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« August 2004 | Main | October 2004 »

September 2004

September 30, 2004

Pregnancy Info 101

I wish they’d made me go to a class when I got that positive beta.

Something the nasty cunt midwife was trying to explain to me, but couldn’t---hence all my frustration--was the difference between a perinatologist and an obstetrician. Apparently, 65,651,659,845 things can go wrong during pregnancy, and that’s what the perinatologist is for. Only about a dozen things can go wrong during delivery, and that’s what an obstetrician is for.

I know, I know, this is all basic, and if I hadn’t been totally stoned in high school and actually attended some of my Latin classes, I would have gotten that earlier (since “peri” means “around” or “during” and then there’s that natal in the middle of the word perinatologist). But I didn’t. So I was really confused when I found out most perinatologists in my state don’t do deliveries any more (due to malpractice insurance fees). So I was like, uh, ok, so if something goes wrong that the midwife can’t handle, who will deliver my baby?

Of course, now I know, and now I’ve got an appointment with an actual doctor of baby delivery.

After the drama of being kicked out of our midwife practice settled, I was absolutely overwhelmed at the prospect of finding a new doctor. It’d taken so much to find midwives that would accept twins; I couldn’t bear the thought of going through that again to find a doctor.

Thankfully, I didn’t have to.

One of my good friends had a baby just about a year ago, and she LOVED her OB. I was hesitant to use him, because I have the prejudice against male doctors. I generally hate them. So while I appreciated her recommendation, I was a tad hesitant. So I asked my little local group of infertile gals (some preggers, some not) who they’d considered using, and the strongest recommendation came from a gal who is herself a doctor. She said that while she also hates male doctors, she would only allow one person to deliver her baby—and it was the same guy my other friend used!

So I called to get an appointment, and the receptionist said I could be seen in November. I said, “Uh…it’s twins, and I’ve got high blood pressure, and I’m supposed to be seen every two weeks! What do I do?” She put me on hold, and went and asked the man himself, and got me an appointment for next week.

I love him already.

And get this: his name is Dr. Mama.

No joke.

Speaking of my blood pressure, it’s continuing to rise (even without the help of the nasty midwife). At my GP’s office (because I needed to see YET ANOTHER doctor, why not) my pressure was 140/95. Sigh.

So I’m officially high risk, with the fabulous trifecta of Fat, Twins, and High Blood Pressure. Yee ha.

The only good news is that this week, I’ve been much less all about the nausea. I’m trying to not get excited, or anything, but I’m also feeling a bit more energy. I also came to the realization that some of my water retention in my feet is related to the stool I sit on at work all day, so I’ve made some adjustments so that I can stop cutting off the circulation to my legs for eight hours a day.

I’m also trying to begin moving more, walking etc, but it’s hard. My hips already hurt so much—just walking three blocks to go get lunch made them so sore I couldn’t wait to sit down again. But I’m trying.

Ah well. Worth it all in the end. I’m also finding myself beginning to be a little more excited about the whole thing…I think registering did it for me! I’m really looking forward to meeting these boys and beginning our life together.

Hope is back, that sneaky bitch. I’m not yet half way through—I’m just 18 weeks now—but I’m still feeling like it’s going to all be ok. Thank god.


I hope everyone is watching the debate tonight, although I'm feeling rather hopeless about it. Bush will seem like a friendly cowboy, and Kerry will sound like a smart, droning bore. While I'd rather have a smart bore than a cowboy for president, I'm terrified that fewer and fewer people agree with me. I recently found out that lots of the students of the college that employs me still plan to vote for Nader, the man LEAST qualified to be president I've ever seen.

Sigh.


