Northern Voice is a small Vancouver conference on blogging, and I’m on the organizing committee. We’re gearing up for the 2007 conference, which we were planning on holding in February, but we’ve run into some issues with the venue. So we’ve come up with a survey to ask people who were thinking of attending NV 2007 for opinions on the various options we have — it’s at NV 2007 Dates and Venue Survey. Closing date is a week from today, that’s September 13th. The survey is short and shouldn’t take more than a couple of minutes to fill in. Thanks!
I found a couple of things very useful for my second pregnancy that I didn’t discover for my first — and thought I should blog them in case they’re useful to anybody else. I’m sure any readers with other ideas will add them — I’ll do another post in a bit about some early babyhood stuff that I found useful.
The biggest problems I had with the second pregnancy were simply due to the size of the belly. I can highly recommend doing Pilates, or yoga, or finding some other way of getting somebody to help you figure out how to sit, stand, and walk as the belly grows. I stuck out in front which made the potential for lower back pain (which I had for my first, when I didn’t do Pilates) worse than for those women for whom the weight is more evenly distributed. I was in a coffee shop in the last couple of weeks and chatted to the barista about this; she thought sticking out in front and not being noticeably pregnant from behind was good until I pointed out it makes doing up your shoes difficult. You do get somewhat adept at twisting your legs around so you can get at your feet sideways — I found a long shoehorn was very useful at this stage.
A body pillow was useful for sleeping as you are meant to sleep only on your side, and the ligaments in your hips start to stretch and hurt, so you need all the support you can get. You can get by with lots of pillows, but a body pillow is easier to deal with. I didn’t bother with one of those fancy shaped body pillows, the basic straight version did just fine and was a lot less expensive. I also found regular massages from a registered massage therapist (make sure they have pregnancy pillows for support and have experience in prenatal massage) to be well worth the money — all those muscles that are being stretched and overloaded in unfamiliar ways really enjoyed being put back into place.
And of course you want to get as much done as possible before the baby arrives, while getting as much sleep as possible. No matter how tired you are before the baby arrives, and how little energy you have, you will be more tired and have less energy afterwards! Mind you, if you live anywhere like Vancouver and need any renovations done, you won’t have much choice in when things get done. They will get done when the contractor can fit them in, if you can find a contractor to do anything. And the rest will get done when you have some energy. Having a baby is a good lesson in what doesn’t need to be done.