T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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379.1 | worked the day she was born! | WFOV12::LITEROVICH | | Fri Sep 28 1990 09:00 | 22 |
| Alison,
I was in a similar situation with my first daughter. I HAD to work as
much as possible.
I had a very easy pregnancy, in fact I worked the day she was born. I
worked in Accounts Receivable in the hospital she was to be born in and
my boss sent me home at about 4 and was I back at the hospital at about 7
ish, she was born at 8:20 that evening! I was lucky. It was easy labor
and they did a section because she was breach. With my second I would
have worked longer, however, we moved across the country 6 weeks
before she was due; then she was 2 weeks early.
I then returned to work at 5 weeks. (Dr did not want to release me to
work yet, however, I simply could not afford to stay home any longer.)
I was very lucky - other then occassional severe headaches I was
healthy with Amy (first). I wish I had half the energy I had when I
was pregnant!
Kim Literovich
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379.2 | What I didn | NRADM::TRIPPL | | Fri Sep 28 1990 09:27 | 37 |
| With my first I was nauseas from the time of conception through
delivery, I also had severe swelling in my ankles, I stopped work about
two weeks before my due date with her. (She was ultimately a
stillbirth, but nothing to do with my level of activity.) I guess I
suffered psycologically from being home, more than physically. I seem
to spend days just looking at the whale of a belly and wishing the
ankles would deflate, and dealing with the heat and humidity of late
May.
With AJ it was wonderful, I worked full time also (as a DECtag I too get
no "bennies" like paid time off, is that your situation also?) until
about 8 weeks before my due date. The decision making factor to stop
work was that it was a couple weeks before Christmas and we had gone
from work, to shopping, then home and I didn't get enough time to allow
the swelling in my ankles deflate. As Murphy's law goes, I had a Dr.
appt early the next morning. My Blood Pressure was a little on the
high side, and my ankles were still noticably swollen so he ordered me
to bed.
Fortunately, (or unufortunately however you look at it) we were living
with my inlaws, we had sold our condo a few weeks earlier, the new
house wasn't ready yet, so I was able to take full advantage of the
Doctor's orders for bed rest. The second thing that happened about
that time was a severe back ache, so I had no choice but to retreat to
bed, with heating pad and feet up. Fortunately (I think) AJ came 7
weeks early, the day after new year.
The other thing I can relate to you is at Umass Medical Center in
Worcester, they have a policy of 6 weeks off, period. Most nurses
will request the beginning of their leave to be their due date, so if
they go early they will be able to enjoy the full 6 weeks with the
newborn. I don't agree, especially with such a physically active job,
but that's our wonderful Commonwealth!
Hope this rambling helps!
Lyn
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379.3 | TAKE A BREAK MOM! | GENRAL::MARZULLA | | Fri Sep 28 1990 15:09 | 18 |
| Well - here's my story. With my first I planned on working right up
until she was born. And that's that way it was. I went into labor
while getting ready for work on a Tuesday morning. I felt great - yes
tired - but we get tired while not pregnant too I kept telling myself.
I had a great fear of getting bored, and thought that all I would do
is sit around the refigerator and swell up even further. Labor was easy,
and I took off the six weeks after my delivery date.
On the second pregnancy, I had a little one already, it was the summer,
I had the luxury to be able to take off the two weeks before my due
date so I did it. Let me tell you - one thing I noticed was that my
recovery was quicker because I was rested BEFORE the delivery. Both
deliveries were basically the *same* so comparisons were easy. So,
I feel that if you are rested going into the pregnancy, you will do
much better after it. FWIT.
Lorrie
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379.4 | Let your body tell you | SCAACT::COX | Kristen Cox - Dallas ACT Sys Mgr | Fri Sep 28 1990 15:22 | 24 |
|
I had not planned to take off any time before my first child, but to use the
2 weeks AFTER the baby for a total of 8 weeks after (the daycare I was
considering would not take them until 8 weeks old). But when I found out that
you cannot do that (i.e. if you don't take your 2 weeks before, you lose them)
I tood the 2 weeks anyways. I was pretty tired, and needed the time to get
ready. But I did get bored at home, and my husband didn't get much work done
between phone calls! I also got the "nesting instinct" and did all kinds of
stuff around the house.
I'm due in 4.5 weeks, and will take the 2 weeks prior, but I'm really nervous.
I have felt soooooo good this pregnancy, and am not tired at all (well, except
for Kati's sleepless nights), and having just moved I fear that I will probably
find too many projects around the house, and might relax better at work! But
just because I think the policy stinks (I would love to work until my due date
and tack the 2 weeks afterwards) I will take my 2 weeks before again.
