Tuesday 5 September 2017

Third Trimester

Welcome to the Third trimester!

My stomach is squirming and nausea is creeping back in… 75grams of sugar in one 300ml clear liquid drink… feels like a weeks worth of sugar in one go for this sugar conscious person.

I cringe as I swallow it down having to place all my instincts of how bad this is for my baby and me and drink it all as instructed.

Welcome to week 28 and to the third trimester… its time for the diabetes screening test!!

It all seems a little surreal to be honest and I feel like I should pat myself on the back or something. Similar feelings of achievement creep in as to when I finish off a complete training block or phase in a build up to a big race.

The only difference is that instead of feeling physically toned and strong as a result of the training, I can feel and literally see my rather large stomach squirming and moving around…

That’s right little one… yah for us we only have 12 weeks to go J

Feeling the baby move has been a bit of a lifesaver for me really. As I struggled my way through the first trimester the one thing that really has helped me get to know my little one has been through its constant movements. I felt its first kick at only 14 weeks and then from then on it has been amazing feeling and seeing it find its strength and coordination and sense of self through movement.

I will never forget sitting down to eat breakfast after a swim session and putting my hands on my tummy to play a little drum like beat on it and getting the biggest and strongest and most visible kick to date into my hand as if to say ‘Bugger off” at that point I thought fair enough you take after your Mum and like your space J

Things that have noticeably changed in the last 2 weeks or as I transitioned from the 2nd trimester to the third are:

o   Almost over night it suddenly became hard or uncomfortable to bend over…meaning my belly is now starting to get in the way of movements I normally take for granted!

o   Putting on shoes is not just an automatic action. I now have to make sure I either sit down or focus on staying balanced and up right and working around my belly to get them on.

o   My puffer jacket suddenly started looking like it would burst if I kept trying to zip it up! So I had to get a new one… not necessarily a bad thing J

o   Sharp stretching pains similar to that of the first trimester have returned in my stomach muscles …sometimes feeling like I have ripped something major!

o   Struggling once again with tiredness or more accurately pure exhaustion and would happily sleep past 8am if given the chance or opportunity.

o   Emotions are revisiting the unbuckling stage again so having to work hard to manage those… yah… not!

o   I have had to stop ignoring or putting off the fact that I now need to start buying things for the baby and getting things ready and prepared!!

o   Training wise, things have had to slow down a bit with the torn ligaments in the ankle, but I am still swimming 3-4 times a week, getting in Pilates sessions and building back into the walking as the Physio rehab allows.  So I have had to slow down a lot earlier then I had hoped or planned, but just trying to roll with where the body is at the best I can.

o   And finally the most obvious is the acceptance that I really do look pregnant now. Gone are the encouraging comments of “Wow your how many months pregnant? Your hardly showing!” To “Oh Wow you have really popped”, “Wow your really big now” and “Oh wow you REALLY look pregnant now” just to go over a couple of the many blunt comments that people now use to greet me with.

(Not always easy to handle some days when your emotions are on a third trimester roller coaster and you’re a person whose identity and career to date as both a professional athlete and Pilates instructor has been about the health wellness and performance of that body!!!)

Lets just say the Glamorous side of been pregnant - if there ever was one - is definitely over!! 

On the positive side of things…


·      The ultra sound scans now show a rather cute looking little human inside…

Saturday 2 September 2017

Trimester Two - Autumn 2017

Trimester Two

Supposedly the best part of pregnancy… and looking back over the last 14 weeks from my 1 week in the 3rd trimester I would agree… Although the good parts all seem to have been condensed into about 4-6 weeks at most… so I have come out the other end feeling a little shortchanged!

Finally the dreaded nausea cleared up around the 4 and ½ to 5-month mark. I had been hanging out since day one of week 13 for it to finish as all the pregnancy week by week readings online said that was its due by date for most and I desperately didn’t want to be one of the unlucky percentage that had it all through the pregnancy!!

