Dear NHS,
I love you.
The adoration that I have for you is complex and not easily put into words but much like a lover on their deathbed I feel that I must so that you can hear it and know you are loved.
I can see that you are struggling and that there are people who are trying to bring you down. You trusted them as friends but now you realise that they have been undermining you at every turn and have left you demoralised and insecure.
I need you to know that I still see you for everything that you are and everything you are capable of being. My love for you remains steadfast.
You see, I know you of old.
I was a junior doctor once. I craved those five letters from my early teens, MBChB, refusing to let anything get in my way. Despite my desperation to get to the front line and start helping people, I found myself convinced that I was woefully inadequate; consumed with the fear of hurting anyone. This daily terror forced me to, reluctantly and sorrowfully, desert the profession. I now realise that the vast majority of your junior doctors also battle with this terror every day and yet continue to turn up; continue to devote themselves to the service of others. The risks they undertake and the vast responsibility that is prematurely thrust upon them is crushing; yet their labours go largely unrecognised and poorly rewarded.
And they are not alone.
NHS, I know that in your heart you are kind. You long to meet the needs and surpass the expectations of everyone of your charges and yet you are thwarted at every turn by bureaucracy and meagre funding. Your caring nature is dispersed through every last one your nursing and midwifery staff who tirelessly tend to the masses whilst making each one feel like they were the first.
I have been the patient, more often than I would like. I take advantage of your benevolence on a weekly basis from the multitude of health professionals who wage war on my failed pancreas and my body's inability to house my unborn children without peril to those who mend my the resultant anatomical consequences borne by my child.
For that I thank you. I shall be eternally grateful.
Don't let them get you down.
You are so much to so many people and we love you.
Saturday, 25 March 2017
Wednesday, 22 March 2017
The Pregnancy: The Reprieve
The next seven days are stagnant and misery filled.
Surreally, life goes on as before; morning comes, breakfast is eaten (albeit
not tasted), work is attended, co-workers’ jokes are laughed at and deadlines
are met. All the while I try to ignore the searing pain in my throat, biting back the deluge
of tears that threaten to flow.
When we do finally return home at the end of each day it is to
an almost palpable sadness. The grief hangs in the air between us and any
comforting word or gesture unleashes a further torrent of tears. So we say
little. Privately, I alternate between desperate pleas to an unfathomable deity and utter
resignation to our wretched fate.
The day arrives for our repeat scan. I am utterly despondent and yet, intensely
aware that I no longer feel pregnant. The nausea that had plagued my first
twelve weeks seems to have dissipated and my chest is no longer excruciatingly tender. Instead, I feel almost back to my pre- pregnant self but, with no
sign of an imminent natural miscarriage, I am consumed with fear of the process
that the hospital are undoubtedly going to recommend to put an end to our brief
parental journey.
We make our way to the waiting room where prospective
parents bubble with nervous excitement at seeing their unborn child on
screen for the first time. They eagerly beam at us in a conspiratorial manner
as we navigate our way through the labyrinth of legs, acknowledging their welcome
with lacklustre smiles. The happy news of Prince George’s birth adorns the
front pages which are held aloft in the waiting room; giving the strangers common ground
on which to engage their neighbours in jovial conversation.
I close my eyes and pray. I pray for help but also to stop my thoughts and halt my
tears. In the space of a week my prayers have evolved from various petitions for
a miraculous intervention to a cyclical plead; merely for the strength to cope with what
is inevitably to follow.
My name. I stand up. I enter the room. The bench awaits. Paper towel tucked in. Cold jelly. We turn away from the monitor. Silent tears roll. My body shakes uncontrollably. I know I am making her job harder. "Nearly done. OK so this is what is happening. "
The kind lady doctor who broke our hearts one week ago is smiling. It's not a beaming smile but one of fragile optimism. She tells us the fluid level has increased. The baby is moving. The heartbeat appears strong and currently there appears to be no evidence that the pregnancy is imminently about to abort. She'll allow us to go and return in three weeks for another scan but advises us to have our first trimester screening done. This may actually result in an infant.
