6.27.2012

Just keep moving

Hard day so far.

Both Ben and I are feeling it and aren't really sure why.

I woke up early this morning and felt like I really wanted to go for a run. Not really a run like I used to go on, but I needed to be moving and really exerting myself. I took Ben along and he showed an admirable amount of restraint by staying with me at my speed. I just went a mile and I wasn't timing it, but my guess would be about 14 minutes. My knees were acting up again. But it felt good. I had to pause and stretch for a minute about halfway.

I muttered, "I am so out of shape."

Ben replied, "I think it's more like you've been pregnant for several months and then your body has been through a whole lot of trauma since then."

Oh.

Yeah.

I guess there is that.

I know the hospital staff and Share Parents volunteers told my family to watch me closely for signs of depression. I honestly didn't think it would be an issue. I've been feeling a lot of peace and relying heavily on my Savior. But, I experienced depression as a teenager, so I kind of know what to watch myself for, and I have to say that some of the symptoms seem to be popping up.

The thing that a lot of people don't get about depression is that it's not feeling sad, it's just not feeling much at all. It's more like apathy. When things happen that you'd normally be excited about and you just don't feel excited about them anymore. When you start to have the desire to engage in more and more reckless behavior in order to get stronger feelings and emotions back to the surface. That's when you need to start worrying.

It's not like I'm gambling away our savings or jumping off the roof, but I recognize that I'm just not myself right now. So, I'm sorry if I just don't seem "right" when you talk to me. Don't worry, we're watching it. This is just a down time for me.

I'll come back to myself soon.

A wonderful friend of mine sent me a beautiful video as I was typing this. It was what I needed this morning. I needed to cry a bit.





I realized yesterday that my blog has made a lot of people cry.

Sorry about that, guys.

I've decided to try and throw in a little lighter spot at least once every post.

Because sometimes it's good to cry.

But, after you cry, you just need to smile.

So, here's a bit of a lighter story from my experience in the hospital.

I'd always heard that on the 0-10 pain scale, 10 was child birth. It never occurred to me that they couldn't include that as a level of pain in the Labor and Delivery unit, because obviously every woman in there would be at a dang 10 the whole time.

So when they asked me where my pain was on the scale, I was prepared to tell them 6 or 7 at first. Then they put it in perspective.

The nurse's exact wording was, "Where is your pain on a scale from 0-10, with 0 being no pain and 10 being having surgery with no medication whatsoever."

This gave me pause.

That was a level of pain I had never considered before.

And just what kind of surgery are we talking about here?

There is a huge difference between an out-patient surgery for an in-grown toe-nail and, say, a heart transplant.

But, as I lay there, pondering scalpels and such, I realized that, at that point, my pain really wasn't a big deal.

"I think it's around a 2." I finally said.

This experience, and several other things that happened, reminded me of a Brian Regan bit that my dad quickly pulled up on his iPad so we could listen to it.

That was, by far, the best laugh I had those few days.



6.26.2012

Joseph's story - Pictures

I have been overwhelmed by the response to Joseph's Story. 
The responses have been so tender. Benjamin and I have truly been surrounded by love. 
We've gone back and visited Joseph's grave a couple of times now. It never gets easier for me to leave there. It's a place of serene peace and deep sorrow. I lay down next to all the flowers and the turtle wind chime we put there and place my hand on the freshly placed ground. I close my eyes and send a silent prayer to my Heavenly Father. 
I miss my son.
I hit the anger stage of grief Friday night. I found out that I'd lost my son because of a terrible infection in me. This awoke such a disturbing train of thought in myself that I suddenly felt anger and hatred encompass me. I was hurting and I wanted to hurt everything around me. I screamed and pounded the ground and demanded, "Why?" until, with my mom and Ben at my side, I finally gave way to sobbing tears and, eventually, prayer, which brought me back to peace. 
We haven't cried as much lately. I was concerned that maybe we were forgetting how to feel. Then we opened up the latest Ensign today and turned right to a piece about tender moments in the life of Emma and Joseph Smith. The first picture we saw was such a painful and familiar sight to us that the tears came back.
Joseph and Emma Smith lost their firstborn, Alvin, on June 15th, 1828.
But For a Small Moment, © Liz Lemon Swindle
Benjamin and I bid farewell to our firstborn, Joseph, on June 18th, 2012.



