• 07 Feb 2010 /  baby, melting down, paolo

    A little over four weeks ago, Paolo and I were out having dinner and a glass of wine.  On our way home, it suddenly dawned on me that I was three days late.  So we stopped off at the pharmacy on our way home and got a box of pregnancy tests.  I peed on one, and two little stripes showed up.  When I finally shut my gaping maw, I took out all the other sticks and peed on every one of them, too.  The result?

    Preggos.

    A great deal of shouting and excitement followed.  Phonecalls to the parental units wherein my mother made very clear that she did NOT want to be called nanna or noni like all the other Indian grandmothers.  It would be GRANNY for her, thank you very much.  Then, a month of waiting for our first OB appointment.  Did you know they won’t even see you until you’re at least two months pregnant?  I didn’t know.  But yep, you have a whole month to figure out the murky waters of prenatal vitamins, diet and wrap your head around the fact that HOLY FUCKING SHIT, I’M HAVING A BABY!  You start packing on the pounds, crying about potatoes (obviously, potatoes are sad), and your boobs grow two cup sizes.  We planned our delayed honeymoon with the quickness (probably Barbados - no big trad climbing trips with baby on board - probably this April) since this would be our last shot at one with just the two of us.  My mom and a couple of friends sent us baby books.

    And the day finally came.  This past Wednesday.  We went to the OB.  She stuck a bunch of instruments up my vagina and I peed on a few more sticks, all of which said THIS LADY IS PREGNANT.  We got smiles and congratulations from about five nurses and two doctors, a stack of prenatal literature and appointments for Lamaze classes and we scheduled our first ultrasound for Friday morning.

    Thursday evening, Paolo came home from work with the pair of UGGS I’ve been crying about wanting for months.  And a bouquet.  And a card that said “Congratulations mommy, love daddy”.  And despite my huge, painful breasts and because of my little prodruding belly, everything was perfect.

    Friday morning, we were handed another bunch of literature and ushered into a room with a tech who rubbed a bunch of warm goop on my belly.  I put my hands above my head while Pnut held them in his hands, and we held our breaths and waited with fascination to see the little critter in my belly.  The tech made a bunch of measurements with her little computer pointer, then told me to get dressed, we’d just hop across the hall to the other machine.  On our way across the hall, we saw the nurse who gave us all the literature.  She stopped in her tracks and asked the tech where we were going.  Then, both women ushered us into the vaginal ultrasound room.  This time, they put a condom over an instrument that looked exactly like a dildo… with a very long cord.  And after adding goop, they stuck that in my vagina.  You know on ER when they do ultrasounds and you hear that disturbingly gross whoosh, whoosh sound and the little flickering and beeping where the baby is?  The nurse pointed that stuff out to us by saying “This is where you would normally see…” and “and over here is where you would usually see”.  And I knew something was horribly wrong.  My mind was blank with shock, but my body went stiff.  And finally, she told us that our baby was dead.  Or rather, that “the fetus is not viable, I’m sorry to say you’ve miscarried”.

    And back to the OB we went, to hear one option more grisly than the next.  Here are your options when you miscarry: 1. wait to pass the fetus at home (could take a couple of weeks) 2. take a pill to help you cramp and bleed and pass the fetus at home.  In case you’re wondering, and I did, and I asked, if you do this then flushing everything down the toilet is the standard operating procedure.  I didn’t have the stomach for these options.  I understand that medically and technically all I would be “passing” would be a “bunch of tissue” (as my doctor friend also reminded me on the phone yesterday).  I respect any woman’s right to choose how she feels about that mass of tissue.  But I chose for two months to think of that mass of tissue as my baby.  And I nurtured it, and fed it, and protected it and planned an amazing life for it.  And I would not be able to sleep ever again if I thought it was sitting in the septic tank in my front yard.

    So we scheduled option 3. A D&C.  That’s the polite way to say abortion.  And Saturday morning, we went back to the hospital.  I saw, through my teary fish-eye lens vision, the other pregnant women in the waiting room, reading pregnancy and parenting books and smiling with their partners.  I was torn between wanting to burst out crying and wanting to punch them all in their happy pregnant faces.

    The nice thing about a Catholic hospital (believe me, I never thought I’d think that, let alone write it down) is that every time the admitting staff, the nurses, or anybody else says D&C at the top of their lungs, you know that nobody thinks you’re there because you want to be.  Everybody knows that your baby is already dead.  Or not viable.  Or whatever you prefer to say that makes you feel better.  And most people are thusly kind and gentle to your grief.

