Thursday, December 20, 2012

Ligaya Isabella Harrison

On October, 14, 2012, I gave birth to a beautiful baby girl at 23 weeks 6 days. Full term is 40 weeks. This is our story as shared on a very dear friend's website: www.maurasmission.com 
She, too, lost her beautiful daughter, Maura Lynn. This organization is dedicated to helping grieving mothers and families worldwide by creating memorial blocks in their children's honor. I am blessed to be a part of it all. I, along with some of the other mothers from our weekly bereavement support group, will continue to blog about our shared journey of loss, grief, and healing. These amazing women are my sisters and I love them so much. Please visit the website and learn how you can contribute to such a great cause. Thank you from the bottom of my heart.

                                                              Ligaya

“Ligaya”. I repeat this over and over again, a million times a day, as if speaking her name will summon her back to me. I love the sound of her name, the feel of it as it rolls off my tongue. Ligaya, which translates to “happiness” in my parents’ native language, Tagalog. Ligaya – my daughter, my first born, my greatest love.

Ligaya was conceived sometime around Mother’s Day in May of 2012 after almost two years of trying to get pregnant. I was about to start Clomid due to PCOS (Polycystic Ovarian Syndrome), but with a combination of diet, exercise, and an increase in my Metformin dosage, I was finally able to ovulate. This was our miracle…and on Mother’s Day! From the start, there were a few things against us: my age (I would be turning 36 in a few short months) and a history of high blood pressure. As a high risk patient, I was seen every few weeks to monitor the pregnancy, which put my paranoid mind at ease. My blood pressure was controlled with medication and stayed relatively stable for the first half of the pregnancy. Everything seemed perfect. All of the genetic testing came back normal and she was the right size and weight for her gestation at the 18 week anatomy scan. She was absolutely perfect. There were no indications that anything was amiss…but still I worried.

Yes, I was one of those – the paranoid, neurotic pregnant lady with a whole lot of time on her hands and an addiction to Google. You would often find me researching both the simplest and most rare of pregnancy complications. I’m sure my doctors considered me somewhat “difficult” with my millions of questions, whereas I awarded myself an honorary medical degree. No – I just thought myself armed and ready for whatever problem may arise. The fear was intense, but it was powered by the most primal instinct to protect the most precious gift I have ever been given. I would have done anything for my Little Bean, and everything I did, was for her – eating healthy (with the occasional McDonald’s shake), not letting work get the best of me, checking my blood pressure upwards of 50 times per day, even buying a brand new Volvo. Yes, I was THAT crazy. And without a doubt, I would do it all over again just for her. Because behind all of that fear, was an immeasurable amount of love for this tiny human being inside of me. I thought I had it covered. I thought I knew it all. Unfortunately, science doesn’t always have the answer, and nature will ultimately run its course.

My biggest fear was of having an incompetent cervix, a condition in which the pressure of a growing baby causes the cervix to open too early, way before the baby is ready to be born. It is a condition that occurs in about 1 out of 100 pregnancies…that’s one percent. One percent. The doctors dismissed my fears, saying I didn’t have any of the risk factors, but I never could quite shake the feeling that this would be my fate. Intuition, perhaps? I asked for cervical checks at my appointments and they would always confirm my cervix was closed, but only from the outside. See, here’s the thing about cervical checks: the only way to know for sure that your cervix is behaving itself is by having a transvaginal ultrasound, which they stopped giving me after the first trimester. A finger exam just can’t tell you if your cervix is funneling on the inside, and it’s usually in the 2nd trimester that the cervical changes start occurring anyway. If you aren’t considered “at risk” for cervical incompetence though, most doctors feel that transvaginal ultrasounds are unnecessary. I will never allow them to make this mistake again in any of my future pregnancies.

The night of my 20th week 5th day, I went to the bathroom and noticed an increased amount of discharge. I drove to Labor and Delivery hoping it was once again nothing and that they would send me home yet again with instructions to just relax (yes, I was already well known there). Unfortunately, that increase in discharge was later confirmed to be my mucus plug. My greatest fear had ultimately come true. My cervix went from an impressive 5cm at 18 weeks to being funneled and less than 1cm in length two weeks later – less than 1cm. I was opening from the inside out. Talk about incompetent! I was furious at my body for not sending me any signals that this was happening. But that’s the thing about having an incompetent cervix. Most of the time you don’t even know you have one until it’s much too late. I had no signs or symptoms other than the occasional pain in my pelvic area and tailbone, which EVERYONE SAID WAS NORMAL.

