A poorly baby & ovaries that have seen better days…

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It’s been a difficult week here at Chez Mills.

I’ve long since suspected that Dexter was suffering with an ear infection. He was clutching at his ears last week and cocking his head unusually to one side. Google helpfully told us to look out for fever, discharge, and changes in mood - but despite hovering over him with the Veratemp, they never came.

In fact, what actually did emerge from my cherubic child was far more traumatic.

On Tuesday night I went out and Craig put little man to bed. When I finally stumbled through the door at midnight (I maintain someone slipped vodka in my J20) I was surprised to discover Dexter was still awake in his cot whimpering. His nose and eyes were streaming and he had a pesky little cough. I stood on Kleenex sentry all night and his room smelt like a football changing room in the morning; an eyewatering concoction of sweat, eucalyptus, and stale alcohol. His little pillow was soaking wet with tears and other less attractive fluids.

Yesterday was spent continually pinning him down and attempting to suck the snot from his nose (with the scariest contraption known to man). The screams were unbearable and I waited nervously for social services to turn up and inform me that the entire street had reported me. Kleenex failed us and had the effect of smearing the snot across his cheeks. I bathed him 3 times in the hope the steam would help clear out his sinuses and wash off the layers of caked phlegm.

This is only Dexter’s second cold and there’s no doubt we’re still prone to the odd over-reaction; yesterday Craig got minute by minute updates on Dex’s condition via text, and in the evening we exchanged worried looks and jumped on Google to look for advice. Needless to say Dexter found it quite amusing and clapped in delight that he was never more than 2ft away from his mummy or daddy. We might aswell have fed him grapes and fanned him like an egyptian prince!

Did I mention I have a snot phobia? No? Well I do. The whole saga has been truly painful.

Despite the fact that Craig and I seem to have evaded this cold thus far, we’ve had our own troubles this week too. On Monday I had an ultrasound to check for PCOS and was told my ovaries resembled a map of the underground; puckered with scars and cysts. As Dexter came to the appointment with us, Craig was left holding the baby in the waiting room. This meant I heard the news alone. On relaying the grisly verdict to Craig he asked a thousand questions I couldn’t answer so we sat in the car in the hospital car park battering our iPhone’s trying to find an explanation that didn’t require a medical degree.

The long and short of it seems to be that despite my haggard ovaries, I don’t have any other symptoms. I still ovulate (in fact I’ve been pregnant this year already), I don’t have a beard or gorilla arms, and I’ve probably had 5 spots in my life. Okay, although excessive hair growth and acne are only indicators of an underlying problem, it has helped cushion the blow somewhat.

The next step is a blood test to test my levels of testosterone and LH. I’ve submitted to so many blood tests this year already that I’m surprised that the lab at the Royal Berkshire Hospital hasn’t opened a new wing in my honour. I’d be very surprised if there’s anything untoward in my blood. I suspect I’ve already had this very test ten times already in 2013 and I never had serious phone call from my doctor that begins with “You might want to sit down Ms Chamberlain”.

Still - given we’ve been consumed by trying for another baby this year - it’s not great news. Craig’s little soldiers are going to have to mount a Lord of the Rings style attack in order to reach the Holy Grail. I’m considering slipping him zinc tablets in his morning orange juice and hiding the coffee. If you think this is harsh, that’s nothing compared to what I’m going to have to give up.

Quitting smoking is now a must (I’m actually attending a clinic this evening), there’ll be no more dirty J20s, and I’m going to have to lose some weight. The exercise bike will be dragged out of our shed, spiders evacuated, and I’ll be forced to get on the bloody thing and hump it into submission. Knowing me, I’ll probably go too far and end up looking like Jodie Marsh. Not only that, but given my mild OCD, I’ll be bankrupting us with homeopathic remedies, trawling Pinterest for low GI recipes, and distracting Craig from the task at hand with my incessant woe-is-me pillow talk.

Well there go - it’s definitely a week I’m excited to see the back of.

 


Operation Baby 2: In bed by 10pm (just when all the new TV dramas come out…)

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Good times here at Chez Mills - my body appears to have finally recovered from the miscarriage. We’ve had 3 months of constant bleeding, fainting, tears… but things seem to have returned to normal and my body appears ready to start again.

The tell-tale signs are everywhere - there’s folic acid, evening primrose oil, and soy tablets in the bathroom, a new pillow seems to have mysteriously crept into our bedroom, a baby name book beside our bed, and we’re going to bed at 10pm every night… Operation Baby Two is in progress!

Dexter - our 12 week scan!

Finding mummy & daddy time has proven a bit difficult as poor Dexter is battling a nasty cough and cold (and teething). As he’s so bunged up, he’s been waking in the night, and feeling really run-down and miserable throughout the day. I can reliably inform you watching your other half sucking your child’s snot out of their nose (just to clarify, this is using a snot-sucking-device) is perhaps the most unsexy thing you will ever see them do.

I’m trying my best to resist temptation and get out the ovulation strips - I don’t want to put us both under the same pressure we did when conceiving Dexter. We’d been trying just over a month when I forced my GP to send us to the hospital for a PCOS ultrasound, signed up to an online pregnancy forum and bleated on about how impossible the whole thing was, took my body temperature in hideous ways, and had a wall chart with just about every useless little thing I could record. I was pregnant a few weeks later.

Dex at 20 weeks!

I still remember the night Dexter was conceived. I had convinced myself we’d missed the boat on my most fertile day (I think Craig had popped down the pub to watch a Manchester Utd match the evening before) and I was in a foul mood with him. Driving to his flat in his van I was giving him the silent treatment and envisaging another punishing month of monitoring my cycle, and enduring more pointless chit chat with fellow desperados on BabyandBump.com.

Poor Craig - I had insisted he cut out caffeine from his diet, force-fed him zinc every morning, and called him home on his lunch-break’s for report for duty. I can’t fault him though - he’d been studying my little chart too and was convinced we had an extra night to make the most of - turns out he was right and I became pregnant with Dexter that night.

A 3D scan of Dexter at 35 weeks - he was born just two weeks after

This time around - I’m determined not to turn the whole thing into a military operation. I’m only 30 years old so still have age on my side. Despite all my moaning I fell pregnant with Dexter in just 2 months, and have just fallen pregnant again since. Although Craig is now 42, he’s fit and healthy and all the evidence suggests he’ll be ready and able for a few years yet.

Some habits die hard though and I’ve already downloaded a conception app on my iPhone… Still, at least this time it’s not a wall-planner…

Wish us luck!

 

 

 

 

pixel Operation Baby 2: In bed by 10pm (just when all the new TV dramas come out...)