My labor and birth story

On Friday, March 27, 2020 around 6 pm, I started to feel the contractions. Julian was already 5 days late and what was going on was pretty much the unimaginable: a global pandemic had set its sights on the world and just a week and a half earlier I was celebrating my 33rd birthday, enjoying the company of both my family and in-laws. At one point, we all looked up at the nearest television in the restaurant. NBA commissioner Adam Silver was announcing the suspension of the season because a player had contracted COVID-19. My sister was scrolling through Twitter and told us that Tom Hanks and his wife Rita Wilson also had it. I don’t think it really sunk in until my nurse midwife told me on the phone a few days later that I wouldn’t be allowed to have visitors once my son entered the world.

That Friday night, I called the Labor and Delivery (L&D) front desk at Kaiser and the nurse told me to follow the 5:1:1 rule, except to make it 3:1:1. This means the contractions had to be 3 minutes apart, lasting about 1 minute, for 1 hour. She explained that because of COVID, they didn’t want my husband Gerard and I to be there a lot longer than we had to be. If my water broke, I would also be able to arrive at the hospital and begin the process of birthing there. I understood and practiced my breathing and labor exercises for what literally felt like forever.

At some point during the day on Saturday March 28th, I called the L&D desk again when the contractions had started to worsen in pain but they were not shortening to the 3:1:1 rule. In fact, at one point they seemed to be getting closer together but then the next hour they would be farther apart (UGH). The nurse reassured me that “it looks like it will happen today” and that I would just need to keep monitoring them. I was ready to go to the hospital and was devastated that I couldn’t yet. Gerard was amazing and helpful with my labor exercises and in making sure I was eating and able to shower okay.

Not surprisingly, Sunday the 29th was the hardest day that weekend. I don’t even remember if I was able to get any sleep up until that point because of the contractions. I was either sitting up in bed or laying on my side all night. By that evening, I hadn’t realized it but my water broke. I called the L&D desk a third time to ask how I would know if it really was my water or if I just peed in my underwear (you can only imagine my Google searches at that point). The nurse asked me to describe it to her and I said it just felt like I had peed but it wasn’t a specific color (bloody show for those who have not gone through this process before. I had no idea either). I also told her that my contractions hadn’t narrowed down to 3:1:1 and she said to wait it out just a little bit longer. Later that night I cried and threw up, my teeth chattered and I shivered even though it wasn’t that cold in our apartment (apparently it’s a thing).

Needless to say, I was completely over it. I was very sleep-deprived and tired of bouncing on my labor ball. I prayed that we would be driving to the hospital by that night, but it wouldn’t be until the very next morning. Around 7 am, I knew it was go-time. I started timing the contractions on the app and tried calling out to Gerard but he was asleep in our living room. One slammed door and a last call to L&D later, we were headed towards Kaiser.

When we arrived, all of the reserved parking spots for L&D were taken. Gerard had to park elsewhere and we slowly walked to the entrance where we were met with a somber sight of canopy tents and staff with face masks and gloves. They took our temperature and a nurse helped me onto a wheelchair and walked me over to the elevators. When we got to L&D and checked in, it was already 9 am. We went to our room where I changed into a hospital gown and was soon reunited with my midwife.

After getting hooked up to an IV and heart monitor, my midwife measured my cervix and asked me when my water broke. I told her it might’ve been on Saturday but that I wasn’t sure. She told me I was 9 cm dilated – yes, NINE – and that it was time to start pushing. I asked her if it was too late for the epidural (which was a box on my birth plan waiting to get checked off) and she said yes. I panicked for maybe a few seconds but I was so determined to have Julian out so I complied. It was then when everyone in the room (nurse, midwife, Gerard and myself) noticed that Julian’s heartbeat would slow down every time I had a contraction. My midwife and the nurse were talking to each other, but I couldn’t even tell you what was being said. After what seemed like 5 hours, I realized my midwife had left and came back with the OB/GYN who informed me that we needed to get Julian out ASAP because the contractions were putting him in distress. If it would be unsuccessful, then they’d need to do an emergency caesarean.

