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Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Surviving the (third) worst week of my life...

This, my friends, will officially go down in the record books as the third worst week of my life, third only to the week involving Payton and the week involving Jonathan. This was number three. It is amazing the ability of a person to go from such an amazing high to such an amazing low in such an amazingly short period of time. It is, to say it simply, amazing. I shall proceed momentarily to detailed elaboration, but be forewarned...I've already advised it was a horrible week. I am also warning you I am graphic in my detail. If you choose to read on, you have been warned. In the words of Jigsaw, "Oh yes, there will be blood."

We left off last Thursday going back to Dr. Welden's office to see if we had a baby thriving or if we had the "worse case scenario". When we got to Dr. Welden's office, we were obviously trepiditious. We start the ultrasound process. By the way, Heidi may actually hold the title for most vaginal ultrasounds in a week. Not a title she ever aspired to, but one she may hold nonetheless. Getting back to business...we are on our way to the ultrasound, obviously worried and anxious. But this ultrasound is part of our high this week. During the ultrasound, we see one baby and one heartbeat. It wasn't yet large enough to hear, but we could see it...the slightest little movement. It was so early that Dr. Welden had to zoom in ever so close to be able to see it but we saw it. It was, well, amazing. This was the first time we'd seen our baby's heartbeat. It was moving, incredible. Heidi was making a baby, a real life. We had taken our IVF science project and were actually making a baby. A BABY, PEOPLE!!! But wait...that's not it. Not only did we see our embryo beating its little heart, there's more! What you ask? What more could we possibly ask for? I answer you with this...we also saw another yolk sac (that's the baby holder, people...google this stuff!), only this one was considerably smaller, so small we are unable to detect a heartbeat. Dr. Welden explained it could be smaller for a couple of reasons; it could have implanted up to 48 hours later than the first embryo, thereby lagging in growth. Or, it could be failing to thrive and on its way to miscarriage. There was no way to tell at that moment. Instead, we would have to wait a few days to see if it was growing and if it was doing so at a rate commiserate with a thriving embryo. Great news! We were so excited! Not only did we have one seemingly healthy embryo, but we might have two! Twins. Wow. Twins. Holy double wow. Two strollers, two car seats, two everything. Why? Because they were twins. We left Dr. Welden's office feeling amazing, maybe even walking on air a little bit. We also left with our first baby photo and video of the heartbeat. A-mazing. For our loyal fans (well, maybe not "fans" but family, friends and some strangers becoming friends through our blog), I introduce you to...our embryo.


Because we aren't sure about the viability of embryo number two, I shall refrain from posting pictures until appropriate confirmation has been received.

We have to give the original child, Jessica, a ride to her car in Riverview after the doctor's appointment so we start our trek to pick her up in Tampa. Our car ride is, of course, punctuated with talk of the embryo(s), showing of the picture, happy baby-making talk about how amazing it was that we might have two babies in there...all conversation that anyone having a baby and seeing it for the first time might have. We drop Jessica off in Riverview, which is a hop, skip and a jump to our house (um, if by hop, skip and jump you mean a BFE). On our way home, Heidi starts to feel a little sick to her stomach. We start looking for a Wendy's to purchase a chocolate Frosty, medicine of the Gods, to help her through this icky moment. Apparently, Riverview is not known for it's conveniently located Wendy's. By the time we find one, we're back in Tampa and Heidi's pain is considerably worse. We stop at Wendy's and while I am ordering her the "Save Me" Frosty, she heads to the little girls room to take a tinkle. By the time she gets in there, the pain is so bad that she has to sit on the floor until the wave of pain passes. For those of you who know Heidi, she's an incredible germ-o-phobe. Sitting on the floor of Wendy's is NOT within the sanitary guidelines she has outlined for her natural habitat. This is being shared solely to help you appreciate how much pain she was in. We leave Wendy's, me helping her walk out because she's in so much pain. Using our medical backgrounds and incredible powers of intuition, we deduce that the kidney stone is once again rearing its ugly head and continuing its painful passage to and through Heidi's urethra. I start texting a friend who has endured the agony of the stone and everything she's telling me about its passage is right on par with the pain Heidi is feeling. I guess we have finally figured out what the painful culprit from earlier in the week is...a rolling stone (hahahaha...get it? Nevermind.)