The doctors performed an emergency transvaginal cerclage the next morning after putting me in Trendelenburg position overnight, which involved sleeping with my feet elevated higher than my head to keep any weight off of my cervix. A cerclage is a surgery in which a strong suture is placed around the cervix to keep it from opening any further. Unfortunately, the success rate of emergent cerclages is not as high as it is for preventative ones, which are usually done before 20 weeks, well before the cervix starts changing. By the time they discovered there was problem with mine, there wasn’t much left to stitch closed. The doctors still remained optimistic and sent me home after two days, with no instructions other than to be on modified bed rest. Modified? No way. If I was going to keep this baby inside me, I was going to put myself on strict bed rest. I would sleep upside down every day if I had to (and I pretty much did).

As relaxing as it sounds, bed rest is the complete opposite. It is damn hard. Knowing that I was basically a ticking time bomb drove me crazy. I am so grateful for my family and husband Nate who looked after me during that period. It was hard on all of us, but we soldiered through the best that we could. I had a few mental breakdowns, but with encouragement from family and friends, I always pulled back from the edge. However, after almost 3 weeks of strict bed rest, of not moving from my left side at any time unless to go to the bathroom, I went into preterm labor. The cerclage was failing, most likely due to an infection that had gotten through my already compromised cervix.
My husband and I drove to the hospital and I was immediately admitted. Had we just made it one more day to 24 weeks, I would have been admitted on hospital bed rest, which had been the plan all along. We had JUST finished packing my bag in preparation for my stay when the contractions started, radiating from the center of my back to my sides, like a belt of nails being cinched tightly around my waist every few minutes. I was given magnesium sulfate to try and slow down the contractions and a steroid shot to help her premature lungs, but unfortunately it was already too late for the medication to be effective. Because the contractions were coming on so strong, the doctor had to take out the cerclage, which was tearing through my cervix. Without the stitch to hold my cervix closed, the end was near.

Ligaya was born at 3:15 am on October 14, 2012 via c-section. I was only 23 weeks and 6 days into my pregnancy. At the time, I was given the option of delivering vaginally, but she was in a breech position. If she was going to come, I wanted it to be quickly so she could be cared for immediately. I wanted her to have the best possible chance of survival, even though we knew the odds were 50%. The neonatologist had spoken to us only a few hours before and broke down the numbers. He also ran down the list of complications that she could be left with, were she to survive. My God, how I prayed. I prayed that if I was in the 1% of the population that had this condition, she would at least be in the 50% that would survive, and that if she did survive, she’d be in the super miracle group that did so without any lifelong disabilities. I also prayed that if God were going to take someone, He would take me. I just wanted her to live. As her parents, we had promised her a life of love and adventure. As her mother, I had promised to protect her at all costs.

I waited for her cry as soon as she was taken from my womb, but there was only silence. They immediately intubated her, and in the background, I could hear the doctors saying that her heart rate was dropping, and that epinephrine would need to be administered. They asked me and Nate if they should continue to the next stage, CPR. We were adamant that they should. Their calls of, “1 and 2 and 3 and 4 and…” were mixed with my frantic cries of “Hail Mary, full of grace…”. Twice they stopped and asked if we wanted them to continue. Of course we did. The counts and the prayers continued in unison. At this point, I still had not seen her. The other doctor who worked on sewing me up kept saying over and over again that she was so beautiful. Nate kept telling me the same. After 15 minutes, they finally made the decision to stop CPR. Her lungs just weren’t mature enough at 23 weeks 6 days for her to make it. They laid my girl to rest in my arms and I watched her struggle to breathe. I am ashamed to say I did not have the strength to witness this for more than a few seconds. I closed my eyes and begged God to let me die with her. She was so beautiful. So very, very beautiful. She may have only weighed 1lb 5 oz (most of it contained in her chubby cheeks!), but she was perfectly formed – from her long legs to her tiny fingers, and her daddy’s nose.

Ligaya’s lion heart continued to beat for two hours while Nate held her in his arms and constantly kissed her beautiful face. I am forever grateful to him for having the strength to hold her in her final moments on Earth as I lay in the recovery room. I was so scared and so devastated that it wasn’t until later that afternoon that I held my baby girl once again alongside my husband. In a beautiful show of support and shared grief, my family came to the hospital and spent time with Ligaya, their first grandchild and niece. Though heartache permeated the room, love did, as well. She was surrounded by people who waited for her and loved her long before she even came into existence; people who dreamed for her, and who will long for her in the years to come.

