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Jennifer Margulis

Mothering Outside the Lines

Advice for a Single Mom: A Reader Response Post

December 6th, 2010

A reader, let’s call her “Karen,” contacted me recently for advice. She’s a single mom with a five-year-old and she’s pregnant again. She’s feeling very scared and lonely, trying to figure out how she’ll negotiate life with a new baby and a full-time job.

I’m so grateful for the advice of readers on this blog so I asked Karen if I could post her dilemma here.

Here’s Karen’s story:

I am a 30-year-old single Mom with a five year old daughter. Being a Mom is the greatest joy in my life. I am also 16 weeks pregnant. I was dating someone who was told he was sterile. After many months of dating, I broke it off with him—because of many reasons, one of which was that I didn’t like how he spoke to me and my son and another was he is not family-oriented and he said he didn’t want kids. Right as our relationship was ending I was increasingly ill and found out I was pregnant. It is his child. I am keeping it happily.

His parents, who live in the same city as me, while great in some ways, are very very controlling and all they can talk about is “their bonding time with the baby” at least nine times his Mom has brought up the idea of me going back to work after one month (might I add that I have to have a C-section due to some physical issues) and that they would watch the baby and help pay for daycare. They also are pressuring me to go take time off to meet their family, who the father of this child is estranged from and never speaks to.

It is so much stress and pressure on me.

What puzzles me is that I am a great Mom, my daughter is awesome, and she and I are really close. She is happy, well adjusted, and healthy, and they are aware of this. With my first baby I worked from home, at night, doing virtual administration and clerical work and editing, so I could stay home. When she was three I got a job outside the home and she went to daycare for the first time. I am a breastfeeding, babywearing, love-being-a-Mom parent, and they think this is strange and over the top.

I want to share this baby with the family, but I’m having panic attacks that they are trying to separate me from the baby. I called a meeting with his parents to tell them that I appreciate their support and involvement, but that I need them to stop talking about these things that stress me out. My ex-boyfriend’s Mom even told me last night that she didn’t think that my Mother should come right after the birth because there would be too many people at my house, and that she and her husband would take care of my needs and care for the baby. My own Mother she is trying to push away.

Readers, what advice do you have for Karen? How can she keep a relationship with her ex-boyfriend’s family—and accept help from them—but also set clear boundaries and have the time and space she needs to bond with her baby? Strong advice and opinions are fine but please be kind and compassionate in your responses.

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[ 19 comments ]

Is There Ever a Right Time to Get Pregnant?

May 11th, 2010

“My daughter still tells me we should never have had children when we did,” a friend confides, remembering how broke she and her husband were when their oldest was born, how far from town they lived, and how she used to haul baskets of dirty cloth diapers 17 miles to the laundry mat since they had no running water in their cabin.

Another friend, Steph Auteri, has recently launched a relationship blog on YourTango (where she also works as an editor) where she’s chronicling her decision to become a mom. In today’s post she asks the question, “Is there a perfect time to get pregnant?”

Some couples need only look coyly at each other and they are nine months away from having a baby. Others try for years to conceive, go through soul-wrenching infertility treatments, and end up giving up the dream that they will become parents. Although so many people take fertility for granted, you really don’t know if you’ll be able to get pregnant until you start trying.

And even if you do get pregnant, you may not stay that way. We planned to have our last baby before I turned 40 and tried to conceive so the baby would be born in the spring. Sure enough I got pregnant. Some days I was so nauseous it was all I could do to crawl out of bed, splash water on my face, and take care of my other kids. But even though I had all the right symptoms, something about the pregnancy didn’t feel real. I wasn’t surprised but I was totally heartbroken when I started bleeding. I bled for two weeks and wasn’t pregnant anymore.

There is no perfect time to try to conceive. There’s no perfect time to be pregnant. And there’s no perfect time to have a baby.

No matter how much money you’ve saved, no matter how much help you’ve lined up, no matter how much job security you think you have, no matter how fit and healthy you are, babies–who then grow up into children–change your life. They change everything about you. They change what you want. They change how you think. They change who you are.

“We wanted our lives to be exactly the same after our son was born,” a high-achieving totally brilliant friend once said to me. “We hated seeing how all our friends changed when they became parents.”

But changing and growing and learning and becoming someone new has, for me anyway, been among what I love best about becoming a parent. My children have helped me open my heart. I never knew you could love someone so much it ached, and keep loving them that much, ache after ache, until my children were born.