My name. I stand up. I enter the room. The bench awaits. Paper towel tucked in. Cold jelly. We turn away from the monitor. Silent tears roll. My body shakes uncontrollably. I know I am making her job harder. "Nearly done. OK so this is what is happening. "
The kind lady doctor who broke our hearts one week ago is smiling. It's not a beaming smile but one of fragile optimism. She tells us the fluid level has increased. The baby is moving. The heartbeat appears strong and currently there appears to be no evidence that the pregnancy is imminently about to abort. She'll allow us to go and return in three weeks for another scan but advises us to have our first trimester screening done. This may actually result in an infant.
Edinburgh's Modern Art Gallery: Everything Will Be Alright |
Friday, 10 March 2017
The Birth Part: Take One
So, there I am with my Gestational Diabetes, my blood that
won’t clot, two weeks until D-day, one week into maternity leave, three days
into our new house (fools) and I am sitting up in bed drinking my (decaf)
coffee when I spring a leak. Husband is sitting next to me but I don’t mention
it straight away. Initially I have to work out exactly what the source was
before I own up to it. Whilst there is no great air of mystery in our marriage,
I feel that if a little wee had escaped I should probably keep that one to
myself. So I gingerly sidle out of the bed and, with my best nonchalant face, stand
up and release an almighty deluge. The air may no longer be mysterious but the
floor is decidedly wet.
It is worth noting at this point that my previous years of
medical experience had always contradicted the classic American sitcom conspiracy
that the rupture of membranes is the first sign of labour and would undoubtedly
be followed by the immediate onset of contractions. I knew what not to expect
but improbably my contractions commenced directly. With my, now, rather high
risk gravidity we phone the maternity triage directly and are advised to attend
as soon as we “please” (genuinely). Rightly or wrongly, following an
assessment, we are sent back to the ranch to wait things out. Phil and Holly are
there (not literally in the room but through the medium of the TV) and we must
last a solid 40mins before we are back in the car on the way to triage. Contractions
are thick, fast and agonising, conversation is lacking and resentment is
building. Husband decides to “distract” me from the excruciating “discomfort”
by taking the scenic route to the hospital. This teaches me a few things:
1. Cobbles are not the labouring woman’s ally
2. Husbands can be cruel task masters and an intense
loathing for one’s spouse during labour is an entirely acceptable emotion
3. A pretty vista does not divert anyone’s attention
from the impending cannonball thrust through the vagina situation happening
elsewhere
Finally we make the car park and forty minutes later we have
navigated the 200yards to the triage desk where I throw myself upon their
mercy, begging for help. Obviously, I don’t actually do this as I seem to have
become some sort of mute and can now only communicate through grunts, wild
gesticulations and shakes of the head. We are put on the monitor and the ever
understaffed NHS (do not get me started) employees run around, each trying to
do the work of ten (highly trained) others. So it is perhaps unsurprising that
the decelerations which are slow to recover are missed and presumed to be a
loss of contact. Perhaps, they will forgive the husband for getting rather
testy with them when he felt that our baby was in danger and not getting the attention
that it required. I will admit that no Tiger Mum erupted at this time, it was all
I could do to breathe and I do not mean deep, centred, hypnobirthing breaths
but mere drawing of air into the most superficial of lung tissue. He had this,
he would see this baby right.
Sure enough, the decelerations are confirmed and we are
moved upstairs to labour ward. The midwife vacates the room for a mere ten
minutes, abandoning a terrified looking student, before a prolonged
deceleration is audible and the cannonball is threatening to burst its way out
my nether regions. The ashen faced student springs into action and hauls in the
first passer-by who happens to be a Consultant. Huzzah! Happy Day, I hear you
cry! No. The truth is, if you want a baby delivered normally then you want a
midwife. Doctors are thoroughly trained to deal with an infant who is
struggling to traverse the birth canal; they will guide them towards the light
(sunroof or otherwise) and reassemble you afterwards. No problem. However, ask
them to deliver a child the way nature intended and you will see utter terror
flash across their face. They aren’t used to it, they haven’t been trained for
it and they are just not comfortable doing it. There is too much inactivity,
too much reliance on nature and too few instruments required.