 I was going to go back in and add these pictures to the previous post, but then I figured that most of the people who have already read it, would not see them. The above image is one of my most cherished. It's a moment from my short time with Joseph. I've also got some scenes from his funeral.
One thing I would like to pass on to you that I've learned recently is never to be afraid to feel something. Be afraid to turn away from your feelings. Please, whatever emotions our story and these images awake in you, don't look away. You just might find that hidden in your darkest feelings is the brightest faith and hope.



The tiny white things on the blanket next to the small statue on the table are porcelain molds of Joseph's hands and feet. The painting was given to us by some friends of my mom's, one of whom has had a similar experience to our own. The blanket serving as a table cloth is Ben's baby blanket. We put Joseph on it after he was born.
Ben and I each have grandparents who experienced the early loss of a child. Through talking to them I have come to realize that this will never be something that we "get over". Our grandparents still tear up when they talk about their children that they have spent a half century missing. Joseph will never be too far from our thoughts. We may each live to be 98 years old. That's another 74 years from where I'm at now. Ben and I have missions of our own that are yet to be accomplished before we part. Apparently, Joseph's mission on the other side of the veil was one so very important that he was not able to stay with his parents for long. 
Since Ben and I married, it often pained me to think that one of us would have to leave the other at some point. I still never wish to leave my best friend, my Benjamin, for any length of time. But, it does bring me great comfort now to think that which ever of us parts this life first, will just be the first one with the opportunity to meet our beautiful Joseph face to face and tell him how proud we are to call him "son". The one who stays behind will have to stay busy with our posterity that is yet to come. Thanks to Joseph, I now realize just how thin the veil between this life and the next truly is. Those who have left and those left behind are never really all that far apart.





