Wednesday, July 27, 2016

Sticky Fingers and Baby Talk

I am a terrible blogger. I'm awful at journaling lately, too. 

I thought I would do an update on Harper since she turned 15 months this past Saturday and I haven't really done an update since she turned one!

She loves math. Take an apple slice that she's already eating and cut it in half for her to have TWO pieces (she always has to have something in each hand when she eats), and she will laugh and run around squealing for a solid 5 minutes. I'm not exaggerating, this is currently happening as I'm writing this blog. 

Her favorite words (okay, the only ones she can say):
Mama or mom, mommy
Dada or daddy
Grandma which actually is either pronounced baba or mamaw (apparently she is from the south)
Grandpa which is bawbaw, not even close but we get it, Harp. Grandpa is her favorite and I blame the gummy worms he sneaks her. 
Please which is my new personal favorite. I had to train her to say this by turning off the tub when she was so NOT ready. She would point at the faucet and say MORE! While signing more. So I would say "more... PLEEEEEEASE?" And she quietly would say "peas!" I mean stop it already. 
More has been one of her favorites since right around one and is a close second to 
Baby. I consider this her REAL first word after mama and daddy that she actually understood what it meant when she said it. It's probably my favorite 
Yay is always accompanied with clapping hands. 
Boo is the most said word in our car, she always plays "boo" in the mirror with us :)
Cheese which frequently gets mixed up with please...
Shoes is hit or miss. Some days she will so audibly come in the family room saying "shoes!" Asking me to put them on her. Other days I say "Harper say shoes!" Only to be met with a blank stare. 
Banana aka Nana is a word she actually gets excited about when she says it. She loves fruit. 
Blueberries which is "Bees"... Close Harp, so close. 
Blanky is also "bee", and you better grab that out of her crib when you grab her because of you don't you will get the cold shoulder until you march back in her room to get it, at which she will steal it from you and smile and snuggle it saying "beeee". 
Birdy is another "bee eee" that is followed by the sign and "tweet tweet tweet" which will make you die. 
Hi which can best be described as hiiiiyeeee and can be heard by all the friendly strangers at winco and wal mart because there is no person too scary for Harper to say hi to. 
Bye bye is said filled with sass and a buh byeeeee sound do it. 
Woooow is a word she uses for the real exciting stuff, like splash pads. 
Water or wa wa is a commonly said word as this girl is seriously a fish out of water. We went to the lake the other day and it was pretty chilly and this girl just keeps dragging me deeper and deeper until I had to pick her up and she made me go until I was shoulder deep! She's crazy. 
Bottle has always been baba. She drinks from her sippy during the day but I cave and give her the bottle before bedtime and don't feel one ounce of guilt!! 
Yeah! Is always said in an enthusiastic little voice, and she uses it to make sure we know that yes, that is indeed what she wants. 

Obviously she doesn't REALLY have these words all down, but we know exactly what she means and I swear even other people can moderately understand her! 

The word I am happiest she hasn't gotten down yet is "NO". Once she learns that it's all over, I know it.

She loves swimming, dancing to ring around the Rosie, chasing dad, running away from mom, bending the rules about no food in the family room, throwing a tantrum when you make her go back into the kitchen to eat, her aunts and uncles, her cousins, and blueberries. 

She's sassy and crazy and won't stop moving, but she sleeps from 730-8 so I won't complain too much. That little girl is the light of our lives, and I can't think of a better way to spend my free time than by chasing after her smelly bum ;) 

Casual Harpo, making sure to ignore me and smile for daddy after I was trying to get a smile out of her for a solid 5 minutes. 

The lake with family is always a fun time! Happy 15 months Harp ;)

This wild child will go down any slide no matter the height. 


She eats grapes two at a time and I have a panick attack every time and squeeze those little cheeks until one pops out. 


She has an obsession with gummy worms.... Knows exactly what drawer grandpa keeps them in. 

Still can't believe she had a broken leg a month ago! And countless bruises on her head since. 



