Tl;Dr: my wife's pregnancy went from 0-100 in a short time span, but both momma and baby are safe and well.
Sunday night: my wife complained of nausea and abdominal pain. We thought it was a stomach bug, it'll get better.
Tuesday night: the pain has only increased, about to a 5/10. Midwives recommend going to Instacare. We fill out paperwork and plan to go in as soon as they open.
Wednesday afternoon: despite feeling little pain, we go to Instacare. They give her a GI cocktail consisting of Midol and numbing medication that takes care of the rest of the pain. Okay, it's just GERD, here's a prescription for Prilosec. It should kick in by Sunday, but come back in 3 days if there's more pain.
Thursday: pain has returned and is making up for lost time. My wife works half a day, meets with midwives, they're not too concerned, it's just GERD, right?
Saturday, 11am: back to Instacare, severe abdominal pain, pain over kidneys, urine is a dark unhealthy color, she hasn't been able to eat or drink much. A family friend that's a pharmacist thinks it's just kidney stones, Instacare can probably help.
Saturday, 12pm: transfer to ER, it's probably gall bladder.
Saturday, 2pm: it's definitely gall bladder and immediate, but the hospital can't support babies under 30 weeks. We're only 25 weeks and change. Ambulance is called to transfer my wife to a hospital with a better NICU just in case labor is induced during surgery.
Saturday, 2:30pm: so now we're transferring to the labor and delivery ward. Makes sense, they can do tests there to make sure baby is okay.
Saturday, 3pm: checked into labor and delivery, NICU doctor stops by while IVs are getting sorted. "So when your baby is born, it'll probably be c-section, we have a good team here, your in good hands." Hang on, I thought it was just gall bladder that needed to be removed, NOT THE BABY?!
Saturday, 4:30pm: tests are inconclusive on gall bladder, so it gets to stay for now. All symptoms point to preeclampsia. OB-GYN says the only real cure is to deliver baby. That wasn't my wife's birth plan. She was going to give birth at a birth suite, not a hospital. She's been seeing midwives, not doctors. Doctors and hospitals terrify her, this is her biggest nightmare!
So now I sit here, in a hospital room with my wife. She has tubes going into her, tubes coming out of her, but thankfully the pain has gone away. This whole week has been absolute misery for her, and my heart has ached the whole time, seeing the woman I love in so much pain with nothing I can do about it. I'm constantly finding new things to put on hold; church responsibilities, family obligations, projects around our home, Halloween preparations, hobbies, and oh yeah, how am I going to do school when I literally have classes from 8am to 7pm twice a week? I know my sweetheart is in the best care in the state, and we are exactly where we need to be. We are surrounded by resources and family who love us and support us, but life is at a standstill right now while I watch the vitals monitors and the doctors watch the lab results. After the rapid descent into nightmare land earlier today, it's just sit-tight-and-wait. I'm terrified and stressed out of my mind with nothing that I can do to help my wife other than comfort her.
I never thought this would happen to us. This is always something that happened to other, more sickly people. I was wrong. As it turns out, you can do everything right, gentle exercise, eat well, drink plenty of fluids, and still end up in the hospital. Please, brethren, if your partner is close, hold her close and tell her you love her. Keep an eye on her. Take care of her. It can all change so fast.
Right now my wife is resting, or at least as well as you can rest in a hospital. The pain is mostly gone, urine is a decent color, vitals are closer to normal than 12 hours ago. I'll take the little wins when I can get them.
Edit: baby was born, healthy and crying at 25 weeks 6 days. Momma is doing well. It has been an absolutely insane couple of days. I did not think any of this could happen. I guess I graduated to r/daddit officially! All of our doctors are optimistic for the future and say that it couldn't have been better. Thank you all for the support!
Sunday night: my wife complained of nausea and abdominal pain. We thought it was a stomach bug, it'll get better.
Tuesday night: the pain has only increased, about to a 5/10. Midwives recommend going to Instacare. We fill out paperwork and plan to go in as soon as they open.
Wednesday afternoon: despite feeling little pain, we go to Instacare. They give her a GI cocktail consisting of Midol and numbing medication that takes care of the rest of the pain. Okay, it's just GERD, here's a prescription for Prilosec. It should kick in by Sunday, but come back in 3 days if there's more pain.
Thursday: pain has returned and is making up for lost time. My wife works half a day, meets with midwives, they're not too concerned, it's just GERD, right?
Saturday, 11am: back to Instacare, severe abdominal pain, pain over kidneys, urine is a dark unhealthy color, she hasn't been able to eat or drink much. A family friend that's a pharmacist thinks it's just kidney stones, Instacare can probably help.
Saturday, 12pm: transfer to ER, it's probably gall bladder.
Saturday, 2pm: it's definitely gall bladder and immediate, but the hospital can't support babies under 30 weeks. We're only 25 weeks and change. Ambulance is called to transfer my wife to a hospital with a better NICU just in case labor is induced during surgery.
Saturday, 2:30pm: so now we're transferring to the labor and delivery ward. Makes sense, they can do tests there to make sure baby is okay.
Saturday, 3pm: checked into labor and delivery, NICU doctor stops by while IVs are getting sorted. "So when your baby is born, it'll probably be c-section, we have a good team here, your in good hands." Hang on, I thought it was just gall bladder that needed to be removed, NOT THE BABY?!
Saturday, 4:30pm: tests are inconclusive on gall bladder, so it gets to stay for now. All symptoms point to preeclampsia. OB-GYN says the only real cure is to deliver baby. That wasn't my wife's birth plan. She was going to give birth at a birth suite, not a hospital. She's been seeing midwives, not doctors. Doctors and hospitals terrify her, this is her biggest nightmare!
So now I sit here, in a hospital room with my wife. She has tubes going into her, tubes coming out of her, but thankfully the pain has gone away. This whole week has been absolute misery for her, and my heart has ached the whole time, seeing the woman I love in so much pain with nothing I can do about it. I'm constantly finding new things to put on hold; church responsibilities, family obligations, projects around our home, Halloween preparations, hobbies, and oh yeah, how am I going to do school when I literally have classes from 8am to 7pm twice a week? I know my sweetheart is in the best care in the state, and we are exactly where we need to be. We are surrounded by resources and family who love us and support us, but life is at a standstill right now while I watch the vitals monitors and the doctors watch the lab results. After the rapid descent into nightmare land earlier today, it's just sit-tight-and-wait. I'm terrified and stressed out of my mind with nothing that I can do to help my wife other than comfort her.
I never thought this would happen to us. This is always something that happened to other, more sickly people. I was wrong. As it turns out, you can do everything right, gentle exercise, eat well, drink plenty of fluids, and still end up in the hospital. Please, brethren, if your partner is close, hold her close and tell her you love her. Keep an eye on her. Take care of her. It can all change so fast.
Right now my wife is resting, or at least as well as you can rest in a hospital. The pain is mostly gone, urine is a decent color, vitals are closer to normal than 12 hours ago. I'll take the little wins when I can get them.
Edit: baby was born, healthy and crying at 25 weeks 6 days. Momma is doing well. It has been an absolutely insane couple of days. I did not think any of this could happen. I guess I graduated to r/daddit officially! All of our doctors are optimistic for the future and say that it couldn't have been better. Thank you all for the support!