I had the most uneventful pregnancies. No morning sickness. Period. I had a little water retention/swelling in my ankles with my 2nd pregnancy.
I had no food cravings...I had food aversions. No puking or anything. Just couldn't eat bagels with 1st pregnancy and couldn't eat tacos with my 2nd. Just didn't sit well.
I am a pretty tall person so I didn't even really "show" until I was near 7 months the first time around.
I still carry some baby weight...but keep in mind that my children are 11 months apart...there was no time to lose anything in between.
Labor and delivery for me was swift. From the first contraction I felt to birth was 4 hours with my first and 2.5 hours with my second. And yeah, no drugs. Sure, it's uncomfortable, but you forget real quick how it was when that little one is in your arms.
My Sis-in-law...big baby about pain and stuff...her son they had to induce. She said the day she delivered she was never having another child. The next day..no kidding...she was like, "That wasn't bad. I think we'll have another one in a few years."
Everyone has different reactions to pregnancy. It seems though that the ones who have the hardest time are the ones who are desperate to tell you about it.
I had no food cravings...I had food aversions. No puking or anything. Just couldn't eat bagels with 1st pregnancy and couldn't eat tacos with my 2nd. Just didn't sit well.
I am a pretty tall person so I didn't even really "show" until I was near 7 months the first time around.
I still carry some baby weight...but keep in mind that my children are 11 months apart...there was no time to lose anything in between.
Labor and delivery for me was swift. From the first contraction I felt to birth was 4 hours with my first and 2.5 hours with my second. And yeah, no drugs. Sure, it's uncomfortable, but you forget real quick how it was when that little one is in your arms.
My Sis-in-law...big baby about pain and stuff...her son they had to induce. She said the day she delivered she was never having another child. The next day..no kidding...she was like, "That wasn't bad. I think we'll have another one in a few years."
Everyone has different reactions to pregnancy. It seems though that the ones who have the hardest time are the ones who are desperate to tell you about it.
But the good news is: It's only 9 months and you get a great reward at the end! You're entitled to your feelings and they won't necessarily be the same as someone else's.
Finally, they decided to take DS by c-section (my worst fear through the whole pregnancy by the way). The c-section was no big deal and I forgot all about the labor soon after. In fact, I asked DH in recovery when he wanted to do it all again. He looked shell-shocked.
. My pregnancy was pretty uneventful and not nearly as bad as I imagined it... AND I was 37 years old, DH 40 and we'd gone back and forth for many years about whether we were ready to have a child. I was NOT considered high risk, even being over 35, and was not encouraged to get amnio (I ended up doing it but for our own reasons). All the doctors and nurses that I talked to said they had far less problems with "older" pregnant moms as they tended to take better care of themselves and follow doctor directives much better than young mothers who (to generalize) thought themselves "invincible" - note this was at Duke Hospital which has handles a lot of high risk pregnancies. So I kinda know where you're coming from and would strongly encourage you to wait until you really are ready to do this - you've got many years before your age is really a factor! DS is now 11 and DH and I still FEEL young enough to keep up with him - and frankly do a lot more as a family than most "younger" parents we know!


We also found one to be the perfect number for us.