When we get home, Heidi is in serious agony. I help her into the house but by the time we get even five steps in, she collapses to the ground. I feel just horrible for her because I know she's in an incredible amount of pain and I can't do anything to help her. I've never had kidney stones (thank God!) so I can empathize but that's about it...I can't take away her discomfort. After she sits on the couch for a bit to catch her breath, I take her to the bedroom and lay her down so she'll be more comfortable. A neighbor had graciously offered to bring us dinner and it was an offer I was too exhausted to refuse. Prior to her arriving with her delicious dining delights, Heidi called me in to help her go to the bathroom. As she was leaving the latrine, she said she felt dizzy and wanted to lay down, which she did, right outside the bathroom door. As she lay there, she said she could feel blood coming out and it felt like a lot. I grabbed a towel and put it under her but the blood had already soaked through her panties and onto the carpet. Then the doorbell rings. I tell Heidi that I'm going to go get the door while she gets her bearings on the floor and that I would be back shortly to help her back to bed. It was our neighbor with dinner. I take a few moments to let her know whats going on and then head back to the bedroom to get Heidi back into bed. By the time I got there, she had bled some more and she didn't feel like she could walk to the bed. I was sitting on the floor with her and I told her that I was just going to carry her to bed. Um, here's where I need to brag just a bit about my incredibly inhuman strength. From a sitting position, I put my arms under Heidi's legs and head and actually pick her up, FROM A SITTING POSITION, and carry her to bed. No, this is not crucial to the story, however, it should be noted that this was very difficult and again, it was from a sitting position! I'm not exactly a spring chicken so I'm not going to lie...I was feeling a little like a stud. I digress. I get Heidi into bed and go into the kitchen to make her a plate of dinner. I bring it to her and she eats some but she just isn't feeling very well so she finds it difficult to eat. I eat dinner because, well, quite frankly, I'm feeling fine and I'm hungry and my neighbor made me a fabulous dinner so I was not about to waste it. Plus, I had just exerted super human strength in lifting her and I'm sure that is what induced such hunger in me. Speculation, of course, but I'm pretty confident that's what it was. We (I) eat and then we decide to turn in for the night because Heidi is just feeling horrible. About 10:30, maybe 11:00, Heidi wakes me up because she's having a hard time breathing. I can't be exact on the time because I was already asleep and the events that occur after are more than a little traumatic so forgive me if my timeline is slightly askew. She wakes me up to tell me that she thinks she has a collapsed lung because she can't take a deep breath. In my grogginess, I'm confused as to why should would think her lung was collapsed because it seemed so out of left field. She said she googled it and had all of the symptoms. OK. I'm going to be a little honest here. I thought she was getting a little ahead of herself and exaggerating the situation because she was in pain. I have to admit, shamefully so, that I was a little frustrated. I told her it was probably the way she was sleeping, all hunched down, and she should either lie down or sit up because her diaphragm was probably squishing her lungs (again, using my medical expertise). She said she had to go to the bathroom again and asked for my help. I take her to the bathroom and as she sits on the toilet, she says that she thinks she's bleeding again. I hear the heavy stream and ask her if she's peeing as well. She says no, it's just blood. I look down and to my shock, there is blood pouring from her. She said that she needed to lie down because she wasn't feeling well. I told her she needed to wait; I had to help clean her up because there was so much blood. She was adamant about laying down and I held her up and told her to take a deep breath and calm down, she was starting to hyperventilate. I honestly thought she had just worked herself up into a panic attack. Rightfully so, mind you, because of the blood and pain, but I still thought it was just a panic attack or something of the sort. I told her I was going to lean her against the back of the toilet while I cleaned her up and then I would take her back to bed. As I leaned her back, her body went completely stiff, her eyes glazed over and she started sliding off the toilet. She was suddenly gone, unconscious. Limp and falling. She wasn't responding to me at all. It was like she left the room and I was left there with just her body. I don't know that I can find the words to describe how terrified I was. She was just bleeding, severely in my estimation, and then immediately she passes out. She was pale and non-responsive. I was afraid she would fall off the toilet so I picked her up and laid her on the floor, all the while calling her name and telling her to wake up. I can hear my own voice in my head, repeating over and over, "baby, baby, baby...wake up, wake up. Baby, baby, baby, wake up." After what felt like an eternity but was probably only a few seconds, her eyes came back into focus and she asked how she got to the floor. I told her she passed out and I put her there. She said "I told you I wasn't hyperventilating. Call 911". Dang, straight from a complete pass-out, girl just called me out! I run out of the bathroom to find a phone and call 911. I'm petrified. I don't know what the frig just happened to her, I only know there's blood everywhere and she's on the floor. The 911 operator does her job in calming me down and gives me specific instructions...put the dog away, turn on the porch light, unlock the door...all things that make me focus on simple tasks and not the panic welling up in my chest. Heidi tells me to get her some pants and to pull up her panties, which are still down around her ankles. I get her dressed. I also realize that I'm in my undies as well so I find some boxer shorts to quickly put on. By the time all of these things are done, the paramedics show up.

A rush of chaos ensues for me and Heidi. Four paramedics show up and start asking all standard questions (you know, like "are you mom?"...erg.) I explain everything that has happened as they load her up on the gurney. They take her out to the ambulance to get her hooked up to an IV and do whatever other paramedic magic is required. I go through the list of Heidi's meds with one of the other paramedics. Then I try to find a bra and real pants...great. Four strangers saw me with floppy boobs. Can the night get any worse? I will save you the trouble of trying to answer that...yes, my friends, yes it can...a lot worse.

We ask the ambulance driver if he can take Heidi to St. Joseph's Hospital in Tampa because our fertility doctor has privileges there and after the chaos at the beginning of the week, we wanted to be in a hospital he could see us in. They agreed and started the trek to Tampa with Heidi. I put the dogs away, grabbed her meds, put on shoes, all stuff done in a panic. How could this be happening again? How could kidney stones be so frigging bad?!?

We get to St. Joseph's Hospital ER and I'm relegated to the waiting room. At each ER this week, there was always more than a little anxiety about our "marital status" and whether the hospital would let me go back with her or if they would pull the whole "you're not really married in Florida" card. After about twenty minutes, a nurse came to get me and with a big sigh of relief, I was taken back to her. They were going to run more tests, including an ultrasound...yep, you guessed it, vaginally. Unfortunately though, they needed a full bladder and because of the situation, Heidi wasn't allowed to drink anything. So, they proceeded to give her a catheter. Not just any catheter, mind you. No, this was a special massively sized catheter designed to be able to not only drain urine, but also push saline into her bladder. This was incredibly painful for Heidi, especially when they removed it. It was supposed to be a swift, quick removal, but Heidi said it hurt so much that she would never get another catheter again....foreshadowing...she wasn't going to be able to stick to that resolve. Back to the room. After a little while, the nurse comes in to add another IV line to her other arm. We ask why they need two lines and she stated that they do it in serious situations in case they need access quickly. Hold the fort, my friends. These are kidney stones. In what universe does that qualify as a serious situation? I mean, I know they are painful, but nonetheless, they're kidney stones. Aren't they?

