All that stuff I wrote yesterday about perspective and optimism and the zen of being a second-timer?
It can kiss my ass today.
Eleanor is fine, but when it comes down to it, she’s acting like more of a preemie than her gestational age would suggest. Sleepy, not eating well. Not quite coordinated on the suck-swallow-breathe thing, such that her oxygen saturation drops when she eats.
She’s back on the nasal cannula with a touch of extra oxygen. She might end up with that little orange tube in her nose for some of her feedings if she doesn’t perk up overnight.
She is not coming home with me in the morning.
Those who prefer to avoid profanity should now avert their eyes.
Fuck perspective. Fuck optimism. Fuck them right in the ear. This was not supposed to happen, dammit. I was not supposed to go home by myself. AGAIN.
It’s like PTSD flashbacks, except that it’s ACTUALLY HAPPENING. All of the NICU bullshit of counting milliliters, thinking there’s actually a difference between 28ml and 35ml. The kind of crap no one ever looks at if your baby never landed in there in the first place – seriously, how many 3-day-old breastfed infants are taking in that much breastmilk at each feeding? Judging by my pump output, I’m going to go out on a limb and say hardly any. But standards are different in the NICU. The standards for getting out of there are way higher than normal.
And that’s when, in my hormone-fueled disappointment and rage, I want to scream BULLSHIT. This is such crap. SUCH CRAP. And I’m so, so mad that I have to deal with it again.
All of this disappointment and rage, to be honest, is about me. It’s selfish. I know my daughter will be fine. I know she will work through these late-preterm issues and will come home and will be healthy. I’m upset because *I* didn’t want to go through this again. Because I wanted my turn to be discharged from the hospital with a carseat on my arm. Because I didn’t want to have to pump every 2 hours and always feel like I was coming up short.
But this morning, when I confirmed that a simultaneous Tuesday discharge was not in the cards, I barely made it back to my hospital room before releasing the big, ugly cry. The kind of crying I couldn’t stop. The kind of crying I had to be careful with so the sobs didn’t hurt my incision. I couldn’t relay the information to my husband without bursting into tears again. I couldn’t interact with any of the nurses or doctors without completely losing it. Could barely get a full sentence out of my mouth for most of the day.
Oh, progesterone. You’re a bitch when you show up in the first trimester, and you’re a bitch when you make your hasty post-partum exit. Sure, I had things to be upset about. But damn, those hormonal changes can turn the whole thing up to 11.
After a little rest, some deep breathing, and a cold, wet towel on my eyes to bring down some of the swelling, I was able to keep it together for a visit from my big kids. Seeing them was surprisingly restorative. Even better was an evening visit from two friends, who brought equal parts junk food and knowledgeable sympathy. Both do a body good.
I know she’s being taken care of. I know she’s in the right place. I know I don’t actually want to have her home until she’s 100% ready to be there. The perspective I wrote about yesterday is still there, tucked away in the more logical part of my brain.
But in the meantime, I’m having a little pity party, and will likely go through an entire box of kleenex when I leave the hospital tomorrow.
It sucks. Period.














