Tomorrow
will mark the first day of my 37th week of pregnancy, and I’m
excited that I’m to the point where I can have a baby at home. The last two weeks I have been acutely aware
of the fact that if I were to go into labor no one would stop me. I also would be unable to have a home birth,
so I have been slightly more cautious than usual. I have also noticed in the past two weeks
that I have a ton more contractions. I
sometimes wake up from them in the middle of the night. This past week, I began
drinking raspberry tea (for uterine toning).
I love it! I also started
drinking Shepherd’s purse tea. I don’t
love it, but it is supposed to help with hemorrhaging after the baby is
born. There are many days that I don’t
feel like running too, and still I continue to do that because of how much
easier my pregnancy has been so far. I
guess drinking this tea is similar to that.
My oldest smelled the tea a few days ago, and said, “It smells just like
asparagus!” I’m not a huge fan of
asparagus, but I don’t mind having it fresh from the garden. Now I think of asparagus while I drink the
tea. My next oldest smelled it yesterday
and said, “It doesn’t smell like asparagus; it smells just like a squished
caterpillar.” I refuse to think about
squashed bugs while I drink my tea.
Asparagus is as far as I will go.
If you are reading this blog and know any tricks to making the tea more
palatable please leave me a comment. I
have found that adding lemon to it tastes really horrible (I love lemon with my
asparagus, so I thought why not try adding it to my “asparagus tea”). Trust me…don’t try it!
I have continued running, but
during week 35 of my pregnancy I became a little discouraged. I usually run 30 minutes on Mondays,
Wednesdays, and Fridays. On Wednesday of
that week, I had back to back contractions after 20 minutes of running. I chose to walk till I hit 30 minutes. That was the first time I had that many
contractions during running. I wasn’t
too worried though because all of the issues that have caused me to stop
running during pregnancy (which has happened 3 or 4 times) resolve before the
next time I run. However, when I started
running on Friday, it didn’t feel right.
I felt out of breath which is clearly not good for the baby, and I
stopped after just five minutes. I felt
a little defeated. My original midwife
instructed me that instead of just looking at the heart rate I had during
exercise that I should look at how I was feeling. If I was able to easily talk during running,
then it was fine to continue running. That
Friday, I wondered if I had just reached the point in my pregnanc y where I
just wouldn’t be able to run anymore. I
pondered it all weekend, and this Monday I tried something a little
different. I tried slowing my pace down,
and guess what? It worked. I can still run, and sing my heart out. Small adjustments can make all the
difference.
I don’t
love running. However, this is what I’ve
learned in this pregnancy. I didn’t feel
tired my first trimester at all--save one or two days. I’m not anywhere near as
fatigued at the end of my pregnancy as I was with the other four pregnancies. I can still make my weekly trip to Wal-mart
without losing my breath or feeling like I have to sit down afterward. I used to feel exhausted just going from side
to side while putting clean sheets on my bed.
I can even still run up my stairs. I’ve also noticed the swelling that I
sometimes have in my ankles completely disappears after I run. This makes running totally worth it to me; so
I will continue to run on my treadmill, just a little slower and softer than I
started out.
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