The ER doctor comes back into the room. He wants to get the name and phone number for our fertility doctor. He advises that Heidi has some type of fluid in her abdomen. They can't be sure what it is at this point, but they surmise that it is blood and likely from an ectopic pregnancy. They are going to call Dr. Welden to come in because Heidi would need to go into emergency surgery to find the source of the bleeding and stop it. STOP! What the hell just happened here? They were f**king kidney stones!!! How is she bleeding internally?!?! The doctor further advises that this is not something that will fix itself and that there is no other option for Heidi but surgery. They were going to transport her to St. Joseph's Women's Hospital across the street by ambulance and perform the surgery as soon as Dr. Welden could get there. What's the expression people use? Oh yea, it's something to the effect of "Shit just got real". Despite all of my intention not to cry in front of Heidi no matter what we were going through, I couldn't help myself. I cried. Why? Shit just got real. These weren't kidney stones. She was bleeding internally and not just a little. The doctor said it was likely the bleeding that was making it difficult for her to breath because the fluid was pushing against her diaphragm, which was pushing against her lungs. It was also the blood loss that was making her dizzy and weak. She saw me cry (dammit!) and said it would be OK. I had to pull my shit together because my job is to be strong for her, take care of her. Shake it off, baby, shake it off...you can do this. The doctor calls Dr. Welden (I know this because I was eavesdropping on his conversation). While he's doing this, the nurses are getting Heidi ready for transport to the women's hospital. They are somber, serious and quick. I call Heidi's mom at, oh, I don't know...3:00 a.m. to tell her that Heidi is going into emergency surgery. She doesn't believe me. I barely believe what is happening. The nurse tells me and Jessica to go ahead and leave so we could get checked in and be ready for when Heidi arrived across the street. As we left the ER, it happened. It sunk in. Shit was more than real...it had potentially devastating consequences and I cried. Jessica did her best to console me but I had a moment away from Heidi where she wouldn't see me cry and it just had to happen. It had to be purged so I was ready for her arrival at the next hospital.

Jessica and I drive across the street to the women's hospital and wait for Heidi. We proceed to the security guard whose age I would estimate to be about 157. I advised we were checking in for a patient who was being brought over for surgery. He said he doesn't see an ambulance arriving and I say to his 157 year old ears that I understand that, she should be arriving shortly and we were told to come check in first. He points to the door and says we'll just have to wait until an ambulance gets here. He told us to have a seat to wait. We sit down. Now, my friends, if you haven't already surmised by this story, it's about 4:00 a.m. I'm a little fricking stressed out and I am making every single effort to maintain maturity so I do not get kicked out of a hospital my wife has yet to arrive at but it is not easy. I'm tired. I'm scared. And now I'm pissed off. I go back to the desk and ask if he can contact the AOD and advise her that we are here for Heidi's surgery and need to check in. He writes down Heidi's name and asks if I'm related to her. Geezohfuck...here we go. "Yes", I say. "What is your relationship?" he asks. "Wife." "What?" "Wife" "Wife, to her?" "Yes"...spoken very slowly through clenched teeth. What, I wonder, would the repercussions be if I just jumped across the desk and actually stabbed the 157 year old security guard to death with the pen he was using to write down Heidi's name? Would it impact my ability to see her when she arrived? Likely...so I restrain myself. He speaks to the AOD and she advises that Heidi should be on her way. He relays that to me then tells me to have a seat. Jessica and I sit for approximately four minutes and then he says to us, "You should come in check in so you are ready when she gets here." I say in my calmest I think I might actually stab you in the eye and go berserk on you voice, "That's what I was trying to do the whole time." My visitor badge picture is not a very happy looking one. I am still considering whether I should return and off him...

Heidi arrives. For a girl whose never rode in an ambulance, this is her fourth ride of the week. Maybe another title for her...They take her back to the prep area and Jessica and I continue to wait in the waiting room, glaring with evil intent at the old guy in the security chair. Odd that the evil daggars we were shooting at him didn't cause him immediate harm. I guess it was his lucky night.

We go back to the prep area and sit with Heidi. My dear, sweet girl is tired and spent. She's still in pain and she's still scared. The anesthesiologist comes in to talk to us and yep, she keeps it real. She tells Heidi that if she has general anesthesia and is put out completely, the chances are minimal that the embryo's will survive. They will most certainly perish at this age because the anesthesia will stop the development of the organs and limbs. Her other alternative is an epidural. This is safer for the embryos. It is, however, not high on Heidi's list of things she feels she can endure. She is very scared, very anxious, about how she will react to being in surgery and being awake. She's already in an immense amount of pain and has been for hours. She can't breathe well, even though she's on oxygen. She's had the misfortune and humiliation of having to use a bedpan twice in the same night. She is at her end...she just can't take anymore. Going into surgery awake feels impossible for her. The anesthesiologist is good at talking to Heidi in her heightened state and agrees to let me come into the surgery with Heidi to keep her calm. Well, now, it would seem that she must have heard of my medical expertise and this was her secret way of getting me into the room to assist...or, she just thought it was the best thing for Heidi; having someone with her that could comfort and soothe her. Probably that.

They take Heidi to prepare for surgery. I get to prepare myself, with a super-sexy blob shaped body outfit, hair net, shoe booties and a mask. I'm feeling pretty darn surgical right now, my friends. This also lends credence to my medical expertise. I'm pretty sure I can now sign my name and follow it with the letters M.D. Please feel free to call my receptionist for an appointment...I offer only gynecology services. :P