Thankfully, my cannonball needed very little assistance and
following a brief period of my pelvis threatening to shatter into fragments;
she was here.
Upon reflection, it was actually a rather speedy process in
comparison to other birth stories that I have heard and despite the ever
growing pile of manure that had accumulated during my pregnancy very little of
it truly hit the fan at the climactic moment. The inability to have an epidural
(due to dearth of the required platelets and therefore the increased risk of
bleeding) and the fear that a caesarean section under general anaesthetic was
my only alternative should I be unable to birth my baby under my own steam
added an extra terror to the birthing process and I swore that should I ever
have to repeat I would sign myself up for an elective section. Whether I did or
not, is another story…
Thursday, 9 March 2017
The Working Mother... Is It Working?
When I was on maternity leave with my daughter, I lasted
seven months before I had to go back
to work. I told myself that this was
because I had a qualification that needed completed in a timely manner and that
I owed it to my daughter to be a strong role model by being a mother with a
fulfilling career. To be honest, I had found maternity leave hard and lonely. I
couldn’t wait to get back to the adult world where coffee is drunk while it is hot,
toileting is an independent activity, conversations are rooted in gossip rather
than babble and Makaton signage (thank you Mr Tumble) and lunch is consumed
without being at the risk of informal highlights. In my ignorant baby free days
I had imagined maternity leave to be a montage of long lunches, cooing, box
sets and cake but in reality it turned out to be cheese toasties, screaming, snippets
of CBeebies (did we ever meet Topsy and Tim’s younger subling?) and soggy
rusks. I will admit that I am not particularly outgoing and really struggled to
make any new mummy friends, despite sporting a prize winning smile to all
potential chums at the weigh in sessions. So all in all it was quite an
isolating time and as devoted as I was to my cherub, her conversational skills
were somewhat lacking. At this point work seemed an attractive alternative so
an agreement was made and the husband stepped his work down while I returned
full time. In for a penny, in for a pound.
As I got myself showered, dressed (huzzah!) and made my way
to the door for the return to adult life I could feel my cape billowing behind
me. I adjusted my mask, placed my hands on my hips and stared into the
distance. I had this. Charlotte, my darling, it is true, you can have it all.
It didn’t take long to realise that I was miserable. I felt
like I was missing everything and as hard as it had been at times during
maternity leave, the fear of missing out (as the young ones will tell you) is
crippling. With Charlotte having her childcare split between my husband, my
mother and a local nursery she started seeking others reassurance in times of
trouble and had started interacting with those around her so much more than
when I had been at the helm. I believe this is due to developmental stages and
not my questionable parenting.
We formed a new plan. The husband would step his work back
up and I would take over his childcare duties. My employer allowed me to step
down to three days a week (the part-time Holy Grail) and we were off, sailing
off into the new normal.
What I hadn’t been prepared for was the guilt. The guilt of
forsaking my daughter for the workplace was not a new sensation and I struggle
to believe that there is a single working mother out there who has not felt it
at some point in time. No, the guilt that I wasn’t prepared for was the one I
felt towards my employer. I went from an employee who could be relied upon to
pick up the slack, work late into the night and come into the office at
weekends, to a part time, nine to fiver who would intermittently call in sick;
not because I was unwell but because my child was lurgy filled and banished
from nursery (anyone who argues that this is a ‘work from home’ situation has
clearly never had a sick child.) They had employed one very capable, focussed person
and had them supplanted with a part-timer whose heart was no longer in it.
It wasn’t a new realisation to me that my current job was rather
dull and far from my ideal occupation but the original plan had been to use it
as a stepping stone into, what would undoubtedly be, a glittering career (based
around what, no one was quite sure.) Now I find myself a mother, working part
time for an understanding employer albeit in a cripplingly tedious industry. I
am no longer an attractive prospect in the job market and yet am not ready to
step up to full time working and miss out on my children’s pre-school years.
Does this mean that I must accept my fate for the next four years, bide my time
and just plod on? For this, I have no answer… yet.
