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Pregnancy week 35: The closer I get to my due date, the more I love my dog

June 2, 2014

My due date is about 30 days away. But instead of organizing the nursery or preparing other things for baby, I can’t stop lavishing attention on my dog.

I’ve always loved my dog, of course. Lemon is a six-year-old, double-dapple dachshund, born blind, deaf and full of sass. People say she’s lucky I adopted her; I think the opposite is true. I’m grateful that of all the dogs in all the world, this wriggly, cuddly, brave pup found her way into my home. She teaches me what it means to be confident and true.

HIKING DOG!

MUCH HIKE. SUCH DOG.

 

Lately, though, my dog love has been particularly strong. After my husband leaves for work, I grab the dog from her bed and pull her into mine. There I prop myself up on pillows, writing and working on my computer, while she burrows against my legs in the place where the backs of my knees form a right angle. (Or on top of my legs. Or sprawled across my lap.)

I find it difficult to pull myself away from her, and I only do it if I must — like if I need groceries or have a doctor’s appointment. Our regular walks have gotten longer, and they feel more leisurely and special.

I LOVE HER SO MUCH.

SNUGGLING SO HARD.

 

My phone has 1,196 photos on it right now, and I’d say the bulk of them are of her silly, furry face. Sometimes I also shoot video — Lemon walking down the stairs, tearing the fluff from a stuffed gorilla, kicking and snoring in her sleep. Really compelling stuff.

HER LITTLE FURRY FACE!

LOOK AT HER LITTLE FURRY FACE!

 

My husband has this theory that I’m chock full of mommy hormones right now. He thinks with no baby here yet, all of my maternal instincts have been concentrated into a big laser beam of love, directed right at this fur-child.

My doula believes there’s a part of me that must know my relationship with Lemon is about to change, so I’m trying to get all my snuggling in now while I still have time and attention to spare.

I think it’s something else entirely — I’m scared.

I’m scared I’ll be a bad mother. This is my first child, and I haven’t spent much time around babies, so I’m not sure I know how to be a parent. This is something that goes way beyond creating a nap schedule or knowing how to change a diaper.

It’s an enormous responsibility to shelter and nourish a child; to love him and keep him safe; to educate him and teach him to be compassionate, ethical and respectful. How do I know if I have the capacity for that? How can anyone be certain?

In college I had this Giga Pet, which required regular (electronic) feeding, activity and loving. One night I got particularly smashed and awoke from my drunken stupor with the Giga Pet wedged underneath my body, the angel of death on the screen. It was horrifying. And it only takes one traumatic robot death to make you wonder how you’ll fare as a real-life parent.

I’m scared I won’t bond with him. I worry that I’ll give birth, and I won’t feel the things that mothers are supposed to feel.

Yes, this baby was desired. My husband and I wanted him, we planned for him, and we spent a long time trying to conceive him. But simply wanting something doesn’t eliminate the fear that comes along with it.

What happens if I bring this child home, and I don’t like him? What if that part of me is missing? It must happen.

I’m scared my baby won’t love me. That must happen sometimes too.

Maybe I should have gotten a Corgi. I know Corgis like me.

I’m not certain birth will alleviate any of my worries — all of these emotions will probably exist in the shadows, live and loaded, for many years to come.

I expected that pregnancy would come with a lot of physical changes, the rise of a belly, the heaviness of my breasts, the cravings, the fluctuation in energy. What I didn’t expect was how much emotion and anxiety would also swell inside my body. The self-doubt, the compound of past damage, the feeling that I’m walking on the edge of a slippery cliff.

So now I wait for my human child to arrive. I continue to wonder how we’ll feel about each other. And I focus my affection on a creature that never fails to return my love — my dog, mom’s best friend.

 

Here’s how everything else is going this week:

Baby: Is enormous. I’m afraid the next ultrasound will show the Michelin man.

Has anyone seen my beach ball?

Has anyone seen my beach ball?

 

My body: Is a wonderland.

Or a constellation.

My milky way brings all the boys to the yard.

How do you prepare for a baby? You planet.