Wednesday, June 1, 2016

I'm A Bad Mom

You know that mom you see at target? You know the one. You were on the other side of the store when you heard her baby screaming. The thought crossed through your head, "Whose BABY is that?! Something must be wrong... Why is the baby still screaming... It's been 5 minutes... Why isn't she doing anything about it?" I can promise you that that mom is trying her best. She is torn between letting her baby scream because she does not want her to get into the habit of crying to get what she wants, or just caving because she feels bad for everyone around who has to hear the screaming. Either way she knows she will be judged. Either by that older woman who can't believe she would let her daughter scream over something so silly as wanting to tear the sippy cups off the aisle wall and her mom not letting her, or by the younger girl who hasn't ever had children and wonders why this mom can't figure out how to make her child stop having a meltdown.

That mom is me. Trying to figure out the happy medium between discipline and not being a mom that people throw shade at (wow, I've never used that phrase but I totally love it...) because she raises her voice and sternly says, "NO." Trying not to cry because I'm wondering if the reason she is having a meltdown is because she fell down the stairs the day before, 15 steps, while I watched in horror as she went down like a poor rag doll and all I could do was scream her name because I couldn't catch up to her, and maybe the doctor was wrong and she is actually hurting. Constantly wondering if I'm the worst mom in the world because whenever I am around other moms they have it SO together, and use the sweetest voice when saying no, showing zero hints of frustration.

I would like to formally break that glass. I'm calling bull spit on the whole thing. There is not one mom out there who does not get frustrated. There is not one mom out there who hasn't had a moment where they crack and yell "NO!", or cave and give their kid the freaking toy because they'll lose their mind if they scream any longer. But in either situation, you can bet there would be judgement from someone.

Right now in the media, there is a lot of criticism going on about the mother who let her son fall into the silverback gorilla exhibit which lead to the death of an endangered animal. Let her son. LET her son? I can not even imagine how that mom feels, being called a bad mom by millions of people. Her son was 4, I have a 4 year old nephew who is the most mature kid in the world, he is extremely independent and if he were to say "I want to climb in there and play with the gorilla", I wouldn't even bat an eye thinking he would actually go in there! To have the entire nation question your ability to be a good mother? No one knows the exact situation that was going on, no one really ever does. But still we all think we have a right to call someone out on their mothering. Don't get me wrong, there are mothers who really could care less, times when we really should let professionals intervene, but to go off of a few quotes from onlookers and a YouTube video and be able to cast judgement? Why is it our place?

WHY DO WE DO THIS to each other, to ourselves? I'm constantly scared that if I ask a question about something that I should probably know the answer to, someone is going to think what a bad mom I am. I know everyone talks about it, the mom shaming, but it is as bad as ever. Even I am guilty of thinking "why the heck is that kid facing forward in the car seat when they aren't even two, doesn't she KNOW?" No, she might not know. There are probably a million things I do "wrong" because I don't know the right thing. On the other side of the spectrum, I am afraid to ever say something to help someone else because I DON'T want them to feel like I'm judging them. I think we as moms need to be a lot slower to jump to conclusions on why someone is trying to give us advice, a lot quicker to accept a helping hand, and a lot kinder to ourselves, because we are doing the best that we can.

As a mom, the words "damned if I do, damned if I don't" come to mind. There are a million different opinions, studies and facts, a million different sources of information, and we are all trying to figure it out. Every child is so different. God did that on PURPOSE. There may be a child here or there who "fits the mold" perfectly, but most of us are trying each day to find what is best for our own child.

I read a quote the other day by Jill Churchill that said "There is no way to be a perfect mother, but there are a million ways to be a good one." Why are we all trying to be the "perfect mom"? There is no such thing! It's a hoax! We need to be less focused on being the perfect mom, and focus more on what we ARE doing right. I am 100% sure that my daughter knows I love her. She is one, but I can tell when she looks at me that she just knows. In my book, that makes me the greatest mom in all the land. Stop beating yourself up. You're doing a great job. Don't forget to say that to the mom with the screaming toddler at target. I promise you, she needs to hear it.





Sunday, November 1, 2015

What's in a name?

