I Got The PTPPNICUDSD Blues!

Post Traumatic Postpartum Neonatal Intensive Care Unit Depression Stress Disorder

OK, maybe I made that up.  But I wasn’t just effected by the twins emergency 9 week early arrival, or their 4.5 months in the NICU, or the wild hormonal changes swirling through my brain and body after pregnancy; they all played a nasty game together.

Few people know many details about our 133 day stay in the NICU because it got to a point where it was too painful to continually tell people our daughter wasn’t any better, or she was continually getting worse, or she had received another dire diagnosis. We appreciated everyone caring enough to ask but they most likely received a lie in response. “She’s doing alright,” “she’s still technically premature so she still has a long way to go,” “her lungs just need to get stronger and she’ll be home,” “eh, she’s getting there.”  I rarely to never shared photos of our daughter during this time because, quite frankly, she looked like shit.  I’ll do my best to not make this post horribly depressing but the truth is I am still profoundly effected by our experiences over the last year and a half. And I still struggle with depression every single day.

When the twins were born on September 3rd, 2014, 9 weeks early by emergency C-section, I didn’t get to see them for the first time till the next day.  They were still an abstract idea to me; you know you’re pregnant but you’ve never seen them outside your body before so you don’t really know who you are missing. I even still felt their fantom kicks. I was in so much pain I was switched to Percocet and kept in a sleepy haze.  Most mothers will probably disagree but I loved having a catheter in because it meant I didn’t have to get out of bed.  (I had to pee and then I didn’t anymore. It was fantastic.) My husband had seen our children when he escorted them to the NICU where he fought with the nurses and doctors to get them placed next to each other rather than in two completely separate areas.

While I was in recovery he spent time with the twins and took pictures but he refused to show me until I was able to see them in person. All I knew for almost 24 hours was that my son had dark hair like his daddy and my daughter had strawberry blonde hair like me. And that her face was completely open on her right side due to her cleft lip and palate. We knew she would have the clefts before she was born but we were never able to see if her lip was open all the way up through her nose or not.  Every 2-4 weeks I was given a 3D ultrasound to try to see her face (moms of typical children are probably envious of that), but she always either had her face up against the membrane that separated her from her brother, which made the image look like she had a veil over her face, or her brother’s butt was in the way.

The day after their birth it was my mission to get out of bed and into the wheelchair so I could go see my babies. Holy fuck! You really don’t realize how every move you make uses your core until your core has been sliced open and stapled back together.  It took two people and a lot of crying but I made it into the wheelchair and over to the NICU.  We had always known that with twins it was almost a guarantee that one or both would spend at least some time in the NICU; however, I was extremely naive of how that would actually effect us.

Their first 4 days in the NICU are kind of a blur for me. I was on heavy painkillers and spent my time there fighting the nods while peering through the little door/windows in the side of their isolettes, cupping Baby Girl’s head in my hands, or sitting next to Baby Boy’s isolette holding his tiny fingers sobbing because every breath he took looked like his ribs collapsed to his spine. It would be 5 days before I was able to hold my son for the first time, and 10 days before I could hold my daughter.  You may notice I talk about my son much less than I do my daughter. Once my son’s lungs opened up he was able to breathe on his own.  For the rest of his time in the NICU as long as we let him sleep on his tummy he was happy.

Because they were 9 weeks premature the doctors expected them to remain in the NICU for 4-6 weeks.  Because we knew we were in for the long haul we showered the NICU nurses with Starbucks coffee and giant gourmet cake pops made by a close friend who was a pastry chef.  My charming husband made sure all the nurses and doctors knew us all by name so they would consciously, or at least subconsciously, take the best care of our babies when we couldn’t be there.

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The massive sunflowers hide that these cake pops were huge!

I remained in the hospital for 5 days, before being discharged. I got my wheelchair ride out but my arms were empty.  I sobbed all the way home leaving our babies behind.  I don’t think that crying ever really stopped after that.  I woke up crying, I pumped crying, I fell asleep crying. I relied on my husband for everything. Physical support, emotional support, and he carried it all like the Titan Atlas.

Pumping, pumping, pumping, pumping, pumping, pumping, pumping, pumping. Fuuucckkkk pumping.  Pumping 8-12 times a day, every 2 hours, roughly a 40 minute routine. Do the math with me here, that’s nearly a minimum of 6 hours a day. But not just during the day – around the clock. And the 2 hours starts when you start pumping, so really you only have an hour and change between pumps. I killed myself for that milk and it always made me feel like a complete failure. I could never produce enough for both.  When I would take that sweet liquid gold into the NICU the nurse taking it would always say, “thats all? Are you pumping at least 8 times a day?” I wanted to be a breastfeeding mother, my goal was at least a year. I knew it would be hard but it’s fucking hard!  I tried everything. Supplements, massage, “Power Pumping”, I was spending that 6+ hours a day online researching how to up my supply. My daughter would never be able to breastfeed due to her cleft lip & palate, and my son would end up taking 8 months to figure out milk came out of those things! 8 months! ANYONE that says “don’t cry over spilled milk” has never been a lactating mother!

