher, and over the threshold. They told me again to come one more time.

If the next reading was again over the threshold, I would need to be induced.

I don’t know why, but that reality didn’t necessarily sink in, and I remained convinced that it was only accumulated stress. This is why I booked a massage for the next day, without consulting my doctor. I don’t recommend this, by the way; it was probably not a smart move.

Life Keeps Happening

That night, before the third appointment, my husband went off to work and I was supposed to go delivery driving. But, I just didn’t feel like it.

I goofed around and took a bath instead. I was chilling in the bath when my husband texted me that his father in Mexico had just had a serious heart attack. 

I was worried of course, and asked him if he wanted to come home early, despite being new on the job.

I also expressed my hope that his father would quickly stabilize, and my husband decided he wanted to continue working.

About ten minutes later he called me crying and said, ā€œmy dad is dead,ā€ which still breaks my heart to remember.

I picked him up, and when we got home he closed himself up in the bedroom to watch an old Mexican movie, whose lead actor apparently looked like his dad when he was young.

The next morning, I went for my massage, rattled, but prepared to get properly relaxed before my blood pressure reading. 

Which didn’t work, shocker.

The reading was again over the threshold, and higher than the day before.

The PA who was on duty cheerfully asked me, ā€œare you ready to have the baby today?ā€ 

Despite intellectually knowing this was the possible outcome, I think I yelled ā€œwhat, today?! NO!ā€

They scheduled the induction at the hospital, and told me to go home, get my things, take my time, and go back to the hospital. 

I texted my husband the news and then, on the hour drive back home to get him and our things, I was so jittery that I called my dad up and started a political argument. 

Once at home, I just kind of wandered around throwing random things in a bag and lamenting the fact that I did not want to leave home and did not want to leave the cats alone. 

I think at some point I just laid on the couch and scrolled on my phone, and my husband was like ā€œuhhh, aren’t we supposed to be going?ā€

I definitely was experiencing that off-to-the-gallows feeling and I stretched out the time at home as long as possible. 

When we finally got on the road, I decided I was starving.

We stopped at a Mexican restaurant and I ate a massive plate of nachos.

Spoiler alert: no one warned me how much puking happens during labor. So yeah, you can guess what happened to the nachos.

After that, rush, rush, rush, we get to the hospital, get all checked in, and set up in the room. 

And then….

We wait. And wait. And wait. 

An Unfortunate Surprise (Which Maybe Shouldn’t Have Been a Surprise)

At that point (yes, not before), I started reading about inductions online, and that’s when I learned that an induction can take several days. 

W.T.F.

I think that’s the moment when I just disassociated from the whole thing, more or less, which was very much for the best. 

I received pitocin, and they did the foley balloon thing, and I was totally imprisoned in the bed between the IV, the balloon, and the baby heartbeat monitors. 

So no recommended exercises for me, or bouncing on the ball, or using the fancy labor tub, or any of that. 

The staff told me I was free to do all of it if I wanted…but, how?

That was a fib anyway, because when I took the baby heartbeat monitors off, a nurse came in to ask me ā€œwhy?ā€ in a scolding tone. 

When I asked to use the shower, suddenly I was not so free to do all of it, though I did ultimately get my shower. It was one of those weird little half-y squat showers as I tried not to get all the various things wet. 

But I digress. 

Obviously, given the events of the night before, my husband and I were in a weird mood. 

He laid on the little plastic couch in the room, and I laid on the supremely uncomfortable bed, and we both pretty much decided that we would not try to be strong. 

I think I even said that to the nurses several times. Like, yes, I’ll take the anti-nausea meds, yes, I’ll probably get the epidural. I’m not feeling tough today and I don’t feel like trying to be strong. 

And yes, I want more juice in the little juice cup.

So began several hours of a quiet, laying-in-bed misery which I fortunately seem to have mostly erased from my memory.

I mean the nurses kept coming in and poking me with various things, and the foley balloon thing sucked, and the blood pressure cuff was too damn tight which is a personal pet peeve / sensory issue that sends me over the edge. 

And I kept throwing up, which again, I never see anybody talk about as something to expect during labor!

I barely slept that night, and I think I complained a lot to my husband about hate, hate, hating the hospital, and wanting to home to my cats.

To add to the tragicomedy, my husband was having a serious flare up of his gastritis and absolutely terrible gas. So, yeah. Every time the nurse left the room, he’d ask, is she gone? And let one rip, and inevitably she’d walk right back in. 

This is the type of thing that would usually make me curl up inside and die from embarrassment, even though hospital staff, of all people, should understand gastric issues.

But like I said, dissociation. Highly recommend it. 

Fortunately we only had to spend one night like that. 

Arrival of the Blood Moon Princess

Whether I’m ascribing too much power to myself or not, for a while the next day I did some visualization exercises, where I imagined swimming up to my baby girl and telling her it’s time to come out, and that I would show her the way, but we had to start moving. 

Maybe it worked, because by evening, the labor seemed to be kicking up. 

It was a full moon that night, and a blood moon.

I ended up getting the epidural, and again, disassociation. I can picture the scene now as if I had been standing in the doorway of the hospital room watching it, even though I was actually sitting on the bed getting a needle stuck in my back.