Eventually I got sick of actively willing it to pass and at that point almost over night it did and with its disappearance the tiredness started to ease and then  just like that I woke up one day and felt almost my normal self.  I of course had a baby bump and it was growing rather rapidly but it was still in that relatively comfortable stage and I felt like a new person… Nausea free J

Weirdly running and swimming felt a lot more comfortable despite my bump been bigger and I felt really pretty agile, active and energetic and if I didn’t look at my Garmin to see how slow I was running I could almost feel like a fit athlete again!

At 21 weeks with an all clear from the 20-week anatomy scan, Marc and I headed off on a delayed honeymoon and had the best holiday ever!

To be honest it was the first time since I was 21 that I was heading out overseas on an actual holiday and not with my bike or running shoes in toe to a training or racing trip!

I did struggle at first been at a beach and in a beautiful tropical place getting into a bikini or wearing summer clothes when I was still trying to comes to terms wit the massive changes that were happening to my body shape and trying to find some confidence within those changes. But I think been away and taking that time out from the normal stressors of my day to day life really helped me take the time to come to terms with my pregnancy and the changes that I was going through both physically and career wise as well.

I was able to run, walk, swim and play in the water and be so active despite what my body was going through and although it didn’t suddenly turn me into a glowing pregnant mum to be… it just helped me accept the changes I was been confronted with and be happy where I was.

Plus a good suntan always helps one feel happier in them selves in any situation J!!

Once back in NZ, I was still loving and enjoying some decent running, swimming and strength sessions. I was using the swimming to get the HR up and push myself where as the runs were slowing and were harder work and I was enjoying them but was having to take breaks along the way on the longer ones and every now and then walk up the steeper hills so I could catch my breath. Whereas in the pool I was not swimming to far off my normal training times, the running was quite a bit slower and my strength on the hills fading.

I however still loved been out there and running. That is until at 26 weeks 3mins into a 1hr 30min trail run I rolled my ankle and just like that the golden phase of the second trimester was over and so was my running. I of course thought it was fine and kept running for a bit (30mins to be exact) but I was wrong and the result was a very slow, painful hobble back through the bush to the car and three torn ligaments - laterally, medially and in the spring ligament along with some possible medial bone damage.

So there it was I was stopping running at 26 weeks, roughly about 10-12 weeks earlier then I thought I would need too…

Of course it was only a projected 7-8 weeks off running with the extent of the damage and then a return to run program but it didn’t take long to do the calculations in my head and wonder at what state my ever growing belly would be at 34 weeks and would I really be able to get back into much running at that time…

Injuries are tough – I should know I have had my fair share of them, over the years, but What I didn’t realize was at this stage in my pregnancy my running and my exercise was my form of nesting

I was using my running as my outlet for my emotions and anxieties or at least my means of managing them. In amongst the beautiful trails and with the ever familiar movement of my body it was my sense of normality amongst all the changes my body was experiencing. Even though it felt far from my normal running pre pregnancy it was still my home and my sense of relief and where I felt most myself.

I was coping best here while I ran. I was already on some level nervous of how life could change once the baby arrived and how much access to this running home and freedom I would have so I was nesting and doing this as much as I could, and suddenly way to early I couldn’t.

I suddenly felt very left out or left behind from my normal life. I had already dealt with some massive changes with the pregnancy but these runs were my way of dealing with those changes. I was expecting at some point in the pregnancy to have to stop running but the reality of stopping so much earlier then I planned was a big curve ball to deal with and left me feeling quite lost.

So yet again in this pregnancy I have been confronted with some big personal challenges and sometimes this has been pretty tough. But as with in all life’s tough situations we just find a way to get on with things, and so that’s what I have been doing.

The reality is my baby and I are still really healthy and although I may not be as fit as I want to be and I am missing something I love in my life- Life is still really good.





Green Chia Bowls were the Hawaiian lunch staple 


The compulsory post run beach swim!!


 The baby Bump and Me :)

Tuesday 22 August 2017

Trimester One- Summer 2017

Trimester One- Summer 2017

Five pee stops in yip just under 40mins, seriously!!! I guess at least I am deep in the forest, no one is around and I am not stuck out in the streets desperately trying to find a loo, but seriously even the dog is giving a look of utter disbelief and with her constant Pee-mail antics that’s saying something!

