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  • The Secret Lives of My Fetus

    Brian Braiker | Jan 29, 2008 06:13 PM

     

    Vo Trung Dung/Corbis

    So my wee bride has reached the 19-week mark in her pregnancy--almost halfway there! We've scheduled our 20-week sonogram for later in February, you know, just in time for week 23. See the image above? That's a 3D ultrasound of someone else's 19/20-week old fetus. Bless its sleeping little face. Let us take great care not to wake the slumbering albino lizardfish, for once angered it will shed its shell of protective poison mucus so it may RISE UP AND EAT YOUR FACE WITH ITS SERRATED FANGS!!!!

    This officially being the second trimester--the pregnancy's golden age--my wife is finally feeling much better. Gone are the days of power puking eight, nine times. Gone is the weight loss. Gone is the scary cancer-ward vibe of our conjugal chamber. Better yet: gone are the disgusting chewable meds. No more drugs. Don't get me wrong, the nausea is still there. She does barf, sometimes daily. She'll wake up with an empty stomach, ralph and get on with the morning. It's impressive how thoroughly she's insinuated reverse peristalsis into her daily routine: wake, boot, rally, break fast. Feels like college again! Even our daughter has gotten into the groove: every time mama goes to the bathroom she asks "she gonna throw up? I wanna see!" Little angel! More worrisome: I was giving said angel a bath the other night. As the water was draining down the tub she leaned over its edge and said "now you have to dry me off. AND NOW I HAVE TO THROW UP! BLLOOUURRGH!!!" Then she spat and wiped her mouth with her forearm! It's so adorable the way they imitate us, isn't it?

    Anyway. Nineteen weeks. Twenty-one (or so) to go. Here are some things I've learned about week 19 of pregnancy. From pregnancy.org:

    Your baby has the same awake and sleep patterns of a newborn. So, basically, mama has an albino lizardfish in her belly that's waking up every two hours and screaming its head off. I'd be a little queasy too.
    Scalp hair becomes apparent this week. No word on back hair. Or, more importantly if it's a boy: moustache-ability.
    The milk teeth buds have already developed. Apparently babies have two rows of teeth: there are milk teeth and, behind them, the permanent teeth grow in. So mama's actually carrying a little shark. A hairy little albino lizardshark with two rows of teeth. You know, like in "Alien." I know I'll sleep well tonight!
    Your baby is swallowing amniotic fluid and his or her kidneys are making urine. Let's take this to the next logical step, shall we: it's swallowing amniotic fluid. It's urinating. Presumably it's urinating into its amniotic sac. Which means its swallowing its urine. Which means my fuzzy little sleep-shrieking albino lizardshark Alien spawn, not even born yet, has a bizarre urine-drinking ritual it practices before ... oh I don't know, it goes on its cannibalistic murdering sprees.
    It's around 6.02 inches (15.3cm) and 8.47 ounces (240gm). That's 6 inches and 8.5 ounces of PURE MAYHEM!


    So pregnancy.org is creeping me out a little. Let's see what the parenting channel at ivillage has to say (aside, of course, from the pop-up congratulating me on being the first-ever male to visit the parenting channel at ivillage).

    At 15 centimeters crown to rump, and weighing eight ounces, your baby is getting big! "Crown to rump?" Is this a baby or a pony? I can't wait to send out our birth announcement: "Meet our new child. Sixteen inches from whithers to brisket!"
    Organs of reproduction are developing rapidly, getting ready to sustain future generations.
     Not even born and already you're giving him a massive guilt trip for not yet giving us grandchildren! That's just great, ivillage.
    If your baby is positioned just right on an ultrasound scan, the tiny penis is easily identifiable. Awesome. I hope it is a boy, so his whole life I can be all "hey, son, why don't you and your tiny penis get ready for dinner?" "Yo, junior, don't you and your tiny penis have homework to do?" "Son, on this your wedding day, you have made me very proud of you. Now go forth and sustain future generations with your tiny penis."


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  • Child-rearing Trivia of the Day!

    Brian Braiker | Nov 28, 2007 02:25 PM

    I mentioned in my post on Monday that a leading cause of death in pregnant women a century ago was HG -- basically barfing to death. Splendid. This got me wondering: what, in this medically advanced age, is the leading cause of death in women today?

