Crossover Day

white clouds with sun piercing through it

It’s Crossover Day: the day I have been both dreading and looking forward to since I saw two lines on a pregnancy test.

At this exact gestational age last year, I checked myself into the hospital, only to be discharged 6 days later with no baby.

I’ve wondered for many months how it would feel to be here again, and the only word I can put my finger on is: weird. It feels weird. Not good, not bad, not really nerve-wracking (ok… a little nerve-wracking), but it feels strange. It’s kind of like déjà vu, but actually not. This pregnancy has been so different than my last one.

I was having dinner with Chris last night and I brought this up. He asked what I meant by “different,” and the best way I could describe it was that last time, I felt like my pregnancy was going on in the background of my life. Yes, I was growing a human, but I was still going about my life business-as-usual. I had the same friends, the same activities, I was following the same people on social media, I was still focused on work, I was still going to the gym, and I was still hanging out with friends. On the side, I was watching YouTube videos about what to add to your baby registry, and I had doctor’s appointments about every 4-5 weeks, but that was just going on in the periphery.

This time around, my pregnancy IS my life. It’s the first thing I think of when I wake up, and the last thing I think of when I go to sleep. My friends group has changed. I rarely leave my house. My morning and evening centers around my meds routine and taking my blood pressure. My main focus in my life is reducing stress. My Instagram is flooded with loss-mom-content. My social calendar is mostly non-existent, but when I do have things to do, they are scheduled around my frequent doctors’ appointments and scans. Almost every conversation with Chris eventually veers into “do you think the baby is ok” territory.

My entire life is this pregnancy. And finally, tomorrow, I will be the most pregnant I’ve ever been. Well, that’s not entirely true, Maliyah lived for 48 hours after I checked into the hospital, but tomorrow will be my most-pregnant-not-hospitalized day. Hopefully. I don’t foresee any emergency hospital visits, but you never know. 25 weeks and 2-4 days has been in my mind for months.

For crossover day, we are currently in the Catskills. The main reason we picked this week was because my office was closed. Also, of course, I knew crossover day was coming and I needed a distraction. After we booked the trip, I told Chris we’d be away for crossover day, and I fully expected him to be surprised. I feel like he is able to compartmentalize much better than I can, so I figured he hadn’t thought about the timing, but I was wrong. He said of course he knew that. I asked him if it made him nervous to be away from a hospital (because it definitely made me nervous!) and he said no. He said no, because we had a scan 2 days before we left, everything looked perfect, my blood pressure has been great, and we have no indications of things going south. But still, I’m nervous.

We also picked this week because it’s nearing the time I will not feel comfortable leaving the city anymore. I know for my mental health, I will need to be within 15 minutes of a Level IV NICU at all times. Also, I will need to be within New York State, because every other state continues to make headlines for killing pregnant women.

A few weeks ago, someone asked me how far along I was, and I said 20 weeks. They were surprised, and they said, “wow! 20 weeks already? Time flies, doesn’t it?” I looked at them dead in the eyes and said, “no. time does not fly. Time is crawling.” I thought 25 weeks 2 days would never come.

I have been jealous of my loss mom friends who had earlier losses and therefore had their crossover days many weeks ago. I know this makes no sense; I didn’t actually want Maliyah to die before she did. But when you have an early loss, you get past that date in a subsequent pregnancy sooner and sometimes getting past that date brings along with it some peace and confidence. For me, 25 weeks and 2-4 days was soooo far away from that initial positive test. There were many months, weeks, days, hours, minutes, seconds to get through before this moment. And they did NOT fly by.

Two weeks ago, I spoke to my mom on a Friday afternoon, and she asked me what my plans were for the weekend. That question stopped me in my tracks. The weekend? I had completely forgotten it was Friday, and I had literally 0 plans. By the way, I am completely fine with 0 weekend plans, it was just remarkable that I hadn’t even considered the two days ahead of me. I was so extremely laser-focused on the current moment in time and getting through it, that it had not occurred to me to make ADVANCE plans.