When they bring me to the surgery room, I see Heidi laid out, butt-ass naked, with a sheet screen dividing her from neck to bottom. I am directed to my very important chair at the head end. She's groggy but awake. The anesthesiologist has given her the epidural and is testing her for feeling by poking her, alternating between a needle and a dull pen top to see if Heidi could tell the difference. Yea, Heidi wasn't really good at this game; an important one if she wanted to get through this surgery without actually feeling anything. It is going to be a laproscopic surgery which poses a bit of a problem because when they pump the gas into her abdomen, it is going to put more pressure on her diaphram and make it even more difficult for her to breathe. She'll be awake so she will be very aware of this. Adding the gas also creates additional pain in her shoulder (why? I don't know...that's just where it presents.) Throughout the entire surgery, Heidi's shoulder was in a lot of pain. Even through the epidural and the other drugs they gave her to make the the process easier, she continually complained about the pain in her shoulder. I sat at her head and consoled her, rubbing her face, holding her hand, reassuring her. I could see the containers holding the blood that was being suctioned from her abdomen. At the time, I didn't know it was diluted with fluid they were adding so I was growing more and more concerned by the amount of blood I was seeing. At one point, the anesthesiologist told me to stand up and look at the screen. She showed me a large bubble in a tube. That was an embryo. And that was a fallopian tube. After almost a week of pain and unknowns, this was it. An ectopic pregnancy. One that led to a significant amount of pain and bleeding. I asked her if it was still viable, she said no. That was a relief to me, just knowing we weren't destroying it, even under the circumstances. I sat back down and continued kissing Heidi, rubbing her face, rubbing her shoulder, holding her hand. At one point, they had her inverted and her head was down. This made the pain in her shoulder worse. The nurse kept encouraging them to hurry and get her back in a horizontal position because of the pain. About an hour and fifteen minutes into the surgery, and after that entire time period is spent at Heidi's head, cajoling, consoling, she turns to me, looks me in the eye and says, "What are you wearing?" LOL...my girl and her powers of observation...it took her 75 minutes to notice I was in surgery wear, with a mask on. I had been kissing her through this same mask but she just now noticed. LOL My girl...

The surgery ends after about an hour and a half. They completely remove the fallopian tube and the embryo. They make sure there is no blood remaining in her abdomen. They stitch and bandage her up and wheel her to recovery.

After recovery, we spend two days in the hospital. Heidi is extremely weak from the blood loss. The doctor did not want to give her a blood transfusion because of potential risk to the embryos, including the possibility of an allergic reaction to the transfused blood. This meant she had to regenerate it on her own. She had lost, at a minimum, four bags of blood, each bag equivalent to the size of one of the bags you fill when you donate blood. This was what they ended up removing minus the solution they added. This did not, however, include any of the blood she lost at home. The time in the hospital was spent by Heidi working up the energy to sit up, stand up, walk to the bathroom, try to eat even though she was nauseous. She was in pain and couldn't sleep well, she couldn't eat well...she was not in a happy place during her recovery.

It was while in the hospital that she came to the realization that she could have died. This was a difficult realization. She was suddenly terrified of what the rest of her pregnancy might hold, if she was even still pregnant. This was a lot of trauma for embryos. She even said she wasn't sure she wanted to be pregnant at this point. She wanted to have a baby. She did not want to die; she didn't want to leave me alone. We didn't talk much about the babies while we were in the hospital because this was something she needed to reconcile. This was something no one expects to have to deal with so she needed time. And my job was to give it to her.

We were released from the hospital on Sunday with instructions to go to Dr. Welden's on Monday for an ultrasound. The ultrasound was to let us know if the embryo(s) survived. Through most of this experience, I am typically the one that keeps everything positive; I put everything into perspective. This day was different. I was so nervous. It felt like someone had taken my body between my head and pelvis and twisted it like giving a really bad indian rug burn to my whole body. I was anxious, scared. I was uncharacteristicly...quiet.

When we got into the room, Dr. Welden asked the cursory questions about how she was feeling, how the incisions felt, etc. Then, as he inserted the vaginal probe (which sounds dirty but isn't...grow up, you immature freaks!), he pauses. The screen is ready to see what is going to show up at the end of that probe in mere seconds, milliseconds, really. My eyes were fixed on the screen, anxious, waiting. And then, he stops. Before he inserts it fully, he stops and prays. He prays that God has seen fit to keep our baby safe and let us be mothers. He prays that God has protected them. I'm going to interject an opinion rant here (like I have to preface my rants...) I believe in God. Heidi believes in God. We are gay. Sometimes, that feels like a contradiction but for us, it isn't. We believe God made us who we are, whether religion believes it or not. One of our concerns when we first went to Dr. Welden was all of the religious paraphenalia we saw scattered around his office and how he would feel about his belief in God and our gayness. Never once has that been an issue for Dr. Welden and to end my rant, never more than this moment have I been more appreciative of Dr. Welden's prayers than this second, this moment in time. His commitment to us and to God merged and I could feel how important God's blessing on our embryos was to not just us, but also to Dr. Welden. Here we go...the moment to end all moments. Did they survive? Was God looking out for them?

As soon as the probe was inserted far enough to see the uterus, we saw it. A heartbeat! WE SAW A HEARTBEAT!!! Stop, pause and ingest the depth of that statement. After all that Heidi had gone through; after all of her blood loss, after surgery, after everything, there was a heartbeat. THERE WAS A HEARTBEAT. And I also saw the glimpse of a second heartbeat and pointed that out to Dr. Welden. He laughed and said I was getting ahead of myself. He zoomed into the embryo and started the measurements. Heartbeat should be 120. This one's was 120.67. The size at last measurement was 1mm. This time, it was 4mm. It had quadrupled in size since Thursday. Not only had it survived, but it thrived, grown! Dr. Welden continues the ultrasound...searching for a possible second embryo. And there it was! Just like I said (again, another testament to my medical knowledge). This one was only a slight bit smaller than the first. The heartbeat was a slight amount under 120. It too, was perfect.

I think it goes without saying that we cried. We cried because despite everything, we had not just one baby, but two. We cried because even though we had just had an incredibly frightening week, we still had a shot at this parenting thing. We cried because we were indescribably happy, relieved. We cried because Dr. Welden apparently has a direct line to God and God listened. Twins, my friends. We have twins. Two. Babies. Twins. And now, my dearest friends, family and strangers alike, now I introduce you to our children, our boys, or girls, or both. It doesn't matter. These are our babies...please say hello.


And so we end our journey trying to get pregnant and begin our journey making babies. We look forward to this trip! As a matter-of-fact, Heidi's already experiencing morning sickness. The first real-life sign of pregnancy. Here we go...making our babies! Thank you, God. Thank you, Dr. Welden. :)


Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Three Emergency Rooms Later...