6.21.2012

Joseph's Story


There are truly no words to describe what Ben and I have seen and experienced in this past week.
It has been easily both the most sacred and the most painful thing I have ever experienced in my life.
I've prayed for strength as I've prepared to record an account of my experiences. I'm at a place in the grieving process where there are just so many emotions all competing for my attention, so for the most part I just don't feel most of them. It feels like sometimes I go from laughing and peaceful to crying and feeling my heart break anew instantaneously, however, I've come to realize that all of these emotions are there all the time, I just am not capable of feeling everything at the same time.
I've decided to record and share Joseph's story because, frankly, prior to Sunday I had no idea what to think when I heard that someone had a miscarriage or a stillborn. It is such a deeply heartbreaking, personal experience that most women, understandably, do not wish to share their story. While my heart is no less broken than any other woman who has been through this, and while I cannot claim to speak for anyone else's experience, I have decided to share this because I want others to be able to understand and have a new perspective on this subject so that they will have a better idea of what couples may be experiencing.
Another large factor in me sharing this is that we find so much joy in Joseph. We are so proud of our son and wish to share what an immeasurable blessing he is with the world.
- - - - -
Sunday morning I woke up bright and early and ordered Ben to stay in bed. I ran into our spare room and pulled out a broom, a pillow, some work gloves and a bright green t-shirt that said, "What a dad!" in Spanish. I eagerly placed them on the bed in front of Ben, threw my arms around him and said, "Happy Father's Day!" All the gifts were things that my practical husband had requested for gifts, with the exception of the shirt, which turned out to be his favorite gift. He served his mission in Bolivia and likes to jokingly speak with me and my broken Spanish occasionally. As we ate breakfast, I started to feel a familiar migraine coming on. I told Ben I didn't think I'd be able to make it to sacrament meeting today and to come back and get me after that part was over so I could teach my primary class. He agreed and I went back to bed, woke up feeling better, and the rest of the morning went as planned. 
After church we came home and started making a banana cream pie to bring over to my dad for his Father's Day barbecue. Right as I was about to finish up with the filling at about 1:40pm, I felt the need to use the restroom, so I asked Ben to take over for me. After I sat down, an enormous gush of liquid left me all at once. 
I immediately knew what had happened.
Trying not to panic, I yelled for Ben to come quickly. I told him that I thought my water had just broke. Both of us were in shock and the first thought was to call the doctor's office. They let us talk to the on-call doctor, because my doctor, Dr Horsley, was out of town. The doctor told us we needed to go immediately to the ER. We quickly made our way to the hospital. On the way I called 911, because I didn't have the number for the hospital. I explained what had just happened and asked that they tell the ER to have a wheelchair ready for me when we pulled up to the doors, because I didn't think walking was a good idea right then. A moment later we pulled up and, sure enough, a nurse rushed to my door and whisked me away. Ben parked the car, ran as fast as he could and caught up to us at the end of the hall, just as she was finishing explaining that she was supposed to take us straight to Labor and Delivery. We took some secret back-ways to the other side of the hospital, where a L&D nurse took over and wheeled me to the furthest corner room in the wing. I later found out that this room is specially situated to provide families who are going through a very difficult time with privacy from the rest of the wing, which is filled with happy, new parents.
My first nurse, Dawn, came in and started going through the routine procedure for when an expectant mother believes her water has broken. The amazing thing about Dawn, though, was that she managed to do everything she needed to do, without ever letting me feel like I was just another patient. She explained everything that was happening in detail, while still being very sensitive and compassionate. We love Dawn. She started by putting some PH strips in me and checking them to see if they were right for amniotic fluid. She did a few and they all came back negative. Then she listened for Joseph's heartbeat, and found it beating along at an unstressed 140/ bpm. While she was doing this she was explaining to me that these were both great signs and that I had probably just experienced a weird side effect from a bladder infection or something. Then she went to do another examination and said that she was starting to double guess herself, because she thought she saw a little bit of amniotic fluid now. The PH test still came back negative, but she decided to order an ultrasound, just to check how much fluid I had lost. She was explaining that if I had just lost a bit of fluid, then they could do things to keep our baby in the right position, to stay in the fluid that was left, until the age of viability, which was 24 weeks, at which point they would transfer me to Mckay-Dee hospital, which specializes in premature births. I was at 16 weeks in my pregnancy, and not thrilled at the prospect of spending two months in the hospital, on constant medication and bed rest, but I braced myself to do whatever I had to, to keep my baby safe. 