I mentioned in my post about the danger zone that everyone has different points at which they feel confident in their pregnancy. For a lot of people, 24 weeks is that point. Many doctors call this “viability,” or when a baby has a chance of survival outside the womb. But that chance is not great, and I was already past 24 weeks when Maliyah died. Also, “survival” could still mean immense complications. The numbers are: 40% of babies born at 24 weeks’ gestation survive, 50% of those born at 25 weeks, 60% of those born at 26 weeks, 70% for 27 weeks, and 80% for 28 weeks. The countdown is on.

As I approached crossover day, my anxiety was ramping up. I could tell by my heartrate when I took/take my blood pressure. It’s a vicious cycle, I’m nervous it will be high, I get stressed about taking it, the stress and anxiety makes it high, and then I’m more stressed and nervous because it’s elevated. Being out of town and far from the hospital doesn’t help. I see that my pulse is nearly 100 before I’m going to take my blood pressure and the moment I’m done, it goes back down to 75. I can’t seem to get a handle on my stress, and I know it’s crucial to do so, which only makes me more frustrated. The loop continues.

I am hoping I will feel less stressed once we cross this threshold of 25 weeks 4 days, and once I am back in the city in proximity of emergency care.

I keep hoping and hoping to front-load the growth of this baby, in case we need to take him out early, so he has the best chances. So far so good. We’ve already hit a few crossover milestones (more on milestones coming soon). He is officially bigger than Maliyah ever was. And he’s probably 2 pounds by now, which is a weight Maliyah never hit. At our last scan when we found out he was 1 pound 10 ounces, I turned to Chris and I said, “2-pound babies live.” Would I like him to be 3 pounds? 4? 5? Even 6? Yes! But being across the 2 threshold is already giving me some hope. I would not say I’m “confident” in any way, shape, or form, but my hope is slowly growing.

I remember vividly being in the hospital last year and begging for additional days or weeks, and now, I’m getting them (hopefully). I am thankful for each day more, and I hope there are many of them.

I’ve used the word, “hope” 7 times in the last three paragraphs. Maybe if I type it here some more, I’ll internalize it!

Hope… hope… hope… hope… hope… hope… hope… hope… hope… hope… hope… hope…

(Written at: 25 weeks, 2 days)

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A Day in the Life: Pregnancy After Loss Edition

postit scrabble to do todo

This blog is a weird one, it’s stream of consciousness, and it’s a true window into my mind. There was nothing special about this particular day, this was just one of many, many days. As I wrote this, I realized the amount of times I have anxious thoughts. Spoiler alert: it’s a lot.

I think this may be an interesting read for those who have never experienced pregnancy after loss (“PAL”), and for those of you who have, it may sound extremely familiar. I wish I could say that this was a more anxious day than normal, but it wasn’t. It was just a day like every other, of which there are many. All in a row.

I have been finding myself so incredibly exhausted lately, but it’s not always physical exhaustion, as much as mental exhaustion. After reading through my own thoughts, I know why. Being pregnant after loss is all-consuming. Literally every normal thought is followed by a catastrophic one. Every reassuring thing seems to disappear into thin air mere moments after. It’s a never-ending thought spiral, and it is tiring. If you have been wondering why I’ve been absent (from get-togethers, social media, group chats), it’s because I am BUSY. In my own head.


8 am:

Lucky me, another day alive. Ready for 16 hours of anxiety.

First things first:

“Chris, do you think our baby is dead?”

“Um no? Why would you say that?”

“I dunno, because it’s my first thought every day when I wake up.”

Let me check my Fitbit app, did I sleep alright? Yes! Only 3 times awake to pee, and 4 nightmares that I was in the hospital. Not bad. Resting heartrate looks normal, maybe my blood pressure will also be normal. Let me not get my hopes up.

