Categories
personalstories poetry

And the poet finally speaks

I haven’t mentioned it before, at least I don’t remember mentioning it–but in addition to nursing, I have a masters degree in creative writing. Poetry to be specific. As might be expected, my initial bachelors degree was a throw-away English degree with a minor in philosophy. And as I was graduating in exactly 4 years–a record for my friend group, who all stayed at least 5 years!– I decided the best course of action, even though I knew (I KNEW!) it would be a waste of money, was to spend two years in grad school for creative writing. I called it a vacation. Like traveling abroad before starting a real job, except I would have no real job waiting because I had trained for nothing!

But never mind the specifics, I dove headfirst into poetry because that was where my love was. It was how I processed the world, emotions and ideas. Poetry felt necessary to being alive. In those years of school, I learned more about language, and I read and wrote more than I can even imagine now. I was immersed. I was drowned but happily so in words.

And I even managed to score jobs working in teaching, writing, and editing after leaving grad school–first at the university where I had gone to school, then at a textbook publisher and then even in the exciting dot-com world and as I’ve mentioned here at prestigious tech publishers like Wired Magazine. But within a few years, it was all falling apart. September 11, 2001 destroyed not only my budding career but really drained my spirit and left me in what we’ve now come to call the quarter-life crisis.

After a few years spent blowing in the breeze, traveling the US in a Volkswagon GTI, camping for free wherever I could and couch surfing the rest of the way, I found the inspiration to go to nursing school. I’ve often felt like my life was just split in two, with a before & after nursing school– each side clearly delineated by roles and responsibilities, by the presence or lack of poetry, by my involvement in the blogging community or not.

But here I am, 16 years after deciding on my 30th birthday (which I spent camping in Death Valley, for those of you who like metaphor), and I am doing both. I am nursing full time in the ICU of a busy teaching hospital, learning every day, and I have started this blog, this little website where I can write about important issues related to nursing, health, and tell stories from nursing.

Its not so surprising then that in the last month or so, I’ve written my first poem in which I’ve ever referred to my job as a nurse. I’m going to take a chance today and share it here with you. I realize that no one really reads this site, so it doesn’t matter, but I want anyone there to know that this is important to me. These two parts of my life have needed to come together for a very long time, and here I will mark this transition. It is not exactly a celebration because this poem is not happy, because we cannot exactly say that nursing or life or 2020 is happy right now either. But no more justification. Here.


Can we pretend that this is not my eulogy?

This resume I’m writing
            My curriculum vitae
Graduated summa cum honore
      One more tiny Latin word better than
                                  Your laude

And for what?
       A bachelors and 2 masters
But still mostly a slave,

A nurse not much removed
        From the handmaid
               Apologizing for everything that’s   not her fault

So what if my mother didn’t love me?

                           And so what if my husband left me?

Then I say out loud
            “Can you help turn side to side
To get on the bedpan or should I get someone to help us?”
Categories
personalstories

Pregnancy Loss & the Stories We Don’t Tell

After the heartbreaking death of Chrissy Teigen’s & John Legend’s unborn baby Jack, I’ve had loss on my mind. The intimate pictures were so startling and truthful.

Over ten years ago, I suffered two pregnancy losses. I began a new year with a resolution to have a baby before I hit “advanced maternal age” at 36. I stopped taking my birth control in January and by early February, I woke up in the middle of the night saying “you better go buy some pregnancy tests because I can feel it in my boobs! I’m knocked up” to my then-husband.

I was right! But oddly so early along that only the faintest trace could be detected on the tests. I went to my doctor for a urine test that did confirm I was about 4 weeks pregnant. And I knew exactly when it happened— on our five year wedding anniversary weekend to Yosemite.

I was unexpectedly excited. I made an ob/gyn appointment and settled into the idea of maybe actually doing this thing! But before even a week could pass, and over a holiday weekend of course, I began bleeding. My nurse training kept me calm. Probably just spotting, maybe even implantation bleeding. I was so so early along. The bleeding became cramping too, though. And without an obstetrician, I was unsure what to do.

Calls to a nurse advice line yielded only the unhelpful “if it’s a miscarriage, there’s nothing we can do—so you should just stay at home.” And I tried. But the Monday of the holiday, as I lay on the floor, having my husband call that same advice line while I experienced the worst pain I’d ever felt, I knew things weren’t good.

Pain is blinding, though. I couldn’t feel any emotions. Just pain. And once I got to the “obstetrical” emergency room, I just laid there waiting to find out my fate. Actually, I think I spent most of my time sitting up, hunched forward, breathing through the pain. Much like Tiegen in that first picture.

I don’t remember anything until the on-call sonographer arrived from home. She wheeled me to an ultrasound room, complaining that she’d just fallen asleep and then had to come back for my case. I experienced my first transvaginal ultrasound, in which a big wand is covered with a condom and lube before being pushed inside you and tilted this way and that, holding pressure against various structures to see the developing baby.

This is a deeply dehumanizing and degrading process. Especially when being done by someone who resents you because you woke them up and made them drive back to work for your emergency.