 

Eating: I think I’ve hit the wacky stage of pregnancy eating. Today The Husband asked what I wanted for lunch, and I said, “Pizza. Or sushi. Or falafel. … Or pizza WITH sushi AND falafel.”  And The Husband looked scared. Very, very scared.

(We ended up eating quinoa salad and sweet potato fries, in case you’re wondering. No sushi/falafel pizza. Not yet, anyway.)

I’m still craving lots of fruit too. Watermelon, cantaloupe, grapes, watermelon, strawberries, banana smoothies, watermelon.

Exercise: It’s difficult to find motivation to work out when I wake up feeling heavy and lethargic, and it’s already 90 degrees outside at dawn. I’ve been swimming a lot and trying to do as much yoga as possible, but I feel increasingly lumpy. I’m pretty sure my blood type has changed from A-positive to gravy.

The Husband: I found this old photo of The Husband with our niece, and it cracks me up. You can just tell by the look on his face that he believes he broke the baby.

This is what our house will look like soon.

This is what our house will look like soon.

 

 

Pregnancy Week 34: Getting prepared — and pampered

May 26, 2014

The Husband and I started going to birth preparation classes this week. We opted to do the classes at a local non-profit for families, because they focus on empowering parents through education in order to make the birth a positive and comfortable experience. The last thing I wanted was to get trapped in a class that scared me — like a teacher running through every possible scenario of what could go wrong or screening a bunch of outdated videos in which bloody babies are yanked from snarled, 1970s porn crotches.

But this class is good. It’s led by my doula, and there are two other couples who are expecting baby boys around the same time. During the first class, we discussed the stages of labor, comfort techniques, and how to make a hospital room feel less hospital-ly. We also watched a birth video that was so real and beautiful and emotionally raw, I got a little teary.

OK, a lot teary.

In that environment, I didn’t feel dumb asking my dumb questions. For instance, I wasn’t clear on what the placenta actually is, where it came from and what happens to it. (If you’re wondering too: It’s an organ that attaches the baby to my uterus, I recently grew it just for this very purpose, and I’ll have to “birth” it after the baby is born. Freaky, man.)

Big lady in front of a big lady.

Big lady in front of a big lady.

 

I also wondered what will happen when I poop during labor — because let’s be honest, I will. (Supposedly there’s a sack attached near the end of the table under the stirrups, kinda like the butt bags that horses wear during a parade. This is where the poop goes.) I’ll be honest — just knowing there’s a system in place makes me feel much more comfortable about defecating on a table.

Before the next class, The Husband and I need to come up with a birth plan. A lot of people tend to say those words with capital letters, as though it is the most important document I will ever write. BIRTH PLAN. It is supposed to go into my HOSPITAL BAG, two more words often said with deep reverence, apparently the most important purse I will ever carry.

The birth plan is designed to help choreograph the labor and delivery process. I get why this is important — it’s supposed to make my wishes very clear. But I also know that life doesn’t adhere to plans, and I want to remain flexible about delivery.

I really feel like this birth plan is something I should leave up to the baby. You want to come out, baby? Terrific! Have I got a canal for you! You need a C-section? Fine. I’m not crazy about that, but we’ll work it out. Whatever makes you healthy and happy.

During my ideal labor, I’d like to have my Spotify “Push It” playlist thumping. I’d like to have some snacks. And I’d like a framed photo of Beyonce on the table next to me — because nothing inspires confidence and strength like Queen Bey. But really, I’ll just be happy if I don’t have the baby in the elevator.

 

Here’s how things are going this week:

Baby: As big as a pineapple or a cantaloupe or something else fat and juicy.

Shower: My friends Xochitl and Nelsy had a fancy lady pampering day for me, and it was exactly what I needed. I’m grateful to have such beautiful friends in my life.

Sassy lady baby shower.

Sassy lady baby shower.

 

There were cupcakes …

Cuppycakes

OMFG.

 

… and a visit to a spa, where I had the loveliest prenatal massage. Then we spent all afternoon soaking in the saltwater pools.

Spa ... ahhhh.

Spa … ahhhh.

 

Cravings: Strawberries, which is strange because I have a minor allergy to them. This allergy is so minor, I only discovered it about a year ago when I had the following conversation with The Husband:

ME: The only thing I don’t like about strawberries is how they make your face numb after eating them.