8:20 am:

Time to take my blood pressure. How long will it take me to get calm this morning? Maybe I can trick myself into thinking I’m still asleep. I probably shouldn’t have brushed my teeth and put in my contacts. Ok, deep breaths. Nope, that makes it worse. Shallow breaths. Why do I feel like I’m on a run? Let me check my Fitbit. My HR is already up 20 bpm from resting. I will just sit here quietly some more and hope it goes down.

Phew, worst part of the morning down. Now time for vitamins, meds, and injection. How long is too long to hold the ice pack on my stomach? The bruising hasn’t been too bad lately. Does that mean the blood thinners aren’t working? How do I know if they’re working? Yesterday I had a nose bleed and I thought that was a good sign but “the bruises aren’t bruising” as Gen Z would say. Why can’t I be happy about not having too many bruises?

9 am:

Work time. This should be a good distraction. I have two meetings in a row, great distraction. Easy: Don’t think about being pregnant. Thank goodness for Zoom, I can wear stretchy pants that don’t push into my minimal stomach bruises and no one can tell. I don’t look pregnant on Zoom! Great!

Wait, is my face puffy? Face puffiness is a sign of pre-eclampsia. I don’t have pre-eclampsia, I literally took my blood pressure 10 minutes ago. I am fine.

What is this person on the meeting even saying? Right, right, they want to switch jobs because they can’t afford to live there with their two kids. Two LIVING kids. Sigh. I won’t bring up my dead one, but it sure does cost less! I mean, the therapy is expensive but…

Alright, meeting 2. I will stay focused. I will not think about how maybe my baby is dead inside me right now. Oh, they want to launch a project in the new fiscal year in July! That’s fine. Well, maybe I’ll be on maternity leave. They don’t know that, but I do. But then again maybe I won’t be on leave if the baby is dead. Should I tell them about this baby? No, I haven’t seen him alive on a scan in 3 weeks, that would be presumptuous. Good chance he died since then. And last time I said something to my coworkers about Maliyah, she was dead 3 weeks later. I can’t jinx it. I will just pretend I will definitely be working in July.

12 pm:

Gym break. I need to get out of my head. I need someone to tell me what to do for an hour. I need to move my body and get out of my mind. This is good! I can still run relatively well. I need to keep my eye on my HR though. My nephrologist says no more than 140bpm. But my MFM says I can do anything so long as I can keep up conversation and breathe regularly. Maybe I’ll compromise at 165 but only in short bursts. Ok, 3 minute push pace. If I start at my base, I probably can increase as I go, but if I start in a push, it’ll be harder to bring my HR down if I need to. Will running too hard for 30 seconds suffocate my baby? I don’t think so, but I also can’t be sure.

I don’t think anyone can tell I’m pregnant, they probably just think I’m lazy. As soon as I hit orange zone I start taking my speed down. This is fine, I feel good. The gym was a good idea. I wonder how many exercises I’ll have to modify when we start lifting weights. Will anyone know why I’m switching exercises? I hope no one says anything. I am still non-pregnant passing I think… no one would dare say anything would they? I need to stop thinking, it’s bringing up my heart rate and everyone can see on the screen.

2 pm:

One more meeting and it’s by phone. This is good. No dissecting whether my face looks pregnant or pre-eclamptic.

3 pm:

How many emails can I get through before the end of the day? Wait, is that the baby kicking? Yes! It is. He’s alive. I think. I’m pretty sure. Only alive babies do that right? Let me do a quick Google. I thought I had some pain under my rib but I don’t think that’s “upper right quadrant” pain, even though it’s technically in my URQ. I am probably just dehydrated. And my blood pressure was perfectly normal this morning! It’s not that. It’s not that. It’s not that. Back to emails.

