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Little People Can Have Babies Too!

Little People Can Have Babies Too!

My husband and I were sitting on the couch, having our morning coffee, when I paused in the magazine I was flipping through and showed him the picture.

“Do you think our daughter’ll look like that?” I asked.

Taking a sip from his mug, my husband squinted at the image of the rosy-cheeked little girl with flaxen pigtails and a gap-toothed smile.

He shook his head. “I don’t think so. She looks like her parents are both normal sized.”

“Normal sized?!” I screeched, slapping the magazine closed and slinging it across the coffee table. “Whatdaya think I am, an elf?”

“Well, no,” my husband replied. I could see the wheels in his mind quickly spinning backwards. “You’re just–just a little person.”

  • 

Exactly one month ago I went in to my hairdresser’s because I had forgotten her phone number and needed to have my hair cut before my pregnancy hormones caused me to hack it off with a dull butcher knife.

“Why hey!” she cried. “Haven’t seen you in a while!”

I apologized for this and asked if she had anything available next week.

She said, “Just a haircut?”

“I’d like some highlights, too, but . . .” I glanced over at the man seated on the stool with a plastic cape draping his shoulders. “Well, I’m expecting. In my second trimester. My midwife said it was fine–”

My hairdresser waved her hand. “Believe you me, Honey, it is fine, or I wouldn’t’ve been allowed to do highlights when I was pregnant myself.”

The next week I was seated in the very stool that customer had occupied, with the same plastic cape draping my shoulders, while my hairdresser jerked my hair through a cap in a way that made me think her former occupation was with the KGB.

“You liking being pregnant?” she asked, ripping out a chunk of my scalp.

“It’s been great,” I said although my expression in the mirror was a mask of pain. “No morning sickness, tons — ouch! — tons of energy. The only problem is, people think I’m a pregnant teenager.”

My hairdresser paused in her torture. “Ya know,” she said, waving the metal hook at me, “funny you should say that. Last week after you left, that guy I was working on was quiet for a while, then said, ‘It’s sad about that girl.’ I said, ‘Why?’ And he said, ‘’Bout her being pregnant and all. She really had a lot going for her.’”

  • 

For three months after I discovered those two pink lines on a home pregnancy test, I pestered my family with one question: “Can you see it now?”

This query was always accompanied with me arching my spine and sticking out my stomach while my hands supported my lower back. If we were in a portion of a grocery store/department store/restaurant/sidewalk that wasn’t too congested, I would even whip up my shirt and point to a little bump on my lower abdomen that could’ve been a full bladder.

“Right there,” I’d ask. “Can’t you see that?”

Then I went up to Pennsylvania to visit my husband’s family. For three solid days I lived on pig stomach (which is actually far tastier than it sounds), cheese curds brought in from Wisconsin, Good’s potato chips fried in lard, scrapple, and peanut-butter rice crispy treats slathered in chocolate. By the time we started back to Tennessee on Sunday, my belly could barely fit in the car.

On Tuesday, after the ultrasound which confirmed we were having a baby girl, I was sitting in our front yard typing when I heard a sound like a woman’s scream. I thought it was a mountain lion or bobcat and heaved my pregnant self up from the camping chair and took off into the woods. I crawled under barbed-wire fences, hacked through brambles while using my stomach as a battering ram (sorry, Baby Girl), climbed over logs and rocks. I was very Sacajawea meets GI Jane, but no mountain lion or bobcat was sighted.

I came down out of the mountain and collapsed into my camping chair once again. I was happily typing when I felt something crawling across my arm. A seed tick. Lifting up my shirt, I discovered another. I practically sprinted into the shower and scrubbed until my skin was tickled pink. By the next day, though, I realized my intervention had been too late.

My kneecap to my ankle on my left leg alone was polka-dotted with twenty chiggers. (Tiny mites that burrow under your skin and hibernate until you go wild and scratch them out. Want to move to Tennessee, anyone?) I had chiggers on my shoulder blades, my collar bone, my back, and other sundry places I would rather not describe.