When the ultrasound tech finally showed up, he apologetically informed me that he wasn't allowed to talk about what he was seeing on the screen. He did let me look, though. I could see my precious baby, squirming a bit. His heart rate was still around a healthy 140. He wasn't under stress or in pain. I didn't realize that this would be the last time I would see my beautiful child while he was alive. Had I known, I wouldn't have let the man with the ultrasound leave so fast. 
Dr Craig was on call that night and she came in to talk to me about what they had found out from the ultrasound. I can't remember exact words, but what they had found out is that I had lost almost all of the amniotic fluid all at once when my water broke. I was still having a difficult time processing what they were saying. My baby was still perfectly healthy. I wanted to know what the next step was. What were they going to do to fix it? After the doctor had left, I turned to Dawn and asked, "So, without amniotic fluid, what will happen?" She was still for a moment before she gently explained, "Amniotic fluid is crucial for the baby. The baby uses it to breathe and do other important things." 
"Won't me or the baby make more?" I asked.
"You won't be able to make enough in time. I am so sorry." She whispered.
Then it hit me.
My body had failed. As a result, my perfectly healthy child was going to leave me.
I have never known such pain as the pain that knowledge left me with.
Dr Craig wanted to immediately induce labor. Through my sobs, I agreed. 
Dr Horsley is an old friend of mine. I baby-sat his five wonderful children for several years and just fell in love with his entire family. There was no one else I trusted with the care of me and my child. That's why, after failed attempts to reach him by phone, my mom drove over to their house and explained to his wife what was happening. His wife got a hold of him and he called me right after calling and talking to Dr Craig. He expressed his sincere sorrow for our situation, and gave some advice. He explained that he highly recommended we wait for our baby's heartbeat to stop before we induce labor. This would make it a lot easier for me to accept. I am so grateful for this advice. I can see now that it saved me from additional heartache.
The next several hours were torture. My child was inside of me, dying, and there was absolutely nothing I could do about it. I just had to wait for his perfect heart to stop beating. This entire time is a blur in my mind. Both of our parents came and went. We watched a movie. We prayed endlessly, read scriptures and found peace in General Conference talks. One talk in particular, Elder Scott's from the most recent conference, touched us. It spoke of how those spirits who have left their body are closer to us than we know. 
That evening I had a sacred experience that let me know that my Joseph had passed on and that he was alright. 
I called for the nurses and requested that they look for a heartbeat. By now, Tiffany was my nurse. She couldn't find a heartbeat on Doppler and called in a more experienced nurse, Dee, for a second opinion. Dee couldn't find anything either, so she got an ultrasound machine. When she finally found Joseph, she explained what was on the screen. She said, "Here is his head, looking over on this side you can see his chest, and right here is where there would be a heartbeat." 
I stared at the screen. His little chest was still. He was lying on his side, his back towards us. My Joseph was peacefully sleeping.
Dee began to cry as she expressed her sympathy for us and then hurried out of the room. Ben held me and we were both racked with sobs. For the first time we truly mourned.
I mourned for all the things this meant I would not experience in this life. I would not see what color his bright eyes were. I would not hear his first words. I would not feel his little hand on my chin as I nurse him. I would not watch him nod off in my arms as I sing him to sleep. I would not hear his laughter as we play yet another game of peek-a-boo. I would not get to set a cake in front of him on his first birthday and watch as he gleefully digs in. The list went on and on without end.
Most of all, I would not get to hold him in my arms for the rest of my life.
I immediately missed my son. I realized just how deep my love for this child I'd never met was. I would have done anything at all in this universe, to get him back, even just for long enough to whisper, "I love you, " into his mortal ear. 
This was one of countless times throughout this experience when an unexpected wave of peace came over me. I determined that I was too exhausted at that moment to induce labor, so I decided to try and rest until morning. I drifted in and out of fitful sleep for a few hours, alternating between weeping, silence, and whispered conversations with Benjamin. There was a chair in the room that transformed into a bed. Ben moved it over next to my bed and slept there, holding my hand. When I would start crying, he would crawl up into my bed and hold me until it passed. Around 3am, we called Ben's dad, Gordon, to come and give me a priesthood blessing with oil. Ben had given me two blessings already, but he had forgotten his consecrated oil, and I felt strongly that I needed it. Gordon showed up and helped Ben administer a blessing to me, granting me strength to do what I needed to do right then and peace and comfort. After that I was able to sleep until just after 6am. Around 7am, I decided that I was going to eat breakfast and then ask them to induce labor. 
I ate, not because I was hungry, but because I knew that I needed to. I was going to be on liquids or ice chips until after labor, and I needed whatever strength I could get. 
At about 8:30am, they gave me the first dose of the pills to start me.