6 pm:

Work over, no more distractions. I could watch tv. I still haven’t finished the Mindy Project. But they’re all OBGYNs. Hard pass. Maybe I’ll go to sleep early. Not that I can ever manage to do that, but maybe tonight is my night. First, dinner. What do I want to eat? Nothing really. What does the baby want to eat? Who even knows if he’s still alive. No, he IS alive. I felt him 3 hours ago. My baby is alive. My baby is alive. Everything is fine.

“Chris, do you think our baby is ok?”

“Um yes, why wouldn’t he be?”

“I dunno, just checking.”

“One day at a time.”

“I know, I know, it’s just… there are so many days.”

8 pm:

Support group! Yes! Other crazy people! All my feelings are normal. This is normal. PAL is hard. Everyone worries. REMEMBER THIS EMILY. The facilitator says I can always go into the hospital if I am worried. Even if I have “no reason” to be worried. I don’t know if I can bring myself to do that. But maybe I will. I have a nephrology appointment Thursday, it’s 2 blocks from the hospital… I haven’t seen our baby in 3 weeks, I could just hop over and get a quick look-see. No… that’s crazy. I felt him move today! BP was good this morning! I don’t want to waste anyone’s time…

9 pm:

Blood pressure and then evening meds. I can calm down. I will calm down. Everything is fine. BP was good this morning. Progressive muscle relaxation. Slowly melt into the couch. But don’t actually slouch. I need an accurate reading. Feet firmly planted on the ground. Back supported. Arm at heart level. Ugh my pulse is going up again I can feel it. Let me check my Fitbit. Yep, it’s up. Way up. Ok, I will sit here calmly for another 5 minutes and see if I can chill. Breathe regularly, but don’t think about breathing. Easy.

Phew normal! I don’t have to do this for another 12 hours. Maybe it’ll also be normal tomorrow. Better not get my hopes up though.

11:30 pm:

I will read in bed until I get tired. OMG he is moving again. HE’S ALIVE. Now maybe I can sleep. But I shouldn’t sleep on my back. Wait, no, maybe that’s an old wives’ tale. My last OB said any sleep is good sleep and my body will wake me or move me if necessary.

My body doesn’t know shit. It didn’t warn me of anything last time. I should probably try to sleep on my side. One day down. One day closer.

“Chris, want to say goodnight to our baby? I hope you’re in there!”

“I hope you stay in there!”

“I hope you’re healthy!”

“I hope you’re growing!”

“And I hope you don’t try to kill your mama.”

“We love you.”

(Written at: 22 weeks, 6 days)

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The Blame Game

Recently, I have been extremely bothered by the seemingly-innocuous question, “how’s the baby?” So many people have said this to me recently in person, by phone, or by text. It always leaves me completely frozen.

How’s the baby? I HAVE NO IDEA. And trust me, I wish I did.

I want to scream at the question-asker, “I FUCKING WISH I KNEW.” It’s something I think about basically every waking moment of every day of every week of every month.

Depending on my mood, I usually say something with a similar meaning to, “I fucking wish I knew,” but in a slightly nicer tone. I’ll say something like, “I wish I knew! Lol”. That “lol” gets them every time. I want people to think, “She’s so breezy! So casual! Look at her, what a chill loss mom!” FALSE.

Sometimes I say, “your guess is as good as mine!” Sometimes I say, “how do you think?,” which always leaves them confused, because how would they know? But the thing is, they honestly do know just as much as I know.

In this weird in-between time where people know I’m pregnant and I’m definitely showing (if you know what my body usually looks like), but I’m not feeling consistent movement and I don’t have closely-spaced appointments, I really do not know how the baby is.

I was chatting about this with my therapist this week, and she said, “why can’t you say, ‘last time we saw him, he was good’?” Sometimes, I do say this. But that usually leads to follow-up questions about why I stated it that way, and what happened since that last time. Nothing bad happened! But also, nothing happened at all. I am just operating on a wing and a prayer. I haven’t had visual confirmation that my baby is alive in weeks.