I wish I had not been so broken by grief that day. I would have kept her in my arms the whole time. I miss the weight of her nestled next to me, the softness of her chubby little cheek, the perfection of her face. I miss so very many things.

Ligaya is now buried in a cemetery that overlooks the ocean. The day of her service Nate carried her tiny casket to her final resting place. Family and friends dropped hundreds of pink and white daisies, roses, and carnations into her little spot and Nate was given a shovel to fill the hole with dirt. Today, her grave site is full of flowers and little toys and trinkets we bring every time that we visit. It has been 2 months since she came into our lives. There is not one second of the day that I don’t miss her and wish she was in my arms. There is not one moment that I don’t feel a sense of loss, a heaviness in my chest, even in times when I feel joy. Yes, it is still possible to feel joy amidst all of the sadness. This is the delicate tightrope we mothers now walk, balancing a life of simultaneously occurring contradictions as we desperately attempt to move forward – happiness and grief, hope and despair, denial and acceptance. It is our new normal. It is our every day.

Where I do find comfort and peace is in knowing that she is in Heaven with many family members who have gone before us, as well as the beloved children of all of the mothers and fathers in our wonderful support group. I know that she feels no pain or suffering and that she is surrounded by only pure love and eternal light. The Reverend at her funeral service told us that she is in the best hands, that she no longer needs our help. It is us, her parents, who need the prayers. It is us who need the help. One of the last things he mentioned at the close of her ceremony was in reference to her name: Ligaya Isabella – the full translation being – “God’s promise of happiness”. That is what she was. That is what she will always be – our happiness.

 

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

20 weeks and crafting....I mean counting


It happened. I turned into one of those. The ultrasound pic sharing mom-to-be. Hey, it’s a happy, albeit, terrifying time for me and Nate….and really, who doesn’t want to see a picture of my baby filled uterus, right?  Don’t answer that.

Our 18-week ultrasound was 2 weeks ago and according to the doctor, everything is checking out just fine.  Now I just have to trust the man. We also received word that the 1st & 2nd trimester screening results came back normal, which indicates that the risk for chromosomal abnormalities is pretty low. I haven’t seen the test results myself, but again, I just have to put my faith in the dude who is currently on vacation for like 4 weeks. OB’s go on vacation? But for why? What if their patient has a baby during that time or something? 


I’m scheduled for appointments every 2 weeks now because of my blood pressure, so I get to meet a new doctor this Thursday while he’s out. This could be fun. This one’s not going to see the crazy coming…unless my OB gave her a head’s up that I’m THAT person who constantly, through multiple modes of communication  (in person, on the phone, by email, bat signal, mental telepathy),  asks about the competence of my cervix and the location of my placenta in relation to my cervix (still competent and still riding high, respectively) .



So now  it’s time to get my mind off of all the worst case scenarios. I’ve been driving down Crazy Lane for far too long now. Speaking of driving, does anyone need a new car? Like a 1-month old Volvo kind of car? If you are totally ok with getting about 17 miles to the gallon and could give a shit about the rising cost of gasoline prices, then this vehicle is for you.  Call me…maybe?


Anyway, to keep my mind out of very dark places, I have decided that I want to get good at crafting….I want to be THAT person who makes my own coffee table out of milk cartons, cereal boxes, and broken seashells. I want to plaster my walls with canvas word art that incorporates multiple photos of my baby filled uterus. I want to become a DIY superstar even though I get really pissed with DIY fools because I don’t understand where the hell they get the time OR money to do things themselves in the first place.   I want to create a masterpiece! Never mind that I’m somewhat limited in creativity when it comes to art. And who cares if I lack the tools, skills, and motivation to make this a successful undertaking? It’s good for my brain! And what’s good for my brain, will be good for my Bean.

I’ve done a few things…see? I made this a few months ago out of a tea canister. It's a pen holder!


Now it’s a fake flower/pen holder!  Ahhh, the form…the function…the  versatility!


More to come, folks. More to come.You can blame it all on Pinterest. Oh, and Etsy, too. 



Thursday, August 30, 2012

I've got something in my oven...


Something's baking in there, and it sure ain’t cookies.Yep, this girl has been diagnosed with elderly primigravida, effectively making me not a girl, but a 36-year old woman who is with child.  I'm 17 weeks and 3 days today. Introducing...Baby Bean! Say hello to my little friend.