Then it was back to waiting.
The next few hours are also a blur. Parents came and went again. We were briefed on what we needed to decide as far as what to do with our son's body. We decided we'd have a small, private funeral and bury him in the Logan Cemetery on Wednesday morning.
Most people were very, very kind. Some people seemed to forget that even though they had no emotional attachment to this "fetus", we did. He meant everything to us. He was and is our son. We had been looking forward to meeting him more than we had looked forward to anything, ever. 
Then, around 11, the contractions started. I asked for some pain medication and what they gave me immediately went to my head. I would close my eyes and see kaleidoscope shapes and colors. I did not feel anything, emotionally, or physically. Suddenly, I understood why people get addicted to drugs. It makes it so you really don't have to face reality when it's painful.
It was not what I wanted.
I decided not to ask for another dose until I really needed it. The pills wear off after about a 1/2 hour to an hour. Coming back down was awful. Suddenly I felt everything again. All the thoughts, emotions and physical pain came rushing back. I reminded myself that I didn't want anymore yet. I had to be mentally present for every second I would get with my son.
I threw up, I think just once, but I can't really remember. A couple of times I felt sharp, deep pains in my chest. When I told the nurses about it, they informed me that it was from extreme emotional stress. I believe it was the feeling of my heart breaking again and again, so it could grow big enough to fit in the enormous feelings of love I was being flooded with. Love for my Heavenly Father, love for my Benjamin, and, of course, an enormous amount of love for my Joseph Gordon. 
At some point we decided on a name for him. We decided on Joseph Gordon Allred. Joseph, because it was a name that I had picked out in my sleep awhile back and we both ended up really liking it. Gordon because we have numerous wonderful men on both sides of the family with the name Gordon, and we wanted to honor them all. 
The pain began to increase in frequency and intensity. I got another dose of pain medication, expecting to be carried away again. This time it barely even took the edge off the pain. The only reason I knew it had really even entered my system was because between the contractions, my head would get extremely fuzzy. I could not stop myself from crying out in pain.
Whenever I had imagined going through labor before, the only comfort that I had was knowing that at the end I would have a baby in my arms and would be flooded with such a level of ecstasy that all that pain would all be worth it. I always counted on that knowledge to get me through labor.
Now I was going through labor with the sole purpose of bringing my son's body into the world, after he had already left it. Words fail me here. I cannot describe the emotional and physical anguish I experienced. They could not keep my mom out in the hallway during the worst of it and she would come in and hold the hand that Ben wasn't holding. 
Then the nurses were back to check on how things were progressing. As they had been that entire shift, they were idly chit-chatting back and forth. They realized that Joseph was waiting just inside and ready to come out, so they called up Dr Horsley. While they were waiting for him, they continued to ignore us and talk to each other. I did not know how they could not feel it. How couldn't they feel the Spirit in that room? It was filled with angels. It had been sanctified by the sacrifice that Ben and I had laid at the altar of the Lord that day. We had come to accept that this was what Heavenly Father had planned for us. He had strengthened us for it. He had held all of us in His hands through the entire experience. We knew that this was right. It was okay. We were still in deep mourning for our precious son, because we missed him and loved him. But we knew that Joseph was all right and we knew that, although we would always miss him, we would be able to accept this as well. And yet these women talked away as if this was just another routine experience in another routine day.
How did they not feel it?
I didn't have the energy to yell at them for how careless they had been that entire day, so instead I whispered, "Please, use quiet voices." They quieted down a bit and soon Dr Horsley came into the room and helped to better set the tone for these women.
He understood that the ground he was walking on was sacred. 
Dr Horsley asked Ben to step up more towards my head and focus on my face while he delivered Joseph. They had been very concerned that Joseph might not be in very good shape, or that the placenta might not come out immediately, which would require surgery. 
They needn't have worried. There were no further complications. After cleaning Joseph up a little, Dr Horsley explained to us that he was perfectly developed for his 16 weeks. His skin was still very red, because he was so young, and there was bruising on one side from where he was resting when he passed on, but they weren't anything that had caused him pain. His head was just a bit bigger than we're used to, again because he was so young, but all his features and everything was as it should be. Then the nurses handed him to us.
And I suddenly understood beauty. Joseph was the most beautiful child I have ever seen. He really was perfect. Perfect ears, perfect closed eyes, perfect lips that were turned up in a small smile, perfect nose that looked just like mine, perfect collarbone, perfect tiny hands, with fingernails and all the knuckles, perfect feet that were exact miniature versions of Ben's.
He was our child. 
Ben went and put on his Father's Day shirt. 