In my mind, I compared this to another frequently-asked question I receive, “how are your parents?” Of course, I don’t have airtags on my parents and I don’t watch them on monitors at all times, I have no idea how my parents are doing at the exact moment when someone asks me about them. And yet, I answer that question all the time. I say they’re great and give some sort of recent update about them. It doesn’t send me into a panic, and I don’t say, “well, I haven’t had proof of life from my parents in 9 days, but last time I spoke to them, they were very much ok.”

So, why is it so different when someone asks about my baby? First of all, just like I mentioned about trauma informing anxiety around pre-e, trauma is also informing my thoughts here. Thankfully, I have never had someone ask me how my parents were, and then something horrific happened and I didn’t know about it. If that had happened to me, I might have a similar trauma response now when people ask about them. That’s exactly what happened with my last baby: things were very bad, and I had no idea.

But it’s more than that. People don’t expect children to be their parents’ keepers. People do not expect a human to know IMMEDIATELY, with some sort of psychic capability, when something happens to their parents. With pregnancy, people do. If it turns out that a mom had no clue their child was in danger, the blaming and shaming comes out with a vengeance.

When speaking with my therapist, I told her that for some reason, with this specific question, I find that I can’t “lie” and say the baby is good. When pressed, I said, “what if I say the baby is good, then the next day I find out he isn’t, and then not only did I lie, I will be blamed for not knowing something had happened?” We dug into that blame a little bit more, and as with everything else, there’s a touch of PTSD there.

Last year, I will never forget when I checked into triage at labor and delivery, and the nurse there called me a mom for the very first time. She said, “you’re doing great mom; you did exactly the right thing for your baby coming in and getting everything checked out.” At the time, I said, “don’t call me mom, it’s way too early.” In hindsight, that statement bothered me even more, but for a completely different reason. I know she meant it to bolster my confidence, and to make me feel like I did a great thing by coming in when I thought something was amiss, but the reality is, I didn’t know anything was wrong. I had no clue. I felt great and I was at home cooking dinner! The only reason I went to the hospital was because my doctor called my cell phone and told me to. That statement from the nurse actually made me feel terrible because, if great moms knew when something was wrong with their babies, then what did that make me?

Good moms are expected to always know what is going on with their kids, and this extends throughout their lives. I hear the guilt from moms who had reduced fetal movement and didn’t know, or moms who put their kids to bed and then they never woke up, and from parents of much older kids who maybe let them go out late at night, even when they had a “bad feeling.” The guilt never ends.

My therapist shared a personal story about someone she knew who was taking care of her 20-something-year old grandson, and he had a seizure and died, but she hadn’t known because he was in his room with the door closed. This poor woman was blamed for not checking on him sooner, and somehow not preventing this completely unpredictable event. He was a fully-grown adult who had the right to privacy and a closed door! It’s not just guilt, but also blame that never ends.

In pregnancy, it feels like, as Gen Z says, “you have one job.” The job is to keep your baby alive, but it’s also to know when they’re not alive, or not doing well. This is easier said than done.

As I’ve said many times on here, with Maliyah, I had no symptoms and no signs. But I also didn’t know what the symptoms or signs were that I was supposed to be looking out for. Parts of me blame myself for this, and wonder that if MAYBE I had known what to look for, I would have spotted something. I know this is probably not true, since I was in the hospital for days, and doctors were asking all the right questions and looking for all signs, and I had none.

But this time, I do know. The main difference between last pregnancy and this one is my knowledge. With that knowledge, comes more blame. I say to myself, “this time I will KNOW if something is wrong.” But what if, yet again, there are no external signs? What if I don’t know? I will never be entirely sure. What if I say things are good, and they aren’t? I wish I had an ultrasound machine at home, but I don’t.

I am symptom-spotting all day every day. I know that a headache is a tell-tale sign of high blood pressure and pre-eclampsia due to brain swelling. But headaches are also just a common occurrence in pregnancy. Also, I am prone to headaches outside of pregnancy! This does not help my anxiety. I also know that dizziness and light-headedness is a sign of low blood pressure. Since my blood pressure has recently been on the low side, I am now looking for this possibility as well.