For the first week home, we would get up and go to the NICU, spend all day there and then come home and do it all over again the next day. The NICU at our hospital was a level III NICU but the babies did not have private rooms. There were 4 main rooms called Pods: Pod A, B, C, and D, and each pod had 6 isolettes/cribs. You could pull a curtain for “privacy.”  The nurses had shift change every day at 7am, 11am, 3pm, 7pm, and 11pm.  At those times all parents had to leave the NICU for 30 minutes before they could come back in; you couldn’t stay with your child around the clock.

After a week I was healed well enough to care for myself and get around on my own. My husband returned to work so he could save his paternity leave for when the twins came home.  I was so scared to be alone. I had become completely dependent on him.  I was constantly crying and sad and he was constantly reassuring me and trying to ease my fears. All the stress surrounding babies that could have torn us apart had brought us exponentially closer.

I delved into a routine in an attempt to keep my sanity. Every morning when my husband left for work I would get up, pump, then head to the hospital to deliver milk. I would stay for 9am rounds where the doctors and staff would come around and talk about all the scary stuff wrong with our children, particularly our daughter. Blood clots in the brain, hydrocephalus, inability to feed, failure to thrive, heart murmurs.  I would stay till about 11:30am then head home. I would drive back to the hospital again at 4:30pm to meet my husband and we would stay till shift change at 7pm then head home and start dinner.

During the 2nd week our daughter stabilized enough to be held.  I was terrified. She had so many tubes and wires and cords attached to her and she was just so tiny.  Looking back at photos I can now see how mottled her skin was and why the doctors were so concerned about her coloring. Shortly after she was put in my arms she refluxed and threw up all over me. The bile itself I didn’t mind. It was the vision of it coming out of her mouth and nose because of her clefts. It gushed out of her entire face and then she would choke and turn blue and the monitors would start screaming. Those goddamn monitors. Constantly going off. Today I can read those monitors upside down and backwards, but then I didn’t know what they meant and the sound always scared the hell out of me. Every time one would go off I would jump.  And because the pod was open I could hear all the other babies monitors, and sometimes I couldn’t discern immediately if something was wrong with my babies or someone else’s.  Most premature babies have a feeding tube in their nose down to their stomaches.  When my daughter’s reflux could not be managed and continued to be threatening her doctors opted to move her feeding tube past her stomach and into her intestine with an x-ray guided weighted tube with the goal of reducing the amount of content in her stomach. Like most things with our daughter we would learn, it only helped a little.  I just kept telling myself that someday I’ll get to hear her little voice tell me she’s OK. I’ll explain in a later post why that will never happen.IMG_5763

One doctor noticed that I would always cry when we spoke after rounds, or any time for that matter. She always asked if I was OK and offered to have a social worker come talk with me.  I always said I was fine, I was just scared, and I didn’t want to talk. After a male doctor (let’s call him Dr. K) bluntly told us our daughter had a hole in her heart and would probably require open heart surgery, my husband had privately requested that the doctors speak with more tact around me. However, one day we were told Baby Girl had fluid pooling around her brain causing added pressure.  I remember our primary nurse hugging me for the first time and that I felt things must be much worse than they are letting on in front of me. I asked to speak to the doctor that always checked on me and told her I was ready to talk to someone. I was set up with appointments to speak with a therapist and a psychiatrist.  I didn’t want medication but I was instructed to keep the appointment anyhow. I don’t even like taking Motrin for headaches till I’ve at least tried to drink it away with water.

Three weeks doesn’t sound like a long time now but by their third week I was losing it.  I wasn’t sure if my daughter was going to ever leave the hospital alive, I was only sleeping and hour or 2 tops at a time, I felt nauseous all the time, postpartum morning sickness as I began to call it, and mentally I was a complete wreck. Imagine every negative emotion coursing through you all at the same time constantly for over 20 days straight. Sadness, fear, anxiety, worry, exhaustion, disappointment, regret, loss, inadequacy. And I don’t mean like I was bummed out or feeling blue. My chest ached with deep terrifying sadness and fear. I felt completely useless to my children.  I regretted having them at all.  I showed up to the NICU multiple times a day but I didn’t want to be there.  I pumped nonstop for them but I fucking hated myself when 30 minutes later I only had an ounce or two to take to them.  When doctors would talk to me I could only nod and fight back the tears, I couldn’t contribute to the conversation or to the care of my children. Every time those motherfucking monitors would go off my heart would race and I would go into fight or flight mode. And one day I snapped.  Both of my children’s monitors kept going off, back and forth, loud piercing beeps in the mandated quiet of the NICU. I wanted to get up and run out of there but instead I grabbed my phone and penned a desperate email to my OB.

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My desperate plea to my OB

My OB headed a special prenatal group we attended and we got to know each other very well, much more so than just occasional check ups. So she wasn’t just passing out pills just because I asked.  She prescribed me Zoloft and I picked it up that night. Zoloft is in no way a quick fix. In fact it makes things worse before they ever get better.