"I'm a daddy." He said
We held Joseph in our arms and wept and prayed.  Then an amazing thing happened. We stopped crying and started just talking. Talking about how wonderful and amazing our son is. As we talked, we began to be filled with more and more true joy, until we were even laughing a little. Our son was just so perfect! 
I learned a lesson about joy that night. I learned that it is possible to be experiencing the most heart rending emotions humanly possible, and yet still have joy. Joy is deeper than happiness. It is possible to have joy in your children in any circumstance, simply because their very existence is a miracle and a blessing to you.
Then the volunteers from Share Parents arrived. These women are angels. They volunteer countless hours serving women with stillborn children, and each of them have been through the same thing. They brought tiny outfits we could pick from that would fit our Joseph. They helped us to dress him, including putting a miniature diaper on him. We picked a white blessing gown for him, with a white knitted cap, and tiny blue booties. They gave him a little teddy bear to tuck under his arm. There were also tiny sets of identical bracelets to choose from. One would go on Joseph's wrist, the other would go on a necklace for me. There was a gold ring, the right size for a newborn's finger, which fit over Joseph's whole hand that we set with him while  the volunteers took pictures of him with and without us. The ring also was mine to put on a necklace. They put all the pictures on a CD and printed out a couple for us to take home with us right then. They provided us with a little blue blanket to wrap him in. They also gave us an extra of the diaper, gown and blanket to keep for ourselves. They left us with their names and phone numbers and the instructions to call them absolutely anytime we wanted to talk or needed anything at all. They put all of these things in a special memory box for us to keep. As I said, these women were truly angels.  Then they left us alone so our parents could come in and meet Joseph, the first grandchild on both sides.
Our parents' visit in the room was very short. There wasn't much to say. There were many tears and whispers of, "He's so precious," and "He's such a blessing."
Ben and I spent some more time alone with our first born son. We held our Joseph. We sang to him. We laughed. We cried. I spent most of my time repeating the words, "I love you," again and again. I knew if he had been able to stay around longer, I would have said those words to him countless times, so I wanted to say it as many times as I could while I held his mortal body. I also explained to him that I knew he was no longer in his little body, but I knew he was with us and could hear me anyway.
After a couple hours had passed, we finally decided that we were ready to tell our sweet Joseph goodbye, and hand him over to Dee, who was once again our nurse. We called her in and then each held him and kissed him one last time.
Then I had to turn away as she walked out with him. 
The feelings were overpowering.
And then, once again, so was the peace.
Share Parents had given me a teddy bear. They recognized that it was in no way a replacement for a baby, but it would give me something to hold as I left the hospital. I cannot tell you how much that bear means to me. I call it my Joseph Bear. When I get really sad and am having a hard time, missing my son, I hold the bear close to me, and somehow, it makes me feel better.
We left that hospital much different than we entered it.
We entered it scared, but still with all the lovely hopes and dreams of a newlywed couple expecting their first child.
We left that hospital with a solemn knowledge that we were, are, and will always be Joseph's parents. We left with a greater capacity for joy and love.
I've had a quote in my head through this whole experience. It's a quote from a man by the name of Francis Webster who crossed the plains with the ill-fated Willie and Martin Handcart companies. He was in a meeting where people were criticizing the trek. Francis stood up and said, "Every one of us came through with the absolute knowledge that God lives for we became acquainted with Him in our extremities!... I knew then that the Angels of God were there. Was I sorry that I chose to come by handcart? No! Neither then nor any minute of my life since. The price we paid to become acquainted with God was a privilege to pay and I am thankful that I was privileged to come in the Martin Handcart Company.” "
Throughout my remaining time on Earth, there will be an empty spot in my heart and my arms, where my son Joseph belongs. But, I will never look back on this experience with any regret. I am so blessed to have Joseph. He has been nothing but a blessing in my life. Through my experiences with him, I have come to know my Savior and my Father. I have felt the hand of God and I will forever be changed by it. I've learned more about all of life's most important lessons in these past four days than I learned in the previous 24 years combined. 
I have also come to know and understand my Benjamin better. I have never felt more blessed in my choice of a husband. He's been my best friend since I met him, and he's been the best husband anyone could ask for. But now, he's so much more than that. He is the other half to my soul. I could not have gotten through this without his strength and tears at my side. Even when he doesn't feel the same way as me in the grieving process, he respects my needs and I try to do the same for him. He listens and cries with me and holds me.
I'm so blessed to have two angels by my side. One on this side of the veil, one on the other.
More than anything, I am forever grateful for Joseph.