    We walked into that hospital on Friday as excited new parents.  Shocked and terrified, but excited.  And we walked out of that hospital on Saturday empty.  At least, that’s how it felt.  My breasts are still enormous and aching, my belly still sticks out a bit, but now I’m just a busty fat chick who can’t put anything near her vagina for two months (”pelvic rest” is the polite way to say that).  They say my body should go back to normal in a couple of months.

    And here’s what you find out when you have a miscarriage - everybody else you know has had one.  People come out of the woodwork and tell you about their DNC’s, their bloody underwear at work, their heartache.  And you wonder, after all the guilt and crying and grief, why you never knew this before: one in five pregnancies ends in miscarriage.  The number is probably closer to one in four, but many women miscarry before knowing they were pregnant.  You think about the women you know, and the number of kids they have, and that’s a lot of miscarriages.  So WHY doesn’t anybody talk about it?  WHY do women have to feel like they’re the only person on earth to suffer like this when it happens?  WHY does everybody tell you “wow, you told us early” when you tell them you’re pregnant?  “So many things go wrong in the first trimester, we think you told us too soon”.  Like if something goes wrong, they don’t want to know about it.  Like you should handle your dirty secret miscarriage alone.  Well what’s the point in having friends and family if they can’t help you make it through something like this?  And how can they do that if they don’t know what you’re going through?

    Sigh.

    I know I’ll wake up one morning soon and know that it’s not the end of the world.  I will wake up ready to try again.  This one was a surprise, but a welcomed and much loved surprise.  Now we know for sure that, though we are as unready as anybody for parenthood, it is something that we want.  In the meantime, I am not going to hide this experience.  And if I get pregnant again, I won’t do anything different- no skulking about for months in fear of telling anybody.  I will still call my best friends and family, excited.  And if I miscarry again, I will want to talk about that too.

    This whole experience has also resolved my feelings once again about nursing as opposed to doctoring.  Because, I find, it is the difference between somebody taking the time to sit with you, stroking your arm when the IV medicine burns and handing you a tissue versus informing you with one sentence that they are sorry but you will pass the mass of tissue.  It’s the difference between treating the human being like a grieving mother and treating the slab of warm meat like a car that needs repairing.  I want the skills to heal, but I also want the time to use them.  I want to heal people, not just bodies.

    One last thing- folks should give more thought and attention to fathers going through this experience.  It’s my body, but it was P’s baby too.  He is grieving as much as I am.  And not a single person yet has offered a kind word just for him during this experience.

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  • 19 May 2009 /  melting down, paolo, topo innards

    What is a nervous breakdown?  It is not wanting to spend another second in your skin.  It is hating yourself for feeling that way, for laying that burden upon those around you.  It is knowing that the only way to make quiet is to remove your brain from the equation, and also knowing the only way to do that.  It is your brain in salty water, calling to you like a siren - SILENCE ME, SILENCE ME! - trying to pull you under.  Then you tie yourself to a pole so that you cannot do what everything in you screams to do, and try to weather the storm.  And you don’t know why.  It is dancing delicately on Occam’s razor, trying to find anything that makes sense and finding nothing at all.

    There is no easy answer.  There is no logic.  There is only the disease, sucking at your soul, an alien in your brain.  In my case, unipolar depression, which is (as I jokingly told a friend today) like having bipolar disorder, only without any of the fun of the upswings.

    Now, four months into the scary medications, something is coming back together.  My hands still quiver and shake while I search for the right words, but I can search for them!  I can see the outline of where I once stood; I just need to figure out how to write the paragraphs, then the sentences, then the words.  I was never good with punctuation, anyway.

    Now I have a wedding to plan.  Yes, P and I have decided.  I don’t know why he loves me, but he does.  This disease is horrid.  It is inexplicable.  I am hard to reach, even for myself.  I don’t deserve his love.  I feel like a wretch from the gutter, a liar and a thief who has been unknowingly ushered into the dance of the faeries.  And I want do dance, I do!  I want the soft relief of his steady arms, his steady mood, his steady love.  I just hope I don’t bring occam’s razor with me.

  • 01 Mar 2009 /  melting down, topo innards

    I know, I know… again, MIA for too long. But I have good reasons.  The nervous breakdown (number two), already anticipated, finally arrived in all its glory and tears.  This time, Efexor and a multitude of other equally scary drugs arrived as well.  People tell me they are good for me, but I have to say that I’ve had better bad trips than these drugs.  No fun at all, people.  And I remember a couple of times in the good old days when I actually ganked antidepressants off of friends while out drinking, just to have a good time.