Whoever said that pregnancy is the most exciting time of one’s life got that right for sure, but they forgot to add “neurotic” and “terrifying” (like ass clenching terror, seriously). Of course, it could just be my obsessive personality again. I tend to fixate on disaster and worst case scenarios when I’m not daydreaming of triple medaling in gymnastics, judo, and beach volleyball. 

As if advanced maternal age wasn't enough to throw me into a neverending spin cycle of crazy, I also have high blood pressure to worry about. Well, just like pimpin', being preggo ain't easy.

I wish my brain would just slow its roll though. I’ve talked to some women who are like, “My pregnancy was so easy! I never worried about a thing! It was perfect!” Oh yeah? Screw you. Me? I barely got off the couch for the first 13 weeks. I’ve never been so scared in my entire life. I still feel like the only thing holding this baby in is the sheer force of my mind and the power of maternal love. It kills me that I can’t control the universe right now – which is why I bought a brand new Volvo. It stops itself from crashing into something/someone if you are going less than 19 mph, which is my normal driving speed these days anyway. 



Alas, I can be the most careful driver in the world, but I can’t control the stupidity of others. Put down the phone already! You can LOL WUT’S UP them later. I want to punch these people in the face.


They say it gets better. I think they’re lying. This information comes from people who have already had their babies – those who made it to the finish line without any complications. Sometimes I want to punch these people in the face, too. I’m not there yet with a baby in my arms, so yeah, it’s hard. Every ache, every stitch in my side, my blood pressure…every time I even go to the bathroom…is cause for alarm. I’m almost to the halfway point, but the worries haven’t stopped. I don’t even want to eat vegetables for shit’s sake (literally), because I’m afraid of contracting listeria. I know I have to, so I make myself, but it often becomes a big production that involves a rosary, meditation music on YouTube, and random thoughts from the Tibetan Book of Living and Dying, which I read years ago for a Sociology of Death class at UCI.



Next February, once Baby Bean is here, I want to look back on all this and laugh. Do I think I will? Probably not. I’ll be on to the next worry and the next worry and the next. Will it be worth it? Yes. Of this, I am certain. I’ve loved my Bean since the moment I found out back in May, when I was sure she was a boy.  


I don't even know what this is a picture of and I'm hoping this isn't classified as some kind of baby porn, but the tech at the private ultrasound place said she's 99% sure Bean is a girl. I'll know more details next week when I go to the 18 week ultrasound with my doctor. I'm nervous, but hopefully all will be well and Bean will have all her important organs and necessary parts working in good order.

So, will I be one of those people who tell scared pregnant women that it gets better and to enjoy the happiest time of one’s life? Hell fucking no. I don’t want to be punched in the face by an APP (Angry Pregnant Person – I am president of that club, by the way).


I know, I know – stay positive. The baby doesn’t need any negativity and stress. Sorry, Baby Bean!  I'm trying! Less than 23 weeks to go now. Cross your fingers and toes we get there! 

Monday, May 21, 2012

You can call me Hulk - as in Incredible, not Hogan


If I were to ask some of my girlfriends which fantasy characters they most closely identified with, I’m sure I would get the whole Disney princess line or some feisty heroine who saves the day without compromising her femininity or virginity (bwaha…ha).

Now, me? I’m David Banner.  Quiet, unassuming, mild mannered – UNTIL you irritate me. Then it’s stand-back-because-I’m-about-to-bust-out-of-my-clothes-and-smash-the-building-to-pieces time ala Incredible Hulk (Incredible Bulk, maybe). Does this mean I fancy myself a brilliant nuclear scientist on the run? No…nuclear science sounds hard. Do I really want to be a semi-nude green monster running around in ripped purple pants? Well sure, sometimes. Does this mean I have some anger management issues? Probably…but are you really going to call me out on that? Try it. You wouldn’t like me when I’m angry.

Anyway, now that I've outed myself as being completely mental, I want to show you a picture of my latest office knick-knack, courtesy of the best assistant in the known and Marvel universe, MD. Because we worked so closely together, she recognized, understood, and accepted the crazy in me, which is how she knew to give me this:


















And this:


Without MD to keep me sane during one of the busiest hiring periods of all time, I surely would have destroyed more things than this pen and pencil:


So to honor MD on her last day of work this past Thursday, we threw her a really nice, but depressing, going away party (due to the sorry state of fiscal affairs at this joint, we couldn't keep her).

Since she's a major fan of THE Force, I made these vanilla cupcakes:

And these chocolate ones too, because what's Star Wars without the Dark Side?