6.19.2012

Joseph Gordon Allred

Joseph Gordon Allred was born June 18, 2012, weighing a little over three and a half ounces and measuring seven inches long. His mommy and daddy got to hear his strong heartbeat one last time before he passed away and his beautiful, perfectly formed mortal body came into this world. We love our son and we miss him terribly. We are so grateful for the sacred experience his life has been for us and for the strength we've received during his passing both from angels seen and unseen. We are eternally grateful for all of your prayers and love. We love all of you, too, and greatly appreciate the space and personal time for now.

6.13.2012

First Trip to the ER

Well, this is not how I was planning to go about my first post on my pregnancy. But this was just so news worthy and eventful that I could not help myself.
So, we found out that we are going to have a baby November 29th!
We found out at the beginning of April. The first couple weeks were awesome. I had no symptoms and I was gearing up to re-start this blog in the theme of trying to have a healthy pregnancy. Little did I know that I would soon be simply trying to survive pregnancy.
The 24 hours after Easter were spent in a foggy haze of morning sickness. I was throwing up every hour on the hour. I couldn't keep anything down, liquid or solid. Ben was a total champ through this. He even assigned himself to be on bucket duty. No joke, I made a great eternal investment in this guy. I finally called up the doctor and they said I was one of the "lucky" 5% of women who get to take some medication to keep stuff down during pregnancy, but I shouldn't need it once I hit the second trimester. 
The rest of my first trimester was spent taking those magical pills. I still felt nauseous every waking moment, but the most I would throw up in a day was 3 times. Which, considering what I had been through at first, was totally manageable. What's a lot more difficult to work with is just how ridiculous and extreme this is. I used to love looking through the ads and recipe books and planning out weekly menus. Now I could literally not even look through the ads without getting sick. All it would take was accidentally thinking about eating something that my body objected to, and my body would, well, object. Anything that smelled strongly of food or chemicals would do me in. What I could tolerate eating changed by the minute. My plans for a healthy, balanced diet went out the stinkin' window.
I was in Bear Grylls mode.


