Week 27: Here Comes the Weight Again
by Sharon Tjaden-Glass
Last week, I pulled on a pair of underwear and thought, “What happened?”
Tight. All over.
And these were the underwear that I wore at the end of my first pregnancy.
I stepped on the scale, the number staring me in the face.
Well, that makes 25 pounds so far…
And still 13 weeks to go.
I tried to put it out of my mind, but when my husband asked me what was wrong, I just started crying.
***
Now, I’ve been through this whole thing before. I know how this goes. You gain a few pounds in the first trimester. Things kind of “explode” in the second trimester. But it’s the third trimester when you really start packing on the weight.
In my head, I know this.
I also know that I was able to drop the weight after the birth. I wish that the way that it melted off me for the first two weeks had continued until I was back to my pre-pregnancy weight. But the truth is, after those first weeks of blissful, unintended weight loss, losing weight resumed the same old narrative that it has always had in my life.
Losing weight was a fight.
I’ve won that fight three times already.
Up in the 190s and then down to the 130s.
Up to the 170s, then down to the 130s.
Up to the 180s, and then down to the 140s.
But it’s still hard.
I am used to navigating the seasons of my life when I need to “batten down the hatches.” I become goal-oriented, willing to forego what I want in the moment for the results that I want in the future. Even when it doesn’t pay off immediately. Look at how I spend my time: I teach. I write. I knit.
These things come easy to me because I have control.
But this season of my life is markedly different.
Pregnancy is a time of growth and expansion. That’s pretty easy to see. It’s probably the most widely understood parts of pregnancy–that you grow bigger and bigger and bigger.
But if you’ve never been pregnant, let me tell you how this is effectively me internally.
At 27 weeks, this baby is now pushing up against my rib cage while at the same time kicking and brushing against my pelvic bones. Since this is my second pregnancy, I’m feeling round ligament pain. My lung capacity is starting to shrink so I’m taking more breaths per minute now. My stomach is compressed so I can’t eat a full meal like I used. I feel so stretched on the sides that sometimes I wonder how I’m going to possibly contain this baby for another 13 weeks without my stomach just splitting wide open.
13 more weeks…
But the physical stuff is a lot easier to deal with than the emotional stuff. And the emotional stuff is a lot harder to see.
It’s not just that I’ve gained a lot of weight. And that I have more to go.
It’s that I’m struggling to let go.
Struggling to surrender.
Struggling to relinquish control.
Struggling to humble myself, once again, to this great task that lies ahead of me.
Sharon: The struggle that you speak of here is so real… It made me think of the struggle involved when someone is drowning – which is a horrible metaphor, but bear with me. Once the surrender happens there is no more struggle. There is peace. There is rest.
What makes this metaphor both horrible and kind of perfect at the same time, is that there is a kind of “drowning” that occurs with each and every pregnancy and birth – what was your known, your comfort, your rhythm and ritual gets drowned out. But, and I know you know this all too well, a new one takes its place.
I so appreciate your struggle and your ability to put it in words here that will allow others to recognize and resonate with these same feelings. They are not talked about often, or enough in our culture.
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Drowning is a great way to put it, even if it is dark. But you know, darkness isn’t always the “bad thing” that we make it out to be. Darkness is the contrast of the light. How can we know light without darkness? How can we feel free when we don’t feel the struggle?
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Yes! My point exactly. There is so much to be said about making it through the struggle and all that we learn from the experience.
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Sharon you are so strong and can make it through this. Thank you for sharing. Maybe the baby will drop early giving you more space (and a whole new set of pains.) Hang in there! It’s so hard!
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Love you, Andrea! Thank you! 🙂
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Well, I was going to see if you wanted to use this Ben & Jerry’s coupon for a BOGO waffle cone with me, but after reading this, I would feel like a bad friend for tempting you to overindulge. 😉
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Hahahahaha!!! With how compressed my stomach already feels, I doubt I could eat the whole cone. Bargh….
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Wow. You make it all so tangible. Your experience is so available. In your book, I just read through your labor. It was so intense for me the reader, I had to stop and take a break. Still breaking. He he. Be well. Here’s to something new happening and surprising you. Something that didn’t happen in your first pregnancy but will happen this time. Be well.
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Thanks, Monique! You’re right–the labor chapter was pretty intense. Actually, I don’t think the pace really starts slowing down until a few weeks post-birth. One of my readers said that this time period left her pretty “breathless.” I thought that was a good way of putting it! It was certainly how I felt!
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I giggled at your last sentence. 🙂
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oh I hear you. This weight business is really hard.
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