I’ve finally made it to my third trimester, and now every day seems like a small victory. Though with all the pregnancy hormones swirling around, pretty much everything is starting to seem like a bigger deal than it really is — both the good and the bad.
So while I can be happy for hours after a single nice comment from someone, my day can also come crashing around my (swollen) ankles with very little prodding.
[Me, looking miserable. The cat looking comfy.]
Like the night a few weeks back when I fell into bed in a sobbing fit and swore I was just going to delete my novel-in-progress that has more than 80,000 words and two and a half years of daily writing/rewriting/editing in it. This all because of an innocent comment from a critique partner about my first chapter needing a little more description in it. Luckily, by morning my despair had ebbed and I decided my novel was not the worst thing ever created in the history of the written word after all. I’m still working on it, with hopes to finish before the baby arrives.
Then there was the evening a couple weeks ago where my husband found me sitting on the floor of my running shower, crying because I couldn’t figure out how to maneuver around my whale-sized stomach to get to my legs with a razor. I laugh about it now, but then I’d had several stressful days in a row, felt like I had bruised insides from baby kicks, was frustrated with my decreasing maneuverability, and uncomfortable with my now regularly swelling ankles and fingers. My shower issue was the last straw that night, and so seemed like a perfectly sane thing to sob over.
My sweet, and probably slightly alarmed husband (since under normal circumstances I’m not a frequent crier at all) took me out to dinner at my choice of restaurants that night, offered to take me to get dessert, and anywhere else I wanted to go. Plus I’ve been getting twice the number of random “I love you!” texts I usually get from him throughout the week.
But while there have been fits of tearfulness, there’s also been happy times these last few weeks. Like me being able to start identifying which specific baby appendage is currently pressing against my stomach, making an uncomfortable bulge. (Though this has been the cause of some tears too, as junior has seemed to have decided that he prefers one particular spot on my right side to poke all day long. It gets quite painful after a while.)
And just a couple of weekends ago my mother and aunt descended on my house with paint buckets and brushes and helped me finally clean out and paint the baby’s room. Now instead of a dark room filled with a few bags of baby things, some boxes of my summer clothes and the cat’s litter box, the room is now empty of clutter and has bright, cheerful blue walls.
Plus there’s the birthing classes at the hospital to look forward to. I’m hoping they will help me stop having a panic attack every time I try to read one of my books on the birthing process. I keep getting overwhelmed with all the technical terms and the seeming 1,000 different things that could happen during the big event. I know it will also help ease some of my anxiety to actually see the facilities where my baby is going to be born.
I’m sure there will still be tearful days ahead as the frustrations of pregnancy continue to grow, but now I’m eagerly counting down the days when those tears will be not because of my uncooperative body and emotions, but instead because I’m finally holding my son in my arms.