The Friday before T-giving, James Bond and I went to a social function and had a great time. It was almost like a date! Saturday morning I felt...not so good. Not pregnancy sick, sick sick. Lying in the bed wishing you were dead sick. You know what I mean. I kept down a cup of tea and piece of dry toast (by sheer force of will, let me assure you) and Sunday was the same story (minus keeping down the piece of toast). It was bad. By Sunday evening, I knew I was dehydrated and it wasn't getting better. I am not a fan of going to the hospital, but James Bond wasn't delirious with hunger and germs and made me go to the hospital. Something about the baby and my health, blah, blah, blah. We woke poor Indy up around 11pm (he was more delirious than I was-the boy needs his sleep) and headed over to Sankt Elisabeth Krankenhaus (St. Elizabeth Hospital) and I was immediately admitted. They did an ultrasound and the baby was fine, but wasn't moving. This freaked me out and I asked the doctor why. She said simply "Er schläft" (He's sleeping). I told her (irrationally in retrospect) to wake him up. She clearly thought I was mad, but tapped my stomach a few times with the u/s wand and then I laughed because he head started shaking back and forth and his little hands were waving around and I had the image of Karl, from the movie UP. The doctor clearly thought I was insane and began an IV push immediately.
Our insurance pays for a double room, but I opted to go with a private room for an extra 50 Euro a night (I was on the maternity ward and did not want to be in a room with a newborn). This was a good call. The room was large and crazy, crazy, crazy clean with a very posh bathroom. I got loads of fluids and anti-nausea medication, which, turns out, I am allergic to. I was literally itching from the inside. Good times! The only other things I could take while pregnant I have known allergies to (yeah, I'm a bundle of fun), so I just lay there miserable. The nurse came back a while later and said she had something that would help and handed me a glass shot glass (none of those disposable paper cups here-that's wasteful) and asked if we used "ho-MAYO-puh-teek" in America. Um, what was that again? I had no idea what she was talking about but I looked down in the little shot glass and saw about 8 round white balls and it suddenly dawned on me what it was. I looked up in surprise and said "Homeopathic! Yes, of course, we have homeopathic medications in America." What I didn't say though was "but they don't give them out in hospitals."
The next morning my OB came in and checked on the baby (still good) and me (still not good-it was really bad food poisoning, nothing more dangerous), took more blood and put me on a diet of zwieback and mushroom broth. Yum. The nurse asked me if we had zwieback in America and laughed when I told her that we did, but generally only gave it to toddlers who were teething. I was there for 2 more nights on fluids and mushroom broth but I insisted that I was going home on Wednesday. No way was I missing Thanksgiving. The OB told me I should stay and "rest" another day or two, but I said absolutely not. Here are some of the highlights of happenings and things I learned while there:
*The nurses work 6 hours shifts.
*Their English is far superior to my German, but some of the things they said made me LOL. One nurse (whose English was not very good) was asking me if I'd had any diarrhea or vomiting (or womitting as she called it), but she didn't know the word for diarrhea, so she put her hand on her bum and made a weird motion and asked if I had had "big toilet." Thankfully, no, but the way she mimed and phrased it gave me a good chuckle. Another nurse knew the term for diarrhea, but not vomiting, so she asked if I'd had the mouth diarrhea. I almost died at the mental image. Ick!
*For breakfast on the maternity ward, they have a buffet. I was only allowed there on my last morning, but thought it was such an odd thing.
*Lunch is the big meal of the day. My last night there, they finally decided I could eat and dinner (light fare) consisted of 3 slices of cheese and 2 pieces of bread. I almost cried. I was so hungry I called James Bond and told him he had to bring me some food or I was going to starve to death.
*German women stay 5-7 days in the hospital after having the baby. The nurses wait on them hand and foot. I know why they don't want to go home.
*The zwieback they serve tastes like it's made from brioche bread and was surprisingly good. I understand why they laughed when I said we don't generally eat it in America.
This is the hospital where I will give birth and while being sick SUCKED, it was nice to get to know the staff at the hospital and see how things will work.
I'm hoping we can spend the next few months outside of the hospital only seeing the OB for normal appointments. AND that I never, ever run across what made me sick in the first place.











