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Today’s Attempt: Almonds

I’d read several places that almonds were a good way to reduce pregnancy nausea. I will try anything short of crack that claims to reduce pregnancy nausea, so 24 hours and $4 later, I had a can of almonds in the house.

No dice. Not only are they ineffective at reducing nausea (for me, I mean), they’re a grainy, pasty thing to try to chew and swallow when you’re queasy. Little teeny bits cling to my mouth and throat, making me cough and then, of course, gag.

Unplanned

Here is something I am suddenly wondering about: If your baby is unplanned, is that something you keep a secret?

I was thinking about how, when someone tells me their baby was not planned, I always remember that little nugget of information. Even if I know they love their baby and are so glad the baby is here, I still remember that the baby was “an accident.” I wouldn’t want someone remembering that about my baby.

Most of my babies were planned. This last one wasn’t. I don’t know if I’m supposed to be keeping that a secret. I haven’t been. For one thing, it’s hard to lie about: if you have twins, and you’re due with another baby before the twins turn 2, it’s not likely you planned it that way. If you’ve gone around for years saying you wanted four children, and when you had your third and fourth together you went around saying, “Well, I guess this is the last pregnancy, then!,” and then you get pregnant again, it’s not likely you planned it that way. If you’ve mentioned to all your dear close friends that you’re just waiting for your period so you can start taking the Pill again, and then you get pregnant, it’s not likely you planned it that way. And it doesn’t really work, anyway, to say to my dear close friends, “YES! Yes, we totally planned this 100%!,” and then not be able to talk to them about my mixed feelings, or how it felt to find out, or all of the worries I have about it.

But I’m nervous that knowing he/she wasn’t planned will make this baby feel that he/she wasn’t wanted. “Unplanned” and “unwanted” are such entirely different things.

Breakfast Time

Is there anything more miserable for a nauseated pregnant woman than dealing with breakfast? Later on in the day, maybe something will appeal. But at breakfast time, the whole kitchen seems dreary, and full of gross food no one should eat. The sink area smells like last night’s dinner. The refrigerator smells like leftovers, and something sour no one else can smell. Every option seems unappealing, and there is the full knowledge that no matter what is chosen, it will not sit well on the tum. It will grudgingly dissolve in there, but it will not bring release from the nausea. And yet something must be eaten, or the situation will worsen. It is a sad, sad time of day.

Here’s The Only Thing That Works

I have given up trying to find something that will make me stop coughing. The OB gave me a list of medications safe to take during pregnancy, and the only one listed for coughing is “regular Robitussin,” which is an expectorant (to make you cough up gunk from your lungs) not a suppressant (to make the coughing stop). I tried it anyway, and of course it made no difference. (That taste, it reminds me of childhood. In 25 years they haven’t changed it. I still had to drink it fast so it would be down my throat before my mouth knew what had hit it.) I also tried a vaporizer, sleeping half-sitting up, breathing slowly through my nose, letting a hard candy dissolve slowly in my mouth—anything anyone said helped them to stop coughing. No good, any of it.

Here is the only thing that works: Benedryl, to knock me flat out so I don’t notice the coughing. It’s on my list for itching, allergies, and trouble sleeping, and I think this qualifies as the last one. I take two Benedryl about half an hour before bed, and I sleep almost all night.

I hate taking medicine when I’m pregnant. No matter how safe the medicine, no matter how many years pregnant women have taken it with no ill effect, I am always half-thinking that in 25 years we’ll find out it took 20 IQ points off the fetus, or that it causes the next generation to be born with flippers.

Goddamned Coughing; Also, Sudden Cultural Reference

Wasn’t I just saying that this new vitamin supplement spared me waking in the wee hours of the morning? Yes, but tonight it is not the queasiness that has roused me, it is the coughing, the coughing, the goddamned coughing. Every fall/winter I get these colds that lead to relentless coughing: it wakes me up, my ribs hurt from it, the tickle in my throat is unendurable if I try to talk or, you know, breathe.