    Have any guesses? The top cause of death among pregnant women today is ... murder. Lovely.

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  • A Very Special I, Breeder Thanksgiving

    Brian Braiker | Nov 26, 2007 07:58 AM
     
     
    Welcome back to the work week, peoplefriends. How was your turkey (or tofurkey and gluten-free stuffing, if that is your proclivity, you filthy hippy)? Any wine-soaked tryptophan-and-football induced hallucinations involving giant inflatable muppets floating down the Broadway of your dreams? I would expect nothing less. Did you shop until you dropped, pull yourself up, rub some dirt in it and head back out to the mall, bloodied but unbowed, your maxed-out credit card mere swipes away from bursting into flames? God bless America!

    I'm afraid I'll just have to live vicariously through you guys this year. We here at I, Breeder headquarters had quite possibly the most-grim Thanksgiving of our lives. Downright depressing, it was. You see, the past couple years, we've packed up and headed West to engorge ourselves with my fambly. And each of those trips took, oh, about 3 years off of our lives:

    * Three tickets to LA? $1000.
    * A rental car for a three-day weekend? Another $300 or more.
    * Flying on Thanksgiving day and having the airline lose your luggage which is particularly unfortunate because your nap-boycotting child spent the past 5 hours screaming, until, upon landing, she gagged herself and vomited all over you? Priceless.

    So we decided, much to the chagrin of Nana Breeder, to stay home this year and cook up a feast for other New York orphans. Thank goodness we did this because, as it turns out, my bride fell ill. Thursday she was far too sick to host, much less assemble a turkey feast, even with my semi-capable assistance. She's actually been quite unwell for the past month. There is a reason for this, dear readers, and verily it is a reason for which we are Very Thankful Indeed: she is heavy with child.

    Actually, she's not heavy with child. She's too busy ralphing to get heavy. Unfortunately, this is a road we've been down before. When she was pregnant the first time around, she morphed into Sir Barfsalot for about five months. Five. Months. You've heard of, I am sure, morning sickness, yes? Well replace "morning" with "every freakin' minute of your life" and sickness with "hurling until you turn yourself inside-out and you see the bottoms of your feet pop out of your own mouth" and you have a general idea of the pit of despair that our home has become.

    There is a name for this condition. It is called hyperemesis gravidarum, which is Latin for "Oh God, BlooorrrhuMAKEITSTOPuugghhhh!!!!," and 100 years ago it was a leading cause of death among pregnant women (including, apparently, Charlotte Bronte). Because they couldn't get hydrated. Because they were barfing all the time. Anyway, she doesn't quite have it as bad as some women get it--some women spend the bulk of their pregnancies in the hospital. Others need to go to the emergency room to get an IV drip hooked up to their arms. (We've already had one emergency room close-call ourselves). She's been prescribed a very powerful anti-emetic called Zofran, which is what chemo patients are given to stave off the up-chuckery. This helps her keep food down, but it doesn't quell the nausea. It's also an incredibly strong drug which, despite being routinely given to pregnant women with no proven side effects yet, has never really been tested on pregnant women. Fabulous!

    So anyway, imagine being hungry all the time, because you're pregnant, and also being nauseous all the time, because you're pregnant. I believe this is a level of hell that proved too great for even Dante to fully fathom. So you see, for Thanksgiving, we stayed in and did nothing. I had a disgusting cold turkey-bacon club. I made her some chicken stock (from scratch, because that's how I roll). She had a big day, actually, she made it all the way from her sick bed to the living room couch. She ate her broth and sobbed quietly, muttering something about my "poison seed." Which seemed a little harsh to me. Poison? I like to think of it as just very, very powerful. Freakishly strong. Certainly too much for SOME PEOPLE to handle, it would seem.

    There you have it. I'd like to tell you that I was contractually obligated to procreate again because Newsweek wasn't convinced that having just one kid was enough to consider me a "breeder" -- but then I'd be lying. In any event, I'll certainly have lots more material to work with in the coming year(s). A whole 'nother kid to exploit! So stay tuned and come on back now, y'hear?
     

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