Monday, October 24, 2016

Week 14: The Scone Trimester and Tips for New Moms

Technically, it's the second trimester. However, due to pregnancy brain, I referred to it as the scone trimester to one of my friends. So now it's the scone trimester. Here are my side-by-sides of 14 weeks with my daughter's pregnancy and 14 weeks with this pregnancy.



Still not much in the way of belly, but I didn't show until 24 weeks with my daughter so I'm not holding my breath.

In other news, this pregnancy has inspired me to help other moms. There is advice galore for new moms, and I've decided to add my two cents. And by two cents, I mean completely ridiculous (yet 100% accurate) advice. Here are some examples.





You can see more quality tips on my twitter here: https://twitter.com/SCFBookwalter.

Or you can follow me:

Sunday, October 9, 2016

Here We Grow Again and Other Pregnancy Expressions: 12 Weeks

Not content with taking over the globe with one minion, hubs and I decided we should add another human to our team. Or maybe it was something more normal. I'll let you decide.

I am 12 weeks today, and it is a great feeling. This pregnancy is so different from my first. But before I delve into that, some FAQs:

When are you due? 

As my cycles continue to plague me with their randomness, this is always somewhat difficult to ascertain. After a dating ultrasound, we have an approximate window. April 21-24, 2017. But babies are notorious for doing whatever they please, so this little kidlet will show whenever he or she decides. 

Will Josh be home? 

YES! Or at least he should be barring unforeseen disaster. 

How are you feeling?

Now, I only feel tired. Weeks 5-11, I had nausea that lasted most of the day. I still have extreme food aversions, but as long as I avoid them I don't get nauseous anymore. 

What is the gender? 

We don't know yet, but we will soon!

Back to the pregnancy. This pregnancy is very different from my pregnancy with my daughter. They started out almost identical, though. For one, I knew I was pregnant almost immediately. This is some magic power I have. Hubs also developed suspicions about a week after conception. I also got a positive pregnancy test way earlier than should have been possible. 

So why did I test early? Like I said, I already knew. I started having symptoms I only get while pregnant. One of the frustrating aspects of early pregnancy is it is almost identical to PMS. Moody, crampy, bloated, HOORAY. However, some early pregnancy symptoms are rarely anything else. For me, I have three things I look for: bleeding gums, constant peeing that wakes me in the night, and a metal taste in my mouth when I eat. 

I had been peeing more than usual and I had noticed the bleeding gums when brushing my teeth. However, I chalked those to other things because it is very hard to get hopeful when dealing with fertility issues. When trying to conceive my daughter, hubs and I went through a lot of testing to figure out why we couldn't get pregnant. Everything came back normal. However, I wasn't ovulating regularly. I found that out by charting my cycles. I was told that once I successfully conceived and carried a child to term that I wouldn't keep having these issues. That was unfortunately not the case. But I digress. 

It was nearing the end of August and temperatures were absurdly high. As a result, I drank a lot more water on a regular basis. I reasoned that more water consumption meant more peeing. I had also been slacking on wearing my retainer. I started wearing it again and it was a bit tight. I figured that accounted for the more sensitive and thus bleeding gums. 

However, one night I was making dinner and I went to taste it. I almost spat it out as it tasted like I had just sipped on a spoonful of pennies. The next day, I went out to Walmart and bought myself a cheap $0.88 test. I knew I was still early and didn't want to waste money peeing on the Gucci pee sticks that cost $10. It popped up as positive immediately. Cue insane laughter. 

I set up a little scavenger hunt for hubs because I couldn't be a normal person and just tell him with words. I left a sticky note on the front door telling him I had something for him in the fridge, The fridge had a sticky note that said something like, "Haha just kidding. Go look on your pillow." The pillow had a super sweet note that read along the lines of, "I got tired waiting for you to find this, so I needed some coffee." The back of the coffee pot had a sticky note informing my husband that all that coffee made me need to pee, so he should go check our daughter's little training potty. 

He later told me he thought our daughter had gone pee pee in the potty which explains why he stared inside the potty with a blank expression for a few seconds before bending down to pull out the pregnancy test. 

Hubs is notoriously bad at reading pregnancy tests. I blame this on ovulation predictor tests (OPKs). For an OPK to be positive, the test line has to be as dark or darker than the control line, With a pregnancy test, it just needs two lines period. However, this test was a clear positive. His face split into a grin and he declared, "I can DEFINITELY see that!" I then went out and bought a Gucci pee stick that came with a digital test because I needed to see the words.


I saw a midwife when I was a little over six weeks. Since my first pregnancy was an ectopic, my risk is higher to have another one. As a result, I get a very early ultrasound to confirm the pregnancy is in the correct location. We saw the heartbeat and it was 104 bpm. They had me come back a week later as they like to follow the heartbeat to 120 bpm. At 7+3, the heart beat was 144. My last appointment was at 10+2 and the heartbeat was 168 bpm. I have another appointment around 14 weeks. 

On to the differences of this pregnancy. With my daughter, I had hellacious heartburn right off the bat and zero nausea. I craved all things tomato products. With this pregnancy, heartburn didn't kick in until around nine weeks and nausea showed up at five weeks. I also crave sugar like there is no tomorrow. Tart sugar in particular. Think Laffy taffy and chewy sweet tarts. Also, I only want chewy sweet stuff. So odd. I also have intense food aversions. I hate the texture of meat. I don't mind the smell or taste, but the texture makes me want to gag. Even thinking about it too much can make me feel queasy, so enough about that. 

Even so, hubs and I both have our predictions for gender. We both think it's another girl. My dad also thinks it is another girl. While my reasoning is based on mother's intuitions, my father's is based on a dream he had of me holding hands with two little girls that look like me. We are all wearing the same type of dress in the dream as well. 