Maybe you’ll want to rush back to your old life like my friends did. But maybe you’ll realize how self-centered you once were, how much you used to take your time and space for granted, how much of a privilege it is to have a tiny creature to care for, and how lucky you are to be the person who makes your baby’s eyes crinkle every time she sees you, lighting up your heart with her toothless drooly smile.

If you have children, what surprised you about becoming a parent? Did you plan your pregnancies or did your children come as a surprise? What factors do you think people should take into consideration when they are thinking about starting a family and trying to conceive?

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[ 21 comments ]

10 Things No One Tells You About Pregnancy

November 15th, 2009

IMG_3852-1
1. Your feet may get a half shoe size bigger
, and stay that way.

2. If you travel on an airplane, your husband’s ankles may get swollen during the flight. That’s what happened to my friend Emily and her husband when they took a trip during her third trimester.

3. Your hair might fall out, like my friend Annette’s did. She thought she had a terminal disease but actually she was pregnant.

4. Or your hair might get thick and shiny and gorgeous. But it’s not yours. Once the baby comes you will start losing it in clumps.

5. You may not have any of those vivid Technicolor pregnancy dreams everyone tells you about.

6. You may get “morning sickness” in the afternoons and evenings and feel perfectly fine in the mornings.

7. Turning from side to side in bed becomes a Herculean task. Think: beetle stuck on its back, legs flailing in the air.

8. You will love your pregnancy body pillow more than your husband.

9. A lot of people won’t even notice you are pregnant, even if you’re as big as a brick house. “I just thought you’d been putting on weight, like I have,” Perii at the library said to me. When I was pregnant with my second child, I was lecturing in front of 40 students three times a week. Though I was eight months along when the semester ended, more than half of them had no idea I was pregnant.

10. Your baby will not come when you think it will or want it to. It will come when you’re least expecting it. I expected to be two weeks past the due date with my first. Instead I was two weeks early.

What surprised you about being pregnant? Share your thoughts in the comment section below.

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[ 25 comments ]

A Baby Born on Wednesday, post 4

November 11th, 2009

Author’s note: Our new baby was born at home in our bedroom this past Wednesday without a birth attendant present. This week’s posts are the story of how we came to choose an unassisted birth and about the birth itself. The first installment is here. The second installment is here. The third installment is here. The final installment, about the labor itself, will be posted on Friday.
bathtowels

“So, who’s your midwife?” A friend asked.

“Oh, someone from out of town,” I heard myself lying into the phone.

“Have you chosen a midwife?” A mom from my daughters’ school wanted to know.

“Um, well, sure, yeah,” I hedged. “Hey, have you signed up to volunteer at the Winter Faire?”

It was my mother who asked the most urgent questions. She called James on the sly and told him to make sure we picked someone—anyone—as soon as possible. Away on a business trip close to my due date, she phoned from Puerto Rico to be sure we had a birth attendant.

“We found a midwife Mom,” I said. “A young woman who’s very competent. You have nothing to worry about. She’s great.”

“I’m. Just. So. Relieved.”

I hung up the phone and went into the kitchen.

“I think I just lied to my mother,” I said to James.

“You told her we had a midwife,” he laughed. “But you didn’t tell her the midwife was going to be at the birth.”

It had taken him a good four months but James had come around and actually seemed to be looking forward to the birth. He was as excited and impatient for us to be in labor as I was. And we really had identified a midwife in the Valley who supported our choice to have an unassisted birth and offered to be our “knowledgeable family friend,” willing to come over if we needed her, though not technically as a midwife (for which she could lose her certification) but just as a friend.

I told fewer than half a dozen people our plan for an unassisted birth. I didn’t want to talk about it because I didn’t want people sending negative or fearful energy in our direction. I also found it trying to allay other people’s irrational fears.

“I’m not a hero,” I heard myself say several times, “I have nothing to prove … if something goes wrong or if there’s any reason that we need to, the hospital is a 2-minute drive from our house. I trust my body. I trust myself. I trust that I will know if something is wrong…”

I spent an hour on the phone reassuring my best friend that unassisted childbirth was safe. Sue wanted me to talk her through everything that could go wrong, so I did.

