SHANTE: …how you are doing at twenty-eight weeks but I am going to let you tell us a lot more about it.How did you end up in NICU?
ERICA: ok. Well, our journey started at twenty weeks when I went in to see the doctor, just for a normal routine check-up to find out what we were having and I found out that my cervix was jammed up to one-eighth of what it should be.
SHANTE: what does that mean to deliver her early because usually [indiscernible] go into labor, correct?
ERICA: well, I was having preemie labor which they fortunately have drugs to stop that now but as far as cervix goes, I was put basically upside down in my doctor’s office because they told me they were trying to keep my baby in and then, I was sent to a different hospital to possibly get a seclage but we were too far in doubt to actually receive one. So I was just put on strict bed rest.
SHANTE: how did you [indiscernible] where you still in the hospital or did you just say ‘don’t come in’ or…
ERICA: it was like twenty weeks and three days and I spent the next five weeks like at home, just on strict bed rest and then the next four and half weeks, I spent in the hospital. I went in at twenty…I believe twenty-six weeks, twenty-five weeks, something like that. I thought I had a bladder infection and the doctor checked me and I was dilated to five.
SHANTE: oh! Wow! (Laughs)
ERICA: yeah!
SHANTE: your story has been…everybody’s story has been…you are different but some are very different from other ladies.
ERICA: yeah! When that happens…
SHANTE: I’m going to ask you two questions and the first one is…when that happens [indiscernible] at twenty-eight weeks [indiscernible] are you okay with that? Or do you want to stay in the hospital any longer.
ERICA: mmm…I was at that point since we went in at twenty-five weeks. I was actually okay with twenty-eight weeks. I was just happy that we made it as far as we did and I was allowed to get sterile shots and some of the procedures needed to help her possibly be okay.
SHANTE: how did you feel about her being in the NICU for that moment without been with any of you?
ERICA: umm… I was somewhat frazzled. We haven’t had a preemie baby in our family that I know of ever but I guess being in the hospital for four weeks, I had the time to meet all the doctors in the NICU and even some of the other parents that had babies in there that were…most of them were all bigger than my baby but they had the NICU experience. So I was able to get to know people and I was…I guess comfortable with them taking care of her and they had taken such good care of us so far. I felt like, you know, there’s nothing else I could do but put it all in God’s hands and we’ll just go with it. Be positive.
SHANTE: what was the low moment while you were in the NICU unit?
ERICA: mm…my low moments were definitely those times when your doctors does their rounds, they come in, look at your baby and they say ‘ok, your baby has a heart defect’ or ‘your baby isn’t gaining weight’ or you know all the negatives they bring to you but you have to find your way to push through it and be like ‘ok, she has this but that’s common in preemies, what can we do?’
SHANTE: [indiscernible] her heart defect. How’s her life now?
ERICA: her heart actually…it was the PDA that’s very common in a lot of preemies and even sample term babies and hers actually ended up closing once they gave her medicines. So we didn’t have to have any heart surgeries or anything.
SHANTE: that’s a win. That’s a win.
W; yes
SHANTE: what do you consider one of your most precious memories when you like look at that moment and like that’s your moment; that’s our moment. I actually remember when my level one, actually looked over and smiled at me and he said [indiscernible] he kept smiling at me and I have a picture of it.
ERICA: oh! Yeah! Our nurses were always like that to us. You know, they were like ‘your baby is always so happy’ and she definitely smiles at us and she just…for a preemie baby, she’s so pretty. Like normal preemie babies, like when she first was born, she just didn’t look very… she didn’t look like a baby but for me the aha moment was for me, to be able to hold her for the first time after a week and then she grips your fingers and you are like ‘she’s a baby’.
SHANTE: what is the one major thing you would say if you were to tell parents or like an advice that helped you in this journey and I hope you would. What would you tell them?
ERICA: mmm…I would definitely say to trust your doctors and if you don’t, to…don’t Google. Definitely do not Google. Go reach out to someone else who has been through it and to see what they did and what worked and what didn’t work because if you don’t trust them and then you do Google, you are just going to be freaked out and then your NICU stay is going to be miserable. Well, for us, it was mainly to stay positive. It’s not a positive situation but if you stay positive, it will help you out.
SHANTE: …and I have one last question for you.
ERICA: ok.
SHANTE: what was…you have had a lot of support from the nurses and you sound like you had from the doctors. When you look at your support system, what do you take them as? Like did you have a parent that was super involved or was your spouse super supportive or…
ERICA: mine was actually totally opposite. We had very little support. We have an aunt that lives where we live but everyone else was two miles away but mine was being able to go to the NICU when I wanted to go because my husband worked for us and when I saw those babies whose parents didn’t get to stay and they had to go home and you know its preemie baby and you can smell the smoke on them. They didn’t have the care that they deserve and I felt like I had everything that I could possibly give her and me being here for her and showing the support is all I can give her and is all I can do.
SHANTE: well, do you have any closing remarks? Anything of that sort?
ERICA: I would just definitely to tell other people that are going through it, don’t be afraid. It is a hard situation and some people do lose their babies but if you go into it in the negative aspect, it’s not going to turn out good for you. You are going to stress; you are going to worry and that does not help your baby. Your baby needs love.
SHANTE: thank you so much for sharing with us. We look forward to talking to you soon. That is from parent 2 parent. Y’all have a great afternoon. Bye bye!
ERICA: bye!