I had agreed with my therapist that I would attend a Postpartum Depression support group.  I didn’t think it was the right fit for me but I agreed to check it out.  **In advance, mothers, please forgive me for my thoughts I am about to share from this time. I know any mother can experience PPD, no extraneous circumstances necessary.** The group consisted of about 10 women, all but myself and one other mother had their babies there with them, all singletons under 6 months. We moved clockwise around the group introducing ourselves and sharing what we were struggling with.  The first mom was beautiful and put together, hair done, light makeup, well dressed.  She talked about how she had got to go out with her girlfriends over the weekend and how nice it was but how the baby woke up at 2am that night wanting to be feed and that was stressful for her.  The next mom shared that she couldn’t get any friends or family to come over and help give her a break from her baby, her son nursed while she spoke. Another shared that her son was born 11 days early but did not have to spend any time in the NICU and she was sad all the time, and that her husband had earlier that day watched their son so she could get out and get a pedicure. I wanted to scream at these pathetic women, “You have your healthy child attached to your tit right now, what the fuck are you crying about?! I would give ANYTHING to be in your shoes. My children are fighting a possibly losing battle for their lives right now!”  I didn’t of course. Instead when it was my turn I started hyperventilating/ugly-crying halfway through my name.   I bawled out my situation and vowed to myself I wasn’t coming back.  The poor girl after me said she had the “postpartum blues.”

The first 10-14 days on Zoloft were the worst. I didn’t think it was possible but everything negative intensified, even the nausea. After about two weeks everything finally began to improve.   I met with my psychiatrist and we increased my dose over time to an effective level.  I am not ashamed to admit that I am medicated.  It is the best thing I have ever done for my kids and marriage.  Once the medication took effect I could control my emotions.  I could hold a productive conversation with the doctors and discuss my children’s care without crying.  I could think reasonably and logically.  And best of all I began to see the positive sides of everything; I saw everything as blessings in disguise.  Every time my husband and I had received bad news, we made “positive positive positive” our mantra, and now I could really live it.  I wasn’t manic by any means, I still felt sadness and anxiety but at a manageable level.   My husband recently told me in the past he thought people that needed antidepressants were weak but after our experience he saw that some people really do need them and they can help immensely.

During those long two weeks, after 31 days in the NICU, our son came home. He was technically still only 35 weeks and tiny, just over 6 pounds. Leaving the hospital with our son was even harder than the day I was discharged after their birth.  I felt like we were abandoning Baby Squirrel.  She was still so little and sick and we were going home and being happy with our healthy baby boy. Every joy felt like a betrayal to her.  It was like living in two different worlds. In the NICU everything was solemn, but at home we were making memories and becoming a family.  Our son was growing and developing and thriving and the gap between him and his sister was growing larger.

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Baby Boy’s Homecoming

 When Baby Girl was nearly 40 weeks old they moved her out of the typical isolette and into a crib.  We brought every stimulus we had.  A mobile with colorful birds for her to look at and reach for, pictures of us and high contrast images to tape to the sides, a vibrating chair, and an iPod and speaker full of calm upbeat and relaxing music.  She loved her music. Her nurses kept it on for her quietly 24/7. Every day the nurses would tell us how much they loved all the Beyonce, I accidentally put 3 copies of “Halo” in her mix. And they always commented on how much Baby Girl loved her music, how she perked up when it came on. Six months later on my 30th birthday we would learn how ironic their comments were.

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IMG_6565All progress with Baby Girl was painstakingly slow. Even with the feeding tube down in her intestine she was still refluxing and aspirating.  She was always going up and down on oxygen support.  Due to her prematurity she has chronic lung disease, her lungs are riddled with scar tissue and continually fill with fluid, requiring more and more diuretics to dry them out.  She had regular echocardiograms to watch how her heart and lungs played together.  (My heart is currently pounding in my chest as I try to formulate this next sentence…) At two months old she was diagnosed with Congestive Heart Failure. Without knowing what that meant, it sounded like a death sentence, right?! “Heart Failure.” That super vital organ that keeps you alive, hers was failing.

I think I shut down.  I don’t remember much after hearing that. I can’t remember if I was just numb from the daily stream of bad news or if I was protecting myself for her possible demise. I think that was the universal tipping point; the universe decided we’d earned a miracle.  During a follow up echo a couple days later the cardiologist found her VSD, the large hole in her heart that Dr. K said would require open heart surgery, and that the cardiologist later refuted but said would take years to close, had closed seemingly over night.  Before telling us the cardiologist had other cardiologist confirm it because he did not believe what he was seeing.  Later that day at rounds, Dr. K said, “I’m not supposed to say this but she must have a lot of people praying for her.”

We rode that high as long as we could.  But Baby Girl’s reflux was not improving.  Dr. K proposed giving her a g-tube and tracheotomy. We refused.  I adamantly did not want my daughter to have a g-tube.  The thought of them cutting open her perfect, soft, smooth belly skin was unbearable.  Just the sheer thought of it made my eyes well up and spill over.

In early/mid November all the nurses went on strike.  Due to the delicate nature of the NICU, the nurses brought in travel nurses and quietly warned all the parents so they could prepare.  For 48 hours my husband stayed with her to make sure there were no set backs due to nurses that were inexperienced with her very particular care instructions. For 48 hours he stayed with her, sleeping in a straight backed chair and leaving only at shift changes.  This ended up being a blessing in disguise as the travel nurse that had our daughter taught us how to take care of our daughter, and further more, she let us. By the end of the two days we felt much more comfortable with her routine care.IMG_6879

The discussion over a g-tube and trach continued for days before my husband made it very clear that the word “tracheotomy” was not to be uttered ever again unless they could guarantee that it would fix all her breathing issues and allow for her to come home, they couldn’t. However, after much back and forth we consented to the g-tube. They assured me that it was just a tiny hole and once she learned how to eat normally they would take the g-tube out and there would only be a small scar. The hope was that if we could get the feeding tube out of her nose and throat she wouldn’t gag and reflux anymore.  Surgery day came and we felt reassured that the performing surgeon had actually performed a major chest surgery on my husband nearly 15 years earlier.  The surgery was quicker than expected and Baby Girl’s pain was manageable.