    So now I have to tell you one of the best things about living in Belgium.  I can go to a doctor, get all weirded out on anti-depressants, and he hands me a note that says I don’t have to go to work.  And then he hands me another note.  And another.  And hopefully, two weeks from now, he will hand me yet another.  Because this is some seriously nutty shit, these drugs.  Sometimes I have good days, and I think - yes, this is over, I can go back to living my life.  But about twenty minutes after the Efexor kicks in, and I’m crying hysterically into Paolo’s shoulder, unable to process any thought except - cry, cry, cry… I realize that no, I’m not ready to go back to anything.  Not work, not home, not reading, not me.  Then I take the tranquilizer that “evens it out”.  I find that I’m taking drug after drug, trying to balance myself out.  Is this how it’s supposed to work?  Is this how I’m supposed to be living?  Who lives like this, cutting a human form of water and molecule by using drug after drug, trying to make something resembling a normal person?  Is the psychiatrist an artist, giving me the tools to reshape my psyche?  Why isn’t the lump of molecules good enough on it’s own?  Take anything, give it the appropriate context, and it is art.  So was I art before this, simply out of context?  Or am I art now, mangled and woven by the context of norms that I don’t understand?

    In the interim, Paolo and I went to Venice.  Previous plans to fix his car and see his family, plus give me a taste of Carnavale.  I’ll have to catch up on that trip another time.

    In the interim, let me get back to something I should have done weeks ago!

    …….

    These excellent questions were asked by Kerri of The Blonde Merryweather:

    1. What is the best vacation you’ve ever been on?  Was it great
    because of the place you went, the people you went with, or the stuff
    you did while you were there?

    I took my favorite “vacation” when I was 20.  After a summer of classes in Madrid, I hitch-hiked from Alicante, Spain to Málaga, Spain with my best friend, El.  It was two weeks on one of the most beautiful coastlines in the world with nothing but a backpack and a bit of luck.  We cajoled fresh, salty sardines off of fishermen for free.  We smoked hash and drank wine on hidden beaches with generous strangers.  We ate the best squid I have ever tasted with white wine.  We were robbed and chased the thief across a beach.  We carried an enormous drum that I insisted I would learn how to play along the way.  We fought, we laughed, we made friends, we got brown, and finally we fell madly in love.  There are enough stories from each day of that vacation to fill my entire lifetime.  And indeed, almost every day I am reminded of some incredible moment we shared.

    2. Have you ever had something that you were convinced you were never
    going to be able to do, and then you managed it?  Be it mastering some
    skill or keeping up motivation for some resolution.  How did you keep
    up your motivation while you were working towards the goal?

    It was a six-year goal to move back to Europe.  After living in Spain illegally for a couple of years running a small bed and breakfast I needed a change.  I figured I could move to the US, get an international job, and be back in Spain within a year or two.  I may, possibly, have underestimated the power of a degree in English Literature.  So I went from international company to international company in St. Louis (located in Misery, the armpit of the USA), pressuring as many people as I could, picking up as many languages as I could.  I took night classes and worked my way towards a degree in International Relations.  Finally, I got a break for a job in Belgium.  It took very little convincing to get me 1500 miles closer to Spain.  But the goal is still there - a place in the sun with friendly people, great calamari, good wine, ocean, mountains and… someplace I can write without needing a corporate day-job.  I don’t need to try and keep my motivation - it’s always there, waiting… that image of myself in a cottage by the sea surrounded by a rainbowed family, an enormous library of books, dogs, and a couple of horses in the stable.

    3. If you found yourself with $1,000 that you had to spend in the next
    24 hours, what would you buy?

    I’ve been dreaming about having one of these tarp tents for a while.  So, that’s be first on the list.  Then, probably, a decent mountainbike (I’m totally not even qualified to know what that means) so I can think about trying a Triathlon sometime this summer.

    4. If you could get back in touch with anyone from your past that
    you’ve lost touch with, who would it be?  Why did you lose touch with
    them to begin with?

    Actually, I’m in touch with pretty much everybody I’d like to be in touch with from the past.  The El I mentioned in question number one is currently in Malawi, Africa.  We’ve stayed close despite spending very little time on the same continent and a number of potentially lethal mistakes both on her part and mine in our relationship (both when we were together, and later as friends).  But a great deal of tension has built up around that relationship over the years.  It’s a great regret of mine.  I always thought she was the great love of my life, and I messed that up.  But there’s no reason that a great love can’t continue on in different ways.  Or am I mistaken on that?  I’d love to hear what others think about that one.

    5. What website do you visit most often?  Is there a guilty pleasure
    website that you visit that you’d be somewhat embarrassed to admit you
    enjoy?

    Oh dear.  I am a total blog addict.  Currently, my favorite blog is written by schmutzie.  I suppose because she feels like a close  compatriot in the battle against crazy.  As I’ve mentioned before, I also love sweet-juniper.  I guess my guilty pleasure website would be sweet and salty, but not because I’m embarassed to read it.  Just because I’ve never lost a child… I’ve rarely even wanted to have one!  So I feel a bit like a sneaky, unwanted interloper when I’m over there.  But something in her writing touches me very deeply.  And that’s the mark of a great writer, isn’t it - somebody who can touch your soul and make you understand something completely foreign to you!

