Sunday, August 3, 2008

12 Weeks

So I’ve started a blog. Woohoo. While this is in effect a pregnancy blog, it is not to be confused with a ‘pregnancy blog’. By that I mean I will not be recording fascinating weekly insights into my digestive system, swapping handy high-fibre diet hints or debating the various pros and cons of breast v. bottle (though breast is best, as any fule kno). These things are of course all very worthy of heated and lengthy discussion, but frankly a bit dull for those of us who are not presently knocked up. And I give you my word that you will not read the words ‘fundus’, ‘mucus’ or ‘discharge’ on these pages; not once, not ever, so help me.

Here’s me now. I haven’t gained any weight yet which is a bit unusual, in a bloody fantastic kind of way. There’s a small bump there, but that’s bloat.


12 weeks down…

So, first trimester. Thank CHRIST that’s over. Things are back to being quasi-normal in our nest, after what can only be described as a prize cunt of a time. Finding out we were pregnant was fun of course, though D was a tad unprepared - I sprung it on him while he was washing up and really quite annoyed (I have never in my life known a male who is not annoyed whilst washing up). For a day we were all high and warm-fuzzied and amazed at ourselves, which was nice. If only we’d known how good we had it that day.

If you are not and have not been pregnant, don’t ever let anyone tell you first trimester is ‘fun’ (or worse, ‘magical’). It’s not. It’s foul. Firstly, the moodiness. Oh lordy, the moodiness… Unlike PMT, where your irrational weepiness / anger / lethargy is easily identifiable and therefore able to be put aside somewhat, pregnancy moods are literally like being possessed. You deeply, truly believe in your moods, and act accordingly. I have been so angry at certain times that my heart rate has started racing and I can hear my own blood pumping in my ears. As Ms. J said to me, it’s like you’re trapped inside yourself – you know you’re being evil, but there’s nothing you can do about it. My advice to anyone new to the preggers game is to just go with it, and don’t think you need to be all ‘hail-me-and-my-innate-nature-mother-goddess-within’ about it. If you feel shit, you feel shit. Go to bed with a good book.

Something a lot of the books and whatnot tend to skip over is the initial shock of a lifestyle shift. And I don’t mean giving up fags and drinking exactly (though that’s not a walk in the park either, frankly). I was unprepared for the sense of loss I experienced for a couple of weeks in the very beginning… it’s hard to put my finger on exactly what I mean by ‘loss’, but it very much felt like I was leaving a large part of my life behind, and that some significant things in my life had come to an end. I guess it’s to do with becoming a mother, the looker-afterer, and the leaving behind of the last vestiges of hedonistic youth (I have a deep and pathological fear that once bub comes I will just –poof! – turn into a MUM, wearing too-high mum jeans and saying things like ‘Oh and I suppose Mr. Nobody took it, did he?’). Obviously, this does not mean I resented or regretted being pregnant – au contraire! - but the two feelings, joy and loss, co-existed in equal parts for a time, and that was pretty overwhelming (at these times I could’ve murdered a few ciggies and glass or 3 of wine, let me tell you).

Then there’s the sickness. Mine was quite bad, and struck while I was in the middle of a 6-week teaching prac. I don’t believe there is any environment more suited to inducing ‘morning’ sickness than a large primary school. That coupled with the psychotic moodiness made for some pretty interesting teaching experiences. Several times I burst into tears spontaneously, experiencing a rush of heart-cockles-being-warmed (some little tacker running his heart out in an athletics race, for example) and at others I could quite literally have back-handed one of the little effers across their smart little face without thinking twice (luckily, common sense prevailed). The sickness meant I quite literally could only eat fruit and cheese sambos at this stage, and anything more exotic than that made me retch violently. And believe me, kids eat wayyyy more exotic things than that.