My blog has had the same name for quite awhile now, it was the name of one of my favorite songs since I was little and my dad showed it to me, but I decided I wanted to change the name for a few different reasons, all of which I'm sure won't mean anything to you so I won't get in to it. However, I wanted to explain the new name of my blog. 

In high school, I remember being in my statistics class during senior year and hearing the term "the absolute value", and thinking dang that would be a sweet name for a band. So I decided back then that if I ever had a band (I mean duh isn't that the dream?) I would have that be the name. 

No guys, I'm not starting a band. Though I totally would if I knew anyone who wanted in ;) 

But when I decided to rename my blog I wanted something original and catchy. Obviously this came to my mind and I wanted to revisit what it actually meant. 

This is the definition that I have decided to give it after reading a few different definitions on the web. Not acknowledging the negative. Yes, that's a thing in math. When they say what is the absolute value of -4, it is 4. Just like that, the negative no longer MATTERS. I want to try my best to apply this to my life. When things seem to be too much, when I'm frustrated and angry, when I feel like everything is going wrong, I want to drop the negative! There is nothing good that comes from dwelling on it, so finding the absolute value of things rather than letting that stupid little negative in front of it get me down seems like it sure would make me and a lot of other people happy.

So I challenge you to do the same. Take those lame negative things and turn them in to something that drops the negative. You can do it for anything, I promise. Look at the bigger picture! Focus on what is positive! I think we all could use a little more positivity in our lives, don't you? 

Saturday, June 13, 2015

Welcoming Harper Emery Bond

I have held off on posting my birth story for quite some time. Maybe it's because when I have time, I would rather be spending it with Bryce or running errands or taking a nap. Who knows? It could also be because it was quite eventful and I haven't wanted to think about making sure I remember every detail, however one day I want to make sure I have it written down, and I have only put part of it in my journal, so I better get it written down before I truly do forget it all! I shall start at the beginning.

On May 4th, the day before my due date, Bryce and I went for our usual nightly walk around McCowin park in Ammon. Along our walk we ran into our friends Kate and Brandon, and decided we were up for a round of frisbee golf! I did a test throw and decided there was no way, and I would just walk along. On the third hole, a frisbee got stuck in a HUGE (seriously it is way tall) tree, and Bryce decided to be the hero and CLIMB IT. What?! I'm DUE tomorrow, you will not leave my child fatherless! Did he care? Probably, but he went almost all the way up that tree anyways. That should've been enough to put me in labor. After we finished, we went to Orange Leaf with Kate and Brandon to get some frozen yogurt.

That's when I started getting contractions. This was normal for me, I had been getting braxton hicks on and off for weeks, and they had started getting pretty painful. On the drive home they got even more painful. By 12 am I had taken a few baths and tried to sleep and I was in way too much pain. I had gone through this 3 weeks earlier, there was no way I was going to get sent home again. Nevertheless I kept tracking my contractions. When they were all under 5 minutes apart and the pain was too much, we went to the hospital. I can't remember exactly when, let's just say 2 am?

When I got there they let us know they were in diversion which meant they had too many people and not enough nurses so they were sending everyone to the other hospital across the street. My heart sank. "You are welcome to come in and get checked though." Heck yeah, I didn't want to go to 2 different hospitals and get sent home. So we went to labor and delivery and the charge nurse had me change and checked me. I was about 1.5 cm dilated and 70%(?) effaced. My contractions were strong and close enough together that they said they might just cancel someone's induction (I would HATE me if I were that person..) since they were only 38 weeks pregnant and clearly I was going into labor. They checked me an hour later and I hadn't progressed so they called my doctor and he told them to have me go ahead and come in for my 10:15 am appointment. KILL ME I thought. I was in so much pain. They gave me something that would possibly help with the pain but wasn't a guarantee.

I went home and got in the bath and sent Bryce to bed. I was crying through my contractions. I still had probably 6 hours until I could go to my doctors and beg him to induce me. I took about 3 baths, went downstairs and laid on the couch. Every time I felt my contractions coming on I started bawling because I knew it would be so much pain for at least a minute... I did not sleep at ALL. Bryce lent me his fingers to squeeze (two so I wouldn't break them) for every contraction. FINALLY it was time to go to my doctors appointment.