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Baby Girl’s first g-tube

Unfortunately, the g-tube didn’t stop the reflux. She needed a pediatric Ear, Nose, & Throat specialist but the closest one was nearly an hour away in Oakland, CA. She was transferred via ambulance with her daddy in toe for what was intended to only be a couple days. Once there and settled in the ENT scoped her nose and throat and found she had a hiatal hernia, the upper part of her stomach was pushing up through the diaphragm and into her chest region.  She would need a Nissen fundoplication surgery to repair it.

Nissen fundoplication, also known as laparoscopic fundoplication, is a surgical procedure to treat gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) and hiatal hernia. In GERD it is usually performed when medical therapy has failed, but with paraesophageal hiatus hernia, it is the first-line procedure.
-good ol’ Wikipedia

The surgery would be done with scopes through tiny holes in her belly and down her esophagus and was expected to take only a couple hours tops. I told my husband to call and update me the second she got out of surgery since he was there with her and I was at home with our son. When you have a newborn/preemie at home time ceases to follow its typical trajectory and I noticed 4 or 5 hours had passed and I still hadn’t heard from my husband. I called him and jokingly chastised him for not calling me when she got out of surgery and asked how she was doing. He didn’t know.  She was still in surgery and no one was telling him anything.  He even went and looked for her back in the NICU thinking maybe they had taken her straight back up there and forgot to come talk to him.

After 7+ hours a doctor emerged to inform my husband that her Nissen was successful, but they had found that during her previous surgery to place her g-tube the surgeons had perforated her bowel and colon causing fluid to leach into her abdomen. To repair the damage and save her from developing sepsis they had to make a large incision across her stomach above her belly button and remove the damaged sections of her bowels and colon. So much for worrying about a tiny g-tube scar, she would now have a scar to rival my c-section incision.

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Bloated after over 7 hours of surgery, sporting a fancy new g-tube button

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Abdominal scars

It took her three weeks before she was stable enough to be transferred back to our home hospital.  Her daddy stayed with her the whole time and made it back just in time for Christmas.

The Nissen had greatly improved her reflux, as long as she wasn’t fed too quickly, but she still wasn’t tolerating any food by mouth without inhaling it into her lungs. For the next month it was a continual boomerang of oxygen support.  They asked for our consent to start her on a stronger diuretic, one they had warned us about when she was born, Lasix. Lasix is a very effective diuretic but also strips the body of electrolytes and potassium so she would need routine blood work to prevent damage to her heart and kidneys. After only one dose and she was able to come off oxygen. Again she completely surprised the doctors.  She still had pulmonary hypertension and chronic lung disease so after about a week she needed to be put back on oxygen but only a very small dose.  We got to the NICU one day to find an almighty Discharge Checklist next to her crib. We were so excited! Her discharge was finally looming in the near future.  We were ready for the challenge in front of us because at least we wouldn’t have to come to the hospital every. single. day.

In true to Baby Squirrel form, a discharge date would be set and then moved back. A date would be set and then she would randomly experience apnea over night while in the care of a nurse that wasn’t familiar with her, thus restarting the 5 day waiting period before she could go home. Then she had to pass a car seat test proving she could make the 20 minute drive home safely. Again, against our strict orders, a night nurse performed the test and she failed due to the pads being in the incorrect position causing her oxygenation level to drop.  This presented a huge setback. Now the only way they would let her go home was in a “car bed” which would need to be special ordered. Amazon to the rescue!! This thing felt like a freaking death trap the way it precariously attached in my car but on January 14th, 2015 I got my final wheelchair ride.

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The scariest wheelchair ride of my life!

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Saying goodbye to our children’s NICU aunties and Grandma, their primary nurse, was extremely bittersweet. They had been our family for nearly 5 months. They were the only people in the entire world that knew exactly what we were experiencing every day.  On Baby Girl’s final day I left this letter to her team:

Dear [primary nurses’ names] and ALL the nurses that care for, talked to, played with, held, comforted, and loved our daughter:

We can never repay you or thank you enough for the gift you have given us. Thank you for being [Baby Girl’s] mothers while I could not.

We are so overwhelmed with excitement to finally have our family whole and be able to bond with both our children. You have been our family for the last 4 months. You have witnessed the hardest days of our lives. Your kind hearts comforted us when [Baby Girl’s] mounting prognosis felt dire. You are forever in our hearts every time we look at our beautiful children who have taught us how precious and fragile life can be. I cannot come up with the right words to truly express our gratitude.

We will truly miss all their aunties & grandmas.

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Saying goodbyes 

Leaving the NICU my sister took one last picture of Baby Girl’s empty pod…IMG_7877
Still to this day I cannot articulate how morose this photograph makes me feel.