In total I must’ve pushed about 10 or more times before Julian entered the world, with the assist of a vacuum extraction and an oxygen mask over my mouth. Gerard had also removed my eyeglasses because they were bothering me while I was pushing, so when Julian came out I couldn’t even see him. He was born at 12:11 pm on March 30, 2020. He was heavily covered in meconium (basically a newborn’s first bowel movement) and the umbilical cord was wrapped around his neck. When we heard him cry, it was the biggest sigh of relief. I couldn’t believe what I had just endured and thought “women’s bodies are so powerful!”

Since he was covered in meconium and the cord had been around his neck, he was still in distress. The staff took him to the NICU to make sure the meconium would be removed from his lungs and he’d be able to breathe properly on his own. The plan to hold him right after birth, for skin-to-skin contact and to have that first family photo, was out the door. I didn’t really have time to process all of that and accept it until later, because I was still trying to calm down from the adrenaline of just having given birth (with no pain meds!).

God is so good and Julian was off of supplemental oxygen after a couple of hours. He was able to breathe on his own afterwards but the NICU physician wanted to monitor him more closely as a precaution. We stayed in the hospital for a total of 2 nights and was able to take Julian home on April 1st. It was exciting as much as it was terrifying.

It definitely was not how I imagined my birth story to go, or the first year of motherhood to be exact. Seeing my son in the NICU was tough. Gerard and I were not allowed to see him together, we had to go separately each time. The nurses were amazing and were so patient with us as we tried to get him to latch (which ultimately turned out to be unsuccessful. I of course have come to internalize that a fed baby is the best baby). Taking him home and not having any help because of coronavirus also proved to be very difficult. The uncertainty was looming over us, especially because it was at the start of the pandemic and the world was still trying to figure it all out. I dreaded when Gerard would head back to work and prayed every day that he wouldn’t contract it.

I felt robbed of my maternity leave, that I didn’t get a chance to have visitors. I mailed out Thank You cards from our baby shower with each note saying “We can’t wait for you to meet him!” Never in my wildest dreams did I think that would be delayed, especially during his first year of life. I didn’t get to take Mommy and Me classes, or bring Julian out with me to do the most mundane, routinely things. Things that I and many people have surely taken for granted.

Looking back, while I may have felt that way, I am truly grateful for the uninterrupted time that I was (and am) able to spend with him. It’s true that we never get that time back. Our children are only babies once. And life never goes as planned, just as the birth plan we had did not go AT ALL how we wanted it to. I am learning to stay grateful and also looking forward to the future, making more memories with our sweet boy, instead of mourning what could have been.

Happy first birthday, Julian Allen. Mom and Dad love you more than you’ll ever know.

12 Thank You Notes

2017 is coming to an end and honestly readers, before I started writing this I thought it would be difficult to think of things in my life that were triumphant this year. The more I thought about it, I started to feel ashamed of myself. I have so much to be thankful for and promised myself to enter 2018 with more positivity. I also want to get into the habit of doing something that has always been so hard for me to do: thank God daily for everything He has given to me.

January – I went on a trip to Ensenada, Mexico with my boyfriend and his cousins. They were so fun and the laughs were endless. Thank You God for the opportunity to make memories with the people who are a part of my boyfriend’s life.

February – I was able to serve on a confirmation retreat for what I think was the 8th year in a row. St. Andrew’s Abby in Valyermo, CA will forever be a special place to me. It was there, in 2004, that I became that much closer to God and grew a better understanding of what it meant to be Catholic. After that, I kept going back to serve the candidates whose shoes I was once in. Thank You God for this beautiful faith.

March – Oh boy, March. My birthday month. My 30th year on Earth. I went to Costa Rica and had an absolute blast. My friend from college has been living there since 2012. I couldn’t think of a better way to celebrate a milestone birthday – one that many people seem to dread. Meaningful conversations, beyond friendly people, and the most gorgeous sunset I’ve ever seen on a beach that I could never find in California (sorry guys but it’s true). Thank You God for allowing me to experience it all. Pura Vida!