Friday, 3 March 2017
The Pregnancy: When Bad Things Happen To Good Embryos
So we are pregnant and just about used to the idea. There is
a little nausea, there is a lot of bloating. I feel thick, not fat just thick
around the middle. It is a permanent state of PMS. Just delightful. Around the
corner we have our 12 week scan and I am excited. The booking appointment was
very formulaic; a list of dull questions (name, DOB, address, etc.), some
slightly more interesting ones (last period, family medical history, etc.), a
bit of wee, a few vials of blood and a ‘close your eyes and hum loudly to
yourself’ date with the weighing scales then the receipt of a lovely green ‘low
risk’ stamp. Huzzah. Straight to the midwifery led birthing unit, do not pass
go. But the scan, that was going to be exciting, it would all feel so real
after that and we can start sharing our happy news.
I wasn’t a fool though, as an innately pessimistic human I
had all my anxious thoughts neatly collated in preparation for my scan. I have
a weird belief that if I have considered the worst possibility and verbalised
that to all in sundry then it is less likely to happen. I have no experience on
which to base this belief other than the fact that I have done this routinely
and led a largely charmed life up to this point. (Husband is almost the
complete opposite and lives by the ‘worry is like a rocking chair; gives you
something to do but gets you nowhere’ school of thinking. I drive him insane
but he humours me.) So there I am, prepared, or so I thought. They call my
name. Deep breath and in we go.
“Just some cold jelly”. I see a head. As a side point, how
can babies be quite so beautiful when their heads are twice the size of the
rest of their bodies? A head is good, I know nothing about the measurements so
just cross my fingers and toes (literally) while the nice sonographer
concentrates on the job in hand. This isn’t too bad. There is clearly a
heartbeat, which we have all enjoyed listening to and there is a bit of
wriggling going on. That is a positive sign. Then it comes.
“I am just going to step out for a moment.”
I look at my husband, he is trying to be reassuring but I
have seen the flash of panic in his eyes.
Then she comes back in, except this time she has brought
someone who doesn’t wear a uniform. This is not good. Uniforms are reassuring;
they have a clear job, they do the grafting. They are very talented but have a
remit. Go out with their remit and the big guns are called in. Big guns don’t
wear uniforms. Big guns are also rarely required in good news scenarios.
The lady with the kind face introduces herself (there was a
doctor in there somewhere) and tells me that she is “just going to take a look”,
which she does and then she asks the sonographer to see if the room is free. I
know that room. I have seen people go into that room composed and coming out broken
and bereft. In my head I am saying “no, just tell me now” but I have no words,
I can barely stand never mind speak. It’s like I am underwater and screaming
for help but no one can hear me. I am locked in with my panicked thoughts and I
need someone to pull me out.
She comes in and explains very clearly what they have found
and what it means.
“There is no fluid around the baby.”
“This is normally associated with non-viable pregnancies
largely due to chromosomal abnormalities.”
“The baby’s heart is beating but a miscarriage is almost
inevitable. It is a waiting game.”
“If nothing happens in the interim, we need you to return in
a week for another scan and then we will make a plan.”
“I am sorry.”
So we leave. Broken and bereft. I have failed you before you
have even taken a breath. I am evicting you when I should be the one who keeps
you safe from harm.
There is nothing I can do but cry. So I cry. All I do is
cry.
My husband suggests we go for a walk. In hind sight, this
was a terrible idea. We say some things, none of which I can remember but I imagine
along the lines of “this isn’t fair”, “was it [insert ridiculous self-blaming activity
here] that caused this? ” and then we stumble across a nursery school out for
their walk, holding hands, wearing their high-viz jackets and looking more
adorable than any living creature should be permitted to look. My heart hurts
more than I ever thought possible.
The Start
Do you ever think back to your pre-child family aspirations? I was having 3 children (two boys and a girl – no other combinations acceptable) and these children would be born within 18months of each other, you know, so they could be friends. There was no consideration towards the energy, nurturing and expense of each individual child nor the fact that it might just not happen like that.
So I got married.