That night I was putting fresh sheets on our bed when the chigger on my stomach started itching. Heaving up my shirt, I started pawing at that sucker like an old bear scratching his back on a tree. I looked down. I gasped. In addition to being able to play Connect-The-Dots with the red bumps spattering my skin, I also had an outy belly button at five months pregnant.

I blame it all on that pig stomach and scrapple.

  • 

This week my husband and I watched a National Geographic video I rented from the library called In the Womb. The first hour was great. My husband and I sat with our heads tilted together like two love birds, and I held one of his hands and affectionately rubbed my stomach with my other. As the narrator would describe what our child was doing right then — how she was stretching and yawning and learning the sound of her mother’s voice (sorry again, Baby Girl) — we would look at each other all googley-eyed and smile.

Thirty minutes later we were led into the fortieth week, and the hearts and flowers narration took an ominous turn. The camera panned in on a woman squatting next to a hospital bed, the hands wrapping her husband’s shaking, while she screamed like she was being ripped in two. And it was no slow birth, either, let me tell you. That camera got all up close and personal with the mom, and I dropped my husband’s hand like a hot potato. I shied away from my laptop screen as if the pain of her labor could somehow radiate through it.

“Is that–is that the umbilical cord?” I asked, pointing at a twisted, purple protrusion that looked twenty feet long.

My husband nodded.

“Is that–” I started to ask and my husband just patted my hand. I thought I was going to be sick.

On camera, the Irish midwife called to the mother in a soft, lilting voice, “You’re almost there, deary. Just one more push.” That midwife then grasped the baby’s head and tugged out the rest of her mottled body like she was just a turnip being plucked from a field.

My husband shut down the computer while I continued staring at the screen, my mouth hanging wide.

Ten minutes later, long after we’d kissed and said goodnight, I tossed back the covers and cried, “But she looked like a cow!”

Putting his hand on my hip, my husband sighed. “I guess we’ll just have to remember that little people can have babies, too.”

Comments

  • Wow … does this stuff really happen to you? The guy in the barber's chair… the chiggers (OMG.. I would be FREAKING OUT), and your wild pursuit of a mountain lion or bobcat… What, Miss Jolina, would you have done if you had FOUND said large kitty? (We had one in our back yard a few weeks ago, watching hubby water the plants. Got some decent pics).

    And I find it interesting you won't eat butter, but you'll eat pig's stomach? What? Scrapple? Peanut-butter rice crispy treats slathered in chocolate… WOW. You go, girl.

    October 10, 2011
  • To echo Melissa, you do have the most amazing stories to tell! Your daughter will have a very memorable life.

    October 10, 2011
  • Oh girl, I couldn't help but have tears in my eyes in laughter as I read about you watching the birthing video. I knew what was coming the second I read “National Geographic” but your imagery was so much fun! Brandon and I attended a labor and deliver class and like you we spent the first half enjoying the images of sweet babies in the womb. In a similar fashion I left the class absolutely horrified and wanting to take it all back, hehehehe.

    You are no larger than I and all went well for me and all will go well for you too, no worries.

    You are an adorable pregnant women! Enjoy it, it goes by too quickly. 🙂

    October 10, 2011
  • Jolina, I don't know how “tall” you are. But, at 4'10″, I totally relate to the part of your story about being pregnant and having folks judge you because they think you're a young person starting a family prematurely.

    But, now I have a new issue. You'll have to contend with this one in the future. My “little one” is now 10 years old and a half inch taller than me…and still growing.

    Wait until you're forced to wear platform shoes and heels high enough to “look like her mom”.

    I share your pain, my friend, I share your pain.

    October 10, 2011
  • This is sooo funny! But I echo Melissa — I would be freaking out too!