April – At the tail end of that trip I received an email for a phone interview that would eventually lead me to my current job. After my in-house interview on April 7th, I received another email stating I was moving forward with the background process. Thank You God for continuing to give me more opportunities to grow and strengthen my skills and talents.

May – On the 12th I drove a little bit over an hour to Pasadena to a book signing by Jen Sincero, author of You are a Badass: How to Stop Doubting Your Greatness and Start Living an Awesome Life. She was there to promote her new book, You are a Badass at Making Money: Master the Mindset of Wealth. Was it worth it? Oh yes. Jen’s humor was just as infectious in person as it is in her books. Her story is incredible, and her advice is noteworthy. I was nervous as I approached the table and told her that listening to her and reading her work has inspired me to get back into writing, even at my age. She laughed as if to indicate I was perfectly fine. “I didn’t start writing till I was in my 30’s too!” After learning how young she still is, I became even more inspired. Thank you Jen for sharing your talent and advice to the world, and thank You God for creating people like her who inspire those like me.

June – I left my job and I took a week off for myself. I have always been that person who believes taking time off means you’re going on a trip. Who takes vacations and stays home?! Taking that week off was so refreshing and very much needed. Note to self: take more days off to recuperate. Thank You God for allowing me to reenergize not only my body but my mind as well.

July – I started my new position with my current employer. It was (and in some ways, still is) a breath of fresh air, a huge relief from the environment I had just left (that’s another blog post for another date). It was almost culture shock to see a management team treat their employees so well. If you’ve read my previous post then you know how I have been feeling about the direction I want my career to go. Don’t get me wrong, I am truly grateful for this opportunity. Thank You God for it, and I cannot wait to see how it prepares me for my sole adventure.

August – I surprised my boyfriend for his birthday and we headed to The Greek Theatre in LA to see Postmodern Jukebox. It was so much better than I had anticipated. He introduced me to them a few years ago so I knew I had to buy those tickets. Thank You God for giving me the ability to buy them to be able to build more memories with my better half.

September – Oh yes, the travel bug never stops. From the 13th to the 18th my boyfriend and I went to Seattle and Vancouver B.C. with his brothers and some friends. Growing up in Southern California, it’s not uncommon to hear that we are missing a great deal of green. This trip really allowed me to take in the beauty of nature and appreciate that people have worked to preserve it. The Pacific Northwest is a new go-to destination in my book, and I am excited to continue the adventure when we visit Portland this upcoming March for my birthday. Again, thank You God for giving me these opportunities to travel.

October – This month I gained new memories that allowed me to enjoy my time with my loved ones, related or not. I was a bridesmaid in my cousin’s wedding, I watched a Beatles tribute band on my mom’s birthday, my boyfriend and I made friends with a couple from Montreal, and we celebrated a friend’s birthday in downtown Orange. Thank You God for bringing these people into my life and for reminding me to always have fun, no matter how stressful life gets.

November – This past Thanksgiving allowed me to really sit back and reflect. So many things happened around the world this year that made a lot of people angry, hurt, confused and fearful. Politics driving families and relationships apart. More mass shootings that instill paranoia and fear. It’s not easy to tune out the suffering when it’s everywhere in our social media, the news and television. I reminded myself not to eat, breathe and sleep all of this negativity. That no matter how bad it gets, I still have my family, friends and my better half to remind me that God’s love is still existent in this troubled yet beautiful world. Thank You God for having them in my life as those reminders.

December – The month may not be over yet as I type this, but already I have a lot to be grateful for. I am very excited to start 2018, for this blog to flourish so I can share my thoughts and ideas with those alike. Christmas is 6 days away, and the only thing I want is for my family and friends to be safe. So here is to better health, fun trips, and a more positive outlook on life. See you next year!

