Saturday 24 February 2007

Pause

I might leave this blog alone for a bit. It's not really helping - it's just encouraging me to dwell on things, which is not good. See you in a few weeks.

Thursday 22 February 2007

Reactions

People just don't know how to react.

It's very confusing, to be told that someone has gained a much-wanted pregnancy (yay!) and then simultaneously learn that it might nearly kill them (oh!).

The standard response is for people to gloss over the illness part. There are several possible reasons for this:

(1) They hear "sickness," they think "morning sickness, oh yes, I know about that, all pregnant women get that. She's making a big fuss about nothing. We all know what a drama queen she is," and they refuse to let me get away with it.

(2) They hear "terrible illness" and they think, "What the fuck am I supposed to say to that? I'll just pretend I didn't hear it."

(3) They hear "debilitation" and they think, "How awful, poor thing. But, well, she's pregnant, this is good. We'll focus on that, not the bad stuff."

Argh, this post is beginning to sound petulant. It's not. I understand. All the above reasons are valid, apart from (a). Hyperemesis is NOT morning sickness. It's much worse; it's potentially life threatening.

But I won't die from it, because modern medicine has a very simple cure (IV drip). And yes, I am a drama queen. They don't put you on a drip until you have been ill for weeks and you are genuinely in danger of death, but hey. They save your life.

God, but I loved that drip. Sometimes, when they added potassium, it hurt. But I didn't care. It made me better. And the nurses, oh those ministering angels. For so long the doctors had failed to make me better or even appear to care very much, and Ally was desperate with worry, and they were reluctant to do home visits, and I just wanted somebody, some super-hero, to swoop down out of the skies, scoop me up in their arms and make it all right, and that's what the nurses and their drips and their smiles and their lovely clean sheets did for me.

I loved being in hospital.

And now here I am, in this weird limbo, and you're all pleased for me, and I'm pleased for me, in fact I'm floating about in a bubble of happiness, and...

You want to know something really really awful?

I'll be disappointed if I don't get ill. Part of me will. The drama queen part. And the part that likes the idea of an entire pregnancy spent at home, like last time. The part that refuses to remember how absolutely sheerly flippin' awful it was. And the part that'll be embarrassed if I turn out to be absolutely fine, after I've made such a bloody fuss about it all.

And I have to stop thinking "when," I have to stop thinking "if," and I have to start thinking "not." No. I won't. It won't. I'm different this time. My body is different. Nothing will be the same. I'll keep going to work and it will be much better than being ill, and I will do all that stuff - the acupuncture, the hypnotherapy, the shiatsu, the massage, the yoga, the toxin-free household, the lack of stress, the vitamins, the organic food, the resting, the relaxation, the positive thinking, the positive thinking, the positive thinking, the positive thinking...

Extremes

It's a strange position I'm in at the moment. Although part of me is repeating the mantra I'll be fine, I'll be fine, don't worry, another part is aware that this may be my last week of comfort for a long time.

I'm five weeks pregnant. The sickness kicked in at six weeks last time.

Next week. Next week, it could all start happening.

But how odd, to be sitting around and waiting maybe for extreme debilitation. Particularly when it was a conscious choice. Easily the most severe illness I have ever experienced, and here I am deliberately setting out to (maybe) go through it all again.

And let's face it, it's hard to feel sympathy for someone who has not only purposely walked into such a situation, but who is facing an outcome so happy... how could it possibly be a bad thing?

Normally when you're so ill that you can't walk for weeks on end, you expect death as a likely result, and nothing else. Debilitation is terrifying because of what it might lead to, as much as how it feels. And normally it is accompanied by the fear that it might not stop. But hyperemesis always stops. By abortion or by birth, it always stops.

I thought about abortion last time, when I was so ill I wanted to die. When it had been going for weeks and simply wouldn't end. But I couldn't do that. What a waste, apart from anything else. I'd only end up doing it all again.

It's all academic, anyway. I won't get ill. I won't. I refuse.

Fine

I am fine, by the way. Tired, but not dysfunctionally so. Occasional bouts of very faint nausea. Also bouts of energy.

And, despite nagging worries that are increasing as next week approaches, I'm very happy.

This is what I wanted, and life is very good. And could get even better very soon. Very glad, I am, that I have Important Project to distract me. That was good timing.

Weird

Oh, it is a weird limbo I'm in at the moment.

