Thursday, 16 July 2020

Beating Hyperemesis Gravidarum by Prayer


Yes...Prayer DOES work !!!

Please don't stop reading now. I will come to the point very shortly and then tell the rest of my story.

So this is how it went. I have always been a believer, I've always believed there is a God and He has done such a lot of wonderful things in my life that I just know that He has to be there. But when things go wrong and life throws you a curveball,  God is the first person you ask why and God is the first person you push away. And this is what I did and this was a big mistake. 

This I realised when looking back and if you read my previous blog post, this is the only option I had left and this was a miracle option.  One that works, one that lifted us up, one that saved us, saved me, saved my wife and save our baby. What a Wonderful God we have one just has to pray with all you have in you, to pray with every little bit of your soul and hand all over to Him and He will be there for you,  He will provide, He will comfort you, pick you up and make you strong. As I type this I have tears welling up in my eyes, tears of  gratefulness, tears of happiness, tears of sadness for not believing He would always be there for us.

When my wife was just lying there and feeling hopeless and sick, all I could do was pray for her. I would lay my hand on her and pray that the bad nausea would subside and many times I would feel the strength through prayer flowing through me to her. Afterwards I would ask her if she felt better and mostly she would. I am not saying that God takes the nausea away, but He gives us the strength to get through it. Believe in Him, we cannot do this alone.

If you are not a believer, just be quiet and talk to God. Try it, it works. Message me through the contact form on this page if you don't feel comfortable to pray and I will pray for you. Together we can and will beat HG.

Monday, 1 June 2020

The Horror of Hyperemesis Gravidarum


I don't think anybody realizes how hyperemesis gravidarum really affects, and what it does to your family until they go through it. The emotional and physical effect on the mother to be, the emotional effects on the husband and children and, in our case, the toddler, is massive. 

My lovely wife is pregnant for the fourth time with HG and we have one beautiful toddler daughter. To look at my wife and see how she suffers, how her body deteriorates, how she emotionally deteriorates, is so so sad. In only just a couple of days and numerous times of vomiting she ended up in hospital, totally dehydrated and needed to get IV's. She just would not have made it without them. The hardest part was me sitting next to the bed in the hospital and looking at her crying and begging me for a termination as her body and her mind just could not cope anymore. Looking into her eyes and seeing how depressed and lifeless they look broke my heart. That is very hard to see for a husband. All I could do was hold her hand and pray for her because termination was not a possibility as she/we wanted another child very badly.  😢

Here we had a constant feeling of nausea, of sickness, constant vomiting, depression and then PTSD after the previous pregnancies with nausea, giving her anxiety attacks as well.  I then realised the only person that can save her emotionally is me, her husband and I must be strong. Drying my tears, I just had to get her positive, I had to get her through this ordeal. The IV's helped, the doctors and their medical plans helped and slowly but surely, we are getting there. We started off planning and looking at it hour-by-hour, day-by-day, week-by-week to get better. Not a long-term plan but very very short-term plans almost snack-by-snack, medication-by-medication and day-by-day until she could get better. But support of friends, support of prayers, support from myself we finally reached a turning point. Seeing her like that is terrible, seeing our toddler not understanding that mummy can't play, and that mummy can't help her is so hard, hard for both of us and for everybody around us and so much harder for the poor mother. 

Weekly trips to the hospital for extra fluids and a good medication routine helped tremendously. We are now at a point where all vomiting has stopped, and nausea is only now and again. But she still is very weak and cannot do much because she then is tired, and this triggers the nausea again. We are hoping that all will be okay at 12 weeks, but for some mums this carries on until their baby is born. If you are one of those mums, I salute you !!!

If you are a HG survivor, you already are a super mum. 

If this is your first pregnancy remember you have already become a mother, going through a pregnancy with HG makes you a super mum. You're already fighting for your baby, you are already giving up a lot for a baby that has not even been born yet, you are a winner, YOU ARE A WINNER. And if your partner does not support you enough, if he does not understand it, if he does not do as much as possible to help you through this, to support you through this emotionally and physically, in the house and all over, then he has let you down. He needs to be on board, and he needs to give his everything.

My daily routine looks something like this: I try and be up before anybody else is awake that I can get an hour or more work done. Then I make tea for my lovely wife with a rusk, something to settle her stomach. I take a shower and get dressed, and then get my toddler up and dressed and ready for pre-school. I help my wife get ready (if she needs help), make them both breakfast and pack a lunch box for my toddler. I make or pack a snack for my wife and then we are off. My wife I drop off at the hospital for IV's and my toddler for school. I might stop at the supermarket for a couple of things on my way home and then start working. Around 3 hours later I am off again to pick both of them up and get lunch ready. Hopefully our toddler is restful the afternoon that I can put a couple of hours in working again. Then it is evening and a bath and supper needs to be done, a snack for my wife for the night and getting our toddler to bed. I then normally try and get in another couple of hours of work. On weekends I do the laundry and pack out our weeks medication in our containers, all ready for each day. (This includes reminders on my phone to remind my wife when she needs to drink her meds) This continues day in and day out, week in and week out, but we focus on the day that my dear wife will feel better, and we focus on the little miracle growing inside of her 😊

She CANNOT do this alone, husbands and partners, man up, you need to help her as much as possible. She did not get pregnant by herself, getting her and that baby through HG is just as much your responsibility as hers. 


IT'S NOT IN HER HEAD (Click and Read)

Please watch this Sick Film

There are thousands of women suffering from HG all around the world. Many people and unfortunately many medical professionals are not totally clued up on how to treat HG sufferers properly. 

If you read this, please spread the news so that more people can become aware of HG and be kinder to women that need your help.


To all the women out there suffering from HG, to all the people supporting them, I pray for each and every one of you. I honestly believe that only prayer has carried us through this and has given us the strength to get this far. 🙏 Try it, prayer WORKS !!!



Saturday, 16 May 2020

Blog on hold...going through HG

Hi all.

My wife is currently going through a HG pregnancy at the moment. Will continue in a couple of months again.

https://twitter.com/HGmoms/status/1261793646375993352?s=19

Saturday, 2 May 2020

After the Interview


Your interview has passed, you might feel positive, maybe not. You might also have no idea how it went or what to make of the interview. This is where it helps to have a really good recruiter backing you. Mine was awesome and this is what she did...

After the interview I needed to update her how it went, what they asked and how I felt about the interviewers. Would I feel comfortable to work there, would I fit in?She would then call them and hear their side and how they felt, why I was not the right candidate, etc. She would then give me feedback and we would decide on the way forward. When a job offer comes she looked at the contract and provided advice. THIS IS WHAT YOU NEED FROM A RECRUITER!!!

From your side, when you have received the offer and negotiated the contract...okay calm down calm down 😀, you need to get that visa application in. Please do not leave your employer out of the process. Update them with your visa application process and timeline, they want to know when you can start, they are running a business so need to know what is going on on your side.

At this stage you would of have decided if you are going to do the application yourself or use an adviser. Time to start the visa application process. If you want to do it yourself, read here. Read it a few times so that you get it right the first time.
https://www.immigration.govt.nz/new-zealand-visas/apply-for-a-visa

Good luck, we will chat about waiting for your visa and getting ready to leave SA in my next post.


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