    October 11, 2011
  • Yes, Melissa, this stuff really DOES happen to me! I did save up these experiences over the course of…well, about a month. 😉 I don't know what I was going to do if I found that mountain lion, but we lost all four of our puppies while we were in PA, and I wondered if the mountain lion had gotten them. I guess I thought I could check its teeth or something. Chiggers ARE awful! Wiping the sores down with alchohol does help, along with fingernail polish, but that just doesn't seem healthy. Speaking of health, about all that pig stomach and scrapple…I guess when in Rome, you must do like the Romans! 😉

    October 12, 2011
  • Very true, Leah! I think it's in my genes. I often say that if my parents didn't exist, fiction would've had to invent them!

    October 12, 2011
  • Oh, I can't imagine attending a birthing class, Erin; I don't know who between Randy and me will be worse! He just gets really, really quiet while I jabber out of nervousness. I'll letchya know how our first birthing class goes. I really hope they don't make us all sit in a bathtub and hold hands or something.

    October 12, 2011
  • Hey there, Chamois (what a beautiful name!),

    I never thought about the dilemna of being a little momma to a big boy or girl! My husband's a foot taller than I am, so our child might inherit her daddy's genes! How are we supposed to act all tough and in command when we are looking up at our child? I guess those platform shoes could always work! 😉 Thanks for stopping by!

    October 12, 2011
  • Ehhh, Julia, a few chiggers never hurt nobody. You just swipe a lil' fingernail polish on 'em and you're good to go! 😉

    October 12, 2011
  • Chiggers are the worst!! So sorry you had to deal with that. That should have been one of the plagues in biblical times. Stuff would have happened immediately.

    As far as being a pregnant little person, it will work in your favor some day. You will look like you have swallowed a basketball by the end of the pregnancy and everyone will tell you that you are the cutest pregnant person they have ever seen. But you will always look like a young mom. I get a few stares when people ask me how old my oldest is and when I say twelve, I get the “Oops, musta been a shotgun wedding” look. Let 'em talk.

    And I bet you ARE one of the cutest pregnant people I would ever see if I could see you. 🙂

    October 13, 2011
  • I agree, Hallie, that these chiggers could've gotten those people let go far sooner than everything else! 🙂

    I feel like I am already huge, but my midwife said that I barely look pregnant. I thought, “Woman, my belly button sure didn't used to look like this!” But I just smiled and nodded.

    Judging from your pictures I'd say you're quite the pretty young mom yourself. And I WILl let 'em talk! Makes life more interesting anyway! 🙂

    October 14, 2011
  • I was terrified during my first pregnancy and being young, took all the tall tales from other women to heart. Yes, there are horror stories, but there are plenty others that aren't. My mother told me one thing that really made sense, and I carried the thought with me through three pregnancies and births. “If labor and birth is really that awful, women wouldn't do it more than once.”

    And you know, what? She was right. I did it three times, and although I won't lie and say it was all painless and beautiful, the moment you hold that precious child in your hands, you would do it again in a heartbeat. Maybe not right away…but certainly again. There is nothing to compare to feeling that life move inside you, and holding that life in your arms later. Blessings to you on your journey to motherhood.

    October 15, 2011
  • Ugh, chiggers? Really? That's just horrible!
    Oh, and you seriously need a new hairdresser…that's supposed to be a pleasurable experience.

    October 15, 2011
  • Thank you for your encouraging words, Cecilia. I will take THESE to heart and discard the ones that terrify me. I have already loved being pregnant so much during these five months that I think I'm going to have a whole brood of children. Perhaps after I give birth, though, that'll change; I guess we'll find out! 😉

    October 17, 2011
  • Yeah, Cynthia, chiggers are certainly no walk in the park, but now I just have a few dark spots where they were, and that'll even heal over time. I should probably get a new hairdresser, I agree, but this one is just such a character that she's worth all the pain she puts me through! 🙂

    October 17, 2011

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