Let your body dictate what you do. If you start feeling very tired, or
uncomfortable (when the baby drops) then take off if you can afford it. If you
feel energetic and WANT to continue to work, I don't think there should be a
problem (of course, you're probably seeing your OB regularly these days,
right?). Let us know!
Kristen
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379.5 | I second that emotion (379.4) | ICS::NELSONK | | Fri Sep 28 1990 16:02 | 25 |
| I left work two weeks before my due date with James because I was
so big I could barely fit behind the steering wheel of my car! Plus,
I had torn the stretch tummy panel in the largest size of maternity
pantyhose I could find. And I was _tired_. I had started getting up
once or twice a night to use the bathroom, and occasionally went down
to the nurse's office to take a nap on my lunch hour. (I have a long
commute to work.)
James was almost a week late, so I had three weeks at home to rest
and relax. I watched the Stanley Cup playoffs, the octa-finals or
whatever they're called, of the NCAA basketball tournament, took
walks, baked, cooked, shopped, and just generally nested around.
I still look back on that time with great fondness. It was the most
time I'd had to myself since graduate school...
The question is, Alison, how do YOU feel?? Can you work 6 hours
a day till, say, 2 weeks before your due date, then half days till
you're due? Talk it over with yourself, your partner
and your manager. If you feel good, work; if you feel like you
need some rest, arrange to take it. Your mileage will _definitely_
vary on this one.
Lots of good luck with the blessed event!
Kate
|
379.6 | Listen To Your Body! | CECV01::POND | | Sun Sep 30 1990 22:46 | 14 |
| I worked the day my first was born; I left work at 6 PM and Elizabeth
was born 5.25 hours later.
For my second the doctor offered to put me on disability at 36 weeks
(rather than the standard 38) and I took it. I was tired from the
pregnancy and dealing with a toddler and I wanted to spend some time
with my first daughter before child #2 came along.
So...listen to your body. It will tell you when you're reaching your
limits.
Good luck!
LZP
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379.7 | if everything's normal you won't hurt the baby any | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Mon Oct 01 1990 10:27 | 12 |
| If you feel reasonably good (I say reasonably because with your
belly sticking out to the next county, it's kind of hard to feel
_totally_ wonderful) you aren't going to cause any problems for
you or your baby. Being rested before the delivery does seem to
help the recovery go a bit faster, but I also found that the time
I didn't stay active right up to the end, delivery itself was a
lot harder.
So I agree with the other noters -- listen to your body (and your
doctor/midwife) and do what needs to be done.
--bonnie
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379.8 | Save some energy for labor and delivery | MARX::FLEURY | | Mon Oct 01 1990 10:39 | 13 |
|
Where will you be most relaxed?
I was home cleaning for two weeks before my baby was born. All the usual
stuff - vacuuming, laundry, dusting, waxing floors, washing windows,
washing walls, scrubbing the grout between the tiles, dusting the tops
of light bulbs... You get the picture. By the time I went into labor
I was exhausted. I would have gotten more rest working at my desk job
those last two weeks. For me - one week home nesting would have been
ideal.
Will your manager let you work part time? That might be a good way to
balance your need to keep busy with your need to rest.
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379.9 | from an occasional PARENTING drop-in | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | I donwanna wearatie | Mon Oct 01 1990 11:03 | 15 |
| brings back memories... I took the 2 weeks before, but it turned into 5
cause my daughter was post-due (NOT worth the extra 3 weeks pay!). It
rained, I mean poured drenching downpours, every day of those last
three weeks, and the cellar flooded. I spent the last 3 weeks of my
first pregnancy getting water out of the cellar with broom and wet-vac.
The sun came out the day I went into labor, 3 weeks to the day
post-due!
all the advice here is sound -- do what feels right, but be careful not
to overdo even if you feel energetic. You need to conserve your
strength, and remember that if this is your first, these are your last
few and precious days of lazy lounging around! SO! read the Sunday
paper, go for walks when you feel like it, go to work, socialize
without distraction, nap whenever you feel like it knowing you can wake
up when you feel like it. I *dream* of things like that now!
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379.10 | Do what your body tells you to..... | POWDML::OCG_TEMP | | Tue Oct 02 1990 16:23 | 8 |
| I worked until the day I went into labor. Shane was born two days
later. I also had a desk job and I know that if I had taken the two
weeks before off, I would have done more work at home. I also needed
to work financially. I had a C-section (do to the fact that I wasn't
dialating) and was back to work when Shane was 5 weeks old and I feel
great (he's 9 weeks old now).
Lori B.
|