He’s nice, you would like him. I won’t bore you with the
numerous ways in which he is nice and why I decided to let him sire my children
(good word, right? I think ‘sire’ should be used more in modern day vocabulary,
anyhow, I digress) as I am sure that once you get to know me a bit better it
will become obvious that he must have some saintly qualities to have stuck
around and sycophantic musings on other halves always brings a little vomit to my
mouth. Seriously, if I hear one more person write into to Steve Wright on a
Sunday and describe someone as their ‘rock’ I may just tie that someone round
their neck and throw them into a lagoon. See how the "rock" analogy works out for them then! Anyway, I got married, we did that for
a bit while I tried one career after another, trying to find one that would fit
and then the pang from my fallopian tubes hit.
My ovaries were twisting; crying out to have one of their
monthly offerings put to good use. In hind sight they probably just wanted some
time off the monthly grind, maternity leave if you will but without the
dependent to worry about (can you even imagine?) All of a sudden there was no
assuaging my need to procreate, it was an insatiable thirst that would only be
quenched by bringing an infant into my life and the greater world. I was ready.
We were in our late 20s and had been together for seven years. We had done the
drunken nights out, the pub lunches with friends that go on late into the
evening and the two day hangovers that would undoubtedly lead to the Monday
blues. We knew that we could do whatever we wanted with our time but we were
over that freedom and wanted a new challenge. (We have since decided that we
may have had a brief period of insanity and perhaps should have considered checking
into the local asylum rather than procreating.) However, I was in the middle of
quite an intensive professional exam schedule and getting pregnant, whilst not
terminal would have been ill advised.
So we got pregnant.
After years of desperately trying not to get pregnant I was
convinced that we would be the unlucky ones who would require intervention. My
periods were intermittent at best and my pessimistic outlook in life had
convinced me that we should start trying so that we could get a few months
under our belt before presenting to the GP for help whilst we were still in the
NHS accepted child bearing years.
It happened first time.
My evil husband (not really Love) made me run a
rather gruelling 10k on the morning of my father’s 60th birthday
celebration. I was aware of a mild cramping pain in my pelvis as I plodded around
the ridiculously hilly course but I thought I was just ‘coming on’ and tried to
push the discomfort to the back of my head (next to the mounting dislike for my
husband.) At one point, there was a supporter on the side line shouting
encouragement to everyone who passed, until she saw my face (which was
apparently drained of all colour) and literally said “Oh my God!”, not in a
good way and definitely not encouraging. Anyway, I am stubborn and we finished
the run in his intended sub 55minute time (bastard) and proceeded to the 60th
celebrations where we drank copious amounts of champagne, wine and gin, in no
particular order. I awoke the next morning waiting for the ominous tom-tom drum
to start thumping between my temples but instead the pain settled a little
further south; somewhere in my nipples. They were in agony. As in, the sheet
was torturing me by wielding its vice like grip on my delicate protuberances. Still,
the penny did not drop. My husband set off for a day’s cycling and it was only
as I was left to the quiet of the house that I thought “might just do a test,
you know, so I can enjoy a hair of the dog later”.
It was positive.
It was positive and I was
on my own.
Do guys get annoyed at missing out on these magical
urine focussed events? Should I lie? Could I lie? The answer to this is always
no. My face is terrible at it and he knows straight away. Great for him,
terrible for me. Wait, what? Never mind him, I am pregnant. Impregnated. With
child. Bun in the oven. Up the duff (lovely expression by the way, such
positive connotations). I needed a drink. Why is it that the one time you really
need a drink is the one time you really shouldn’t drink and to be honest, I had
probably had more than my fair share the night before. Thus, the mother’s guilt
begins.
What have I done? |
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
The Letter of Resignation
I went to work today. I went to work today, not for the money (as I would be sorely disappointed), but for the need to contribute, to help, ...
-
So, to cut a long story short we did actually have a baby... It was a miscarriage that never was but a threat that loitered menacingly fo...
-
It's been a big week this week and, no, we haven't sold our house. In fact, it is no longer even on the market which was both a hea...
-
So, a pandemic. I'll admit that it is a parenting hurdle I never saw coming. It's not so much the sanitising (I mean, they eat dirt...