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Baby Squirrel’s Homecoming

In conclusion, over a year later, some days I feel like I am ready to get off Zoloft, I have even reduced my dose a bit.  But then there are times that I’m not sure I could handle caring for all my daughters special needs without it. When Baby Squirrel is happy and smiles or laughs my heart swells with joy unlike anything I’ve ever experienced, it’s so amazing and wonderful and I don’t know how I could love someone so much. But when she is irritable and sick and crying for hours/days on end or shitting and vomiting nonstop I want to shoot myself in the face (metaphorically speaking, I promise.) I don’t want to stay on medication forever but it’s still something I’m struggling with daily.  Currently my daughter is in the middle of another asthma episode.  She wakes up multiple times a night crying inconsolably, coughing and desaturating thus requiring additional oxygen till she can recover.  She doesn’t have a typical cry, due to multiple factors it’s quieter and courser but it burrows into your brain and eats your goddamn soul.  Along with her pulse oximeter and feeding pump we now have to haul her suction machine upstairs every night and back down again the next day.  She requires 30 minutes of multiple nebulizers 4 times a day followed by CPT (chest physical therapy.)  I do all this while also caring for her twin brother, who is now running all over the place and getting into everything, and while trying to keep the house in relative order. I can’t take her anywhere for fear of her catching another cold and landing back in the hospital again (those exciting tales to follow in later installments.)  Which leave me feeling full of regret that my son is missing out on countless experiences because of his sister. This was not intended to be a pity-party or a sob story but rather to paint a picture of my daily reality and why I don’t feel ready to get off my mediation at this time. Maybe I’m weak but our daily life is entirely too overwhelming without a little chemical help.  And on the worst of days bottle-o-wine help. 😉

I know this was an exceptionally long post; thanks for sticking with me as I try to bring our story up to speed.  Below are more mostly unshared photos from our time in the NICU.  Coming up next: the twins at home, Baby Squirrel’s long awaited cleft lip repair, and her very real, very close call with death. Processed with MOLDIV

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My Battle To Baby(s)

This post is dedicated to the hopeful mommy-to-bes out there.  No matter how long your path takes, whether it takes 1 month or 60, till you have your baby in your arms it feels like forever.

Thank you so much for the outpour of love and support that came from my first blog post! I never imagined the positive response I’ve received.  xo

Rather than pick up the linear timeline where I left off, I want to go back a bit. I come from what I always considered a long line of Fertile Myrtles. My maternal grandmother had 7 children, my mother had 5, and my oldest sister, who apparently can’t look at her husband without getting pregnant, has 8 children.  So I was certain that the day I got off birth control I’d get knocked-up. Because of that fear I was always very responsible; I had never even had a legitimate pregnancy scare before.

In December 2013, three months after my husband and I got married, we decided we were ready to start our family. I stopped my birth control and bought a pack of pregnancy tests. Nothing the first month. Disappointed but I knew it was completely normal and to be expected. The 2nd month, nothing. Mildly irritated but still normal. My doctor has advised me at my pre-conception check-up to allow my menstrual cycle (I hate that term) to normalize for two months before trying to conceive. Two months is a long ass time to wait when you want to get pregnant; when you are ready to have a baby you want that baby NOW. In the months that followed I went through multiple 20 packs of ovulation test kits, charted my cervical mucus, and even purchased a special oral basal fertility thermometer to record my waking temperature every morning. Nothing.

When you’re trying to get pregnant it feels like everyone around you is getting pregnant on the first shot. Those people suck. Just kidding! They are very fortunate and I am jealous. But trying to get pregnant can make you do thing that you know aren’t logical…

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Not my brightest idea

Months came and went, 11 to be exact. I was so pissed off at my body and feeling like a complete biological failure. I didn’t want to think about it anymore. I didn’t want to talk about it anymore. And then it happened. A faint second line on the pregnancy test. I had thought for nearly a year of fun ways to reveal our pregnancy to my husband and when it finally happened I opted for Facetiming him and screaming like a crazy person.

We were on cloud 9, I was finally pregnant! At 5 weeks I had a blood test and an ultrasound to confirm the pregnancy. We got to see the little blob that was our baby! It was the most special little blob we’d ever seen. We started talking about names and discussing our bright new future. We planned to wait till the 2nd trimester to announce the pregnancy to our families but we couldn’t resist telling a few of our closest friends.

The excitement was short-lived. The blood test confirmed I was pregnant but my hormone levels were much lower than they should have been. Then I started having very light spotting.  I was so scared I was going to lose this baby after waiting nearly a year for this moment. I couldn’t hold my tears back when I would speak on the phone to advise nurses.  They asked me to come back in at about 7.5 weeks to check on our baby. The first thing I saw was a flicker. My worries vanished. Our baby had a heartbeat. My own heart flutters just thinking about it now more than two years later. Next we heard the heartbeat. It was music to our ears. I think my husband teared up a bit even. He had been scared too but was staying so strong for me.

My doctor called it a “threatened miscarriage” and said she didn’t expect the pregnancy to last. We didn’t listen. We had seen and heard the heartbeat, our baby was alive and the excitement returned.

The following saturday we were getting ready for my sister’s black tie 40th birthday party when the cramps and bleeding started. I called an advise nurse but I couldn’t be seen till Monday. My heart was broken but we pulled ourselves together, slapped on smiles, and went to  the party.  We tried to remain positive and I tried not to think about what was happening inside my body.

Two days later I went in for an ultrasound. The flicker was gone.  I lay there on the table, tears silently rolling down my face, waiting for a 2nd OB to come and confirm the miscarriage.  I faced the wall, I didn’t want to see the motionless ultrasound image again.  We made it 8 weeks and it was over.  I was given the option of going home and waiting to miscarriage naturally or I could have a Dilation & Curettage procedure (D&C), basically an abortion procedure. I opted for a D&C, the baby was dead, I wanted to get it out and over with.