Monday, I was at the gym, and I started to get a headache. I was panicking. My blood pressure had been fine in the morning, but what if it was spiking? How quickly could I get to the hospital? Should I go home and check my BP or just go directly there? I felt paralyzed, stared blankly at the wall, and I hadn’t done any exercises for 2 minutes when my friend asked me if I was ok. I remembered that I had not had a headache before class, and one thing that had changed is that I put my hair up. Sure enough, when I took my ponytail down and quickly braided my hair, my head felt a lot better.

Then, 3 minutes later, we went into a circuit of chest presses to high bridge pulls on the TRX. I got up from the bench, and felt light-headed. Panic set in again. Was my blood pressure actually too low? How do I make it go up? I’d never had this problem before, so I wasn’t sure what to do. Should I also go to the hospital for that? Again, I stood paralyzed by fear. Then I remembered that it is semi-common to get light-headed from standing up quickly, and it’s even more common in pregnancy, especially when feeling overheated. After standing there staring at the wall for a second, I felt completely normal again. At least, I felt normal physically. Mentally, I felt like a crazy person.

Meanwhile, the blame game was continuing in my head. What if I went to the hospital and they asked where I had been when it happened, and said I shouldn’t have been at the gym? I have followed all of my doctor’s advice, but surely this would somehow end up my fault. Don’t I care about my baby? I should know better! As a reminder, readers, I entered this thought spiral simply because my ponytail was too tight. The self-blame is never-ending.

In my rational mind, I know there’s no explanation for what happened with Maliyah. It is not my fault. Many doctors have told me this. But to me, it still feels like I somehow made some mistake. Maybe I didn’t make a mistake causing her demise, but I certainly feel like I made a mistake by not realizing it faster. Everyone is allowed one mistake of innocence. Two mistakes though? Not ok. I feel even more pressure now to do everything in my power to protect this baby because I already used up my naiveté, and I do not want to be blamed if something goes wrong again.

There’s no good way to answer the question, “how’s the baby.” This is part of why I avoid discussing my pregnancy in general. I have decided that for now, I will simply sidestep the question like a good politician and instead say, “physically I’m feeling good.” That is true, but a non-answer to the actual question. Another one of my favorites at the moment is: “no news is hopefully good news.” Also true. Note I didn’t say, “no news is good news,” because that may be a lie. Every one of these interactions is a stark reminder of how lovely it would be to be pregnant and naïve, and how nice it must feel to just answer simple questions with simple answers. But that’s not my story, and none of this is simple.

(Written at: 21 weeks 4 days)

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The Anger Zone

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Anger is not an emotional state I typically find myself in. Not before my first pregnancy, not ever. This is not to say I never get mad, but I don’t usually sit in a space of anger. Recently, that has changed.

I noticed a drastic shift in my mindset toward anger in February 2024. The days were slowly moving forward toward Maliyah’s 1st birthday, and I could not stop myself from reliving my February 2023. Every day in February 2024, I found myself logging into the hospital app on my phone and obsessively rereading my old medical records. I read doctor’s notes, ultrasound tech annotations, and blood test results. I was back and forth, furiously switching apps between Epic and Google, searching every single medical definition. I went into my blood pressure app and looked at my readings day after day from the year prior. Truly masochistic behavior, day after day after day.

I got madder and madder.

We all know the saying, “knowledge is power.” Well, in my case? Knowledge was anger. Knowing what I know now, when I looked back at my charts from last year… I became increasingly angry every day.