Sitting in the car on the way there, I was miserable and scared to go in to the waiting room because I knew I couldn't have a soundless contraction. I almost sent Bryce in to just wait until they called me so I wouldn't be embarrassed. Luckily they got us back right before I had another contraction, at which point I was bawling and groaning from so much pain even when I tried to suppress it. The doctor finally came in and checked me. "Well, what hospital did you want to deliver at?" He asked. I told him my preference and told him that when I was there this morning they were in diversion. "Well let me call them then. You're 4 cm dilated. You're having the baby today, or at least by early morning tomorrow."

I started crying in thankfulness. The doctor came back and told us the hospital would take us, but that we better hurry before someone else gets there. Luckily it was 2 minutes away, so we went off to the hospital to have our baby!

When we got there, they got us right in. It was 11:23 as I changed into my gown and I was so excited and relieved that she would be here soon.







My nurse was so sweet and was asking me questions and getting everything ready when I started to have yet another contraction at which point I called Bryce over to squeeze his fingers as I began to feel the pain. My nurse felt so bad that she hadn't called in the anesthesiologist and didn't realize I was in so much pain because I was in such a great mood when she was setting up all of the equipment. The anesthesiologist was in there within 15 minutes. The epidural really wasn't terrible. There was pressure and a little pain but the end product had me wanting to shout with joy. Which I did. I felt NO pain from my contractions!!

My doctor was in at about 12:30 or 1 and broke my water, and I was 6 cm dilated. I was excited I had progressed another 2 cm in the last hour or so. But this excitement wouldn't last.

When my doctor broke my water, there was a very large amount of meconium in the fluid. This would mean that they wanted the baby out sooner than later and that they didn't want her to cry so she would not aspirate any.

They kept checking me and I kept not progressing. At 4:30 I was still 6 cm. My nurse was bummed about it, she really thought I would have the baby before the shift change. Harper's heart rate fell a little for the first time right before they switched nurses. It made my nurse nervous but she said it still might be fine. It was just for a short period. They switched nurses and my next nurse checked me at about 5:30. Then Checked me again. And again. I was luckily testing throughout all of this. The baby was apparently turned away from my spine instead of towards and so they had me laying on my side and switching every 30 minutes to try and get her to turn. Whatever side I was on, the opposite would start feeling a bit of pain during the contractions so in came the anesthesiologist to fix that. 

They had me on a low dose of pitocin. The baby at this point had a steady heart rate, which was apparently NOT a good thing. They wanted to see her heart rate spike during contractions and it just wasn't doing that. They at this point mentioned I may need a c section. I was terrified. But the more Bryce and I talked about it, the calmer I got. I was looking up pictures of scars and saw Victoria Beckham had gotten one with all of her kids and decided if she could get back into shape quickly after hers, then so could I. I was almost relieved at this point. But my doctor had told me as long as I keep progressing and baby stays fine, that he would let my body keep trying. 

At this point I was still nervous, and asked Bryce if he could call his dad to come and help him give me a blessing. In the LDS church, worthy men can hold the priesthood, and with that they are able to give a blessing. His dad would be coming around 8, his mom told us. His mom had been there since around 2 when she brought Bryce lunch. I was glad he wasn't totally alone while I was sleeping on and off. 

I got checked again between this time and the time Bryce's dad came, and was still at a 6. I had been at a 6 for 8 hours which was definitely not ideal. Finally at 8, I woke up to Bryce's Dad coming in to the room, and they were ready to give me a blessing. 

 I am SO grateful Bryce holds the priesthood, because I attribute that blessing to how well everything went considering the circumstances later on. I'm not entirely sure Harper would be here had it not been for that blessing and faith in the Lord. 