I told her what most people don’t know: that taking a shower is more dangerous and results in more deaths than having a baby, that driving in a car to the hospital is the most dangerous part of labor—besides what can go wrong because of hospital intervention—that large scientific studies most recently in Canada, but also in the United States, New Zealand, and Australia have all shown very clearly that homebirth is safer than hospital birth, and that there are women all over the United States having unassisted births, but because they fear social disapprobation and people’s irrational rage, they mostly keep it to themselves.

I suggested she read Heather Cushman Dowdee’s incredible cartoon about the unassisted birth of her son and look at Shauna Mama’s unbelievably moving and amazing photographs of herself catching her own baby during an unassisted birth.

I told her about Sarah J. Buckley, the Australian family physician, whose husband is also a doctor, who decided on an unassisted birth at age 40 with their fourth, a daughter who surprised them all by coming out breech (with no complications).

I also spent a lot of time preparing for the birth. I bought two kinds of “chux’s”: one package of disposable absorbent pads and one single chux made of cloth; I also bought ultra thick sanitary napkins and witch hazel (you put witch hazel on the napkins and put them in the freezer for after the birth); we had a handy man install a metal bar in our bathroom shower so I could lean against it during labor if I needed to; I drank loads of red raspberry tea, which is supposed to tone your uterus; I exercised every day; washed our cloth baby diapers; cooked and froze a huge batch of burritos; and started being obsessive about keeping the bathroom—where I expected I’d be laboring a lot of the time—clean and tidy. My friend Jenny leant me an herbal tonic to stop post partum hemorrhage and I asked friends to be on stand by to drive the kids home from school (Athena and Etani both wanted to see the birth) or pick them up from after school activities.

But most importantly I spent quiet time every day imaging the kind of birth I wanted us to have, relaxing, and meditating. If you know me in real life, you know that I’m not much for relaxing and I tend to dismiss the hooey-wooey stuff that people in Ashland like so much. I usually don’t have the patience for baths or the concentration for meditation but I’m trying to change that. To prepare for this birth I made myself slow down. I lit candles and sat in the tub and practiced making “aahh” and “oohh” noises, thinking about the baby moving through my body, being gently squeezed by contractions.

“I will have an easy, gentle birth,” I told myself every day. “I can do this.”

“My body is strong,” “The birth will be fun,” “I will keep a sense of humor,” “James and I will catch our baby,” “Contractions are an interesting sensation to pay attention to,” “This will be an easy, gentle birth.”

I said these things over and over to myself and made myself believe them. But here’s the truth: I wanted to have an unassisted birth more than anything and I couldn’t wait to go into labor but there was a small person in the back of my mind who thought I was asking for too much and was secretly terrified that something would go wrong.

Cartoon courtesy of Heather Cushman-Dowdee.

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[ 8 comments ]

A Baby Born on Wednesday, post 2

November 9th, 2009

Author’s note: Our new baby was born at home in our bedroom this past Wednesday without a birth attendant present. No name (yet). No weight (we don’t own a scale). No midwives. This week’s posts are the story of how we came to choose an unassisted birth and about the birth itself. This is the second installment. The first installment is here. To read the whole story, please check back daily.

When Athena was born I got an unnecessary tear

When Athena was born I got an unnecessary tear

“We both started at the same place,” James explained during another “conversation” about unassisted birth. He put his hands side by side to show me what he meant. “And we both moved away from that place together.”

He kept his left hand in place and moved his right hand to show how we had both changed together: We started off as children of divorce who grew up in the 1970s playing soccer, eating Fruit Loops and Ding Dongs, watching TV every day after school, and participating in the mainstream without question, and together we became young parents who had a traumatizing hospital birth with almost every unnecessary intervention possible (except a C-section) who decided after months of research not to follow the CDC vaccination schedule, to make our own organic baby food, to hold our baby when she cried despite doctors telling us we would “spoil” her, to use cloth diapers even though everyone we knew said it was too much work, and to question the assumptions of our childhood.

After educating ourselves about it, reading everything we could, and meeting people who were more progressive than the limousine liberals I grew up around and the right-wing conservative business people from James’s side of the family, we left the world of medical hospital births behind and decided to have our second and third babies at home.

“But then,” James continued. “You made this even bigger leap,” he put his right hand as far from the left hand as he could. “Now you’re over here,” he bobbed his right hand up and down. “It’s taking me a lot longer to catch up, but I’m trying. I’m almost there.”