  • 15 Jan 2009 /  melting down, topo innards, topomusic

    The main problem with disappearing for well over a month is that you then feel the need to come back with a BANG! To rehash all the exciting things that happened over the last few weeks. To excite your loyal audience (hi Chelsea!) with titillating observations and snarky commentary. You get all hyper about how to do it. You construct run-on sentences in your mind. You edit them. You delete them completely and come up with a new subject. You do this pretty much every day until you realize that everything you’ve been wanting to write about is utterly meaningless in comparison with the bag of tortilla chips on the coffee table and the cushy couch growing out of your ass. You compose tender and reassuring poems to your growing ass. Finally, your ass gets so big it doesn’t fit on the couch anymore and you have to get up and go to work. Dammit.

    So as you can see, I have returned to work now have nothing better to do than post.

    I’ll just give you the overview of the last eight-ish or so weeks. First, I got depressed. Well, actually I got depressed sometime in October. Instead of waiting for Total Meltdown this time, P found some cheap tickets and shuttled us both off to Chicago for Thanksgiving. I saw the whole family, which was really fun except my mother’s version of “hello”, which was as usual a lyrical exercise in criticism. This time it covered (primarily) my knack for losing things and my lack of common sense. Always a good time. After the US, I had one week of pretty happy. Then I crashed into Total Meltdown mode for all of December (in case Ian Curtis below didn’t clue you in). TM mode means I walk around the house bleary-eyed and crying a lot for no specific or apparent reason. P looks at me and I cry. I put my shoes on and find it incredibly sad. I comb my hair - waterworks. I come home and go straight for the couch. P hugs me, I cry. P makes me dinner, I cry. I go to bed and bawl all night. And this whole time sad-me is being watched by psycho-me. Psycho-me turns everything I do into a potential act of suicide. Drive to work- why? when it would be so much easier to drive into a tree. That would quiet things down. Then I feel this incredible bourgeois guilt: “What the fuck is wrong with me? This isn’t the 1800’s that I can inherit my uncle’s money and check myself into a sanitarium for le malaise. I’ve got this thoroughly rich life and I am being a big fucking baby about it. People are suffering all over the world and I’m blubbering about jet-setting around Europe.” Unfortunately, depression is a disease, people. And you can’t really apply logic to a brain that isn’t functioning properly. Unless that logic happens to involve ways to kill yourself.

    I feel absolutely horrid writing about this. Because I find it embarrassing to be a weak, whiney baby. Because I have no less than three friends who have lost their parents or other people close to them to this disease. But I don’t want my life or what I write to be bullshit. I want to have real friends who know and love me for who I am. Who love me when I’m fucked up and depressed, and not just when I’m running around making up fun magical adventures. And if you decide you still love me, well - thank you, please leave me a comment so that I know who you are, and I love you too.

    Moving on… this TM depression state lasted pretty much through New Years, which was a total effing disaster this year. Pretty much everybody we knew left the country. We didn’t really have the money to go anywhere because P’s divorce got finalized suddenly and he had to fly to Italy to sign the paperwork in front of a judge. The few friends that we do have here were doing their own traditional things (Belgians, like St. Louis people, have this annoying tendency to keep hanging out with the same people they went to highschool with… not that I’m bitter about being left out!).  I was so depressed and couch-ridden for the week P really did everything he could to get me out of the house. A colleague of his was nice enough to scrounge us up tickets to a VIP erotic party. Let me say here - not something we do. But we went to a club earlier this year out of curiosity and thought the people and the ambiance were really relaxed and interesting. Besides, it was P’s only option apart from a) staying home listening to me cry or b) knocking me on the head with an ice axe. The party was not relaxing and the people were not interesting. It was a meat festival and at some point I just gave up and started downing Vodka/redbulls.  After I was altogether too drunk I had a massive freak-out and P drove me home. The end.

    I guess the freakout I had at the party was cathartic, because I came back to life sometime last week and started feeling human for the first time in months. I finally managed to detach the tumor - I mean the couch - from my ass and found that I had gained 6 kilos. That’s a lot when you’re five foot two and started out at 50 kilos.  So I started climbing again, took up Pilates (which is a real workout, unlike the “breathe, use your mind” yoga crap I hate), have done a few woodcarvings already, and …well, voilà… poorly written stream-of consciousness, but at least it’s a post, eh?

    Feeling broken and healed all at once feels almost exactly like this perfect rendition of Hallelujah, Jeff Buckley’s version of the original Leonard Cohen song.