My doctor came in around 9. The reason I wasn't progressing was because the baby wasn't sitting low anymore. They upped the pitocin and FINALLY things started moving. I was at an 8. Then a 9. Around 11:45 he asked me if I wanted to do a practice push, because I would be pushing soon. He didn't really say I was at a 10 yet, but I went with it. It looked like I wouldn't be getting a c section after all. They had me take a huge deep breath, then hold it for 10 seconds as I pushed. FYI, when they say 10 seconds, they mean counting to 10 as slowly as possible. After, they want you to push all of your air out (seriously all of it or they will tell you you're doing it wrong) then take the biggest breath of your life and do it all over again. After I practiced, he said okay, we are going to do it for real now. I was at a 10. She was going to be here soon. My doctor was amazing. He was with me the whole time even awhile before I was ready to start pushing. Between pushing, he let me know they may need to use a vacuum or forceps because her shoulder was stuck. I was okay with that if he felt it was safe. I kept pushing and pushing and he kept encouraging me. Meanwhile between every contraction Bryce was getting me ice chips. OH MY GOSH I would've died without them. I was nauseous and tired and it helped me SO much. My mother-in-law was also on the other side of the curtain in the lounging part of the room and started getting ice chips to hand to Bryce. Bryce was holding one of my legs back most of the time. I felt like Harper's leg was jamming straight into my rib so I finally got them to lay me flat on my back and I could breath much better. When she was crowing they told me she had hair and had me feel it so I would get inspired to push more. I actually had them get me a mirror which I said I would NEVER do, and even had Bryce look (I also said I would never let him, but he was okay with it so I told him to go for it). Bryce was so dang encouraging the whole time!

The mirror was so cool. I could see the progress I was making. Finally I was pushing almost constantly and with one last push the doctor practically pulled her out. That was probably the grossest part, seeing all the fluid that she was in... They had been replenishing my water with IV (so weird, didn't know that was a thing) and when she came out, so did all the water and a TON of meconium. They told me they did NOT want her to cry, and the last 15 minutes I was pushing there was a team there ready to work on her. I didn't exactly realize why until 6 weeks later when the doctor told me everything that actually happened. She didn't breathe for 2 minutes and my mother in law saw them working on her through the curtain and said she was purple. I didn't know that until a few days later, which I am so happy I didn't. She was being worked on for a little while, and Bryce kept assuring me she was fine even though he didn't leave my side. She wasn't making any noise even after she was breathing. The nurse kept telling her "it's okay, you can cry. You're fine, you can make some noise." I heard a few noises but no cries. They told me she was okay, just wasn't wanting to cry. Finally she was okay to come see me. She was born at 12:55 am after and hour of pushing, and Bryce took a picture of her for me to see at 1:09 am, then at 1:28 am I was finally able to hold her!

1:09 am, the first picture I saw of her

1:03 am. She had her own respiratory specialist waiting for her before she came out. Her own little team working on her. 
Those first few hours were everything. 

She had a very coned shaped head because of how she was sitting in there for so long during the labor process, but my doctor had warned me before she was born that she would, so I wasn't caught off guard. I could not believe she was here. The first thing I asked was if she had a tongue tie, because I knew that could effect breast feeding. "Are you kidding me? The way she is sticking her tongue out, I don't even have to check." It's true, that baby's tongue was ALWAYS out. I snuggled my sweet girl and tried to get her to nurse. She couldn't figure out how to latch, so I kept trying but then just snuggled her. She did not cry for over 2 hours after she was born. Just made small noises. Bryce kept saying how badly he wanted to hear her cry, but we knew he would regret saying that eventually ;)

After awhile the nurse took me to the bathroom. Oh my gosh, I wish someone would have warned me how SWOLLEN I would be... I mean a lot of trauma happens down there, so I guess I should've thought about it but I didn't. I was scared the swelling would never go down! It was much better even just a few hours later. They moved us to the recovery room while Bryce was still sleeping (I made him take a nap as soon as I got her and he had held her and then they took her to clean her off). They went back to get him and then we settled in to sleep.