Our friend Nik was sympathetic. “I think it’s amazing what you want to do,” he told me. “But I understand it from James’s point of view, too. He has a lot to lose.”

Most people in America believe what Nik was implying: to have a home birth without midwives present is dangerous.

I could die.

The baby could die.

Maybe that’s what James was really afraid of.

But when James and I talked about our two home births, we realized that the only things that went wrong during Athena’s birth were midwife-induced.

Because it was February in New England during a snowstorm, the midwives did not come until the last 20 minutes of the labor. Even though I was in full-blown transition, I still remember Jharna barreling into the room.

“Have you checked her?!” she asked loudly to Kristen, who had arrived a few minutes before and had just enough time to set up her equipment. Jharna’s tone of urgency broke into my concentration—I was standing by the edge of the bed having a toe-curling contraction and my water was breaking.

“No need to,” Kristen replied. “I know she’s in transition.”

Though Kristen was calm and centered, Jharna started ordering all of us around. “You need to get on the bed,” she told me. “YOU NEED TO GET ON THE BED RIGHT NOW!”

James and I had not considered where I would birth the baby (other than at home) and this sounded reasonable at the time. I clambered onto the bed, gave three terrific pushes, and the baby practically flew across the room. During the minutes this took to happen Jarna managed to yell at me again to say that if she didn’t call my friend and toddler they would miss the birth. Then she bellowed down the stairs for Sue and Hesperus to come up.

Hesperus watched Athena being born

Hesperus watched Athena being born

At the same time, Kristen looked at the baby’s head when it came out and said, “Oh good, no cord.”

James pointed to the white serpentine thing wrapped around the baby’s neck and said, “What’s that?”

“The cord,” Kristen conceded, gently pulling it up and away from the baby’s neck.

Because I had pushed from a supine position, as ordered by a midwife, I ended up with a second-degree tear in my perineum that needed stitches.

Athena was a small baby and I am a wide-hipped woman.

It took years for me to realize that the tearing was completely unnecessary, the result of Jharna’s arbitrary idea that the baby needed to be born on the bed.

Or perhaps the idea was not that arbitrary and was actually for their convenience: if a woman is lying down and still (instead of moving, alternating between standing, squatting, and being on all fours), it makes it easier for the midwives to see what’s going on and to catch the baby.

After the birth, Jharna and Kristen disappeared into our guest room because Jharna’s back and neck were tight and she needed a massage. I’d like to think now that they were trying to be considerate and to give us some space, but even at the time I remember feeling slightly put out: they had been in our house for less than an hour and were already thinking more about themselves than about us and our new baby.

When I got pregnant for the third time, I called Kristen and told her I’d like to hire her but I did not want Jarna—who had no children of her own—at the birth. Kristen and I had become friends and I told her frankly that Jharna’s energy felt really negative. Though she initially agreed, she changed her mind. “You’re asking me to go behind my partner’s back,” she said. “I can’t do that.”

The birth attendant we chose this time, Megan Hill, was not yet certified as a midwife. But she had ten children of her own, all born at home. Five of her ten had been born without any outside assistance.

Photo of Athena, 3, taken by Hesperus

Photo of Athena, 3, taken by Hesperus

Interested in reading more? Post 3 tells the story of our second home birth, attended by a midwife-in-training and a doctor.

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[ 13 comments ]

A Baby Born on Wednesday, post 1

November 7th, 2009

Author’s note: Our new baby was born at home in our bedroom this past Wednesday without a birth attendant present. No name (yet). No weight (we don’t own a scale). No midwives. This week’s posts from Monday to Friday will be the story of how we came to choose an unassisted birth and about the birth itself. To read the whole story, please check back daily.

CoupleAtOdds
“The thing is, I don’t know if I really want a midwife,” I said to James when I was nearly five months pregnant and still had not chosen anyone.

“Oh God.” He furrowed his brow and looked unhappy.

We’d been having “conversations” like this one for months. Every time we interviewed a midwife, James would say, “Great! She seems great,” and I would hesitate.

The midwives were great—I liked every one I talked to on the phone and the three I met in person. They all seemed smart and knowledgeable and compassionate and interested, definitely women I’d like to have as friends.

The problem wasn’t with the midwives.

It was with me.