I promised I would not talk digestion, and I won’t, except to say that the expulsion of waste from my body became a temperamental business ( lots of one, none of the other – pregnant women know what I mean). Boobs, much bigger. Skin, acne-prone. Dizzy spells. Exhaustion: That was probably the hardest bit. Ms. L, who is also currently up duff, was so exhausted through her first trimester recently that during her workday she would nip into the toilets to rest her poor weary head on the toilet roll holder for a few minutes several times a day. It’s a glamorous business, pregnancy.

This is getting dangerously close to the ‘pregnancy blog’ side of things, so I’ll get her back on course and wrap her up. Pregnancy books. Very handy, naturally. Everyone in the whole entire world who has ever had a baby has What To Expect When You’re Expecting. I do too. It’s a great book, full of sound information and advice. I only have two problems with it. One is the constant referring to ‘your husband’ (blergh), and the other is the front cover. To wit:


Doesn't she just look like a barrel of laughs? Though to be fair, this image probably freaked me out more than it should have, as at this point in my pregnancy I was feeling less like that, and more like this:



I also have Kaz Cooke’s Up The Duff which is good – irreverent, funny, more realistic and all that, though a tad too cool for school if you ask me (never happy, am I?)

Apart from that I am not allowed to eat anything that I like or that I might accidentally enjoy, I have the mental computation rate of a single cell organism, and have just embarked on the great Hospital / Midwife Choosing Adventure which has already had me in tears twice, and which last week resulted in a bitchy battle of wills with a sour, nasal-voiced woman named Janette (it was over the phone, but I just know she wore those stupid bangle things that hold your sleeves up, and had glasses with a jeweled neck strap).

But of course it’s not all bad… all my nasty bastard first trimester symptoms just disappeared overnight last week, just like that. This of course sent us into a tailspin, convinced as I was that something terrible had happened, and we rushed off for an emergency ‘reassurance’ scan. Everything was fine of course, and seeing the little grub’s heart beating furiously away, its funny wriggly movements and its tiny little face was pretty bloody awesome indeed (even maybe magical). And here's a lovely photo of the happy couple...

5 comments:

mu said...

aw bewdiful. I hope it has your chin and his forehead. and your wit. and his dish-doing skills.

xxx

kimba said...

Hi love.
A great read...

but let me say, you MUST go all innate goddess n'shit!! (You knew I was going to say that didn't you. I am bloody predictable...)

I highly, most most highly recommend (darn, I thought about placing another comma there after the second 'highly' but dithered too long) Ina May Gaskin's 'Spiritual Midwifery'.

An incredible book of birthing stories and wisdom, and yes lots of beardy weirdies (and that's just the women...)

Also, consider coming to Melbs and doing Rhea Dempsey's course 'Embracing the Intensity'. We found it an absolute essential. You can stay with us and I will treat you like a full goddess.

www.birthingwisdom.com.au

First trimester sucks arse though, it's true...You can see why adding chronic but acute back pain to the mix was no walk in the park...thanks again for your love during that time.

xxx

Trace said...

Dear Gravida.

I look forward to more.

M(rs) Savage.

xx

doidoi6 said...

Oh youse are gorgeous! This is great, I'm looking forward to reading/seeing more x It reminded me that I was doing prac during my first trimester with James. It sucked! x

sambo said...

hey B. Am loving this blog.

Haven't got all the way through, but am so far in grateful agree-ance with most comments.

I am concealing all pregnancy news from those who don't need to know-because as I've also found, 'once were strangers' suddenly become best friends with your tummy and dive for it.

I have developed moves like a martial artist to combat the unexpected hands in inappropriate places. But the consequences are having to feel the social awkwardness to surprized attackers, who suddenly wonder why the right to touch you uninvited has been snatched away.

Hence, no news is good news.

but the news and advice has begun to trickle through. I put a special request to mum to say if I share special info with YOU, it's because you have the privilege of no other, being privy to every ache and pain. But who wants all and sundry to call a week later with sympathy, when the moment has past?

Anyways. Sounds like I need my own blog.

thanks for sharing your experience with the voice of sanity.

cheers
sam