We later discovered Harper had a lip tie, and thought that may be the reason she was having trouble latching. Since her first day I have used a nipple shield to help her latch and it has worked wonders for her latching problems. We think it's more muscular motor skills that have made it hard for her to open wide and latch, but she is growing and getting a lot of milk, so we aren't too concerned about me still using a shield. She can now latch without it but it is a very bad latch that will cause trauma to me, and I don't want to hate nursing, so I just switch between using a shield and not using one. We have an appointment to meet with an occupational therapist, so I'm hoping it helps :) 


Later that morning with Daddy. My heart was so full looking at the way he looked at his little girl. 

I loved snuggling my little babe! 

I couldn't believe how perfect she was

I was obsessed with her hair. Most of it in the front is gone now but the top back and bottom back has always had a ton! 

One day old and ready to go home. She was just too cute in her little outfit! 

So tiny in her crib! 

When we checked out, Harper had a bit of jaundice so we would need to go to our pediatrician in 2 days to check it out. She still had high readings so they encouraged us to feed her every 2 hours even if she was sleeping, to wake her up, and they would check 2 days later. By then she had gained 5 oz in 2 days so they were pleased, and her levels were staying the same so they said she was okay.


Her first visit to the doctor to get her jaundice levels (bilirubin) checked!  

It was a crazy ride, but I am so grateful for how everything went. Harper is such a light in our lives! I may continue to update this blog as I remember other details of the day. Sorry if I get a bit graphic, but I want to remember this as best I can. Thank you for reading!



Okay, so I have gone through and updated this a little before posting, and since originally writing it I have had my 6 week appointment when my doctor shed some light on the happenings during my labor. I went in and told him my mother in law had said she was blue, and asked just how bad my labor was. "Yeah, it was pretty bad. We were all peeing our pants a little. The nurses and I still talk about it."

Great. So he explained how Harper had a shoulder dystocia, that her head was out but her shoulder was stuck. He said he has had a lot of these happen before, but only about 5 have made him pretty much pee his pants, and that mine was one of them. He explained that when the baby's head is coming out, the umbilical cord moves way back into the uterus and if the baby doesn't come out quick enough, that the cord gets compressed and the baby loses oxygen to the brain. Harper was like this for 45 seconds, which he said isn't bad but definitely isn't good. He had to use 3 different methods to try and et her out, and the third one worked. He told me often when a baby is stuck like this, they will end up with a broken arm or clavicle. I was so relieved she didn't have either of those! Then he told me the scarier part is that when they pull the baby out, there are a bundle of nerves between the neck and arm that can be damaged and pull apart and leave the baby paralyzed in that arm. I couldn't imagine how difficult and horrible that would be. He said after Harper was out, she had a score of 2 out of 10 on a score they rate them on (breathing, active, color, heartbeat, stuff like that.) He said that Harper was not breathing for 2 minutes (which I knew) but that she had to be resuscitated. I definitely didn't realize that! He said the whole team was scrambling working on her. That 5 minutes later, her number on the scale was still only a 5. Finally it had gotten to a 7 which isn't great but isn't bad either. That's when I was finally able to hold her. 

I cannot imagine what state I would have been in had things gone a much different and devastating way. As I sat there listening to all of the details my doctor was telling me, I just kept looking at Harper, so grateful that I had gotten a blessing before, that she was there with me. I couldn't believe that there was such a big chance we could have lost her that day. I don't like to think about it, I just am so glad we were able to keep our sweet little girl. 

My mother-in-law had told me that after the team was done working on Harper, the respiratory specialist was leaving and asked her on the way out,"were you praying?" She told him that she had been, and that he had said (I can't remember exactly what it was) something along the lines of good, that they had needed it, that he had been terrified. (I may need to correct this once I remember what he really said...)

I even remember the nurse telling me that Harper had given them quite a scare. I figured it all had to do with the meconium, but I was wrong. 

7 weeks and 6 hours later I Iay in bed writing the rest of this, laying next to my wonderful husband, looking at my sweet girl fast asleep in her little rock n play, counting my blessings. My love for her keeps growing and growing, and sometimes when I look at her I feel like my heart might burst. I feel so blessed to have our sweet little angel with us. 



Her first sponge bath with mom and dad all by themselves under the direction of my mom! 