Though I liked all these women, I didn’t want them touching my belly or sticking their fingers up my yaya or telling me what to eat or to have blood work done.

No one had been in the room when James and I conceived our baby. I was beginning to feel like childbirth is as private and intimate as making love and I had trouble imagining having anyone else present.

“I don’t think I want anyone at the birth,” I tried to explain to my worried husband. “I think I want to do it by myself. With you.”

There’s a term for this: Unassisted childbirth. Some people call it “unhindered birth” or “free birth.” There’s a forum on Mothering.com dedicated to it. And some incredible Websites about it.

I started reading everything I could about childbirth—hippie books from the 1970s about home births, manuals written for emergency medical professionals in case they unexpectedly have to deliver a baby, unassisted birth stories on the Internet and in magazines, classics like Spiritual Midwifery, and a book by Laura Shanley called Unassisted Childbirth—and talking to women who had had successful unassisted births.

The more I read, the more convinced I became that we could have the birth we wanted, by ourselves, without anyone guiding us, interfering, or telling us what to do. And the more I read, the more I thought about my three previous birth experiences, and how I wanted this one to be different.

But James wasn’t completely on board. I knew what I wanted, but how could I convince my husband?

Interested in reading more? Post 2 tells the story of our first home birth attended by midwives.

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[ 18 comments ]

If You’re Pregnant, The Swine Flu Vaccine May Not Be Safe

November 4th, 2009

ConfusedPregnantWomanThe Washington Post reported in early October that 28 pregnant women have died of the swine flu and the CDC specifies that pregnant women are at higher risk of death if they catch the swine flu, especially in the third trimester. An article in the November 3, 2009 British newspaper, the Telegraph, reiterates that pregnant women are at a proportionately high risk of having severe health problems from the swine flu.

My father-in-law, who reads these kinds of mainstream newspapers and Web sites, has been so disturbed by the increased risk to pregnant women that he’s been calling my husband to make sure I’m okay.

“I got my swine flu shot today,” he told James. “Jennifer going to get one?”

The answer is no. I’m one of the pregnant women criticized in articles like this one from from WebMD who are wary of the swine flu vaccine and have decided not to get the shot.

Citing a new survey that shows that only one in four pregnant women plan to get vaccinated against H1N1, this WebMD article laments that so many pregnant women have “confusion” about the risks of the vaccine and then dismisses the concern that the vaccine might cause adverse reactions, claiming that “… researchers say the H1N1 vaccine is made the same way as the seasonal flu shot and has been found in clinical studies to be safe and effective at producing an immune response in healthy adults.”

But there are several compelling reasons why pregnant women should not run to the nearest pharmacy and get vaccinated.

Just ask Vicky Debold, an RN with a Ph.D. in Public Health who is also the Director of Research and Patient Safety at the National Vaccine Information Center. DeBold believes pregnant women should be wary about the swine flu vaccine, though when she wrote a response to a pro-vaccine op-ed by Paul Offit (a vocal spokesperson in favor of vaccines who also developed and co-owns the patent on one of the newest vaccines mandated on the CDC schedule for children), the New York Times did not publish it.

Bottom line: Debold argues that there is not enough information about the effect of the vaccine on pregnant women and their fetuses for anyone to claim that it is safe.

1) The vaccine has not been adequately tested on pregnant women: The NIH’s H1N1 pregnancy trial began less than two months ago (in September) and includes only 120 women. We have no results from this trial to date but, according to Debold, we do know that an earlier 1997-2002 seasonal influenza vaccine study of over 49,000 pregnant women showed that vaccination did not reduce influenza-related hospital admissions or doctor visits. At the same time, the influenza vaccine package inserts explain that animal reproductive tests have not been conducted on the vaccine and the potential harm to fetuses is unknown.

2) The H1N1 vaccine contains thimerosal, a mercury compound known to be a fetal toxin: There are two versions of the vaccine, one that contains 25 mcg of thimerosal and one that does not. Although pregnant women can request the thimerosal-free vaccine, it is harder to find. If you do not specifically ask to be given the vaccine without thimerosal, chances are you will be injecting a known neurotoxin into your blood stream.

3) There is no real data about the evidence of the effectiveness of the vaccine: Risk assessment is a tricky business. Some people—like me—believe we should take the risk of contracting a wild virus found in human populations over the risk of potential damage done by a pharmaceutical product that makes money for big business and doctors. Other people—most of American society—believe the opposite. But I wonder why anyone would choose to be injected with a pharmaceutical product that has not been adequately tested and very well may not work.