Next week. That's when it could all happen. That's when it kicked in last time. I'm simultaneously planning and plotting for what I'll do / how I'll cope if I get ill, and trying to tell myself that No, I won't get ill.

I'm a bit scared.

And trying not to be.

It's doing my head in.

No it's not. I'm fine. I'll be fine. It's fine.

Monday 19 February 2007

So Far So Good

I'm fine, by the way.

I keep getting bouts of PMT-like hormonal imbalance - i.e. I'm a grumpy unpredictable cow. No change there then. But I seem to have some of those tranquilising hormones knocking about too, which is good. I'm also farting like a trooper, and my boobs have started exuding a very particular type of Pregnancy Sweat, which has its very own smell. I remember it clearly from last time. Most odd. Personally I don't think it smells too bad, but others may not agree...

It's a messy business, procreation.

I have a relaxed week planned. Lots of yoga, early to bed every night. Well, that's the plan. Unfortunately I haven't yet reached the point where coffee and alcohol are unpalatable. So I keep wanting beer. Bother.

I nipped out this morning to buy nice biscuits from M&S for my colleagues, as part of the traditional Good News ritual, but then realised that if anything goes wrong I don't really want all my colleagues to be doing the what-on-earth-do-we-say-to-her dance, so have decided to hang fire on a General Office Announcement until I reach 12 weeks. Which means I'll have to eat the biscuits all to myself. What a shame.

I need some fatter trousers.

Seriously. I'm blooming all over the place. Breasts, tummy, you name it. I feel ripe. I probably smell ripe, too. I look pregnant already.

Last time, I didn't have to combine pregnancy with work. I was too ill. I went off sick at 8 weeks and didn't return until a year later. But this time I'm determined not to be ill. Which means I'll have to sit around in a neat prim office being all primal and earthy and, well, pregnant.

Right. I'm off to feel smug and pat my tummy some more.

Friday 16 February 2007

Disappointments and Pink Lines

The alarm was doing that thing it does of going off every five minutes, and I was doing that thing I do of pressing snooze and not waking up. At one point I surfaced enough to remember, this morning is the morning.

And then I woke up.

In the bathroom I dipped a little stick in a little pot, and started to count. Within seconds there was one pink line. I checked the instructions again. Two pink lines, if you're pregnant. Two.

Bugger.

And I felt frustrated, and embarrassed, and humiliated. Because I'd done it again. Told the world, told myself, that I felt pregnant, that I had all these symptoms... weight gain, indigestion, sore breasts, recurring faint nausea...

That was the worst bit. The nausea. Even though I know it and have had it proved over and over, I hate it when my brain shows me, yet again, how good it is at conjuring nausea out of absolutely fuck all.

But the instructions said wait five minutes, and absolutely on no account let anything splash above the line. Which means sitting there like a lemon for 300 bloody seconds, holding the dipstick and counting...

I glanced at it, and thought I could see a faint second line. Very very faint. Probably not even there at all.

I didn't even have my glasses on, I'd been so desperate for the loo.

Stupid bloody eyes, hallucinating pink lines all over the place.

I looked down at my knees, and counted some more. Then I allowed myself another glance.

Not quite so faint this time, but still pretty faint.

I checked the instructions again. They said that one line may be considerably fainter than the other...

Still, I didn't believe it at first.

But ten minutes later, the line had become more solid. There was no denying it. It was definitely there.

Yup.

I'M PREGNANT!

Thursday 15 February 2007

Positive Thinking?

My partner thinks my periods are going to get later and later as long as I want to get preggers.

He calls it the power of positive thinking. I call it my stupid brain making a fool of me again...

Not that it's started. My period, I mean. Still no sign. But I was grumpy today. Then again, I had plenty of reasons to be grumpy.

I was going to do a test tomorrow. But now that he's said that...

The thing is, I really hate it when I do a test and it comes out negative. Hence wanting to put it off as long as possible, to ensure it's positive. It's not just the disappointment, it's the not believing. Because they're not 100% accurate, and what if it's wrong, and

The only thing that'll convince me I'm not up the duff is red and runny. And the only thing that'll convince I am is blue and linear. In the meantime, I vacillate, as usual between "I'm sure I am" and "Nah, I'm definitely not" - sometimes swapping between the two several times per hour.

It's all very tiresome.

