Hi,
well, I have a 5 year old and a 3 year old, who are both hea\althy, so in that sense it went well! I too had different pregnancies.
I lost hypo awareness as well between about 6 weeks and 20 weeks, but as Isay, I was trying so hard to keep my BG incheck that I was running lowish all the time. I really feel my BG dropping, so when I was keeping it in teh 4s, there wasn't far to drop. i also stopped driving for a bit.
I ended up with pre eclamsia inmy 1st pregnancy, although they did not know that at the time as they thought I was damaging my kidneys. i sweeled up like a water balloon, and had an emergency c section at 36 weeks. My daughter was 5 lb 11. It was only then, as my kidney function returned to normal that they confirmed it had been pre eclamsia. To be honest, it didn't make any difference to teh treatment I received, but it was so nice to see thos eresults improve!
2Nd round, lost hypo awareness again, but only needed an ambulance once this time
Other than, text book diabetic pregnancy. As I had already had a c scetion, I really wanted to "try and do it naturally" right up until the midwife told me that I would not be walking around teh ward, listening to whale music andusing a birthing ball, but strapped to a minitored, ona bed, witha slidiing scale in my arm...so I opted for an elective section..best decision I made. My son was 8lb 13 at 39 weeks. A bit heavy, but not as heavy as they thought he was going to be.
Please, do not get scared reading this. At least now you are aware what may happen, and that there is no normal..even when the patient is teh same, the treatment is teh same, there is no normal!
i don't know whether the midwife was basically scaring me into choosing a c section. I was gutted at the time, but actually, it was a lovely expereince. they refused to discuss delivery with me until the very end of pregnancy, so you may not be able to have this conversation, but it is worth trying, especially now, in teh early days, so, if you are like I was, you have time to accept what could happen.
My only iother advice...make friends with someone who lives near the hospital and arrange that you can park in their driveway..you will spend quite a lot of time there over the next 36 weeks. In my experience, I also learn't very quickly that community midwife team were not very helpful, indeed, in my second pregnancy, I did not see them at all, until after my son arrived, when they were very good at looking after him. This is in no way a complaint about them, but they assumed that I was being looked after by the hospital...which I was. It made me a bit sad that teh hospital never really talked about the baby...except to measure them and do a few scans. It also meant that I missed teh NHS antenatal classess.