4) Health officials are assuming that the H1N1 vaccine is “as safe as the seasonal flu vaccine,” but this assumption may simply be wrong: The H1N1 virus is behaving differently than the usual seasonal flu viruses, so we cannot assume that the H1N1 vaccine will provoke the same reactions in different people as the seasonal flu vaccine. Debold isn’t buying this unsubstantiated assumption. I’m not either.

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[ 16 comments ]

The Waiting Game

November 3rd, 2009

WaitingforTimePeggy and I were talking the other day about how we need a new way to describe when a baby is due.

Due “date” is something of a misnomer, since a healthy baby can safely be born two weeks (or more) before that date or two weeks (or more) afterwards. Some women gestate longer than others and often labor is unnecessarily induced by artificial means that lead to a cascade of iatrogenic problems.

What should we call it? Due season? Due time? Due month? One blogger suggests calling it a “due window.”

It’s easy to be mistaken about the date of conception. According to Ina May Gaskin and other birth experts, modern ultrasounds have proved notoriously unreliable in measuring a fetus’s size or estimating a due date.

My friend Kay had a healthy, uneventful pregnancy until her doctor ordered a C-section because the baby was two weeks “late.” Her son weighed less than seven pounds and had a host of preemie health problems after he was cut out of her uterus. He was born too soon.

The same thing happened to my friend Nora, a doctor, who had a scheduled C-section with her second born. She was sure of the date of conception but that didn’t mean her baby was ready according to the doctor’s schedule (he was going on vacation and wanted to do the surgery before he left). Nora’s sons lungs were underdeveloped and he had to be medically evacuated to a larger hospital, spending over two weeks in the NICU.

For some women a baby isn’t full term until it has cooked for 42 weeks (or more). I recently read a first-person account that a woman can gestate anywhere from 36 – 47 weeks and give birth naturally and safely to a healthy baby.

Christine sends an email from Japan, where she lives with her family. “I am eight days late,” she writes, “and I’m absolutely miserable.”

I know how she feels. My “due date” came and went without a hiccup from Pineapple. The waiting game is hard and I’m trying not to let it drive me crazy but the truth is I’m beginning to despair.

“Just keep making plans,” my friend Jenny, who had two of her four at 42 weeks, suggests. “The baby will come when it comes.”

I keep trying to convince myself the baby will come when it’s ready. Then another voice in my head gives a sinister chuckle and says, “NO IT WON’T. YOU ARE GOING TO BE PREGNANT FOREVER.”ComingSoon?

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[ 7 comments ]

Liberated From Prenatal “Care”

November 2nd, 2009

Pregnancy Images-8After almost every prenatal visit when I was pregnant with my first child I would cry. The midwives in the only practice our student insurance would pay for were so mean that we ended up switching to the doctors. When I refused what I considered nonsensical testing, they would look at me sternly and say things like, “You’re going to buy yourself a C-section if you don’t do the glucose tolerance test.”

Without telling us why, my favorite doctor in the practice (a young woman with two small children herself) ordered an “emergency ultrasound” when I was eight and a half months pregnant. That’s what she called it: an emergency ultrasound. My face felt tight and when I looked at James his skin was ashen.

When I asked nervously why, the doctor mumbled, “Inter-uterine growth retardation. You’re measuring too small.” She snapped the paper mandate off the pad, turned on her heel, and started to walk out of the room.

“Could it be because I’ve been biking every day?” I suggested feebly to her receding white-smocked back.

After six and a half months of morning sickness, I felt like someone washed the windows. I was happier and fitter and more energetic in the last two months of my first pregnancy than I had ever been in my life.

“I read that women who exercise sometimes measure small or have smaller babies…?”

“Absolutely not.” The doctor left the room. Late, no doubt, for her next appointment though she had spent a total of five and a half minutes with us.

So many medical practitioners, even many midwives, treat pregnancy as an illness. Even the gentlest practitioners want to “manage” your pregnancy. They tell you what to eat, how much weight you should gain, how often you should exercise. They scold you if your pee is too yellow (“You should be drinking more water”) and furrow their brows if your blood pressure is too high (“This is a possible sign of pre-eclampsia. Expect to go on bed rest”).