It never fails, you know. Whenever things are going exceptionally well with our fertility, something has to happen to throw a wrench into the works. Well, this most wrench was quite the doozy. It's a long story, involving a long night so roll up your sleeves and get ready to hear about our last couple of days. Warning to the reader: They sucked. Royally. Worse, I'm still super tired so this blog will likely have minimal humor injected. I'm just too tired so I apologize in advance. Feel free, however, to interject where you think I would have added something funny or sarcastic. It will lighten this up a bit.

Around 6:00 p.m. on Monday evening, Heidi had two sharp pains in her back. By 8:00, her stomach and right side started hurting pretty bad. I told her that it was probably the normal aches and pains associated with pregnancy...lots of uterus stretching, maybe her introduction to morning sickness, all of the fun stuff that she had to look forward to being pregnant. I wasn't worried, I just figured it was the next step in her journey and chuckled internally knowing what she was in for...and she wished for this. LOL

She went to bed early hoping that she would feel a little better by the morning. Around 11:00 p.m., I heard her whimpering, almost crying. I asked what was wrong and she said her stomach was hurting really badly. She went out to lie on the couch (because apparently, she feels our couch has magic healing powers). I joined her and we sat in the dark trying to figure out what to do would fix the problem. I decided to call our nurse, despite the late hour, in case the pain was from hyper-stimulation. She answered in her "Who the hell is this? I'm sleeping" groggy voice. I told her the sitch and she said we could wait until tomorrow to come see Dr. Welden or if the pain got too bad, we could go to the ER...she just didn't want us to sit in the ER all night for nothing. She said Heidi should try to take Tylenol to take the edge off. She didn't think it was the hyper-stimulation but she didn't know what it was. I fetched some hard-core Tylenol and Heidi took those. We went back to bed and decided that if she wasn't feeling better within a half hour, we would go to the ER.

Now, if it had worked, this would be a very short blog. It didn't. At 12:00 a.m. we headed to Morton Plant Hospital in Clearwater. When we checked in, they told us it shouldn’t be too long. This was good because Heidi was getting more and more uncomfortable from the pain in her back and stomach. After an hour and a half of waiting in the waiting room, which is slightly scary at midnight, and being told twice that it wouldn't be much longer, the little dude at the desk advised he didn't know when they would be able to take us back because they had gotten really busy (um, not in the waiting area...). It was now 2:00 a.m. and Heidi can barely walk. We absolutely did not feel like having her sit in a hard chair and continue to wait to not be seen so we decided to go to Bardmoor ER. We called them first to see if there was a wait and by the grace of God, there wasn't. We went to get our car from the valet...yea, the hospital is under construction so you had to valet. The dude jumped in his mini-van to head the two blocks to our car and reappeared in about five minutes, laughing that it would help if he had the keys. Seriously? You're a valet...you have two responsibilities: Keys and parking. By the time he got back, I was more than a little annoyed and Heidi was in more pain. Were it not 2:00 a.m. and if I didn't have to hold my wife up, I may have beat him up. Seriously.

We get to Bardmoor ER and get taken right back to a room. Thank you, Gods of ER's, thank you. They immediately start her on an IV. We advise of the issue and advise that she is five and a half weeks pregnant after IVF. Let me just say that the nurse was nice enough, props for that. However, she wasn't really all that detail oriented. When the doctor came in, he though Heidi was five months pregnant. When I was giving her the names and dosages of Heidi's meds, there wasn't an available drop down for 1 ml of Progesterone so she just input the standard 50 ml. One would think that a little attention to detail would be important in this setting, but what do I know? When the doctor came in and we started answering IVF questions, you could tell he wasn't very familiar with the process. We told him we had 3 embryos put back but that we didn’t know yet how many took so he ordered an ultrasound. About an hour later, the ultrasound tech arrives. By this time, Heidi's pain has worsened. This made the topical and vaginal ultrasound extremely painful. Apparently, this tech had not taken the "Dr. Welden's Guide to Gentle Ultrasounds" course and was quite rough on Heidi, especially considering the fact that her stomach was already in so much pain. The only positive in this situation was the fact that I was able to watch her do the ultrasound and I saw her mark the drop-down box for number of fetuses: 2. I also got to see her mark one of the screen shots with yolk sac. This was my second visit with our baby...once during the aspiration, and now, watching a screen with a yolk sack on it. Despite the situation, I couldn't help but smile. Two babies. Deep breaths...two babies. Oh my god. Two babies...back to Heidi. I couldn't help but smile at her, even though she had no idea what I was smiling about. My happiness was short-lived.

After the tech finishes, she advises that the radiologist has to review the pictures and the doctor would be back in to talk to us in thirty to sixty minutes. It's about 4:30 a.m. at this point so what else do we have to do? Sleep is pretty much out of the question because of the amount of pain Heidi is in and the fact that the temperature in the room was probably bordering at about 37 degrees. The doctor finally comes in and tells us one fetus looks good and is in the right spot in the uterus. Another embryo looks to have implanted really low in the cervix and is in the wrong position and may not continue to be viable. He also thinks the pain on Heidi's right side is due to an ectopic pregnancy. So, in a span of a mere few moments, we learned we had three babies and then learned that maybe we had one. He also said that they were not equipped to handle these types of issues and that an ambulance has been called to transfer Heidi to Bayfront.

It is now 5:00 a.m. and the pain is just too much for Heidi. A half hour earlier, she asked the nurse for pain medicine. When the nurse came back with it, Heidi asked if it was okay to take since she was pregnant. The nurse gave her a look that said, "why would it matter?" and said "Not really, it's a narcotic.". I then asked her if she could have some Tylenol to at least try to take the edge off. The nurse goes to get some. After about thirty minutes, Heidi just couldn't take the pain anymore. She conceded and agreed to take the pain medicine. After nine hours, she just couldn’t take it anymore. You have to understand how bad Heidi's pain must have been. Under normal circumstances, I can't get her to take a Tylenol to save my life. She could be fighting the worse headache of her life but she'd rather see if she could just manage it without taking the Tylenol. For her to take a pain pill was a huge indicator of the amount of pain she was in. She was so worried about the affect it would have on the baby. Second visit from the nurse with the pain pill must have resulted in her actually looking up some information about the pain pill because she said it was a Class C narcotic that was often used in OB situations. Weird...this is the second health care professional that I wanted to beat up in a single night.