We rushed out of the clinic, I didn’t want to see any of the pregnant woman in the waiting room.  Once at home my husband lead me up to our bedroom to bed but I didn’t make it. I collapsed on the stairs and the emotion of our loss came flooding out. I honestly can’t recall much of the night after that.

Later that week I went in for my scheduled D&C.  I had to take a strong antibiotic on an empty stomach an hour before the procedure so by the time they took me back I was extremely nauseous. They led me to a bed with a bag for my belongings and a gown to change into. My husband wasn’t allowed to come back with me, I would see him again in recovery.  Once I was ready my bed was wheeled down the hall to wait and get an IV line started. I asked for a barf bag because I honestly felt like I was going to puke. The nurse tending to me was very friendly and chatty. She complimented me on my ring and we talked a little about my wedding.  Then she said it, “Why are you having this procedure today, you’re just not ready to be a mom?”  I was stunned. I would guess the abortion rate among married woman is much lower than the general population but maybe I’m wrong.  As I mentioned before, I had never been pregnant before.  I am Pro-Choice but I am thankful I have never had to make that choice.  I didn’t know how to respond. “The baby died,” I finally stammered out. My brain couldn’t formulate “miscarriage” at that moment. “Oh, I’m sorry. You know my sister had one of those before,” the nurse replied.  I just wanted her to leave.  When she finally did I laid there alone, silently crying, trying not to barf.

When the time came, they wheeled me down the hall into an operating room.  I was thankful it was all women performing and attending my procedure.  I remember the room was cold so they covered me with a warm blanket.  They put my legs in stirrups and tied them there.  They started pushing my sedative which instantly took effect.  I was awake for the entire procedure but I was mentally and physically numb.  I recall a nurse with the softest warmest hands in the world held my hand the entire time.  To this day I am still so thankful to her.

When it was over I imagined where the mass of cells that had made up our baby had gone. In the trash…biohazard…incinerator maybe…

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My dogs keeping an eye on me as I recovered at home

My husband really wanted me to write about our miscarriage, but he wanted me to make it a positive thing.  I’m struggling to find that positive twist.  Miscarriages suck for lack of a better word, and are physically, emotionally, and mentally traumatic. I think the worst long term effect is I no longer equate pregnancy with having a baby.  A friend recently shared with me she had had a miscarriage and after she “felt sad/embarrassed about it and felt that I needed to keep it a secret.” With 1 in 4 woman experiencing at least one miscarriage in her life, keeping it a secret makes us all feel more alone.  Don’t get me wrong, I don’t expect woman to want to share something so traumatic and disappointing. That’s why I can’t find the positive twist.  I guess I am thankful I lost our baby “early” rather than later…

After I recovered from my D&C we were referred for infertility treatment.  Our specialist said he believed I had Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome (PCOS) which was keeping me from ovulating regularly.  And that alllllllll the ovulation kits I’d gone through were a waste because they don’t work for women with PCOS.  I kept a journal during the process. I wrote about how ill the various ovulation medications made me feel; the hormonal swings that made me feel like I was out of my mind.  I was obsessive. Getting pregnant was all I thought about all day long. I was even getting annoyed of thinking about it all the time.   All the fear I had accumulated during my previous pregnancy leading up to the miscarriage still followed me, more so maybe even.  For over two months this continued, I never felt well. I had what I described as a feeling of “general shittiness.”  I wrote in my journal:

“Sick and tired of being sick and tired. I can’t remember the last time I felt good. I’m so sick and tired of hearing myself think and talk about TTC  (Trying To Conceive) and infertility. But I’m also really scared of being pregnant again. I’m scared of losing it again or of all the other bad things that can happen. I feel like a crazy person. I want it so bad but I don’t want it/scared of it all at the same time. I want to be pregnant but waiting and fear will just begin again. I wish so bad I could be as ignorant and optimistic as women that get pregnant right away and everything is so easy for them. I’m so bitter and jealous.

I try to remind myself that I come from fertile women and I just need a little extra help to unlock my potential. I wish I could just turn off all the negative thoughts.”

I had to have a procedure called a hysterosalpingogram (HSG), for a HSG a doctor fills your lady parts with dye and then a radiologist takes images of how that dye travels through said lady parts. “It was amazing to see what my organs look like. The fallopian tubes literally look like a strand of hair!” Radiologist said everything looked fine except for what looked like fibroids or polyps in my uterus.  I asked if they could be scar tissue from the D&C, she said yes. “I started to tear up. She said its really easy to fix and remove. I cried all the way back to work. Its just one more set back. One more hurdle. I’m so over it.”

My infertility specialist wanted me to scrap the month and have the procedure to remove the scar tissue. I was so frustrated. This cycle I had already been on heavy ovulation medications for two weeks, I didn’t want this month to have been in vain. I insisted we continue and see this month through and if I didn’t get pregnant than I would have the procedure. I did not want another fucking procedure. I dreaded it. The thought of it gave me flashbacks to the D&C and being tried to the stirrups. “I want it to happen this cycle so I don’t have to have the procedure. This ordeal makes me feel weak because I want to give up so quickly.”