Many women, especially first-time moms, appreciate being guided through every month of a pregnancy. They believe all the testing and the managing will insure a healthy baby. They believe, like I did, that health care practitioners have the best intentions.

Besides, people in the medical establishment know what’s best for us and our bodies and our babies.

But do they really? Though prenatal visits can be a comfort to parents, a pregnant woman does not actually need to be charted and tested and doctored. Unless you plan to abort a baby if the tests come out questionable, there is little reason to do them. If something is going wrong in your pregnancy, your body will tell you as much and then you can go to a doctor. What a pregnant woman really needs is not prenatal visits, invasive (and often inconclusive) testing, and scolding. She needs to be loved and supported and fed healthy food and given adequate rest and time to be outside and moving her body.

When was the last time your doctor made you a healthy meal or offered to watch your children while you napped or took a walk?

I’m tired of people telling me what to do and how to manage my body. I don’t find it reassuring to pee on a stick and be told there is no protein in my urine. I don’t need a doctor (like my friend’s husband who stayed at our house and ate yellow cupcakes for breakfast every morning) to tell me how much weight to gain. I don’t even need a midwife to remind me to eat salad. I don’t need a midwife’s assistant to palpitate my belly so hard it hurts. And I don’t really feel like filling in numbers on a form that will get stuck in a chart to certify to health professionals I hardly know how many people I’ve had sex with.

We’ve opted not to have any prenatal “care” during this pregnancy. Instead of paying a doctor or a midwife to tell me to take my vitamins, I’ve used that time to write in a journal to Pineapple, to take walks, to work, to watch my daughters’ gymnastics classes, to talk to friends, to volunteer at my son’s kindergarten, and to read everything I can, from thick novels written by my great love Charles Dickens to Ina May Gaskin’s Guide to Childbirth. (Ina May, by the way, thinks the glucose tolerance test is pretty much unnecessary and misguided.)

This personal choice is a threat to a multi-billion dollar industry that treats the prenatal period like a disease. Rejecting prenatal intervention may not for everyone but it’s been an incredibly liberating decision for me.

In the meantime, if you have a doctor who holds office hours outside and takes you walking in the park for the monthly prenatal visit, send me a phone number.

(Photograph courtesy of Koeby Johnson.)

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[ 26 comments ]

Beware of The Pregnant Jail Breaker

November 1st, 2009

PregnantConvictBellyAbout 15 minutes before the Halloween parade, we still didn’t have our costumes ready. Since my due date (more on how that’s a misnomer in a later post) was BEFORE Halloween, I wasn’t expecting to even be in the parade this year, let alone in a costume.

James had the idea that we should paint my belly into a big yellow Pac Man and put dots all over black clothes but 1) we didn’t have any yellow face paint and 2) we were out of time.

So I went in my friend Anjie’s escaped convict costume instead.

“I don’t like it,” my 10-year-old daughter Hesperus complained. “It makes me feel bad for people in jail.”

One of my good friends (the former editor of our local newspaper) is actually serving jail time right now. When I write to him I have to include his prisoner serial number on the envelope. So I know what Hesperus means. At least she was happy with her costume: a shooting yellow star that she and James spent all morning making.

The four of us rushed down to the parade, leaving James creating a Pac Man head for himself out of leftover yellow cardboard.

I didn’t have a lot of family practices growing up (family was never a priority, my parents both worked full-time, and they ended their rocky relationship when I was still in elementary school) but we always made our own Halloween costumes, however rudimentary or silly, and this is tradition I’ve passed down to my children.

“Happy Halloween!” I called as we walked to the parade.

“Don’t say that,” 8-year-old Athena chided. “It’s embarrassing.”

“GIVE ME ALL YOUR MONEY, I JUST BROKE OUT OF JAIL AND I NEED SOME DOUGH!” I snarled at the next people we passed.

“That’s a little better,” 6-year-old Etani said, urging me to walk faster.

KidsinHalloweenCostumesEtani was a scary ghost (think pillow case with eye holes). Athena a witch (think Hesperus’s costume hemmed from last year). Next year we’ll plan the costumes a little more in advance. Despite being rather miserable that this baby is not showing any signs of coming out into the world, Halloween will always be one of my favorite holidays. After all, it gives you the chance to be someone you aren’t in real life. HANDS UP AND GIVE ME YOUR WALLET.

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