September 28, 2004

How To Prove Midwives Can Be Assholes, Just Like Any Other Medical Practitioner

1. Make “Oh my GOD!” sounds when you see your patient’s blood pressure of the day

2. Talk to your patient as if they are a 14-year-old who didn’t know sex could get you pregnant, even if they are actually 36-years-old and went through two years of infertility treatments and know more about getting pregnant than most general practitioners

3. Tell your patient that you and the other midwives have decided, as a practice, two weeks earlier, that she needs to switch to an obstetrician and that you can’t treat them anymore

4. Don’t give this information to the perinatologist your patient saw a week ago, or call the patient to inform them of this fact, so that the patient can be sure to waste her time by coming to visit you once more for no fucking reason

5. Make the patient wait a really long time before you check the babies’ heart rates, even after the patient tells you that she is really afraid and needs to know that the babies are still alive, while giving a lecture on the state of malpractice insurance in the commonwealth

6. Once you finally decide to break out the Doppler, be sure to begin checking for the heartbeats up near the patient’s ribcage, even though the patient is not quite 18 weeks pregnant and the babies aren’t up there, just so the patient can completely freak out and start to cry thinking her babies are dead

7. Continue to persist in using the Doppler too high, even when the patient tells you repeatedly to move it, and then ponder out loud if the way-too-fucking-slow to be a baby’s heart rate is the right one, even when the patient says, clearly, that she knows it’s her own heartbeat because her heart is currently pounding away in her throat in perfect time to the sound the Doppler is making

8. Finally find one heartbeat after the patient forcibly moves your hand to the right position

9. Move the Doppler and hear another baby’s heartbeat, but tell the patient you can’t be sure it’s not the same baby as the first heartbeat, even though it’s six fucking inches away from the first one, just so the patient can continue to enjoy her freakout

10. Be sure to smear the Doppler gel all over the patients skirt and then scold the patient for making you make a mess

11. Run, fast as you can, as patient rises up quickly with an impressive left hook.

September 27, 2004

Registries and Baby Showers

******Lots of baby stuff mentioned. Scroll down past the line to the part about my mom if you'd rather ignore it all******

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So my dear friends that are planning my baby shower, are, for reasons unknown to me, doing this without my (meddling) participation.

While I understand that the mom-to-be rarely plans her own shower, the fact is that I’m a party planner. I mean for years I did it for a living. Plus, when a friend of mine got married a few years back, I ended up becoming her wedding planner—something that will not happen again, thank god, since I’ve learned to be much more respectful of boundaries since that time.

I told them I didn’t want it to be a surprise, which was possibly a mistake, since now I get to hear about when they get together and stuff. So I got to feel left out on Sunday because I knew that they were two doors down planning things.

Sniffle.

The only consolation I have is that I will get to be part of the planning for my best friend’s bridal shower. While I imagine all nineteen (or so) of us bridesmaids will be involved-- to some extent-- since her eight-year-old daughter will be the maid of honor and there are only a couple of us bridesmaids living locally, I’m guessing I’ll get to play a big role in the whole bridal shower planning thing.

Revenge is sweet…

Actually, I don’t really mind. Ok, I mind a little, but I’m just so glad it’s these three fab women planning it.

Thanks S, E, and J!

So anyway, they encouraged me to get registered for my shower sooner rather than later. We’re doing the shower early—it will be December 4—since the twins could come anytime from January on.

So Saturday I managed to convince my dear husband, who hates shopping, to go to the store and register with me. We made a list at home, but even so, felt totally clueless when we arrived at the store. Thankfully, the store is apparently used to this, and they totally take you by the hand and tell you what to do. Plus, they have a great list of their own, which we cross-referenced to our list (we got almost everything on their list, except things like window valences—ick—who invented those puffy things?).

I have never been so delirious after shopping. I seriously had vertigo. By the end, I was standing in front of a wall of bottle nipples, thinking I was looking at pacifiers, and not being able to comprehend why they looked wrong.

But we got it all done, in one day. Now anything I have to change I can do on-line.

I’ve never registered for anything before. When we got married, we just told people to give us money. We’d already lived together for three years, what more could we need (yeah, we were stupid. To this day, I wish I’d registered for china, since I serve my grand Christmas dinner each year on paper plates).