HUSBAND: Strawberries don’t make your face numb.

ME: Uh, yes. They do.

HUSBAND: That’s not supposed to happen. You’re allergic to them.

Oh. So I have this allergy, but it has completely disappeared since I’ve been pregnant. And I have been eating a LOT of strawberries.

Perhaps I’m birthing a magic baby with the ability to remove allergies. In which case all you celiacs should get your money ready now, because I’m totally going to charge for that service. Cash only.

Also craving watermelon, mango and all the world’s avocados.

Body: I think maybe baby is going through a growth spurt. I’m hungry all the time, and my body is now all belly. I also had a body/self-image crisis this week, but I don’t feel like writing about it yet.

Reading: This review of “Labor Day: True Birth Stories By Today’s Best Women Writers.”

I love this part: “Yes, healthy living babies matter, yes, healthy living babies are the inarguable goal, but women’s bodies and minds — and the all-important connection between the two — matter also.”

 

Pregnancy Week 32: Mother’s Day

May 11, 2014

My favorite memory of my mom is also one of the most mysterious.

It happened when I was in first grade, and the teacher abruptly sent me to the principal’s office. My mom was there, waiting, and she gave me the kind of look that meant I should keep my mouth shut.

This was clearly unusual. I had never been to the principal’s office before, let alone in the middle of the school day. My mom signed a form or something, and then she held my hand as she guided me out of the school, into the parking lot and into our family station wagon.

When I was buckled into the car, she handed me a paper bag from some toy store that probably doesn’t exist anymore.

“Go on. Open it,” she said.

Inside was a Glamour Gal, a 4-inch tall doll of molded plastic and tiny features. She had luscious blonde hair, just like the lady on WKRP in Cincinnati, and was wearing a blue tube dress. She was the most beautiful thing I’d ever seen.

The present was strange, because it wasn’t my birthday or Christmas or any special occasion at all.

Glamour gals

I had the one on the right. Eventually I also got the one wearing the pink dress — a dress that easily slipped off her shoulders so she could have filthy sex with my gigantic Ken dolls. The ’80s were crazy for everyone.

 

After that, we went to McDonalds, and my mom bought me a Happy Meal. This was also strange, because it was something that just didn’t happen. We rarely went out to eat, fast food or otherwise, but when we did it was with the whole family.

I remember stirring my soggy fries into puddles of ketchup, just like mom did, and it felt very grown-up, like two sassy ladies out on the town. When my mom finally brought me home, she said I must never tell anyone about our secret afternoon outing. I waited for something like that to happen again, but it never did.

My mom did a lot of terrific things for me, so I’m not sure why that incident sticks in my head. I suppose it’s the oddity and rarity of it.

I don’t remember the context of that day — what was happening at home or at school. Maybe my mom was sad and lonely, and she wanted to do something to strengthen our relationship. Maybe she was just bored and wanted to see me. Maybe that’s the day my first-grade teacher was baptizing everyone into the Church of Satan, and she was protecting me. Who knows?

I wish I could ask her.

This is the fourth Mother’s Day since my mom passed away. But since she spent 10 years dying of Alzheimer’s Disease, it feels like I’ve been without her much longer.

I think we're both wearing cool Member's Only jackets because it was the '80s and we were totally rad.

I think we’re both wearing Members Only jackets because we were totally rad. Also what is this place? Anyone know?

 

It’s difficult to explain Alzheimer’s to those who haven’t tried to love someone through it. It’s a thief of a disease. It doesn’t only steal memories, it steals the victim’s everything.

Alzheimer’s took the light that illuminated my mother’s eyes, and it left behind someone I no longer recognized.

It’s only fair, I guess, that she no longer recognized me either.

At the nursing home.

At the nursing home.

 

I spent many years resentful of this — it’s how I mourned. I was angry that my mom abandoned me. I didn’t have a mom to call when I got engaged. I didn’t have a mom to watch me walk down the aisle. I didn’t have a mom around when adult life felt fierce and overwhelming. I didn’t have a mom when I needed one.

For a long time, I pushed away memories of her. I could only recall the most mundane things — our drive to church, her vacuuming the house, the way she studied her the arch of her eyebrows as she filled them in with a makeup pencil.