I am a Pilates Instructor. I have good Pelvic floor muscles. I seriously felt like I emptied out a full bladder just 5mins ago, how could my bladder feel ridiculously full again!

So this is what its like little one, I guess you have to grow and find some room somewhere but do you think you could just try not to sit so tightly above my bladder some days.  Could you just shift back to where you were yesterday and stay there? That worked pretty well for me…

Okay deep breaths enjoy the view. I remind myself to just take a moment and be thankful I am running at all, for the beautiful place in which I am able to run in, and for my ever patient, four legged training buddy who doesn’t seem to care whether it’s a shuffle day or a racing day. She is up for anything as long as it involves adventure.

Frustrations, fears, panic, anxiety, and pure amazement of the miracle that is happening inside me are amongst the hugely contrasting and complex emotions and feelings that seem to have made up the experience of been pregnant for me so far.

We say it was a surprise that we got pregnant and that is true, we didn’t expect it to happen so easily or so quickly. But to be honest I suspected something was different in my body right from a few days after conception and although I desperately tried to just ignore the signs and feelings and just carry on with training, thinking “no not yet I just need a few more months…a few more races”…each week the signs just kept adding up.

It started with a massive bout of intense completely random stomach cramping as I sat on the couch recovering from a long run session. Then the growing discomfort in my breasts, followed by the random nausea that didn’t follow the patterns of my normal food intolerances, and then the main indicator - the unexplained light headedness and dizziness at the top of the “BIG HILL” in the Hanuas in the midst of my 2&1/2 hr. run. I guess when you’re an athlete you are constantly checking in with your body and monitoring how it is feeling/responding and dealing with things, so its hard not to notice these changes.

 So when my period never showed up and neither did any of the normal premenstrual symptoms I was pretty darn sure even though I had never experienced it before that I was going to get a positive result on the pregnancy test.

I waited 3 days and when there were still no signs of it arriving I got the test from the store and told my Husband Marc matter of factly that I was taking the test and that he needed to be ready for it to be positive.

At that point I am not sure if I was more afraid of been pregnant or of not been pregnant and worrying if I ever could be. But I switched off to the feelings and just did the test. At first it didn’t seem like the second line was going to show and I handed the stick to Marc and said “sorry for the stress it looks like I was wrong.” As I washed my hands though I heard Marc’s voice saying “Ummmmm, wait a minute you may want to re check that … its showed up… the second line that is…”

So much has gone on since the day we found out and so much has changed… Literally…

I have put on 4 KG’s in 4 and ½ months something which I would never let happen mid summer in amongst some of our biggest training and racing blocks, and my once toned stomach has as they say “popped” out.  I had kind of breezed through the first month and a half training hard oblivious or more honestly ignoring what was going on inside of me, but then it hit, subtly at first and then full whammy - the morning sickness and the tiredness.

For the next 2 and ½ months I felt like I had toxic waste sitting bubbly away in my stomach, I just felt so ill and disgusting and so tired. Sure there were good patches but they were just a nice surprise, the norm became dealing with the constant urge to throw up and never been able too.

The hardest thing I found about the first trimester months was the huge conflicts and anxieties that you are dealing with and the fact that you can’t really tell or talk to anyone about it.  All the things I could rely on as an athlete in terms of healthy eating and training and who I am as a person and how much I value honesty and yet you are living with this massive secret to which you have only told a very small select group of need to know people. So when people ask how are you? How’s everything going? How’s training? What’s your next race? You have to carefully side step questions so as to make sure your answer is not a flat out lie. So instead of saying “I feel so disgusting, I want to throw up and I am so tired I just want to be curled up in bed because I am pregnant”. You have to smile and say doing good thanks, still planning my races for the year and yes training is going okay thanks.

You also have this conflict within you of the fact that no matter how much exercise you are able to do and how healthy you eat you are going to put weight on and that needs to be accepted as a healthy and necessary process, but while your not telling anyone and it’s the middle of our summer racing season and your training buddies are all super lean and fit and getting more so the closer there races get, you worry about people thinking you are just not training hard or getting old and lazy. The training world can be an awesome place but it can also be a place of harsh judgments and as a female athlete I am more then awear of this.

