My Overdue Pregnancy Journey: Labor, Delivery, and What Helped

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Hello lovelies — you know how much I enjoy sharing stories here. I’ve written about my first pregnancy, a blissful second trimester and a trying third trimester. I also shared the pain of a miscarriage and how I birthed my second daughter through prayer. Now it’s time to tell you about my latest pregnancy journey.

This pregnancy was especially challenging because I was caring for two toddlers while battling morning sickness. Some days I would lie down in my room and leave them to play, only to hear the triumphant noises as they scattered toys and made a mess. I would lie there, exhausted, listening to their shouts of jubilation while planning the next round of cleanup.

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The morning sickness eased when the midwife prescribed something to curb vomiting, but the medicine brought severe headaches and dizziness. It solved one problem and created two others — annoying side effects that made the whole experience more difficult.

Cravings were another memorable part of this pregnancy. I longed for the exact corn and beans porridge my aunt made when we visited her in Cameroon — not a close substitute, but that same pot and taste. I also developed a desperate craving for overcooked Nigerian jollof rice, the kind that had been slightly burnt during preparation. I even found myself almost befriending a random Nigerian woman just to get a plate of the burnt jollof I wanted.

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The beginning of belle

There were small, frustrating moments too — like the time Mr N bought me a hamburger I badly wanted but stopped to run errands before coming home, so by the time I ate it it was cold. The disappointment felt outsized during pregnancy.

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At one point I had to put blogging on hold because juggling everything became overwhelming. Overall, the pregnancy was a mix of intrigue, joy, and frequent frustration.

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As the months passed, my due date approached. I had always delivered before the expected date in previous pregnancies, so I assumed this time would be the same. I was wrong. I packed and repacked my hospital bags, expecting the baby on January 1st or even the night before — but the due date came and went without labor. I grew increasingly irritated, and the constant calls from friends and family asking if the baby had arrived only added to my frustration.

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Me and my humongous tummy by the baby’s crib all set up

To make matters more stressful, I went to the hospital twice and was sent home both times after being diagnosed with false labor. The first visit felt especially familiar — I thought my waters had broken, as happened during my first labor experience — but after hours of tests I was discharged. The second trip was equally deflating; I don’t even remember what prompted it, but it wasn’t real labor either.

Three days after my due date, the baby finally arrived. Giving birth in America was a noticeably different experience from delivering at home, and I plan to share those differences in my next pregnancy diary. For now, I’m relieved and grateful to have the baby safely here.

Until next time, stay sweet!