It feels really greedy—to list all these items and expect other people to pay for them. Obviously, we would have to starve to buy it all ourselves, but still…sheesh! I hope people don’t feel pressured.

Anyway. It’s done. Now, I just sit back and let the gals do the work until I get to open presents. Yeah!

September 24, 2004

Now I KNOW I'm Having Boys

And how do I know?

Cause I checked this out of the library yesterday.

And read it in three hours.

September 23, 2004

My Friend Web

For some reason today I found myself thinking about my friend Web.

When I first got sober, and felt more like a drug addict than an alcoholic, Web showed me his track marks and made me feel more at home in my recovery program. Web was a cute guy with a disarming smile, arms covered in tattoos, and a silly machismo walk. He relapsed not long after our first meeting, but came back some months later with his tail between his legs, ready to really be sober.

He was funny and sweet, and became a little brother to my husband and me.

He was an usher at my wedding. I allowed my ushers to pick out their own clothes and they both wore black tuxes with yellow shirts with ruffles. They both looked pretty silly. But as I came into the church, and Web saw me in my wedding dress, he cried. It touched me more than I can say.

As a wedding present, Web gave me a tattoo. It’s a tattoo I’d wanted for a long, long time—an elemental deer and other creature that had been discovered on the 2,400-year-old body of a tribal woman dug up in Siberia. He hadn’t been tattooing long, so it took a really long time, and while beautiful, scarred a bit more than my other tattoos. Sometimes it puffs up for no reason, and looks like that old Puff Paint we used on our t-shirts in the 70s. It’s puffing up as I write this.

My boys would have loved Web. He’d been a skateboard punk in his youth, and could have taught them all kinds of slick moves. After being sober a while, he opened his own tattoo shop, which you KNOW the boys would have thought was the coolest thing ever. Web loved children, and he would have been a great uncle to the kids.

But Web couldn’t stay sober. More than a year after the last time I saw him, he shot himself in his car while parked in front of his estranged girlfriend’s apartment. He couldn’t keep living the way he was living, and didn’t know how else to stop.

For some reason, Web seems very close to me today. I miss him like crazy, even though I began missing him more than a year before he died. It’s so hard to lose a friend to drugs first, and death second. He was so well loved.

I miss you, Web. I wish you could meet the boys. I really do.

Here’s the poem I wrote for Web after he died.

_________________________________

For Web

Instead of
blood
it is ink
I imagine
spraying
behind you
when the gun
went off.

For a moment, a roaring
dragon tangled with a
giant koi, and words
in old english
faded too quickly
to be read.

Each time, now,
I touch the mark
you engraved on me
with needles and ink
(an act more
intimate than sex)
it swells at
your memory.

It will be impossible
not to miss you.


September 21, 2004

Photos and More

So, I'm spotting a bit again, and while I await the return call from the midwife, I figured I would occupy myself by posting a short entry, including some photos from Monday's ultrasound...

Baby_a_16wk

Baby_b_16wk

Baby_boy


I must say, the penis shot of the one baby is quite funny...


In other random thoughts, I've been exploring baby carrying methods. I've heard you can carry two slinged twins until they're about seven months old, and that seems like a good option.

But I'd dearly love to do this instead...

I grew up in Albuquerque, and saw Navajo women carrying their babies like this all the time, and I never once saw one of those babies crying. They were always smiling or looking out at the world with fascination, that great Navajo baby hair sticking straight up in the air.

Course, here on the East Coast, I'd be arrested for child abuse using one of those. Too bad.

The midwife just called back. Not to worry. Probably just irritation from yesterday's vaginal ultrasound (which did hurt a bit on the old cervix)...

September 20, 2004

Clean Bill of Health and Clean Rooms

I am so tired I can barely think. We had to be at the doctor’s office by 8:20am. Since I normally don’t work until 11am, and often stay in bed until 10am, you can imagine how hard it was to get up at 7am.

I nearly fell asleep during the long, long ultrasound, but was kept awake by the painful prodding of the abdominal scanner (I don’t think she used quite enough gel…). And lucky, lucky me, we also did a vaginal ultrasound to check my cervix.

