In retrospect, my pregnancy with Javi went pretty smoothly. If you had asked me in the moment, I would have said otherwise. I had so much anxiety about every little thing, especially during the first trimester. It eased up in the later trimesters, but did not go away. I suffer from bad allergies that can occasionally result in asthma, and one night during the second trimester, I had a mild attack and frantically had Ryan take me to the ER. I was convinced the baby wasn't getting enough oxygen (all totally untrue). Other than a BS modified bed rest for a few weeks during my third trimester, overall it was a pretty uneventful pregnancy.
Here I am, the day before my due date, sightseeing with my mom.
On my due date, I woke up to get ready for a doctor's appointment. As I was plugging my phone into a charger, I heard a weird snap. With everything going on with your body at that point, you don't really think anything is weird. Until I stepped into the shower and had a bit of a gush and realized my water probably broke. After a quick and messy confirmation at the doctor's appointment, we were off to labor and delivery! My labor progressed quickly, I got the epidural and then it was time to push. And then I pushed and pushed and pushed and could feel no progression. I've run a marathon before, and I can tell you that pushing for 3 hours with no progression is 10 times worse. The worst part is that I had a doctor and 3 nurses (as well as Ryan and my mom) in there with me the whole time and nobody said anything to me. They just kept encouraging me to go. Finally at hour 3 (and I had a big clock right in my line of sight so I was very aware of the time) I finally asked, "what is going on?" The doctor said that I was pushing really well, but that for some reason, the baby just wasn't crowning. They could see the head, but after each push it was like I was sucking him right back in. Then, she said they would let me push for another hour, and if I could just get him a bit further, they might be able to use a vacuum. After another hour, they would insist I have a c section. I could not fathom pushing for another hour. There was no way that after all my exhaustion, I would be able to get somewhere I couldn't when I had more energy. I knew that it wasn't going to happen. Through huge tears of disappointment, guilt, shame and exhaustion, I asked them to just do the c-section.
Right before the pushing.
A c-section was not my plan. Even though I knew that anything can happen during labor & delivery, I had not mentally or emotionally prepared for a c-section. Luckily, I was so exhausted by that point, that I didn't have any room for fear. The worst parts of a c-section are hearing your baby cry for the first time and not getting to see him. Then, continuing to hear him cry and being in the middle of being sewn back-up, Frankenstein-style, which, by the way, you can totally feel. I didn't feel pain, but I felt a lot of very strong tugging which is extremely disturbing. The kind anesthesiologist took my phone, took a picture of Javi and brought it back for us to see. The first glimpse of my son was a picture on my iPhone. Definitely not Lifetime movie material.
This is it! This is the first glimpse I got of Javi.
Ryan and I right before the race
It occurs to me now the similarity between the marathon disappointment and the c-section disappointment. Once Javi was out and was a whopping 8 pounds 7 ounces (for reference, I am 5'2), my doctor reassured me that he was too big and I was too small and he would not have come out vaginally. Even with this medical reassurance, I felt like a total failure. While I agree that c-sections shouldn't be the first option, there is such a stigma with having one that even if it was medically necessary, it still made me feel terrible. Nearly a year later and I still feel terrible about it. What if I had just pushed for another hour? I remember doing skin-to-skin with Javi and being simultaneously elated to finally see his face, but also so devastated that I had to have a c-section. Things certainly didn't start off on the right foot.
Believe it or not, this is the best picture of me right after the c-section. I hate how I look, but I'm sharing so you can see what 3 hours of pushing followed by a c-section looks like. It looks (and felt) like HELL!