I found my anger directed more inward than outward. I did not blame my doctors. I truly think they were doing the best they could with the knowledge they had. I have learned over the past year that doctors have specialties, and often, despite our common belief that doctors know everything, it’s truly a misconception. Doctors know their field. Doctors know how most cases resolve in their field, and how most bodies react to certain things, they know means and averages and medians. Unfortunately, as I said two weeks ago, I was an EXTREME outlier. I do not blame my doctors for not expecting I would be the .00001 case.

However, I found myself in February in an anger spiral, extremely angry at myself. The reason I was so mad, was because I know now that I had a lot of red flags. I had yellow flags, and they were flags I raised to my doctors. However, because the yellows don’t usually transform into reds, my concerns were dismissed. Now, knowing what I know, knowing the ending of my story, I am extremely livid with myself for not pushing harder. In my rational mind, I know this is not fair to me. I know that I did my best, and all I knew last year was to raise any concerns I had, and to trust my medical team’s expertise. But now that I know what I know, I find my blood boiling.

I mentioned a test last week called an AFP test. I am not going to get into the details here, but the short version of my story is, my test result was high. Not just high-ish, but HIGH. Now in 2024, I am an AFP expert. At the time, I was not. At the time, I raised my concerns, my doctor did a scan, said it was “unexplained,” and I threw up my hands. Now that I know what I know, I see my records and I say, “why didn’t I insist on seeing an MFM immediately?” I’ll tell you why… because I literally didn’t know what an MFM was last year.

I chastise myself now for not reading my charts during my first pregnancy. At the time, I was told specifically not to check the ultrasound reports or notes, because they said the baby’s sex, and we were keeping that a secret. My doctor told us that she would tell us verbally if anything was wrong. I really did not question this. I naively thought that medical notes were meant for a doctor’s own records. Yes, I knew I could access the notes on my app, but why would I? Wouldn’t my doctors say everything aloud to me that they put in there?

It turns out, that answer is no. There were many notes in my chart that were either inaccurate to the information they said aloud, or were just excluded from our 1:1 conversations. I know now, that notes are often not added to a patient’s chart until 3-4 days after the appointment. I know that, because nowadays, I refresh the app constantly after appointments, and I read the notes religiously and thoroughly.

What happens between the appointment time and the notes-entering time? I really can’t say. But I imagine that sometimes, a doctor looks over what they saw, observed, felt, heard, etc., and then later, they put those pieces of information together and write down some theories in the chart. Also, days later, when a doctor is seeing patient after patient, it’s very possible they told one patient something that they didn’t tell me, but 3 days later, how could they remember what they said to whom? Also, just like in any profession, doctors have specialized knowledge that they may inaccurately assume patients also know.

One glaring personal example is that no doctor ever mentioned pre-eclampsia to me after 12 weeks. At 12 weeks, my doctor told me to start taking one baby aspirin a day because it was proven to reduce the risk of pre-eclampsia, and I had two risk factors of pre-eclampsia: being 35 years old, and the fact that it was my first pregnancy. I started taking that one aspirin daily, as suggested, and nothing else was ever said. I didn’t ask what pre-e was, what to look for, how early it could begin… I didn’t ask anything. I just took the pill daily, and lived my life. And that word was never said again to me until I checked myself into the hospital.

Imagine my surprise when, in February of this year, I opened up an ultrasound report from 5 weeks before Maliyah was born, and found the note “close monitoring for preeclampsia.” I don’t know what “close monitoring” was meant to entail, but first of all, it was never said out loud, and second of all, I never saw a doctor in 3D between when that note was written, and until I was in triage with stroke-level blood pressure readings. But I didn’t know. So when I saw that note, I was mad. Very, very mad. Also included in that same notes section of the ultrasound was this: “We reviewed the association of an elevated AFP with adverse maternal and/or fetal outcomes including but not limited to stillbirth, fetal growth restriction and preeclampsia.” None of this was true. I mean, the actual risks are true, but they certainly did not “review” that with me. Nobody ever said the word “stillbirth” to us.