Tuesday 13 February 2007

The Lies We Tell Ourselves

I just checked my diary, and it turns out my period was THREE DAYS LATE last month.

I keep insisting to myself that I'm never late, and at first I just kept telling myself I must have made a mistake.

But no, I didn't.

Bother.

Preset Emotion

I can't be the first person to have thought of this, but I kind of like the idea... no, I don't. I hate it. It's a rubbish idea. But it tickles me, for some reason...

Evolutionarily speaking, our main purpose as animals is to procreate, which makes it the job of women to have babies and not do much else, so maybe evolution just kind of assumed that all women would always want babies at all times, and rather than let us come up with our own emotional response, it just stuck a pre-set in: When woman has period, therefore woman shall get all grumpy and depressed.

Whether we think we want babies or not, evolution has decreed that not being pregnant shall royally piss us off. Every single fucking time.

My back is aching now, too. Period due some time in the next 12 hours, I'd say.

Grug

A sudden explosion of anger, frustration and depression, all in one go. Apparently triggered by things not going well at work, but accompanied by a lingering fizzing-in-the-head which generally signifies a bout of PMT.

Of course, it could be pregnancy hormones making me narky... or it could be just that I am naturally narky...

My partner believes that the hoping and the wishing make your periods late.

How fucking infuriating would that be, if one's body and mind were somehow able to conspire amongst themselves to tease you and then throw you against a wall, just when you need it least?

I hate my body sometimes. And I think it hates me, too.

Monday 12 February 2007

About GInger

I think we might need to have a word about ginger.

This is a pre-emptive thing, and please nobody feel bad, and you probably have tons of experience of ginger working for nausea / sickness...

But it doesn't work on me. Never has. Been tried several times. Doesn't touch it.

So let's just get that out of the way now. Don't recommend ginger. Because I might get annoyed with you, and that wouldn't really be fair, because you would only be giving me well-meaning advice, and I am taking zinc pills, even though zinc is the thing that ginger has in it and therefore probably won't work...

But please don't recommend ginger. I already know about ginger. I've been told about ginger several times. But it doesn't work on me. Sorry.

Anyway, now that we've got that out of the way, I can give you the news....

...which is that there isn't any. I was due on today. Nothing happened. I don't think I've had PMT at all in the last two weeks (I normally get two distinct bouts). I threw up, a tiny bit, in the middle of last week. Nothing since then.

And yes, this means that you wouldn't even have any reason to give me The Ginger Advice, seeing as I'm not actually nauseous or vomiting. But. You know. Sometimes it pays to be pre-emptive.

So, anyway. No period, a teeny-tiny throwing-up event, no PMT, slightly sore boobs.

This could mean anything.

But I won't do a test until Friday. Sorry, but I just won't. Well, I probably won't. And anyway, owing to an unplanned coincidence of events, I am also on tenterhooks this week for other news, concerning Important Project. And that's mostly distracting me from thinking about The Baby Thing.

But I do like the idea of both arriving at once. That would be cool.

Wednesday 7 February 2007

Whirligig

This blog is so very specific to me and my concerns that nobody much reads it at all. It's a proper little secret corner of the internet. And now I have this mad urge to go wild and run all over the blog, whirling and shouting and taking my clothes off, shouting out obscenities and chucking custard at the walls. Just cos nobody would notice if I did.

This morning, still feeling nauseous and worried about how it would affect Important Project, I played loud music and danced around the kitchen. I remembered something me and the hypnotist discovered: That nausea has a buzziness about it that, if you concentrate really hard, you can just about convince yourself represents some kind of druggy high - instead of sheer fork-in-brain hell.

That's why I danced. To pretend to myself that, far from being nauseous, I was just off my head. And it worked! The faster I whirled, the better I felt. I spun round in circles, I jumped up and down, I wheeled back and forth between kitchen and hallway, my eyes closed, my hips swaying, and remembering a memory of a disco I went to when I was fifteen years old.

It was great. Can the cure for nausea really be that simple? Am I going to spend nine months spinning madly about the kitchen?

Doesn't sound so bad really, does it?

Early Morning Present

I just threw up. Out of the blue, not long after getting up.

I don't want it to mean I'm pregnant.

Not because I don't want to be pregnant - I do. But last time, the sickness didn't start until I was six weeks pregnant. This would be only three*. It wouldn't bode well.