The boys are fine, and yes, at least one is for sure a boy, as we have a lovely shot of his penis (the tech called it a winky, but we’re going to call it a penis. OK?). I promise I’ll post the shots as soon as I can. Their sizes were great, and all looked well, except that one had a little extra fluid around the kidneys, and the other had “bright bowels.”

At least something is bright.

When we met with the high-risk obstetrician afterwards, she said she wasn’t worried about that stuff, it could be normal, and not to worry. Surprisingly, I’m not worried. Mostly because we had normal CVS test results.

My cervix is a perfect size 4.

Sigh.

We talked about my blood pressure, which the OB isn’t worried about, and doesn’t think is high enough to warrant treatment. She did suggest I get a blood pressure cuff at home so I can check it myself later in the pregnancy.

We talked about the water retention. She suggested I wear support hose and eat a low salt diet (less than 3 grams of sodium a day).

And we talked about my weight, several times. While she was matter-of-fact about it, I felt totally judged.

I’ve been fat since high school (more fat sometimes, like now, than others). For the last six years, I’ve also been in incredibly good shape—doctors knew this by noticing my athletic heart rate (48bpm!) and low blood pressure. While they always thought I should lose weight, they commended me on my good exercise habits.

For the last six years, I’ve also been following some sort of modified eating program. Either no sugar and no flour, or Weight Watchers, or something. Like all women, especially all fat women, I know a LOT about nutrition, diet, and how to make changes.

So I bristled a bit when she suggestion I get a dietician to help me figure out how to eat low salt. Not fair, I realize. I do have a nutrionist, and I might ask her for suggestions, but I imagine I can figure it out myself (basically, I just have to not eat anything I like. No problem).

In a typically mature fashion, I took this advice to heart by enjoying a large amount of tater tots (with the salty, salty ketchup) at lunch (in my defense, I didn’t add more salt).

One good thing is that she told me I can start taking Nexium again for my heartburn. Yeah! Nexium, that little purple pill, is the best thing EVER. Very happy about that.

I didn’t particularly like this doctor (can you tell?). She won’t be anywhere near me during delivery, since she no longer does deliveries, and the doctor I thought I was seeing today isn’t doing deliveries after Jan 1 either. With any luck, things will go well and I won’t need anyone other than the midwives there during delivery, but I wonder if I’ll get to meet the doctor that will be there “just in case” in advance?

I’m not sure I’m all that happy with this arrangement.

_________________________________________________


On a different note, while I was watching TV the other night I saw the new “Oust” air freshener ad.

In it, a mother of a teenage boy shrieks at her son while pointing at his closet, “Is this how I raised you?!!!” as he sheepishly shakes long hair out of his eyes. She then feels better magically when she places the new air freshener in his closet.

Here’s my question—or series of questions:

1. Why the fuck is she in her teenage boy’s closet? Doesn’t she know that’s where he hides his porn?
2. All teenagers are messy. Why does it display a shortcoming in her child raising ability that he’s a slob?

And the big question:

3. WHY ON EARTH DOES HIS CLOSET NEED TO BE CLEAN?

I’ve never understood the rationale behind the idea that children must have clean rooms. If they trip over something in the dark on their way to the bathroom, hey, it’s a great way to learn about consequences. If their clothes are dirty and smelly, the kids at school will make fun of them, and they’ll either live with it or change. As far as I can tell, it’s really none of my business. As long as they keep foodstuff to a minimum in there, I can’t see any reason to be involved in that area of the house at all.

My mother-in-law once freaked out at my husband when he was in high school because he’d forgotten to make his bed. When he said, “Geez, Ma, it’s not like I killed someone!” She said, “It’s just as bad!”

In her defense, she is German. Lord have mercy.

September 17, 2004

Holy Shit, I'm Having Boys!