Team work! 

Her upper lip tie. 

This is seriously how she would sleep. 

My mom came up 3 days after she was born and stayed for 5 days. I am so glad she was able to help me out. I was exhausted before she got there and wash bit out of it, so I'm lucky she helped me catch up on some sleep! 

My mom caught this picture. I am so obsessed with Harper, and so happy my mom caught such a sweet moment of me cuddling my perfect angel. 

Harper is now 7 weeks (6 weeks 6 days in this picture) and lights up our life! She fills my life with so much purpose. I love being a mommy to her and wife to Bryce. I wouldn't trade my life for anyone else's. 

Wednesday, May 27, 2015

3 weeks old

Harper is 3 weeks old today! May 26, 2015 :) She loves to eat, look up at the ceiling, lay on daddy and mommy's tummies, and making plenty of dirty diapers for mommy and daddy to change! She has such a strong little body, lifting her head more gracefully for such long periods of time!! She is pushing off of our legs if she can feel them with her feet. She's making more and more adorable baby sounds! She is mastering turning on to her side which makes us nervous to put her in her crib at night in case she happens to turn herself over! But I'm sure she will be fine :) we may have to leave her arms out of the swaddle sooner than usual! We are the happiest, most tired parents. We love her so so much. 

Tuesday, May 5, 2015

40 weeks

Someone forgot to warn me that the day I hit 40 weeks would be the most miserable yet. Last night Bryce and I were on our daily walk when we ran into our friends Kate and Brandon. We decided to do a little frisbee golfing- after all I was all about getting things moving, maybe this would help. Well by the 2nd hole I was done and decided to just stick to walking. I was having a ton of pelvic pressure and pain. After we were done, we went for frozen yogurt. Delish. But I was getting terrible cramp like pains the whole time. On the way home every little bump was killing me! When we finally got home it was 10 and I got in the bath. From that point on until right now, I have not gone without a contraction at least every 5 minutes. So they started getting painful. Really painful. To the point where I was in tears. I was so frustrated that I didn't know if I should go to labor and delivery or not that I began bawling. Finally I decided I would see if they got worse and stayed close together. Finally at 330 I told Bryce we needed to go in, it was getting too painful. We get to the hospital and they let us know they are sending patients to the other hospital because they are understaffed and won't have enough beds, but they would check me. So I got hooked up and had them check me. I was getting contractions every 2-3 minutes, then 5, then back to 2-3 and she said they would cancel an induction and keep me after she checked me. Well the check held no good news. I am still at a centimeter, and while my doctor told me I was at 70 last week, the nurse said I am not that thin. It was a miserable thing to be told. She also asked me what my pain level was when I got there and I said 6. She then told me that since it was my first baby that my pain level is probably more a 2. Thank you kind nurse (she really was nice just crushed my dreams) for telling me what MY pain level "really" is. Guys I was at the point where it hurt so bad that in my head I thought "I can't do more days of this, I would rather get a c section." Those of you who know me know that I would not say something like that lightly. But that goes to show you how painful these are. It feels like someone is stabbing my uterus from the inside then carving something. I naturally was bawling while she talked to me. HOW can these be way more painful than last time and still not help me progress? Finally she called my doctor and he said to just come in at 1015 unless my water breaks. The nurse kindly gave me something that "may" help with the pain enough to let me sleep (I'm not sleeping if that tells you anything. 24 hours and still going strong). But that's all they could do. She told me not to worry, that it wouldn't be another week, I'm in early labor and I should be back soon when the pain doubles or my water breaks. If the pain doubles I literally will not be alive. I have already been so nauseated from how painful these contractions are that I can't imagine having them get too much worse. So here I am sitting in a bath blogging to try and distract me from my contractions (hahaha) while I wait 3 more hours for my appointment. I am 40 weeks and 100% miserable. All Bryce keeps reminding me is how worth it she is. He's totally right. He has been such a rock for me tonight. He's helped with breathing, with making sure I'm as comfy as I can be. I am so blessed to have him. 