When we find out we are being transferred, I tried again to call Pam. Our phones were almost dead so I called from the hospital phone. I'm sure the sobbing voicemail she received was not the best wake-up call she could have gotten. It was weird. I didn't cry in front of Heidi because my job is to be strong for her, take care of her, make her know that its going to be alright. But there's something about talking to a trusted person, someone who had gone through this journey with you, there was something about talking to that person in a time of crisis that makes you turn to shit and become completely incapable of forming words without hitching and sobbing. I took a moment to go plug my phone into the car so it could charge and give myself a moment. I called Pam again and unfortunately for her, just let go again. I asked her what we should do because I just didn't know. I only knew that I needed Heidi to be alright but beyond that, I was actually lost. I needed her to tell me what to do. Using her groggy voice again, she said that we should go ahead and go to Bayfront. Before we agreed to let them do anything except diagnostic testing, the needed to talk to Dr. Welden. The ambulance shows up around 7:00 a.m. We were on our way to ER number 3 for the night. After a long 45 minute, bumpy ride with Tim, the new ambulance driver, we finally arrive at Bayfront. I followed the ambulance and made all the phone calls I needed to make while I had battery-life. Work, Nancy to update her on Heidi's condition and Jessica...again, a person who just made it OK for me to cry when I talked to her. That was okay...I needed to get it out before I was back with Heidi. You can't be someone's rock if you're a blubbering idiot, right?

We were placed in a room upon arrival. Heidi's stomach pain had finally calmed down and while we waited for the doctor, we fell asleep - - - Heidi in the hospital bed, me in the least ergonomically correct chair possible. It's amazing where and how someone can fall asleep if they are tired enough. Around 9:00 a.m., the OB doctor came round...Dr. Brown. By the grace of God, once again, he was very familiar with IVF (he and his wife were currently 22-weeks pregnant with twins so he knew exactly what we were going through). Thank God! He indicated that he didn't believe it was an ectopic pregnancy because the pain was to high in Heidi's stomach. He thought it was more likely a kidney stone but would send her for his own ultrasound instead of relying on the notes from Bardmoor. In less than six hours, Heidi was having her second topical and vaginal ultrasound. And amazingly enough, this ultrasound tech had also failed the gentle ultrasound course. Heidi was in so much pain her eyes were filled with tears. The entire experience was so painful and uncomfortable for her. I watched the tech, who initially asked me to wait in the waiting room (yea, right, that wasn't going to happen!). She was quicker than the last tech, taking less pictures. After the ultrasound, Dr. Brown reviewed the ultrasound and said that the one fetus appeared to be fine. He indicated there may be a second fetus at the bottom of the uterus but because of the size, it was hard to tell. He thought the best course of action would be to go to our fertility doctor. He called Dr. Welden to explain his findings and then came back in for a brief chat. As we were preparing to be discharged, Heidi started spotting. It created that feeling that if one more thing went wrong, we might just go unhinged. I don't actually know what the result of that would be, I just know that we were nearing the end of our emotional rope. Each time we would start to feel better, something else would happen. We hailed the doctor in the hallway to advise him of the spotting. He indicated that it was likely because of all of the ultrasounds Heidi had that day.

We left the hospital around 12:30 p.m. On our way home, we grabbed lunch and with what little energy we had left, ate and went to bed. We had to be at Dr. Welden's by 4:00 so we only had an hour and a half to rest but we needed every second of that.

We get to Dr. Welden's and are embraced by our nurses. It felt good to be somewhere familiar with people who knew us and cared about our outcome. Dr. Welden did an external exam, listening to Heidi's belly parts, tapping around in places (all of which were weird because he's usually just involved in one part of her body so it felt out of place...). He performed another ultrasound, much more gently than the techs. Poor Heidi...this was her third vaginal ultrasound in one day. If you've never had one, know this...the want is a good twelve inches and has to reach the netheregions of her girl parts. It is not what one would describe as "fun" or "enjoyable". He was so thorough, looking everywhere...he found the baby placed appropriately in the uterus. He also found a blood sac behind the embryo and said that sometimes, when an embryo is implanting, it may hit a blood vessel and some of the blood may leak into the uterus. It thought that was the case with the blood behind the uterus in this ultrasound. He was unable to find an embryo at the bottom of the uterus as indicated by the two other ultrasound techs. He said it may have been a mucus sac or something like that. He had seen them in Heidi's cervix in the past so he wasn't concerned. He advised that it was difficult to see an ectopic pregnancy because the ultrasound contract was the same as the tube; unless the embryo was large enough, it wouldn't necessarily show on the ultrasound. IF the embryo had travelled up the tube, it may be about forty-eight hours behind the other embryo. With that being said, he wanted us to come back on Thursday to do another ultrasound. He also said the pain Heidi was feeling could be a kidney stone but he didn't know; he was just speculating based on the path of pain - - - lower back to stomach.

He was going to do a urine sample and more blood tests before we left. Heidi had been poked so many times this week, between the blood tests for HCG and all of the tests from the hospital. My poor little pin cushion...she had gone through so much today. We were finally starting to feel a little better about things. One last thing...urine test, and then we were off to go to bed. She went into the rest room and as she sat down to do piddle in a cup, a bunch of blood came out. She was obviously freaked out and immediately left the restroom to tell Dr. Welden; she didn't even finish peeing in the cup. He happened to be right at the bathroom when she came out. He said not to worry; it could be from all the ultrasounds and trauma to the cervix. It was possible that the one embryo that was really low aborting itself. Just no way of knowing this early in the pregnancy. Heidi went back to finish her urine sample. I sat with Pam and cried. Again, everytime it felt like we could relax a little, something else happened. Heidi was coming out and I dried my tears...gotta stay strong for her. I am her rock, dammit, I gotta stop all this damn crying. It must be because I'm so damned tired.