As far as I can tell, none of the over-the-counter cough medicines work even a little tiny bit. A doctor once gave me a prescription for a cough syrup with codeine in it, and that did work a little—but only because it knocked me into a narcotic coma, not because it did anything about the cough. If you’ve found some sort of miracle product, please let me know.

When I’m pregnant, these coughs are so much worse: not only am I unable to induce coma via Nyquil, the coughing can trigger barfing. And when I’m pregnant, I’m already uncomfortable and sorry for myself, and adding illness seems so, so unfair. Paul said he’d read that a pregnant woman has lower immunity to illness because otherwise her body would think the baby was an intruder and get rid of it. This did make me feel a little less sorry for myself: illness = helping baby.

Tonight I finally gave up trying to sleep through it. It was 4:00 a.m., I’d been awake with the coughing every hour or so all night, and I was noticing that every time I coughed (every eight seconds), Paul moved around a little, so I must be messing with his sleep, too. I’m up having some graham crackers and water and some Tylenol for the rib pain.

Hey, have you been watching My Name Is Earl? I realize everyone else has been raving about this show and giving it awards and writing articles about the actors, but we only just noticed it. (I think a child puts its parents about 5 months behind, culturally-speaking. Add a second child? Now you’re 10 months behind.) We’re getting the first season on DVD from Netflix, and so far it’s bear-awesome.

Nauseated Rx

The nurse at the OB office gave me a sample pack of a prescription medication I’d never heard of, which is supposed to help alleviate some of the nausea I’m about to go crazy from. The medication is called Premesis Rx, and it’s just a vitamin supplement: 75 mg of slow-release vitamin B6 (the normal daily amount is 2 mg), plus some B12, some calcium carbonate, and some folic acid. I gather that only the B6 reduces nausea. (The calcium carbonate is like nibbling 2/5ths of a Tums tablet: I guess it could help a little, but it’s not something you’d get a not-covered-by-your-insurance prescription for.)

I tried taking it last night, and although I am still queasy all the 24-hour-day long, I haven’t actually barfed, nor have I woken at 3:00 in the morning too nauseated to get back to sleep, nor have I felt as if I wished I myself had never been conceived. I wonder, could it be working? Has anyone else tried this, or known anyone who tried it, and did it work? The nurse at the OB office said she tried it for her own pregnancies but it was a complete bust for her.

She also said there’s something else they can prescribe if this doesn’t work. My question is, WHY HAS NO ONE MENTIONED THESE TWO PRESCRIPTIONS TO ME BEFORE, WHEN I HAVE BARFED MY WAY THROUGH THE FIRST TRIMESTER MORE THAN THREE TIMES NOW?? I think the reason is that I’m insufficiently whiny (in person, I mean). I say I’m having some trouble with morning sickness, and the OB says heartily that that’s perfectly normal, and I say “Oh” and thank him. Whereas what I should be doing is grabbing him by his collar and saying, “NO, I don’t think you UNDERSTAND. I can’t SWALLOW. I can’t SLEEP. I am BARFING INTO THE TOILET at 3:00 a.m., 7:30 a.m., and 2:30 p.m., and lying groaning on the recliner in between, and unless you do something about it, I will be doing this for EIGHT MISERABLE WEEKS you bastard, and my guess is that if you had this feeling for TWO DAYS you would be CRYING FOR YOUR MAMA.”

Prime Idiot

It’s 4:30 in the morning; I’ve been up since 3:30. This is happening almost every night: I wake up queasy and restless and uncomfortable and the wrong temperature, and can’t go back to sleep. This particular night, I have the additional keep-me-up of feeling like a prime idiot for once again practically kissing a doctor’s sandals for giving me what I think was a wrong and inappropriately dismissive diagnosis.

For the last few days, I’ve been running a fever on and off. The highest it’s been is 99.9, so I’m not exactly combusting here, but when the fever is “on” I feel so awful I can’t even describe it. I feel as if I’m dying, or as if I’d like to. I can barely walk or move, but sitting/lying still doesn’t help either. I feel like I can’t lift the babies, or change their diapers, or comb my hair, or swallow food. AWFUL, is what I’m saying here. Also, I have a gunky cough, and when I breathe in my lungs feel sore.