Lately I’ve been thinking about how lucky I am to be having boys. I’m still sad about not having a girl, so I’ve been consoling myself by thinking about the fact that boys are cheaper (according to the moms that I know), that boys won’t come home pregnant, and they don’t stomp their feet and shriek “MOM!!” at 13 the ways girls do.

Sure, they might want to dissect the dog, and they’ll never clean their rooms, and getting them to shower will be a challenge, but they WON’T COME HOME PREGNANT!

Speaking of pregnant, can you get a condom sewn on so they don’t get anyone else pregnant? But I digress.

This morning, my husband was telling me about the woman who disrupted Laura Bush’s speech in New Jersey yesterday by wearing a t-shirt that said, “President Bush You Killed My Son!” Her son was killed in the line of duty in Iraq.

Just as I was admiring her bravery and strength (we may not all agree on her methods, but at least she stood up and said what she thought—and she LOST HER SON), my husband said, “We’ll have to move to Canada if they start a draft, and bring the boys with us.”

I was stricken. Oh my god, I’m having sons, boys that some future president can decide to send off in some obscure and unnecessary war. Even if it’s an honorable war, my boys could be killed!

I know that women are also in combat now, and they are just as likely to die, but I feel that we are still a generation or two away from actually drafting women, so it’s my boys at risk if there is ever another draft.

It’s a terrifying thought. But one good thing came out of this horrifying thought; I realized, without a doubt, that I love these babies fiercely and want to protect them both from harm. I guess I’ll be a decent mom after all.

_______________________________________________

I’ve tried to stay away from political topics—I promise to get back to my pets or something fun soon—but while we’re talking about war, I just wanted to mention that uber-conservative Pat Buchanan and I actually agree about something (read this article—it’s shocking how well thought out it is, and how much I agree). He also believes that the Iraq war is the worst mistake America has made in the last forty years. Interesting, no?

September 15, 2004

The Furry Truth

So, have I told you all about my pets?

No? Are you sure? Actually, I’m sure, because I just scanned my whole blog to make sure I’m not repeating myself.

One of the side effects of being a vet tech is that you collect pets like most people collect CDs. As a result I have, currently, five cats and one very large dog. Since I haven’t worked in the veterinary field for over eight years now, all of my cats are very, very old.

Introducing one baby into a house full of pets is difficult; introducing two is a little scary. My husband frequently jokes about putting down the two males cats, for various reasons, and then we’d just have three cats and a dog. At least, I think he’s joking, although earlier in the year I had to ask him to stop making jokes about the wood chipper some workmen were using on our block (like, every time one of the cats did something annoying, he’s yell, “Wood chipper!”).

So let me tell you about my lovely pets. I’ll do it in age order.

Franklin (aka Frankie): If those stories about cats sucking the souls out of babies were true (and they are so not), Frankie would be their king. He’s the oldest, at 18, a brown tabby, and the oddest cat I’ve ever owned. In his younger days (you know, back when he was 15) he developed the amazing ability to urinate directly into electrical outlets, without electrocuting himself. The smell, as you can imagine, was just lovely. He also likes to sit directly behind your head while on the couch; and I’m absolutely convinced that he’s back there draining our life force so he can live forever. We recently took him in to the vet for old cat blood work, and he’s fine, with a minor hyperthyroid issue that doesn’t even really need to be medicated. Sadly, he’s gone deaf, and he seems fairly senile. He’s also become food obsessed, and will whack your hand with his paw repeatedly until you give him something (or spray him with a water bottle, which is what I have to do in order to finish my bowl of cereal every morning). Frank is the top candidate for offing, except that he persists in having nothing really wrong with him, so I just can’t do it.

Spot (aka Tootie): Spot is a striking cat, a clearly defined calico with white being her primarily color. She’s also a bitch. She has a chronic scowl, quite literally, that makes her look unbelievably pissed off, even in those rare moments where she’s purring and happy. She screams like you’re trying to hack off a leg any time you get within a few feet of her. When I rescued her from the streets, I had to scruff her with one hand and hold her back feet with the other (leaving me to have to push myself up from the ground with my head) just to get her into the house. We had to give her kitty Valium for weeks before we could let her out of seclusion to meet the other cats (and the dog). She’s mellowed in her old age (she’s about 14) and now sometimes lets me pet her when I’m watching TV. For much of her life, the only time you could pet her was when you were on the toilet (I guess she thought she was safer then).