This picture still gives me chills
Then, we were back home and the oxycodone part of the medication rotation ended. The day after I went off the meds, the shit hit the fan. I had NO IDEA how much the oxycodone was regulating my emotions. All new moms will tell you that the emotional rollercoast postpartum is intense. For me, it was as if the oxycodone had been serving as a dam, and the emotional floodwaters were building up, and building up and building up behind it. I was overwhelmed by a tidal wave of built up emotions as well as the downer of coming off the meds. I cried for two entire days straight and could not see any light at the end of the tunnel. I couldn't even see a tunnel. All I saw was this disaster that I had wished upon myself, something I clearly wasn't cut out for and how the hell was I going to survive with Ryan going back to work the next week leaving me alone for 12 hours straight each day. It was the darkest place I've ever gone in my life. My sister came to visit me a few days later (during Ryan's first day back). If you don't know my sister, she is a badass. She never seems scared of anything, she faced motherhood like an Olympic champion. She gave birth to two kids unmedicated, one of which was nearly 10 pounds. 10 pounds!!! I digress. She came to see me and I couldn't stop crying and I could tell that I was scaring her. That was when I knew something was really wrong. I called my mom, asked her to come stay with me and pulled out the therapist recommendations provided by my doctor's practice to all of their patients. I setup an appointment.
Here is my sister that night, showing me how to baby wear
I went to therapy weekly for about a month and it helped tremendously. Even though I was convinced I had postpartum depression, they assured me it was really just baby blues. I work at a high school for underprivileged teens. The whole time I was in this dark state, I couldn't stop thinking of the single moms of our students who have multiple kids on their own. I felt guilty for needing a babysitter every week day for 3 hours and for getting night nurses twice a week for a month. Guilt, shame, guilt, shame, a constant spiral. I feel incredibly relieved and lucky that I didn't have any addiction issues with the oxycodone, because that certainly could have been a possibility! But, we got through those 4 months of maternity leave and of course, right when I was heading back to work, I finally felt like I had gotten a hang of the whole stay at home thing. Going back to work was both hard and liberating. It was incredible to engage with adults again and to do something for which I am passionate. But it was also hard to feel like I was missing out on a lot of things with Javi. At this point, 11 months in, I feel like I've found a way to live between to the two worlds that works. I will never say that I've found balance, because balance is a total pipe dream. But, I think I've found a way to not hate myself too much on either end at the end of each day.
Javi is around 1 month here
Javi is around 3 months here
I hate for this all to sound so negative, because another part of those maternity months were exquisite moments of bliss with this beautiful soul with whom I'm utterly obsessed. As he was growing physically, I was also growing in unexpected ways. I built up a lot of resilience, I learned to run a household, I learned to trust my mom instincts, I learned that I love working and that even though I love my son immensely, my work is outside of the home. I also learned the hard truth that as much as you hope for equality, so much of the parenting/household burdens disproportionately fall on the mom, even if you are a working mom. Ryan is an amazing father and incredibly helpful, but the lack of decent paternity leave in this country means men do not have the opportunity to connect to their children in the way that is needed to be a lead (or co-lead) parent. That was probably the bitterest pill to swallow, one that I'm continuing to work on getting past on a daily basis. All I can say is that I am incredibly grateful for our nanny Rosanna who not only takes excellent care of Javi when I'm at work, but really feels like a partner when it comes to the apartment. And MAJOR kudos to all of you stay-at-home moms out there. Now that I know what it takes, I am in awe of you. I also would hire a working mother in a heartbeat because now I know how efficient you are at your job and how great you are at multitasking. I also trust that you wouldn't force me to sit through a meeting that could have been an email.
My delicious Javi at 10 months
So, most of this long story is really a personal preparation. We are pregnant with our second child, and they will only be 18 months apart. I am completely aware that the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over expecting different results. So, I want to make sure that in this hormonal delirium of the first trimester, I'm remembering all of the hard parts of the first time. But, I am hopeful, because I'm so much better informed this time around. I will be having a scheduled c-section, and my new doctor is opposed to using opioids for c-section recovery. I know now that it is a waste of energy to worry about SIDS 24/7. I know that they will eventually sleep through the night. I know that all of the hard parts are temporary, and just turn into different hard parts. I know that all of the hard parts are punctuated by extreme moments of delirious joy. I now fully grasp the reality of being a working mom. Most importantly, I know that I am utterly capable of surviving the madness. Bring on round 2!