I went to my primary care physician’s office, confident I’d be walking away with an antibiotic. They made me see the nurse-practitioner, which is standard for this stupid office: the actual doctors have 3-month waits for appointments. His diagnosis? Probably a cold. Just keep taking Tylenol every six hours. His attitude was dismissive and amused, like I was some silly pregnant woman wasting his time. He noticed that Elizabeth was coughing, and I said, “Yes, we’ve had a cold going through our house,” and he said, “Well, guess what?”–meaning DUH, lady, you have that cold too, you didn’t need a DOCTOR VISIT to tell you that.

As I understand it, though, a CHILD might get a fever from a cold, but adults usually do not. In an adult, a fever is usually a good sign that something is wrong. And in a pregnant adult, I don’t think I’d take a chance on that, if I were a doctor: infections can be serious, serious things.

I can’t believe he sent me away as if I were just there for fun, maybe trying to score some “good stuff” antibiotics. It is no small feat for me to get to a doctor appointment: I have to schedule it around a 2nd grader and a kindergartner’s schedules, and I have to bring the twins with me in their ginormous stroller that barely wedges into the exam room, and the twins have to miss all or part of their nap. I don’t go in until I am so worried about my health, I’m starting to wring my hands and hyperventilate and imagine scenarios where the last-rites priest says, “But why didn’t you call the doctor sooner?” A brief glance at my medical records should show that almost every single time I come in, it’s something that requires medical attention–and on the few occasions I’ve gone out of there without medication, I’ve been back a week later and they’ve given it to me that time, finally willing to concede that I have, for one memorable example, pneumonia.

What I really can’t believe is that I said not one word of this to the nurse-practitioner. I said “okay.” I thanked him. I’m completely responsible for the well-being of a child living inside my own personal body, and I have a fever, and I feel so bad I have WISHED FOR DEATH, and I thanked him and paid my co-pay and didn’t even argue a little. Okay, I argued a teeny bit: I said I was worried about the fever, because I knew pregnant women shouldn’t have fevers. He gave another dismissive look/sound/gesture and said, “Well, sure, if you were running a constant 102 that would be another matter.” Me: “Okay! Thank you!”

In part, I blame my mother, who reared me with such a deeply respectful attitude toward authority, I have been unable to break that attitude even when a break is richly, richly called for. But in addition to the nurture, it is my own shy, fearful, confrontation-hating nature that turns against me. If only there were a medication for THAT.

Intake Appointment

I had my first OB appointment this morning. It was an “intake” appointment: I just saw the nurse and updated my family history, got my free tote bag and my lab paperwork and my sheet of which medications are approved to take during pregnancy and which aren’t (“DO take your prenatal vitamins! DON’T take crack!”).

Every time I’ve gone to the intake appointment before, they’ve asked if the pregnancy was planned, and I’d been debating what to say this time. Just “unplanned” and leave it at that? How should I do my tone of voice so that they don’t ask me any unpleasant questions? Luckily, the nurse didn’t ask this time. I suppose they assume that once you have four children, a pregnancy is either planned or you’re too dim to figure out how it keeps happening.

Quease-riffic

So. queasy. I feel so awful, I don’t know how I can get through the next 2 months of it. (And I feel so, so, SO sorry for the women who have this the whole 9 months. I think sainthood isn’t too lofty a reward for those women.) This morning as soon as I got up, I ate saltines and ginger ale and banana, but I’m still on the verge of actual barfing. I feel tired and achy all over. Usually I get the twins dressed right after they have their breakfast, but today I barely felt like I could lift them from their high chairs into their play yard. Then I sat in the recliner for awhile, feeling yucky.

I don’t even want to read. I don’t want to go anywhere or do anything. I don’t want to pick up toddlers. All I want to do is WHINE.

I keep looking for more solutions to the problem, but my conclusion is that there is no solution. People mention ginger, and peppermint, and a whole bunch of other things, but the consensus seems to be that nothing really works on “morning sickness” except time: getting past it.

Here is what I am really wondering: Is this the usual nausea I have with every pregnancy? Or is this the more intense variety I had when I was expecting the twins?