But now that I’m writing a memoir in which she figures prominently, I’m starting to excavate my memories again, and she materializes in the most surprising places. I hear a George Michael song, and it reminds me of mom dancing in the kitchen, committing crimes against chicken. (Seriously, she was a terrible cook.)  Spring flowers remind me of how my mom found wild honeysuckle in our backyard, plucked the stamen and placed the sweet drop of nectar on my tongue. Certain smells remind me of her perfume, her sweat, her skin.

I think of her even more now as my pregnancy progresses. I wish she were here to offer me advice and guide me down this brand-new path. Maybe I wouldn’t even want her opinions if she were here to give them; maybe I would hate her advice. It would just be nice to have the option.

This is one of my favorite photos of my mom. I love it because she looks completely fallible, like she's about to drop my screaming sister right there on that lawn full of weeds. She has absolutely no idea what to do with this child. It's so human and so real.

This is one of my favorite photos of my mom. I love it because she looks completely fallible, like she’s about to drop my screaming sister right there on that lawn full of weeds. She has absolutely no idea what to do with this child.

 

The funny thing is that the longer she’s away from me, the closer I feel to her.

Mommy and me. She was clearly an investor in Aquanet at this point.

Mommy and me. At this point, she was clearly an investor in Aquanet.

 

I’m not a person who believes in heaven as a literal place. I think it’s a beautiful myth, and I have no problem with people who do believe in the concept. But for me personally, I don’t think my mom is watching me from above or looking down over me. I don’t think  I will somehow be reunited with her when I die.

What I am attached to is the concept of energy, which doesn’t dissipate simply because a physical body dies — I believe souls never disappear, they just change form.

I’m sad my mom will never meet my son. Even so, I feel her energy now, every day. It’s here as I rub my growing belly. It’s here as I feel a small little thing kicking inside me. And it’ll still be here someday when I spontaneously pick my child up from school, give him a surprise present and take him to lunch for no reason whatsoever.

Pregnancy Week 31: The disconnect

May 5, 2014

I should have known this would happen. Right after I posted that pregnancy makes me feel oh-so-sexy, my body turned against me.

My walk developed a distinct waddle. My right eyelid got fat and swollen. I became super farty. My thighs turned into tree trunks.

To be clear: I still FEEL sexy on the inside. But my outside looks like Sloth from “Goonies.”

It could be worse. I could look like Mama Fratelli.

It could be worse. I could look like Mama Fratelli.

 

Otherwise, this has been a terrific week. The Husband and I made a little excursion to Sunnylands, the former estate of Walter and Leonore Annenberg that now serves as a retreat center for national and international leaders. This means I am basically Obama, but with better hair.

photo 4-1

Sunny days at Sunnylands

 

Also my historic summit was with a bunch of cacti.

Agave maria.

Agave maria.

 

And sometimes I sat on the ground.

photo 3-1

It looks like I’m grabbing my crotch, but trust me — that’s belly I’m holding. (At this point in pregnancy, my crotch is located in some other state.)

 

I love barrel cacti, so it doesn’t bother me in the least that my belly now resembles one.

Round belly

Look at this barrel!

 

Here’s what else has been going on this week:

BABY: I really don’t think he’s doing much at this point, other than putting on weight. He’s supposedly the size of a pineapple now, but the other day I held a pineapple at the market and I don’t see how that’s possible.

ME: Emotions. So many emotions. And heartburn.

The biggest thing I’m feeling now is an enormous disconnect — it’s hard for me to wrap my head around the fact that the baby in my belly is going to be an actual baby living outside of me. Soon.

Here’s how bad it is: Some friends recently gave me wonderful books on child-rearing, and my initial thought was, “Aw, that’s so sweet! But why are they giving me books about raising children? I’m only pregnant.”

It reminds me of my freshman-year grammar class, which was part of the core curriculum at my journalism school. It was a difficult class, so I often thought, “Yeah, this is a good class and all. But when am I ever going to use this?” Around midterm it finally dawned on me, “Oh yeah. EVERY DAY FOR THE REST OF MY ADULT LIFE.”