I felt so blindsided when I saw that note, that I asked my husband. I don’t remember being in a heightened state of anxiety such that I would have forgotten such a dire possibility being mentioned, but I was glad I had an additional witness. Sure enough, my husband confirmed, this was never stated to us.

Of course, hindsight is 20-20. I’d like to think that if I had seen that note, if they had said those words aloud to me, I would have asked more questions and I would have done more googling. I’d like to think that I would have advocated for myself more when, 3 days later, I had a video appointment with my doctor, I told her my blood pressure was rising, and she said, “that’s normal in pregnancy because your blood volume is increasing, it’s not high enough to medicate.” I didn’t know what that could mean back then, and I didn’t even know that I had already been flagged for pre-e. But now when I read those notes, and relive all of the events that followed, the what-if voices in my head are loud, and they are incessant.

Five weeks after that video call, as we were pleading with the doctors in the hospital for 1 more week, 5 more days, 3 more days, it’s impossible for me not to think, “WHAT IF I had just started on blood pressure meds a few weeks prior? What if I had actually been monitored closely and had even one routine blood draw?”

I’ll never have those answers, and it’s infuriating.

I had months of anger about my previous pregnancy, and what I should have done, if I somehow could have known. Then, I thought I was through my anger phase. Things continued to progress smoothly through pregnancy #2. I had a week where I had two very big appointments: first, an appointment with my MFM, then, an appointment for an anatomy scan, which is often the most detailed scan a pregnant person has throughout their entire pregnancy. I was extremely anxious (as usual), because I could have learned about many possible anomalies, or likelihood of preterm labor. I also could learn if my baby was growing on pace.

Everything went extremely well, and I was so incredibly happy that I screamed it from the rooftops! I announced baby #2 immediately on social media and excitedly told all my coworkers!

PSYCH!! I did none of those things.

I took the bus home from the hospital and cried. Then took a hot shower and cried. Then I laid in bed and cried. A lot. And I wasn’t even sad, I was MAD. Truly furious.

I couldn’t understand why everything was going so well. Of course I wanted it to go well, but why did one of my babies die, and this one was just… hunky-dory? I wanted to be so happy but I couldn’t get over my comparison and frustration.

I dug into my brain and went through everything that I was doing differently this second pregnancy. There were a lot of things. I had pre-conception consultations and tests. I’m taking some different meds. I’m taking two aspirin daily instead of one. I’m overseen by a team of doctors who are extremely knowledgeable.

On a good day, those things give me peace and solace. On a bad day, like I was having around 19 weeks, 5 days, it made me furious. Here’s why: the things I’m doing differently are so easy. SO EASY. They’re so easy, that I cannot possibly grasp why I didn’t do them last time. The most invasive thing I’m doing this pregnancy is giving myself one injection a day. Needles don’t bother me, and if I’m honest, I don’t mind the injections at all. It’s not like I had a massive surgery or reconstructed my uterus. I’m taking 1 additional aspirin a day! Those pills are so small I routinely drop them on the ground. The things I am doing are SIMPLE.

And yet, I wasn’t told to do them last time.

If I had done those things, would I have a living child at home? If I had, would our baby boy be able to meet his sister instead of just seeing her handprints? I just cannot make sense of the fact that I had to lose a baby when it seems so SIMPLE to have an uneventful pregnancy. Like I said before, the what-ifs are loud, and they are incessant. I absolutely hate when people in the loss community say “if you didn’t have baby 1, you wouldn’t have baby 2” because it’s just simply not true. We always wanted more than one baby. And I very easily could have had both alive. But I don’t, and I will never know why. It’s unfair, and it makes me angry.

I know anger is one of the classic stages of grief, and somehow, I hadn’t found myself there until recently, but here I am, and who knows when I’ll see myself on to a different stage. Everyone says, “grief is not linear,” and I’m here as a shining example, finding myself back in stage 2, after I made it through the other 4. If you need me, I’ll be at the nearest rage room.

(Written at: 20 week 4 days)

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