We have instructions to return on Thursday. We go home and have dinner and go to bed. This was one of the longest and most difficult days we've had to endure in this process.

What now? Well, Pam called and said that Dr. Welden took the records from both ER's home with him to review more closely. Since they both indicated an embryo at the time of ultrasound but he was unable to find it, he thinks she may have miscarried. Pam also indicated Heidi's HCG levels had gone down; another indicator that one of the embryos miscarried. I don't suppose we'll ever know for sure; since she is so early, everything is speculative. The pain has subsided signficantly. If it was a kidney stone, it could have passed. She's still tender but it's nothing even close to the original pain she as in. The bleeding has also stopped; just some spotting today. She's exhausted but we took today off together and caught up on some sleep.

Tomorrow is another ultrasound. With every single ounce of everything that I am, I pray and hope that the baby is growing and thriving. I only ask that you also pray because that's what we have left...one baby and a lot of prayers.

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Numbers don't lie, baby!

Ever have that feeling that you are walking on air? I mean, really...you don't even feel your feet hit the ground when you walk. Every once in awhile, you actually have to look down to see if you are, in fact, touching the ground. That's what kind of day I had today. And not I alone...I think little Hieidi may have actually been taller than me today, the way she floated on cloud 9.

Today was our second blood test. We arose early to get to the lab early so we could get the blood drawn and get to work on time. By 7:30 a.m., the lab held in a little vial a specimen, the one we were anxious to hear the results of. It was going to be a numbers day today. We needed to see some doubling in numbers. Our first blood test was 769. We needed that to double today. We were worried since it was such a high number that it would be unrealistic for it to really double; that seemed like so much. Double. Twice as much. That just seemed like so much to expect. I mean, to be honest, we should have some in the bank since we already exceeded the expectation on the first number. No matter how we sliced it, we needed double. Sigh.

Because we went to a lab instead of Dr. Welden's office, it took a little longer to get the results. Heidi was patient until lunch time. Then she started getting a little anxious. She sent Pam a text, looking for a status. Pam texted back and said it would take about an hour. Sigh again. An hour is soooo long!

We got back to work from lunch. I was in a meeting in someones office when my beloved poked her head around the corner. I asked her if she had a number, she said she'd tell me after my meeting. I, of course, immediately excused myself since this particular person knows nothing of our endeavors. I stood in the middle of our department where my wife, with crazy excitement in her eyes, told me our number. Not double, not even triple. 4313. Holy all that is amazing, good and holy!!! I wanted to hug her right there but I couldn't (damn you, professional protocol!!!). I couldn't believe my ears. The nurse said she couldn't remember the last time someone at their office had a number that high on their second blood draw.

So here we are...still progressing amazingly well. We're so excited and so happy that things are going so well. Everytime we set an expectation, it is surpassed.

I know this was an incredibly close blog to our last one but I just had to share!!! Monday is our next test day. We still have to double...so keep those prayers coming! We need at least 8600!

Love, smiles and hearts full of joy,
The mommies-to-be

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

"Anything can happen, child. Anything can be."

"Listen to the mustn'ts, child.
Listen to the don'ts.
Listen to the shouldn'ts,
the impossibles, the won'ts.
Listen to the never haves,
then listen close to me...
Anything can happen, child.
Anything can be.”

This poem has resonated through my head quite frequently as of late. For those of you who know where the sidewalk ends, Mr. Shel Silverstein penned this little bit of prose many moons ago. I know this because it was included in one of my favorite childhood books. Last August, my wife bought this very same book for me. It was to be the first book for our child-to-be. I was tickled pink (ickle me, pickle me, tickle me too...). It was such a signficant gift for her to buy me; so thoughtful, so perfect, so timely. It turned out that this little gem would, sadly, be placed back in the gift bag and stored in our closet until later days. Our child-to-be was not to be had last year. Interesting, though, that this poem showed up unexpectedly on my Facebook page (yes, I'm a fan of Shel Silverstein's page, you aren't?!?!). It showed up on September 25th...halfway through our ten day waiting period. Ah, but I get ahead of myself...

September 20th: Transfer day. This was the day we would have our embryos placed back into Heidi's babymaker. It was a little nerve wracking. We only had three embryos fertilized. Each day since the aspiration, we called our embryologist, Dr. Bill (or Dr. Clarke if you're an adult...I am not, so he shall forever be known as Dr. Bill). Everyday he would give us an update on the quality and progression of our eggs. Our routine for five days was to call Dr. Bill on our way home from work to see how the babies-to-be were doing. Each time we dialed the number, we did so with a slight amount of nervousness, a small level of anxiety, afraid he would deliver bad news. With so few embryos, we were so worried that one would fragment or not survive. It felt like such an incredible amount of pressure, worrying about three small, microscopic eggs and their progress; knowing these three eggs held so much hope and promise for us. But, each day we called, we heard a smile in Dr. Bill's voice as he relayed to us the positive progress made by our little eggies. Each day, he was so happy to report that no fragmentation had occurred and the embryos were progressing magnificently. Each day we hung up with a sigh of relief...this would be the time. This would be our time. We just had to have faith.

Listen to the mustn'ts, child.

The day before the transfer, Dr. Bill said he hoped that at least one of the embryos would reach the blastocyst phase. This is the most ideal phase because it means the egg progressed to the best potential prior to transfer. All that would be left would be for the eggs to find a comfortable place in Heidi's uttie to settle in and grow. We were hoping for the blastocyst phase...it meant less work for our embryo. Fingers were crossed; so were toes, sometimes eyes. You get the point...a lot of body parts were crossed that at least one would progress to blastocyst.

Listen to the don'ts...

When we arrived at Dr. Welden's office on transfer day, Dr. Bill was at the front desk and in his happy little hand, he held a picture. It was the first official group portrait of our embryos. He was grinning from ear to ear. Three blastocysts, he pronounced. Three. All perfect, all ready to be transferred.