My Important Project will be finished in three days. I'm so nearly there. But it's something I can't do when I'm nauseous. I'm physically incapable.

I'm hoping it was the zinc tablet I took at an unusual time of day, because I forgot to take it last night. It's ironic, really. The zinc is to prevent sickness. Ginger is full of it. But I noticed once before that I got nauseous an hour or so after taking one...

I have all these plans to use hypnosis, relaxation, CBT to combat nausea and try and break the connection between nausea and vomiting. Nausea is such hell you see, and chucking up alleviates it, so in the past I've encouraged myself to do it, if only to relieve the incessant buzzing stick-a-fork-in-your-brain that is nausea. But then I ended up dehydrated. Nearly dead. On a drip.

So anyway, this morning was only mild nausea. Very mild. But I had no control over the barfing bit. I may be living in cloud cuckoo land.

I'm not going to get ill again. I'm not. I'm not, I'm not, I refuse.


*Confusingly, the length of a pregnancy is measured from the first day of your last period - despite the fact that you almost certainly conceived two weeks later than that.

Friday 2 February 2007

Exhausted

I'm so incredibly tired. I've had a really busy week, so it's not surprising. But...

And I keep getting indigestion.

Just thought I'd mention.

Thursday 1 February 2007

Dates

A week on Monday.

That's when I might know.

But I'm going to wait until that Friday before doing any tests.

That's a whole fortnight from now!

[expires from impatience]

Signs and Portents and OH FUCKING HELL

And... we're off again.

The official fertile period has passed, and we're into The Waiting Bit. Or rather, The Watching Bit.

Ooh! I just shouted at someone for being an idiot! Maybe I'm pregnant?
No, they're just an idiot.

Ooh! I smell a bit funny! Am I...?
No, I just need a bath.

Ooh! My skin is all glowy and lovely! Could it be...?
No. I'm just healthy.

Ooh! My breasts are sore! Maybe...
No. My glands are swollen.

Ooh! I keep farting!

Ooh! I'm constipated!

Ooh! My toes hurt!

My body is having a laugh. It lies awake nights thinking of new and bizarre potentially-pregnant symptoms to goad me with.

And it's not even as though I've been trying very hard. I completely missed the Magical Four-Day Fertility Window, because... well... there's this thing called life. It's relentless. It happens every day, whether you like it or not. It makes you tired, and busy, and grumpy, and distracted, and has no interest whatsoever in monthly bloody cycles.

And anyway. My aunt says that the more you try, the less likely you are to conceive. That fertility kits and all that rubbish just get in the way. Spontaneity. That's what you need.

But what the fuck is that all about? Are people seriously suggesting that eeny-tiny little smelly swimmy things and itchy-titchy little eggs can tell how much you want them to meet and make friends? That the sperm are all tapping each other on the shoulder and whispering in each other's ears, "Nah, she wants it too much. Let's play bouncy castle in this giant womb instead."?

Well, I decided that The Rest Of My Life was a bit too pressing this month and that really I'd be quite happy to wait until next month, and it didn't really matter... and all I achieved was to miss The Little Opportunity Window whilst simultaneously believing that maybe if I pretended not to care I could catch the little buggers unaware. And all this means is that I'm even less likely to be pregnant than normal, but no less likely to be watching myself like a hawk.

I had a funny taste in my mouth the other day. I'm sure it was a sign...

On Being Anonymous

Once I'd set this anonymous blog up and posted (retrospectively) a few posts, it started to lose its appeal.

It was cathartic, to be able to splurge on a whole load of stuff I hadn't been able to write about previously. But once I'd got it out of my system I didn't feel so bad about it any more, and therefore didn't feel the need to blog it.

Or maybe it's just that old menstrual cycle again...

There are pros and cons to both anonymous and non-anonymous. When you're anonymous you have to censor yourself constantly to make sure you're not giving your identity away. When you're non-anonymous, you have to monitor to guard against writing anything you'd rather certain people didn't read...

The only way to have total free rein seems to be not give a fuck about anybody or anyone, in which case you'd probably not be angstridden enough to want to blog in the first place.

I reckon fiction is the way forward. If I wrote fiction I could bare my soul in great detail, and as long as I bared a few other people's souls along the way, nobody could ever know what was real or what wasn’t. "I have a good imagination" is the perfect get-out clause.