Time for fun comparison pictures. I didn't get a front picture of eight weeks and my side view is half cut off by a vanity. Ohhhhhhh well. I'm eight weeks pregnant with my daughter on the left and eight weeks into this pregnancy on the right.


Below is the most recent comparison. On the left, I was 12 weeks with my daughter. I also had a glorious tan as it was high summer. The right is today. Pale McPalerson. Don't mind my face and hair. I was freshly bathed, so neither were fully done. #WetHairDontCare


I feel like I look ever so slightly smaller this time around. My waist hasn't disappeared yet. With my daughter's pregnancy, I turned into a tree trunk almost immediately. I didn't show in the traditional sense until forever, though. My lower back is also way less curved. I did a lot of physical therapy and had a couple of chiropractic adjustments when I was pregnant with my daughter as I have scoliosis and sway back. Maybe I won't have as much back pain this time around? So far, that has not been the case.

I'll be interested to see how this pregnancy compares as time goes on. I hear it is common to show faster with subsequent children, so we shall see!

Tuesday, October 4, 2016

LASIK Surgery

I've been meaning to write this post for awhile and I keep putting it off in favor of other things. Like making cute strawberry costumes for Halloween. I got LASIK about seven weeks ago and it is amazing.

Pre-Op

This was a very annoying part of the process. Hubs wanted me to get LASIK for my birthday which was in January. However, I was not a candidate at the time because I was still nursing. I had to wait until my daughter was weaned + three months. They say this is because the hormones related to nursing can affect your vision. There is no sense getting LASIK for a prescription that is prone to change. 

My daughter weaned around 14 months (late April), so I couldn't get the surgery until late July. However, I was going on vacation in late July/early August. After LASIK, I wouldn't be allowed to get in a natural body of water for weeks. I wanted to enjoy my family vacation, so I scheduled the procedure for after we returned home. 

I still had my pre-op appointment in July to confirm I was a candidate based on some parameters about my eyes. I got the all clear and surgery was set for mid-August. They checked my eyes one more time before the procedure to make sure my prescription hadn't done anything weird and to check the dryness of my corneas. Apparently, my initial exam showed some corneal dryness. They were not any dryer than before, so I was all set.

This is the last picture of me wearing my glasses the day of the surgery. Also, no makeup. Ew.
To get ready for the procedure itself was kind of funny. They put my hair back in a net and put some numbing drops in my eyes. Then they wiped down my eyes with some antiseptic cleaning product. I was not allowed to wear makeup or products around my eyes for three days leading up to the surgery or for one week after the surgery, but they wanted to be extra certain that my eyes were clean. 

Here I am in all my no makeup glory. 
I was offered a valium for nerves, but I declined. I have had poor reactions to narcotics in the past. I know valium is not a narcotic, but I did not want to discover mid-eyeball surgery that Valium makes me go nuts. I was given a warm neck pillow, blanket, and a teddy bear wearing scrubs to hold. This was oddly comforting. 

The Surgery

The surgery is not painful, but it is not the most comfortable thing in the world. The part I was most worried about was getting the little thingamabobs put into my eyes to hold them open. I didn't even feel that part since they gave me even more numbing drops before the procedure. 

The part that was uncomfortable was cutting the flap. The surgeon has to hold the eye in place to ensure it does not move. This requires an absurd about of pressure. It is exceedingly uncomfortable. It does not take long, though. 

The surgeon pulling the flap back was by far the oddest part of the procedure. From what I could tell, he was using a tiny spatula to gently ease the flap open. Each time he pulled on the flap, my vision would move with it. Super weird. It was also odd to see someone wiping a tiny spatula across your eye. It was kind of like watching TV if the TV was directly on top of my eyeball. 

The laser part was simple. My prescription was pretty mild, so I only needed the laser for four seconds per eye. It did smell like burning hair, though. That was gross. Then the surgeon replaced the flap and that was it. He taped some super attractive eye shields over my eyes and I went to get lunch. I had to come back 90 minutes later for post-op.

Recovery

My eyes got extremely uncomfortable within 30 minutes as the numbing drops wore off. They didn't hurt so much as they were light sensitive to the extreme. When I went back in for my 90-minute post-op, I could barely open my eyes in a dark room. However, I was already at 20/20 vision for distance. 

My up close vision was blurry which freaked me out as I've never had problems seeing up close. The surgeon explained this was because of all the drops I had in my eyes. He said it was kind of like looking through a fish bowl.

The surgeon gave me some more numbing drops in the office so that I could open my eyes for more than two seconds. He inspected my flaps and said it all looked how it should. Hubs drove me home and my eyes were starting to bother me again by the time we got to the house. However, I took a three-hour nap and woke up feeling 90% normal. My eyes felt a little gritty, but they did not hurt in the slightest. 

I had to wear my super attractive eye shields at night for five days. I also had to use antibiotic drops for a week and steroid drops. I was supposed to use the steroid drops until I ran out of them. However, I made the unfortunate discovery that I am allergic to sulfites. One of the ingredients in the steroid drops was sodium bisulfite. It made my torso unbearably itchy. At my one-week post-op appointment (which was actually 10 days after surgery), the surgeon told me to cease the steroid drops.

Here are the eye shields. Trying to take a selfie after LASIK is hard. I couldn't see up close.
I came back one month after my one-week follow-up for my last follow-up appointment. My eyes are doing great and my vision is excellent. My right eye is 20/20 and my left eye is 20/15 (potentially even better, they didn't check below 20/15). 

In the beginning, I had to use artificial tears every hour. By one week post-op, I was using them every 2-3 hours. Now I use them about three times per day. The dryness was the most annoying part of recovery, but being able to see without glasses is worth it. Plus, that side effect won't last forever.