We continued with the cycle and I was given an ultrasound so the doctor could see if I was ready to ovulate. I wasn’t. It was disappointing because I would have to double my medication for 5 days and come back again. I asked my husband if it was hard for him to see an ultrasound image again since our miscarriage – he didn’t like it. Five days later we returned and this time I had 3 eggs that were ready! I was told I had a 40% of getting pregnant this month and a 6% chance of getting multiple. She asked, “you have a chance of having triplets, do you want to continue?” The thought of triplets was horrifying to me but we said yes without skipping a beat.

We were given medication that James would have to inject into my stomach at home which would cause me to ovulate within 48 hours.  I hate needles and shots but it wasn’t bad. So for the next few days we started sending in applications for a stork…

I was told to wait 10-14 days before taking a pregnancy test since the ovulation injection could cause a false-positive. I waited 8. Those are the 2 longest minutes of your life! But there it was, a super faint 2nd line! I knew it was too early so I kept it to myself and tried to not get too excited. Two days later I took another test and the 2nd line was slightly darker. I decided I would tell my husband that night. I got one pink and one blue bandana and I made signs for our two dogs to wear around their necks, “I’m going to be a big brother!” and “I’m going to be a big brother (again!)” I told my husband to call the dogs. He thought the bandanas were cute but in true man style he was completely oblivious to the signs they had around their necks. He just wasn’t getting it so I practically shouted “I’m pregnant!”

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A blood test confirmed the pregnancy and this time my hormone levels were elevated appropriately. At 5 weeks along we went back in for an ultrasound to take a look. Although I had had so much fear of being pregnant again, I was feeling really positive this time.  So when the ultrasound tech didn’t say anything right away my heart sank. Not again! I couldn’t bring myself to even look at the screen. Then she spoke, “Do you see those two sacks?” My eyes pop open!

“Twins?!”

“Yep!”

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Twins!

We had never wanted twins but we were so excited that I was pregnant again and that everything looked good so far.  The first day we couldn’t stop laughing about it. The next day I cried all day at my desk. I was terrified! I come from a large family, I’ve seen firsthand how hard one newborn can be at the beginning. I didn’t know how we would manage. Thankfully my bestfriend knew just what to say: FullSizeRender (5)

Thank you for sticking with me! I plan to post at least once a week. Stay tuned for NICU, Postpartum Depression, and Other Things That Suck. All with lots of never before shared photos of A&A during our 133 days in the NICU.

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Let’s Get Started, Shall We

Welcome to my first post! Please begin by reading the “About” section.

When the seed was planted for this blog, the biggest roadblock, other than coming up with a name, was where to start. Currently my twins, A & A, are 15 months old and so much has happened! How could I begin without explaining where we’ve been, but we’ve been everywhere, including near to death. My daughter, Baby Squirrel, has been through so much that I’ve even forgotten about many of her diagnoses that have been overshadowed by additional diagnoses.

Regret hit me for not starting earlier. Then I recalled I had started earlier. Shortly after the twins were born while they were both still in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU), I was in the deep depths of misery. I would spend my time between trips to the hospital scouring the internet for hopeful stories about preemies and VSDs and Dandy-Walker Syndrome, and all the rest of the scary words being thrown at us daily. I remember even googling, “are kids worth it?”  My husband and I had always wanted kids. We had struggled with infertility for a year before having a miscarriage and beginning fertility treatment. I knew I was not OK, I needed help.

The following post I submitted to March of Dimes: Share Your Story:
09/2014
31 Weeker B/G Twins in NICU + Special Needs Child (Cleft lip/palate & Dandy-Walker Syndrome)

Where to begin… My husband and I tried for over a year to get pregnant before seeing a fertility specialist. We had been pregnant once but I had a miscarriage at 8 weeks. Turns out I have PCOS (Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome) and don’t ovulate normally. However, after one round of ovulation therapy (and a warning that we might conceive triplets) I did in fact conceive. At 5 weeks we learned it was twins. The first day we laughed. The next day I cried, all day. I was so scared. One baby is hard enough work on its own. After a few days when it sank in a little we were so excited.

The pregnancy started out well. At our gender ultrasound we didn’t learn the genders but we did learn that Baby A had a cleft lip & probably palate. We were devastated.  At the time it felt like the worst news in the world. Like our world with perfect healthy babies was over. Later we learned Baby A was a girl, I felt so bad for her. I felt like we wouldn’t be able to take newborn pictures of her or want people to see her. Feelings that I feel very guilty about now. After meeting with a geneticist my husband and I decided to get an amniocentesis to find out if either of our twins suffered from any larger chromosomal problems. After the traumatic procedure and 2 very long weeks we learned that our son & daughter were chromosomally  perfect. Over time we met with what would be her craniofacial team and saw how they would help fix her clefts. It was so reassuring and our fears were greatly relieved.  I thought that was the end of our worries.

Unfortunately our baby girls story gets worse. At a later ultrasound we got hit with another huge bombshell – a defect in our baby girl’s brain. They found that our baby had Dandy-Walker syndrome, a congenital birth defect affecting the cerebellum & 4th ventricle. They said it looked mild but Dandy-Walker syndrome can cause physical & intellectual impairment to severe mental retardation. There is no way to see how it will express itself. Again we were devastated. Her brain! No parent ever dreams of having a child with special needs. But every time i worried about her she would give me a kick. Like she was reassuring me she would be fine. Although I was heartbroken I had so much faith in her.