This was all about doing what I had to do to make it out with me and the baby alive. 
My diet was not healthy that first 3 months, but not terrible either. Mainly it consisted of PBJs and cold cereal. I ended up losing about 10 pounds. Fortunately, I had more than enough weight to spare and it's not a big deal if you end up losing weight in the first trimester. 
Then, a beautiful thing happened.
I started having increasingly longer periods of time where I didn't feel nauseous. I never thought I would be in a position where I would look at my husband during dinner and say, "I like this food. I'm actually enjoying this!" and then both of us would tear up a little in sheer joy. But I swear that really did happen. 
And for a couple weeks this trend continued. I was very happy.
Then yesterday happened. It started out with a headache that would just not relent. I took some non-aspirin Tylenol, to no avail. Then my vision went blurry. Then I puked. I really wanted to sleep. My problem is that our home is getting re-roofed right now. So, from 7am until 4pm they have their music going and it sounds like we're living below a hippo dance club. This is a very difficult environment to sleep in. I called my OB, but he was on vacation, so the on call doc said that it sounded like a virus so I should try to drink as much fluids as I could and get some rest. Ben was concerned about me so he called his mom to come over and check on me. She told me they had a room ready for me in their basement, where I could sleep all I want and holler if I needed anything. 
I love these people.
I went over to my in-laws and slept until Ben came home from work and woke me up. This is when stuff done got weird. I was convinced that my virus was something extremely deadly and contagious and so the police were going to come and burn me and all my stuff so other people wouldn't catch it. I didn't want them to, though because:
A) I'm pregnant and
B) I'm still alive.
I was terrified and I wanted to keep moving so they couldn't find me. I tried to go for a walk but Ben stopped me, saying I was way too sick for that. So, I tried to run away. That didn't fly either. I felt so betrayed that he would force me to stay in a place where they could find me so easily. I just laid there and cried. Then I got up and wrote out in my journal exactly how I want my funeral to go. Then I threw up again. And again. Then I ate. Then I threw up again. Gradually, and after a priesthood blessing, I came out of my confused paranoia. Then I started noticing that I was getting a terrible cramping pain in my lower abdomen. This didn't concern me too much at first, because I've already discovered that pregnancy comes with it's share of random pains. But, as we were trying to go to sleep, and I was still throwing up, the pains got way worse. I couldn't sleep and I had the distinct feeling that something really was very wrong.  We phoned the on call doc again, and he said that I was extremely dehydrated and we needed to get in to the ER immediately before I became a raisin woman. Or something like that.
We dragged my body to the car and rushed over to the ER. When we got there, I let Ben take care of the checking in stuff, because I recognized that my head still wasn't completely on straight. Suddenly, I felt an urge. I knew I had to get to the bathroom immediately or things were about to get ugly. I frantically asked the  receptionist where the bathroom was. Casually, she glanced up and drawled out, "What are you going to use it for."
I blinked at her as I fought back a completely new urge. That to leap over the counter and attack this woman. Then I had to bite back the verbal response of, "Well, I was thinking that I'd mosey on in there and set to decorating the place with toilet paper. It's amazing what you can do with a little ingenuity!"
What the heck did she think I was going to be doing in there?
I went with, "Well, I'm not sure yet. I might throw-up or I might use the restroom."
She took her time handing me a pink bucket and informing me that they'd need a sample. Then she pointed to the little electronic pad on my side of the counter and told me that she needed a signature saying that I consented to treatment. At this point I about gave her the requested sample up close and personal. Only then did she tell me where the bathroom was.
Fortunately, the nurses and doctors in the ER that night were awesome. I truly cannot say enough about how grateful I am for these people and their kindness. The doctor there agreed with the on call OB's diagnosis of dehydration and they set me up with an IV of happiness. They gave me a little bag of strong anti-nausea stuff and two bags of a saline solution. The first bag of saline solution kind of stalled, though, and by the time they noticed and got it going, it was cold and I started shivering uncontrollably. Shivering from the inside out is a completely new experience for me. They warmed up the next bag and it felt much better. From the moment that mixture of happiness started hitting my veins, though, I relaxed and was slipping in and out of sleep for the next 4 hours while they were fixing me. Then they sent me home with orders to be on a clear liquids diet (broth, juice, Gatorade, etc.) until I can ease myself back onto normal foods.
The doctor also did an ultrasound to make certain that the baby was okay. That was a beautiful moment for me. As I watched my little baby trying to do back flips inside of me, I realized that I'm more than willing to go through all of this, and a whole lot more, for the opportunity to be a part of this little spirit's life.
I love this baby.
It's a completely new kind of love. I've always heard all the cliches about a mother's love, but I never have truly understood them.
I think I'm beginning to get it now.
Even now, I would die for this child. But, that doesn't appear to be what I need to do. What I need to do is endure all of this and whatever the next 4 1/2 months hold. And I will do so. Whenever I start to give in to misery and think that this is too hard for me to do, I picture that small child with it's little heart pumping away.
I truly am amazed every time I get to peek inside there and see that my baby is so healthy. It is nothing short of a miracle that I can go through pains and experiences that I never thought possible, and then find out that my baby is completely unharmed and, in fact, thriving.
So, I will do my best for this baby.
Because my child is totally worth this.
And so much more.