I don’t really remember what it felt like.

I can tell you that another thing people don’t seem to talk about is that SOMETIMES EPIDURALS DON’T WORK!

Yes, that’s right. Sometimes they straight up don’t work. 

And often they only partially block the pain. 

I had a few minutes or hours, I don’t know, where I wasn’t sure if it was working.

But it showed up for me in the end.

Still, you feel a lot. And when the doctor came in (fortunately my OB/GYN happened to be on rotation) and asked, ā€œare you ready?ā€ I believe I yelled ā€œNO!ā€, again, and looked at my husband and said, ā€œI don’t want to do this, let’s go home.ā€ 

That seems absurd when I look at my baby daughter today. But that moment is a real Schrodinger’s cat situation. We didn’t know what we were going to find in the box. 

Despite the drama of that moment, the next little while was relatively calm. 

I had a comical tussle with the honestly delightful labor nurse (no sarcasm here; she was great and I do not hold the following against her).

She asked me what I knew about pushing, and I responded something about the various things I read online, about how you are not supposed to strain and when it’s time you want to direct your energy down in a kind of centered, forceful way. 

I’m pretty sure she just blinked at me. I know that she informed me that actually, it should be just like pooping. Basically, she said, you want to strain.

Well, I still think she’s wrong, and I informed her that I for one, don’t poop that way. 

She could tell that I was holding back and not following her directions, so a ridiculous passive aggressive back-and-forth ensued for a minute or two. 

And the room was so, so quiet, and it was incredibly awkward. 

Let’s Get This Party Started

I didn’t end up buying or preparing any of the fancy things that I had read about months before (a birth playlist! fairy lights! aroma therapy!) for the hospital.

But I did have my free Pandora app, the same one that I’ve had for over 10 years now, complete with ads. I put my secret Taylor Swift Pandora station on, and that’s what everybody in the delivery room got to listen to. And it was pretty chill. 

So yeah, dissociation and Taylor Swift. Those are the recommendations.

Given that the epidural worked, and while there was plenty of sensation and sometimes pain, I couldn’t actually feel the movement of the baby.

So as we were getting close to the end, the doctor asked me if I wanted to see how much progress we were making, and told me to put my hand down there. 

I did that, and felt a slimy little baby head covered in hair. 

And it was literally the most alien, foreign sensation. I yelled ā€œoh my god!ā€, and snatched my hand back. 

A few minutes later my baby girl was out, and promptly pooped on me. My husband cried as she arrived, something for which I will always love him. 

Things Take a Turn

I always hear stories about the moment someone felt they became a mother. 

I don’t think I had that moment.

But as they plopped her on my chest, I do very clearly remember her little purple hand flailing around and I had what I think is a normal human reaction. Like, here is this fragile, delicate creature, and I am responsible for her, and she needs help. 

So I reached out and grasped that tiny purple hand.

She didn’t grasp back. She was crying, and I tried to soothe her.

But the nurses told me that actually we need her to cry more, she’s not crying enough. They started poking at her and whatever else, and the next thing I know, they are taking her off to the NICU for respiratory distress. 

I could give you a play-by-play of the next moments, but I don’t really want to. Suffice to say, everybody got quiet, and it was uncomfortable, though they assured me (in not very convincing tones) that she would be fine and that she had just opened her mouth and gulped fluid on the way out. 

And in this awkward silence, my Pandora station played Pink Pony Club while the doctor sewed up my junk (which fortunately only suffered minor tears). 

And ta-da! That’s the story of how my beautiful girl was born.

Any Conclusions?

A few other notable events occurred, such as a silly argument between my husband and I about ordering a post-birth Pizza Hut pizza, and the fact that our little girl was in the NICU for a few days. 

In the end, though, she was able to go home with us when I was discharged and I did not continue to have blood pressure issues. 

Important PSA: postpartum preeclampsia can happen! That’s something I also didn’t know. 

It wasn’t a magical fun fest, but it was a pretty positive experience in the end.

A lot of people talk about having birth trauma, but blessedly, I don’t feel traumatized by my experience (and yes, I know I am very, very fortunate in that). 

On one hand, luck is responsible for that.

On the other hand, I think it also helped that despite reading natural birthing books months earlier, I ultimately never wrote a birthing plan, never hired a doula, never read about birth complications in great detail though I knew generally what they are, and never got really rigid in my thinking about how I wanted things to go.

I want to stress that I am not knocking any of those things, and I know many people advise the above for good reasons! 

But for me, I think it was better that I didn’t do any of that. 

Finally, I think it was helpful that my husband and I just decided we weren’t going to be tough, and we weren’t going to be brave, and we weren’t going to be strong. 

It’s counterintuitive, but sometimes it’s easier to be all of those things in the appropriate amounts if you just cut yourself some slack. 

Maybe it’s cliched, but the truth is that what I truly feel thinking back on those hectic days is gratitude, gratitude, relief, and gratitude: that we all made it through and got to go home together, to our very confused kitties who were not at all impressed by our new, screaming family member.

a gray cat on a changing table
Max was disappointed to learn that this is a changing table, and not a cat bed. Image by Nina Harper