Before pregnancy I always said I was pro-choice and I would never bring a special needs child into the world. But she was already my baby girl. I could feel her moving inside of me. I was shocked when doctors gave us the option for a “reduction” to abort just her. We didn’t consider it for a minute.

My pregnancy continued on. We did research and came to terms with another of her conditions. I had Braxton-Hicks contractions everyday starting in my 2nd trimester. After being evaluated by Labor & Deliver they determined I just had an irritable uterus and lots of contractions were just my thing. Unless they got painful I was OK.

At 31 weeks, 3 weeks into my maternity leave, I started having contractions that felt like period cramps. I tracked them and they became more frequent. I called in and they told me I should go into L&D for observation. At 6pm on 9/3/2014 I was chitchatting with a nurse as she tried to get the heart rate monitors on my belly. She was having a little trouble finding baby A so she went out to get an ultrasound machine. I wasn’t concerned and told my husband to use this time to go move the car and grab my bag in case they wanted to observe me over night. A male nurse came back in and after locating baby A got on his phone and called someone “STAT”. I asked what was wrong but he wouldn’t tell me. A few people entered my room and checked baby A again and called more people in. They told me baby girls heart rate was under 80 and she would have to come out via emergency c section. I was so scared. I tried calling my husband to get him back in the room. They grabbed me and started giving me an IV and telling me about general anesthesia. Right as my husband returned they were rushing me out of the room and down to the OR. Once I was on the table I could feel fast moving hands all over me but couldn’t see anything due to the infamous blue curtain. I was so scared they were going to cut me  open before I was under I kept yelling “I’M STILL AWAKE! I’M STILL AWAKE!”

My babies were born at 6:29pm. Baby girl was 3 pounds 6.3 oz. Baby boy was 4 pounds 5 oz.

I woke up in so much pain. My husband had escorted our babies to the NICU where I wouldn’t see them till the next day.

The next day I was determined to get into a wheelchair so I could see my babies. When I first saw my daughter I was shocked by how big her cleft was. It was completely up and through her nose. That was the least of our worries. Both our babies’ lungs were underdeveloped. It killed me to watch my son fight to breathe. I cried nonstop the first few days every time I saw him. Baby girl had the same condition but didn’t seem to be struggling as much. A few days later when they sent me home they told us to expect them to remain in the NICU for 4-6 weeks. Leaving them was the hardest thing.

During the first week we learned our baby girl ALSO has a hole in her heart. It was presented to us as a very large hole that could require open-heart surgery. I was so scared she was going to die. I ran out of the NICU and collapsed in a chair in the hallway, repeating to my husband “I can’t lose her, I can’t lose her…” Later we met with a cardiologist who explained that although it’s one of the largest VSDs he’s ever seen they usually close on their own in a few years. That he would not operate on it. Due to the hole in her heart her lungs have excess fluid in them making her breathing fast & hard. In order to help with the fluid in her lungs they had to give her diuretics which caused her to lose even more weight. Seeing her so tiny compared to her brother is so difficult.

Now almost 3 weeks later our son is doing great. He is off air and up to 5 pounds. We are working on breast & bottle feeding. Once he learns how to eat he can come home. We all hope that is in the next 2 weeks.

Our daughter has finally started to gain some weight back but she is still a pound and a half smaller than her brother. She struggles to breathe and they change her breathing machines often. It still kills me to see her so skeletal. Holding her is scary due to her small size. Plus she has terrible reflux so her feeding tube had to be pushed down into her intestine. Most days feel like 1 step forward 2 steps back.

As for our daughter’s Dandy-Walker syndrome, her ventricles do not seem to be swelling at this time but the doctors still think she will need a lot of extra help. Its so heartbreaking to hear. I hate having to “wait and see.” I am so overwhelmed with fear of having a child with special needs, let alone having another baby to care for at the same time. I cry most of the days. My husband is so amazing and supportive but I feel like I am drowning in despair.  I have an appointment with a psychiatrist to discuss possible PPD.

I knew our twins would most likely be in the NICU but I never realized how hard it would be. My husband stayed home with me for 2 weeks to help me recover but now is back to work till they come home. My routine is going to 9am rounds by myself. Listening to the doctors talk to each other makes everything sound so scary and I don’t understand most of it. I try breastfeeding my son and then go home and pump every 2 hours. At 4:30pm I meet my husband over at the NICU again. Its so draining. Pumping all the time and going back and forth to the NICU takes up all our time. Our babies aren’t home and I still don’t get time to sleep. I am hoping its easier once they come home.

But I am also terrified of them coming home. I’ve seen them struggle to live. I’ve seen how fragile they can be. I’ve become to rely on their monitors to show me they are OK. I don’t trust myself with my own kids. It might be PPD but I am terrified of being a mom. I’m scared I won’t survive it. I feel like every thing and every thought is overwhelming. I’m terrified of having a child with special needs. But I also don’t want to set up a self-fulfilling prophesy by treating her like she has special needs.

Right now I pray my daughter keeps gaining weight as that will hopefully help many of her health issues.

I just wish I could fast forward in time.

Phew, that was painful to revisit.

In posts to follow I will work on getting you all up to date with all the fun stuff thats happened since their exciting arrival.

Till then,

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PS. Ironically I don’t think I swore at all in this post. I’ll work on that.