That’s what’s happening to me here — I’m having that midterm moment of realization. At some point this baby is going to be a BABY. Holy crap.

EXERCISE: This was a terrific week for exercise. Great energy, lots of walking and yoga, plus one day of swimming and one 10-mile bike ride.

CRAVINGS: My usual nacho tooth appears to have been replaced by a sweet tooth. I’m craving watermelon, mango and anything made of cookie.

CAT: Has officially declared ownership of my belly.

CAT LOVE SLOTH.

CAT LOVE SLOTH.

 

A long time ago, I thought my cat was a reincarnated version of a dead ex-boyfriend, since they both liked to watch me pee. Now I just think my cat believes I’m a cat too — and he seems to be under the impression that he’s the father of my child.

It’s gonna be awkward when this baby pops out with no whiskers. Like, Maury Povich paternity test awkward.

HUSBAND: Sewing wonderful things for baby.

Real men wield Singers.

Real men wield Singers.

 

Pregnancy week 28: If these uterus walls could talk

April 16, 2014

This past week was the LA Times Festival of Books, which has become an annual tradition for my writer girlfriends and me.

It was my second time attending the festival — and it’s the second time I’ve been pregnant at the festival.  However, the baby I carried last year died in the first trimester.

I thought I would be over it by now, because that’s what you’re supposed to think. That’s what people tell you: Time heals all wounds and all that. Besides, I have a new baby to look forward to, a new life to fill the space inside me.

So I was surprised by how the grief came back so forcefully this weekend, how fully formed it still is. It hasn’t dissipated. It hasn’t shifted into something else. It’s still this annoying, recognizable presence — a purple gorilla, as poet Matthew Dickman put it.

I did my best to lose myself in other people’s stories so that I wouldn’t be consumed by my own. I went to panels and had books signed by some of my new favorite authors. I swooned over the delightful Pico Iyer and went all fangirl on Laini Taylor in the bathroom. I met LeVar Burton.

READING EFFING RAINBOW.

READING EFFING RAINBOW.

 

But still the grief remained.

It’s something I’ll have to live with, I suppose. In a way it’s a relief to know that my other baby didn’t disappear completely. She’s still there somewhere, in that part of me that feels like a wooden splinter. But it doesn’t do much to lessen the loss.

This week I also had one of those 4D ultrasounds, the kind that makes the baby look like a lump of clay or some kind of sculpture-in-progress. I’ve always hated those things. They’re creepy. The photos always make the baby look like a criminal with pantyhose pulled over its head, someone about to knock over a convenience store.

But when it came time, I couldn’t resist. My pregnancy is still at the point where my child exists in an ultrasound monitor, not yet in real life, and I just wanted to look at him. I’m still scared he won’t be real.

It is remarkable what you can see on those ultrasounds. Not just the baby’s face, which was thrilling, even though he looks like a sack of mushy oranges.

My boy has a face!

My boy has a face!

 

For some reason, I also have a head of cabbage in there.

For some reason, I also have a head of cabbage in there.

 

But it was amazing to see the heart too. Four chambers with valves that know exactly how to open and close.

I actually have a video of the heart pumping, but I couldn't figure out how to upload it. So just imagine it.

I actually have a video of the heart pumping, but I couldn’t figure out how to upload it. So just imagine it.

 

And bones. I was mesmerized by the spine — the perfect, intricate pieces of a puzzle that somehow solved itself — and I couldn’t get over the fact that my body formed those bones. My god. No wonder I’ve been so tired. I made bones!

In my free time, I make spines.

In my free time, I make spines.

 

Pregnancy is such a strange dichotomy. I’ve never felt so powerful, and I’ve never felt so weak.

On the one hand, I am making life. It’s a rush to acknowledge that. I’ve created this thing that will someday be a person with his own abilities, goals, and unique personality. That’s insane.

But it’s also unnerving to realize how random it is — how many forks exist in this road. There’s no reason why this baby might live and why the other did not. I didn’t do anything to make this pregnancy more viable than the last. I didn’t love the babies any differently. In fact, other than subletting my uterus, I really had no part in this at all.

That’s just how it is. One baby is almost here, one is not, and I’m still learning how to accept that some wounds never heal.