How far along:
40 weeks. Please let this be my last blog

Size of baby:
A watermelon still? 


Total Weight Gain:
I am not sure, probably still around 30 


Movement:   
She hates the monitors. She goes nuts and tries to kick them off me. Hahaha

Belly Button in or out?:
In. 

Sleep:
Going on 24 hours of nada. Contractions really are the worst. 

What I miss:
Breathing. 

Food Cravings:
Pizza. 

Food Aversions:  
Still doing great and not having any problems! 

Nausea:
With the painful contractions.  

Moody/Happy?
Moody. See intro haha. 

Wedding ring on our off?
I made it to 40 weeks without ever having to take it off :) 

Symptoms: 
Everything. Haha

Best Moment this week:
Spending time with friends! 

Worst Moment this week:
Today. Hahah

What I'm looking forward to:
An epidural. I swear that some people just don't have these kind of labor pains or have a ridiculous threshold, because if I tried to do this natural I would pass out.

 

Tuesday, April 28, 2015

The final count down... We hope!

When I was laying in bed last night getting contractions every 10-20 minutes, I was thinking about how I just have one week left until Harper's due date, and how fast this pregnancy really was. It's true the last few weeks drag on but I still can't believe she could be here any time! Bryce and I were also talking about how blessed I've been this pregnancy. Aside from the size thing and having to get a lot of ultrasounds and worrying about that, it's been really great. I went through the whole nauseous 24/7 for weeks on end to where I felt like if I would even look at food I would throw up, but unisom helped a ton and for some people it doesn't even touch the morning sickness. I was able to work until I was 38.5 weeks pregnant. I've been able to sleep well basically every night besides when the nausea was too much or the night before an appointment. So I am very grateful! I went to the doctors for what I HOPE will be my last appointment today, but if this little girl is as stubborn as her mama, I will be sitting at the doctors office 40 weeks pregnant next Tuesday. 

My doctor blew out his knee playing volleyball so now I'm not quite sure who will be delivering Harper, but have met with all of the doctors but one so I'm okay. It was hard to explain to him why I was getting NSTs and AFIs done but we got through it! After he told me I was 70% effaced and dilated still just over a 1, he stripped my membranes. I'm sure it won't speed much up but still it's exciting haha! Then he talked to me about how the baby is in a great position, that her head is down way low and as far as it can get until I actually start going into labor so I was way happy about that. He also told me that he thinks I am going to have a "really nice labor and everything should go really smooth and it'll be great." It's nice to hear that as hard is labor is, he thinks I'll have a good one haha! 


How far along:
39 weeks :) 

Size of baby:
A watermelon! 


Total Weight Gain:
I am at exactly 30 pounds. 

Stretch Marks:  
This question is now getting old. 

Movement:   
I don't understand how she can have so little room and still move so much. Bryce freaked out the other day because when she moves now you can seriously feel exactly what body part and she pushes so hard that it's like 2 inches past where my belly should be when she doesn't move haha. 

Belly Button in or out?:
It's rolled? The outter is rolled and the inside is still deep lol.  

Sleep:
It was great but the last few nights I have been getting woken up by bad contractions so that's rough. 

What I miss:
Getting off the couch without any assistance and it not taking an extra minute hahaha. 

Food Cravings:
Pasta. 

Food Aversions:  
Still doing great and not having any problems! 

Nausea:
I sometimes get nauseated when I need to drink water even if I'm totally hydrated! 

Moody/Happy?
So happy! My little girl is almost here!! 

Wedding ring on our off?
Still rocking it :) 

Symptoms: 
Contractions every 10-20 minutes, dilation, effacement, nesting still. 

Best Moment this week:
I've just had a ton of wonderful moments spending time with Bryce before Harper girl gets here :) 

Worst Moment this week:
Finding out my doctor wouldn't be delivering me. He's the one who has ordered everything and been keeping an eye on things so it's scary to have someone else now. 

What I'm looking forward to:
The dinners we have planned for this week! We are making yummy ones. Also the Avengers on Friday morning. And of course our baby girl coming :) 

Harper's nursery :)