Fifi (aka Feefers): She is our prettiest cat, with long gray hair and big pale green eyes. She’s also, oddly, mute—by choice. When I first got her, she was always getting locked in closets and dresser drawers (because she’d bury herself in the clothes in there) for a day at a time. We’d finally notice she was missing (hey, we were drunks, people!) and try to find her. We usually found her only after we got really quiet, and then we’d hear the sad sound of her declawed paws (yes, I declawed all my cats, and on most, even did the surgery myself) trying to claw her way out of the drawer or closet. She never meows to let us know she’s stuck. She occasionally squeaks when she yawns, and she always lets out a sad howl when Frankie tries to hump her (we think he’s got a third ball he hid during his neutering). But you can step on her tail (not on purpose!) and she’ll say not a word, just try to get away, and you’ll finally hear the sad scraping of her nails against the floor… She’s about 14.

Dylan (aka Dilly): Dylan is fat. He’s white with gray spots, and is too fat to groom his own back and ass so that he constantly gets mats on the back half of his body (and he’s short haired). He’s also very whiny, each meow sounding vaguely like an old lady complaining at the deli counter. He bites your feet, randomly, when he wants to be petted. If you stop petting him, he bites your hands. He broke his back once jumping off a dining room chair (yes, I’m quite serious) and now walks in a really funny way. He enjoys going out into the back yard and acting like a small whiny ghost. He was originally my best friend’s cat, but when she went into rehab all those years ago, she left him with us, and he’s been with us ever since. He’s my husband’s favorite whipping boy, and the cat most likely to be placed in a wood chipper.

Annie (aka Banana): Annie is our baby. I got her when she was two days old when a homeless guy came into the animal hospital claiming her mother had been hit by a car. He also brought in her sister, who sadly died within the hour. Annie was so determined to survive, however, that when I offered a syringe with formula in it, she sucked it down fiercely. We didn’t name her until she was four weeks old, afraid she wouldn’t survive (kittens who don’t get colostrums from their moms often die from something as mild as a cold), and then we named her after Lil’ Orphan Annie. Because she was bottle fed, instead of kneading and purring like a normal cat, she purrs and bites our fingers. Also because she was bottle fed, she’s oddly formed, with a tiny head too small for her body and huge eyes that are completely round. She hates everyone except my husband and me and the dog. She’s a yellow-brown tabby with weird orange spots and is also growing fat enough to compete with Dylan. She also doesn’t groom her own face, but thankfully allows me to pick her nose and eyes for her. She’s nine years old.

Hammer (aka Bubba): Hammer is the dog. About seven years ago, I instituted a rule that I couldn’t pick up stray animals any more unless they were injured. While driving to work one day, I saw Hammer. We’d just lost my dog Misty a few months before, and were looking forward to being dog free for a little while. But there Hammer was, scrounging behind a dumpster. I’d never seen a dog so emaciated. He was literally a fur-covered dog skeleton. I stopped my car, reluctantly, since most emaciated dogs are pretty feral, and you can cause them to run into traffic if you try to catch them. Oh, and because he was a pit bull, and I was in a bad neighborhood known for dog fighting. Hammer, however, came right to me when I called and offered him the only food I had, a tiny 2 oz piece of cheese (yeah, I was on a diet that day). I lifted his skeletal body into my car—it was awful, the thinness—and the cheese caused him to promptly start farting. I drove the rest of the way to work, stopping on the way at an SPCA to see if they’d take him. They took one look at him and said since he was a pit bull, they’d have to euthanize him right away (my state is one of the ones that won’t adopt pit bulls out of shelters). Hammer just sat in my back seat, looking at me with unadulterated love, so I knew I couldn’t leave him there. I called my husband (who I’d only just cured of a fear of dogs) and told him the deal. I stopped at work and convinced a man in the building to come out and meet the dog to make sure that Hammer didn’t hate men. Then I drove the poor guy down to my vet who told me that he would have surely died in another few days on the street (it was the coldest February we’d had in years). The vet gave me some bland food, and we took Hammer home and began to fatten him up. We planned, originally, to find him a home, but that changed within the week. Hammer gained five pounds a week, nearly doubling his weight at the end. He’s brindled, so he had a period between emaciation and his natural body weight when people thought he was a really big-headed boxer, but that passed as his chest just got wider and wider. Now he’s about 95 lbs, and the nicest, sweetest, calmest dog I’ve ever owned. He loves everyone, and my best friend’s 60lb daughter can take him for walks and he won’t even pull on the leash. He’s the best dog ever.


