First came the sciatica, which shot pains down my legs, up my back and sometimes up my bum. Some people enjoy pain in the bum, but not me, bum fun is not my bag. My feet hurt so much I had to buy a pair of those slightly unattractive 'FitFlops' which I wore everyday, even when it pissed it down. My bladder had shrunk to the size of a peanut and I had to go to the toilet around eleven times a night. My bump, wasn't all small neat and manageable, it was huge. I waddled around with the knowledge that this was supposed to be the good bit, dreading the next bit. All these things aside, the most annoying one of all was the fact that I couldn't sleep. I am not talking about a bit of tossing and turning and a disturbed nights sleep. I am talking full on insomnia. Not because I lacked tiredness either, it was because I had restless leg syndrome, which is a weird kind of pain like twitching in your legs and the only way to stop it is to move. Instead of having lovely long nights of sleep, I walked around my tiny living/dining room reading anything from a fiction novel to the Argos catalogue. People kept saying 'Ooo you wait until the baby arrives, then you'll be tired', but I knew I would have more sleep when she arrived. Sometimes I was simply too tired to read anything that made sense, so looking at pictures of baby paraphernalia was all I could manage. I can practically quote you a price on anything from Mothercare, Argos or Ikea catalogues of 2010. It was horrendous. I usually had a bath at three a.m. every morning with this lavender bath soak by Original Source. If I ran out it meant I would never sleep again, so you would quite often find me prowling the isles of the 24 hr Tesco's on the wrong side of midnight. A specialist told me that banana's and tonic water could help, so I stocked up on both and found I couldn't sleep if I didn't have a combination of the three. Within a couple of weeks I was on first name terms with the night staff. I was usually pestering someone to get the bath bubbles out of the bottom of a stock cage as it wasn't even on the shelf yet. I think they would have told anyone else to go away in no uncertain terms, but they made allowances on the basis that I was a) heavily pregnant, b) desperate looking, c) pleading with them and sometimes crying. Not to mention the fact that I am pretty sure they thought I was emotionally unhinged. They were spot on!
I was losing it. I think anyone would have, if they had been in my position. Added to my woes was the fact that I was craving fruit and I don't just mean the odd orange, I was eating about ten oranges a day (two big ones, eight little ones), two apples, two bananas, two limes, a lemon and whatever else I could get my hands on. There were frequent trips to Tesco and the veg market. I was still only getting £65 a week and the the fruit addiction was setting me back a bit. If I had been addicted to orange food, I would have been minted like a new leg of lamb. Unfortunately I was growing a baby with very expensive tastes, that to this day still won't eat anything overly processed. I had a decision to make, it was either feed myself and my baby healthy food or pay the T.V. license and water bill. Needless to say, I ran up a big bill with the water board and didn't have a T.V. I did get really fat, some how, from fruit! Judas of a body! I am not so sure if it was a side affect of my circumstances or whether it was just raging hormones, but unbeknown to me, I had turned into a complete and utter bitch. I ripped heads off left right and centre, relatively unprovoked most of the time. I was like a time bomb waiting to go off. Heaven forbid someone gave me the wrong change or brushed past me too quickly. I had grown men reduced to tears and begging for mercy on a daily basis. Everything stressed me out and made me angry, but my sister, who was amazing at dealing with me, maintained that I would be back to my old self when my baby arrived. I had to improve, or I wouldn't have any family left, let alone friends. Even I hated myself.
So I sleeplessly raged, waddled and widdled through the remainder of my pregnancy and only gained a few little stretch marks here and there... until I went overdue. Then, all of a sudden, it looked like a bear had attacked my guts with freshly sharpened claws and to add insult to injury I started to get pregnancy rash. The rash made me look like I had been stuffed into a bee hive for a couple of hours with some very angry bees. I literally wanted to peel my skin off. It was so uncomfortable, but no creams seemed to help. The best thing I found to ease it just a little, was to lie on my bed with a cold wet towel over me. I had of course tried other things, for example, I read on the Internet that it's good to have an oatmeal bath. So I went to my best friends house and she ran me a bath, but she didn't have oatmeal, so we used Ready Brek. It was the strangest bath I have ever had. After that made no difference but proved entertaining, my friend decided we should try putting some Manuka honey on the particularly sore area which was my legs. She spread the honey on with a spoon and then wrapped my legs in cling film. It looked a bit strange but did sooth it a bit. Later on, my friend's boyfriend dropped me off at home, whilst explaining to me how early he had to get up in the morning and how tired he was. He drove away and I stood outside my flat, in the dark, looking for my keys. Anyone who knows me, knows I am notorious for losing my keys (and phone, especially the phone). I always think I have lost them, but then they always seem to be in the bottom of my over sized, Mary Poppins style, very disorganised handbag. So there I was, legs smothered in honey and wrapped in cling film, locked out, cold and desperate for the toilet. I didn't feel I could call my friends boyfriend because he was so tired, so I rang my sister who was babysitting and had my spare key and asked her to save my bacon instead. As always she came to my rescue without complaint and let me in. I must say, that was one of the most bazaar evenings I have ever had (without being drunk).
As you can probably gather, I didn't get on very well with pregnancy and I just wanted it over. I was huge by the time that day came and had apparently earned myself the nick name 'big fat Ruth' (which a friend let slip not long ago!) Then I tried to give birth, which was a disaster, but that's another story.....