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It’s a Need, not a Desire

I graduated. I moved out. I entered the workforce…..and this is it? 30 more years of this? It’s the common side effects of young adulthood, the yearning for something more, the need to be able to do more. It’s a thought that’s been replaying in my head. “I am way too young still, to be ‘over it.'”

When I was a kid, roughly 8-9 years old, my dream was to become a writer. I often received compliments on my work. I won writing contests, I had several pen pals, I kept many journals, and my English teachers in high school would give me 100’s on the assignments I turned in. In any way I could, I expressed my life by writing it down. So what happened?

As a friend recently put it, life happened. When we are children, the desire to be something greater is in saving lives as a doctor or entertaining an audience on stage. When we grow up and prepare for the real world, we learn what is practical versus what isn’t. Aim for something that’s going to pay the bills and provide food on the table, right? Fast forward 20 years later and I am not (yet) a writer, but a customer service representative for one of the top employers in my state.

So what if I want to do more? Surely I was not put on this earth to “just pay bills and die,” right?

Since entering the workforce, I have learned a lot about what I’m great at and what I’m not particularly so great at. In these low moments, my thoughts are always racing. I don’t know if this place is right for me. Is it the people? Is it the work? Am I just being an ungrateful brat? I always seem unsatisfied. Conversations with friends always turn to work, with a lack of spark in my eye. I’ve only recently been able to admit to myself that there is nothing wrong with me, and that I have only been trying to find the right fit. Most people will read that and think, well there’s nothing wrong with that! Yes but what if I told you the right fit was risky? What if it required me to leave my 9-5 job, benefits and retirement included? What if the guarantee for work would not be 100% there all of the time? Most people would look at me like I was nuts. What else more do I need?

What I need is something that brings me joy. Something that will bring me closer to God. That will get me out of bed every morning instead of stalling. A profession where I get to utilize my talents for the greater good. Days that leave me looking forward to more, instead of only the weekends. What I need is a purpose, not a job.

People will be quick with their negativity. I have experienced it many times. Stepping out of your comfort zone is only something they wish they could do themselves. I would be lying if I said this didn’t scare me. It’s only human to feel scared! That is the greatest risk I am willing to take though.

If you are reading this and going through something similar, please find encouragement when I tell you it is never too late to follow your dreams. Cheesy, I know. How many times have we heard that, honestly? Even though I lost touch with it for a while, writing has always been it for me. I am actively taking steps to pursue a career in writing so I can have what I need, not what I want. When you need something it should be imperative for your well-being. Just like water, food, and sleep, happiness is needed in order to survive. Nobody thinks of it as needing happiness, it’s only something they want. Wouldn’t you consider it essential for peace of mind and mental and physical wellness?

 

The Inspiration

I came to choose the name of my blog from a song that was introduced to me by my childhood best friend.

In the early 2000’s, Stacie Orrico was described as the Christina Aguilera of Christian pop music. While she certainly had the vocal range, her image was, of course, much more clean and lady-like. Unbeknownst to me, she would make a lasting impression on my life, then at 13 and today at 30.

Her album Genuine seemed to have a reoccurring theme: friendship. It was as if Stacie was reaching out to a friend who needed to hear the message embedded in her lyrics. In her hit single with the same title, she tells this friend that she is worried about the path he or is she taking in life. It doesn’t seem right. Stacie tells them, “what you need is something genuine. What you want is something real. What you need is something truthful…I know you do.”

That “something genuine” that Stacie was talking about is our Lord Jesus Christ. Every day, I am learning that He is truly the only genuine thing my heart seeks. My happiness cannot be found in material things, no matter how many times I try to convince myself that nail polish and cute blouses will satisfy me.

My hope is that I can deliver something genuine to my community, too. Whether it’s faith, relationships, travel or food, my shared experiences and thoughts will be from the bottom of my introspected heart. I hope that you will be able to relate, appreciate and feel called to share your ideas and comments with me as well.

God Bless!