Now that you’ve met them all, you can see the dilemma we have about bringing in the babies. I know all the tricks—get dolls first and treat them like real babies to help them get used to the idea of something always being in our arms; select a few daily things that the pets would miss if they stopped and be sure to keep them in your daily routine if at all possible; never leave the babies and pets alone together, etc.

There are things I won’t consider, like getting rid of them. The animal shelters are full of pets that the owners couldn’t “deal with” once there were also children (and people who are moving into a place that doesn’t allow pets—tell me something—if you have pets, why the fuck would you move into a place that doesn’t allow them????). I truly believe it’s possible to have both babies and pets. My neighbors have a dog that is way more high-strung than Hammer, and he actually allowed their daughter to use his skin as a chew toy. I know it can work.

But it’s going to be a challenge. While I’m not after any assvice, I’d love to hear about some successes if you know of any. Please!

September 14, 2004

Furniture Fear

One of the good things about waiting to try to have kids until your mid-thirties is that you have lots of friends that have finished their baby-making and they all want to give you stuff.

Since we’re fairly poor, this couldn’t be better news. My best friend is giving me her daughter’s crib (yes, it was built before 1999 and the latest round of crib requirements, and no, her daughter didn’t choke herself to death in it). Another woman, one I don’t even know, overheard my friends discussing my twins and offered up another crib. I’m very blessed in that I probably won’t have to buy much in the way of baby furniture.

My husband and I have discussed the baby room in abstract. We’ve argued about whether the tiny square room he now uses as an office is a better choice than the tiny rectangular room we now use as a dressing room. The larger (guffaw—we live in a row house, nothing is actually large) master bedroom contains only our bed and the dog’s bed, and this weird ass 60’s chair (kind of like a lazy boy in a permanent open position but on a rail that lets you choose different angles) that is that avocado green and that will probably be where I sleep at the end of the pregnancy (because it keeps your head and feet raised). We know we have to move the dressers into the main bedroom, but we have yet to decide which of the other two will definitely be the babies’ room.

I know we have to start moving on this. Because I’m carrying twins, I have to assume the babies could come really early, or I could be put on some kind of bed rest that would require my husband to make all the decisions about the baby’s room (not on option, clearly, wonderful as he is). We must resolve all of this before the holidays.

But I’m scared. Julia's been writing lately about how infertility can feel contagious to our friends, who begin worrying when they haven't gotten pregnant after three months of trying. I think that fear of miscarriage is also contagious, particularly here in blogland.

I've never miscarried, but I can’t bear the thought of having a nursery set up and then not having babies to put in it. I’m going to be 16 weeks pregnant tomorrow—time to start saying how far along I am in months instead of weeks—and I know that now my risk of miscarriage is now very low. But, come on—we’ve all read Tertia’s blog! The horrors that are still out there, hovering in my fear range, are huge and unwieldy.

Maybe after Monday’s ultrasound, where they’ll check the babies’ growth and stuff, I’ll feel more like parenthood will be the result of this pregnancy, instead of more grief.

I’m just having such a hard time getting my mind around all this. Any advice?