Towards the end, the sonographer quietly apologized. “I’m sorry,” she said. “ I think it’s ectopic.”

And like that, I was alone to wipe the lubricant from between my legs with the flimsy white paper drape I’d been covered with.

Back in my room, a doctor explained that the reason I was feeling so much pain was that the ectopic pregnancy had ruptured and I was accumulating fluid & blood in my pelvis now. She recommended emergency surgery that night.

And then it was over as abruptly as it started—in the middle of that same night. I begged that the procedure be laparoscopic and that the surgeon do everything in her power to prevent having to cut me open all the way. Anything that would make it so I could go home in the morning.

Ironically enough, for someone who willingly worked at a hospital about five days a week, my only concern was to leave it ASAP.

This was February. Presidents’ Day weekend, ten years ago. I waited 3 months, per my ob/gyn’s instructions before trying again. Then I got pregnant on the first try again and scheduled a five-week ultrasound per instructions in early July.

No heartbeat.

But maybe too early? Here began the frequent ultrasounds and blood draws. First, a weekly ultrasound. Blood every 3 days to see if my pregnancy hormones were rising appropriately. Then the ultrasounds became every three days as well. I couldn’t even joke about them using condoms on the transvaginal ultrasound probe anymore— I’d lost my sense of humor somewhere between forced entries.

I was nauseous, more than just mornings. My breasts were excruciatingly tender and already much bigger. I could smell EVERYTHING. This is not a great superpower for a nurse to have. Second pregnancy bonus: a heart murmur, normal I was told since I was doubling my blood volume.

I don’t remember what week we called it. Sometime between 8 and 9. Maybe 10?There was still no heartbeat in my gestational sac in my uterus. Plus, they thought they saw what looked like another ectopic in my other Fallopian tube. Not rupture this time, so no bleeding or pain. Also no life.

This time I didn’t need emergency surgery. I would get intramuscular injections of methotrexate, a good old fashioned chemotherapy drug that targets fast growing cells (like tumors or … ).

That day of my injections when I left the office, I was in a daze. I had gotten a shot in both shoulders (deltoid muscles) and both butt cheeks ( gluteals). I was told that I wouldn’t feel any side effects or in fact any effects at all from the medication. I was told that I wouldn’t bleed, that it wouldn’t seem like I was having a miscarriage, that there would be no cramping.

Not only would this all turn out to be lies, but the shots wouldn’t work. A “pregnancy” blood test had to be done every three days to make sure my hormone levels went down appropriately. Aka, that anything growing in me died.

I carried myself like a pall bearer to the lab trying not to cry when some unknowing tech asked happily, “oh, are you expecting?” as they drew my blood.

I was still experiencing morning sickness. Still has all the other weird things, heightened sense of smell, tender and enlarged breasts, the heart murmur. Within two weeks, my betaHCG hadn’t dropped enough and I had to get a second round of methotrexate injections.

The every-three-day lab tests continued. Until my hormone level was zero. I can’t remember anything from that time because I dissociated so completely. I was numb. Go to the lab. Go to bed. Like a black hole forming. I was a coffin in waiting. A coffin to be. A coffin.

And do you know what is the ONLY thing I remember my doctor telling me? “Well, you’ve had an ectopic in both Fallopian tubes so you’re done. You can’t have a baby. You can try IVF but you will need to have your tubes tied first.”

There were no conversations about grief, about loss. No ideas about what to do next in order to keep on living. Common knowledge warns that infertility and pregnancy loss contribute quite a bit to divorce. I would be lying if I said it wasn’t true for me.

I never healed, in many ways, from the physical traumas to my body not to mention the emotional trauma. And I certainly didn’t talk about it. Who did? My doctor, who I continued to see, certainly didn’t ask.

I did tell my husband at the time that there was no way I would do IVF, which would involve the every few day blood draws and aggressively invasive ultrasounds. But I’m sure he didn’t really understand the true depth of the emotional and physical trauma those things caused me. I never told him.

But my unwillingness to forge other paths to motherhood certainly played a role in our divorce. That however is a story for another time.

People have tried to bash Chrissy Tiegen for sharing such personal photos—or even for taking them at all. But I find them to be gorgeous. Painful, yes. Triggering? For me personally, yes. Honestly, it’s taken me a long time to finish this post. The weekend those photos came out was pretty dark for me as I relived a very sad time in my own life. But without people like her who are brave enough to share the depth of their sorrow and vulnerability as well as their joy, we could not move this conversation forward. We could not continue to heal as women and demand respect for the very hard work we do in addition to our jobs.

Also, I want to give you a little medical perspective on those pictures now that we’ve gone through my story and (in some ways) I feel the right to reveal this. In one picture, we can see Tiegen leaning forward, her back covered with what could be plastic wrap. There is a doctor behind her, a nurse holding her hand in front. Those of you familiar with the scene will recognize that she is getting an epidural. Which means that she had probably had to give birth to little Jack. And if that doesn’t break your heart into a million little pieces and make you want to scream “nobody should ever have to do this alone” then I just don’t know. I’m grateful she has started more conversations. I hope more women will connect and heal.