And how could I NOT include these little guys? Although once you gnawed off Yoda's ears, he looked scary as hell.
Recipes for green tea and chocolate cookies can be found here: 

Now, these non-Star Wars related chocolate chip walnut cookies are just thrown in here for fun because I made them but didn't share with anyone else, which is off topic:
                                          Recipe for this can only be found in my Hulk head:

I’m particularly enamored with Yoda and Darth, though. See? I made them friends:

If only life were that easy.

Ah well, another party tomorrow - a happy one! I haven't decided what to make yet, but the celebrant is more Boba Tea than Boba Fett,  so I'll have to put my new baking toys away.

Oh, and just a note for future reference....when in the presence of a true Star Wars fan, do NOT, under any circumstance, call the Millennium Falcon a "jet plane that they all fly around in". 






Friday, May 11, 2012


If someone had asked me last month if I was ready for a lifestyle change, I would have responded yes – if by lifestyle change they meant winning the Lotto or something along those lines. That would present a pretty significant change in lifestyle, no? If they meant the other kind of lifestyle change (Translation: YOU NEED TO GO ON A DIET), I probably would have punched them in the face and called it a year.




The truth is I have made a lifestyle change due to a recent meltdown I had at work a few weeks ago. Other people’s stupidity coupled with my body’s knack for high drama of the blood pressure variety, sent me to the nearest Urgent Care. Talk about being scared straight. Stroking out is no joke, people. So - since I don’t want to embarrass myself and die at work slumped over a stack of paper, I decided to drop the food shovel that’s strapped to my back and look for some bad-ass Nikes instead.

I wanted THESE

But I'm smart enough to know that this is not the look for a grown ass woman with no historical ties to Hello Kitty or a love of basketball. So I'm stuck wearing my old Nikes for now and they work just fine for the......wait for it......Zumba party! That's right - I ditched the workout and joined the Latin American party bus headed for Fitnesstown, USA. Since I wasn’t losing any weight using only the power of my imagination (I’ve been winning gold medals in my head on the uneven bars since 1984, when the movie Nadia came out on TV), I had to actually…well, move a little.  By God, I’ve become some kind of merengue superstar. I am on my way to kick ball changing my fat from here to perpetuity and I love it. It’s the most fun I’ve had exercising since Richard Simmons’ Sweatin’ to the Oldies 1, 2 & 3 on VHS.



So how does this figure into the whole baking career? It doesn’t. I’m not going to fiddle around with recipes and try to make them healthier. And while I applaud the very few who can turn a vegan dessert into something not akin to dog caca, that’s just not what I do. Interestingly enough, I don’t go hog wild on my own baked goods anyway. I distance myself from the final product, only allowing myself a small taste test to make sure that what I’m presenting is in fact, not only edible, but damn good. Nope. I will continue on in the spirit of full-fat/gut-busting desserts because unlike the Avengers, I can’t save America from space invaders or its obesity problem. I can only save my own fat ass one salt-free, salsa step at a time.

Now for a comparison...

                                         My former breakfast of choice:
                                                   
                                    
                                    And now.....oatmeal with a shitload of fruit                       

I wish I had won the Lotto.


Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Sweet and not so sweet

Holy shit, it's been so long that I forgot my password and had to come up with a new one. I might not remember this password in the future either as it involves several #'s, &'s, and %'s, but that's a chance I'm willing to take. You may ask, "Hey, Stupid, why make it so difficult?" Well,  that's the way you gotta roll, especially if you've ever been a victim of a fake Paypal request that involved you sending not only your debit card number, but your damn PIN, as well.

I haven't been around much due to work being all kinds of crazy, but that may change in the next few months if I get laid off (I work for a college and the California budget for education is in fail mode. Interestingly enough, I'm busy working on hiring a grip of full-time instructors in the midst of all this layoff talk. Say what?! Yep). So anyway, I don't know exactly what'll happen if I get laid off, but I kinda think I'll be a little happier. I'll get to sing and bake again. I'll get to spend more time with the people I love. I'll workout more.  I'll get to satisfy my Lifetime Movie Network addiction on a daily basis. You know...important stuff. Because one thing I've learned in the past few months is that life really is fucking short and there is some weird truth to death coming in 3's.

So we'll see. All I know is that I have a box of sweet potatoes sitting on my counter waiting to be turned into a pie...or casserole....or a dozen muffins (probably all 3 since I mistakenly thought Nate and I had it in us to get through a whole box from Costco on our own). They're getting old and tired and it's time to transform them into something wonderful before it's too late.