The other struggle was that you feel so sick and gross but you are been told by the health professionals that that is a great sign of everything been very healthy and progressing well… Feeling so sick but been told that your healthy just didn’t match up in my brain.

Weird cravings also caused massive conflicts… for example I am a clean eater and a lover of fresh veges and then suddenly one day I woke up and I couldn’t even stand the sight of lettuce or anything green. All I wanted and all I craved were chips, olives, meat and salt. So I had the huge controversy of wanting to be healthy and eat healthy but as much as I tried I just couldn’t even look at the green stuff without feeling violently ill.

Its summer and the weather for the most part is awesome and it’s the time of the year I am normally clocking up as big a cycling miles as I can. Spending hours each day outside soaking up the sun and trucking up the miles and the training hours. But not this summer, this summer I have very little or no interest in riding my bike. All I want to do is run and swim, which is funny. Running I can understand it has always been my first love and I have the best 4 legged training buddy ever, but swimming… swimming was always the thing I struggled the most to get done and here I am choosing to swim over cycling…. Go figure I guess for me that is as weird as feeling so adversely towards green vegetables.

Take into account all this conflict and there is also the reality that although I have been super lucky to have been able to continue to run, swim and do my Pilates sessions and stay very active despite feeling so sick in the first few months, that the training hours that I have been doing are hugely reduced from what I am used to and there is a huge transition from racing as a professional athlete to been pregnant and exercising to stay fit and healthy.

I thankfully was able to work with my coach right through till 14 weeks and for me that made such a massive difference as my coach has become one of best friends despite the fact he lives in Boulder, and to have had to loose that support as well as deal with everything else just would have been too much at once.

Dealing with all this internal conflict and feeling so sick also indelibly brought about quite a bit of anxiety and for me this anxiety as it got closer and closer to the time that we would need to start telling people that I was pregnant built up to a level that I found that I needed to get some support to deal with it. I am not sure if it was the loss of control of my body and the internal changes and conflicts or if it was the fact that once we started telling people it was all becoming very real.

You always hear people talk about that glow that people get when they are pregnant and how awesome and exciting it is, and how bonded you feel to this wee thing growing inside of you and how special it is. Well I kept waiting amongst all the morning sickness and tiredness for this glow to appear and this overwhelming feeling of bondedness and it just wasn’t there… it just wasn’t coming… the only thing I felt that resembled any kind of impending motherhood was that I felt furiously protective of this baby inside of me and who it will become and terrified of anyone hurting it…even though I also felt at times that I felt so disgusting and so anxious about the whole thing that I just wanted to get it out, right there, right then.

I keep reminding myself that I am hugely thankful and that I definitely am. After been an athlete for so many years I know what a huge gift it is to be pregnant. I keep reminding myself about the amazing process of how the baby is growing, day-by-day and week-by-week. But I am also a thinker and a problem solver and used to been able to control if not the immediate world around me at least my body, and so I have to accept that this is a very different time for me and try not to judge myself for not naturally fitting into the role of been pregnant.

Thankfully at 19 weeks now I am feeling so much healthier and more energetic and able to deal with the emotions and fears of the last few months, with a more relaxed and accepting view of where things are at. But wow it really has been and will continue to be quite a process of adaptation… emotionally and physically.

I realize that this is a somewhat raw and I guess different side of pregnancy and it has taken quite a bit of courage to choose to be so open about what I have experienced. As so many athletes are pregnant this year and having babies and from the social media posts it sounds like they absolutely love it and are so excited about it which is awesome. But I also believe that there maybe one or two that like me have waited for that excitement and glow to kick in and it hasn’t yet and who may have really struggled with the changes. I want them to know that they are not alone in those feelings and struggles and that even though it seems hard not to, to try not to judge themselves for finding it challenging.

The core of where I am at is that I am hugely thankful. It is just that we are all different and as I am finding out even something as beautiful and miraculous as been pregnant can also be a very challenging and confronting time.


Out on a long trail run at about 8 weeks Pregnant with Hollie