We went back to the room, ready to be impregnated. Knocked up. Have a bun placed in the oven. We'd been here before so we knew what to expect from the procedure. Dr. Welden was anxious to see if the dilation would make the transfer easier and hopefully not need to use the guide. He preferred the less invasive method, but because Heidi's cervix likes to fight all who dare enter her forbidden zone, we weren't positive that the dilation would make the process easier. We got settled in for the dirty deed. Deep breath...here we go. After the transfer, Dr. Welden said a prayer. I cried. I know that's not much of a surprise but it was moving. During the transfer, we noticed, as we did with the last IVF, that while he was pushing the embryos into the uterus, he closed his eyes, as if in prayer. Somehow, it meant so much that he not only worked with us medically, he did his spiritual part too.

Listen to the shouldn'ts...

So nothing left now but the waiting. Ten days. Oh my gosh, I don't know if you have ever had that moment in your life when even the smallest period of time somehow defied the entire scientific time continuum and somehow, the amount of time it took to elapse a mere ten days seemingly doubled, no tripled. The wait became it's own living, breathing being, doing all it could to extend its life. The wait...

the impossibles, the won'ts.

As luck would have it, day 10 fell on a Sunday. The lab is closed on Sunday. Really? Why? Why do we need to have seven days in a week? Why not have a lab open everyday? What the what? Perhaps I was feeling a little irrational but geez oh Pete people, we're feeling a little anxious and impatient here. So, instead of waiting for the lab, we opted for the HPT, home pregnancy test. An EPT to be exact. The only thing that stood between us and eternal happiness were two little pink lines. We planned to take the test first thing, around 7:00 a.m. Heidi awoke at 6:30 a.m. She gently shook me awake and advised that she had to pee really bad. If she peed without the taking the test, it may be a couple more hours before she had to pee again. She asked if we should take the test then. And so we did...we went into the bathroom. I unwrapped the test and handed it to her. She did her business (which was, in and of itself amazing because she generally has stage fright when it comes to urinating in front of me, or any other person). As I'm fumbling with the instructions to figure out the requisite amount of time necessary to allow for the appearance of the magical pink lines, Heidi exclaims, yes exclaims, through mid-stream that the lines are showing! They appeared before Heidi could even finish tinkling! She began to cry, as I stared in amazement at those magical two lines. The test before, last August, took a few minutes to register so we were more than a little shocked at how quickly they appeared on this test. Heidi finished making number one and we stood together, hugging, crying. It was happening. Oh my dear God, it was happening. We were making a baby!

Listen to the never haves,

What now? Well, we obviously wanted to tell our family. But how? We didn't want to call them. We wanted to do something else. We debated having cookies made for each person, announcing their new status, you know "I'm going to be a grandma", "I'm going to be a sister", you get the idea. The only problem with that is that it was Sunday at 6:30 in the morning...the mall didn't open until 12:00. Our family knew we were testing today; there was no way they would wait to hear from us until the afternoon. What about t-shirts? We headed to Wal-Mart to see if they had any t-shirts that pronounced the all-familiar "Baby on Board". Nothing. We decided to try Babies R Us to see if they had bibs. Jackpot! We made our first baby announcements...bibs declaring new relationships...sister, aunt, uncle, grandma. These would be our declarations. While checking out, quite proud of ourselves, I get a text from the mother-in-law...the patience has worn off. I do the best I can. I lie. I tell her that Heidi didn't sleep all night because she was so nervous. I tell her she decided to wait until later in the day to take the test...I tell her it meant more for Heidi to hold on to the hope by delaying the test than to give up hope and take it. I'll say this...they were good lies...mostly true, just of Heidi's feelings the day before, not this day; not this amazing day. We knew who our first stop had to be...Nancy's house. We drove up to her house and sent her a text to come outside. She ran to the car. LOL She was so excited. We gave her the gift and after punching me for lying to her, she held Heidi and cried. We stopped by Ross next, where Amanda was shopping for shoes and surprised her with the news. She cried in the shoe aisle. Jessica was at work until 10:00 p.m. so, despite my efforts to lie to her, I ended up having to tell her over the phone. I texted and then called my mom with the news too. And last, but not least, a pop-in at David's house. Family told. Now we could tell our nurse. She had sent a text that morning that we did not respond to until we had told our family. We responded with a simple picture, one of our pregnancy test. She called, shrieking that she had turned her phone off while in church and when she came out and saw our message, she started screaming and crying with excitement. The next call came almost immediately after by our other nurse, Tana. She told me Happy Father's Day. LOL That's my girl. LOL

then listen close to me...

The next morning we made our way to Dr. Welden's office for the blood test. We were met with huge hugs and huge smiles. Both Dr. Welden and Dr. Bill were there and doled out hugs and congratulations. It was happy, happy, joy, joy all the way around. Pam took blood and off we went...anxious to hear what our HCG numbers were. The normal range is anywhere between 5 and 435. Our last pregnancy had an opening HCG of about 20. We both hoped for a higher number than last time. We thought 50 would be great. We wanted to hear a 50 for our number...it just had to be better. That afternoon, Pam called to give us our number. Can you say 769? That's right...769 baby! Wait...769? What does that mean? That's way outside the range...is that bad, good, what? If you are the deductive type, you may have guessed it...multiples! It's not an absolute indicator for multiples but certainly an indicator. Progesterone was supposed to be around 20. Heidi's exceeded 300. Another indicator. Holy IVF, batman...we could be having twins. OR TRIPLETS! Holy multiple babies, Robin! We knew there was a chance but we were hoping so much just to get pregnant, we didn't really thing we could possibly have multiples! So, where are we now? Waiting to take blood test #2 tomorrow...then every Monday and Thursday for the next two weeks. We have an ultrasound scheduled for October 16th. We probably won't be able to hear the heartbeat(s), but the doctor should be able to see how many sacs there are, how many babies. October 27th is week 8...a critical milestone. Chances of miscarrage reduce greatly after the 8th week. What an amazing month October is going to be! What an amazing year it's going to be. What an amazing life we have to look forward to...


Anything can happen, child. Anything can be...