logo
I Felt Terrified To Raise A Baby Girl In This World. Then, 5 Words From My OB-GYN Gave Me Hope.

I Felt Terrified To Raise A Baby Girl In This World. Then, 5 Words From My OB-GYN Gave Me Hope.

Yahoo09-07-2025
At 38 years old, after a breakup, a move and a series of dating app experiences that served only to provide my comedian friend with material for an entire year of stand-up shows, I decided to pursue single parenthood.
For me, motherhood had always been a dream, both in that it's been a lifelong desire and seemed as unattainable as most dreams do. Some of this stemmed from societal assumptions of parenthood; a two-parent household that is preceded by dates wildly more successful than any I'd ever been on, followed by marriage, and, even in this era of delayed pregnancy and scientific breakthroughs in assisted reproduction, the loud ticking of a biological clock.
And, more pressingly and personally: Did I deserve the responsibility, joys, and privileges of motherhood? A lifetime of often-crushing people-pleasing and imposter syndrome, coupled with the prospect of an administration that almost immediately began to roll back access to reproductive healthcare and instituted critical threats to human rights, plagued my first trimester even more than my newly fluctuating hormones.
Compared to so many others, I was lucky. It was an easy subway ride to the fertility clinic, and I snagged early morning appointments that barely interfered with work. I sent emails from the beautifully appointed waiting room of the Midtown office, and joked with the nurses who had the misfortune of taking my blood for the overwhelming battery of tests required for any fertility journey.
Sometimes, I walked the three miles home from the clinic, stopping for a toasted bagel with vegan cream cheese from my favorite bodega and handing out information on New York's Prop 1 ballot initiative and voter registration packets along the way.
And, though I hadn't dared to let myself believe it would, could work, the third pregnancy test flashed positive a month before the election. For a month, I carried this perfect, barely-real secret with me as I sat in work meetings lobbying for reproductive medicine access, as I canvassed and phone-banked for the full slate of Democratic candidates, as I hoped for personal and national health and success, as I tried to suppress the fears that prevented me from fully celebrating, from hoping, from buying maternity clothing or Harris-Waltz merch.
And then. Well, you know most of what happened next. Many of us mourned as a nation while others, unfettered by the president's fear-mongering, themselves spread a shocking amount of xenophobia, misogyny and racism.
And on a personal level, I stayed at home rather than go on a work trip to Florida, which had just instituted a six-week abortion ban under Ron DeSantis' campaigns of intimidation and misinformation. At six weeks pregnant, I knew that the odds of early miscarriage were still high, and that access to care would mean a now-illegal abortion.
Those weeks, I woke up, worked, and went to bed nauseous from pregnancy ― and from my terror for my immigrant family and friends, seeing the gleefully entitled hostility among the anti-abortion protestors at the clinic where I had volunteered for years, and now, increasingly aware of my precarious privilege as a pregnant person in New York, where, at the very least, access to and protections for abortion were protected.
And I cried, curled up around the vague idea of this early pregnancy, wondering what I had done and what it would mean to bring a human into this country and world.
At my 12-week appointment, when I had just been told I was having a girl and my phone was blowing up with a terrifying series of executive orders and nominations, I headed to my second OB-GYN appointment swamped by all of that fear, guilt, and the all-encompassing nausea of the wildly misnamed 'morning sickness.'
Stripped to the waist and trying to pretend that I recognized and was moved by the flickering blob of static on the ultrasound screen, I expressed the easiest of my worries, that I wasn't providing my growing fetus with enough (or any) nutrients, as the only thing I was able to keep down was depressingly dry toast and the occasional cup of tea.
As she wiped the goo from the ultrasound wand, my OB-GYN said five words that have since become a mantra and a sea change: 'Don't worry; she'll take what she needs.'
She left the room as I lay on the table, absorbing the surprising power of that sentence. She'll take what she needs: a reassurance, but also a wish, that this baby girl, born into a terrifying nightmare of government-sanctioned misogyny, dehumanization of immigrants and minorities, cuts to social services, attacks on trans people, will somehow both recognize and demand her rights. Born to a parent who has always struggled with naming her needs, let alone taking what she needs, this being will nevertheless ensure that her own needs are met, even in her earliest moments in utero.
And so she has; as the terror of this administration has grown, systematically and purposefully, in tandem alongside the joys and thrills of pregnancy, she has siphoned the iron from my blood to aid in her own development, shoved my internal organs into disarray to make space for her growing body, sent me to the pharmacy for Unisom, ginger tea, Tums, and a dizzying array of vitamins as she has jutted and carved her way into my digestive, endocrine, cardiac, other systems I never paid attention to until she claimed them for her own.
And I have delighted in each of these uncomfortable, incredible reminders that my baby girl is, even now, asserting herself.
'She'll take what she needs' has echoed in my mind as a hope and a promise as my due date approaches — you'll take what you need, and I'll learn from you. I rub my belly, jabbed now with elbows and heels and other sharp little body parts demanding room and attention, and make my wish: You'll tell me what you need, and I will keep fighting to make it available for you. We'll take what we need, and we'll make sure that others can, too.
Do you have a compelling personal story you'd like to see published on HuffPost? Find out what we're looking for here and send us a pitch at pitch@huffpost.com.
These Are The States That Will Ignore Your Final Wishes Just Because You're Pregnant
People See Me And Think I'm Pregnant. They're Shocked When I Tell Them The Heartbreaking Truth.
When I Got Pregnant Again After 3 Miscarriages, My Husband Surprised Me With A Terrifying Gift
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Veteran who served in Middle Eastern wars launches campaign against Sen. Susan Collins
Veteran who served in Middle Eastern wars launches campaign against Sen. Susan Collins

Fox News

time31 minutes ago

  • Fox News

Veteran who served in Middle Eastern wars launches campaign against Sen. Susan Collins

Print Close By Pilar Arias Published August 19, 2025 More than a year before voters take to the polls, U.S. Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, has a new challenger. Early Tuesday morning, Graham Platner entered the race as a Democrat. The combat veteran served in the U.S. Army and Marine Corps during the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, according to his online biography, and is now the owner-operator of Waukeag Neck Oyster Co. His campaign Facebook page says he is a "friend of the working Mainer, foe of the oligarchy." He already has more than a dozen town halls scheduled across the New England state. "[E]very where I've gone, it seems like the fabric of what holds us together is being ripped apart by billionaires and corrupt politicians," Platner, 40, said in a campaign launch video. SENATE DEMOCRATS ARE FEVERISHLY RECRUITING TOP CANDIDATES TO WIN BACK MAJORITY IN 2026 MIDTERMS "Profiting off of destroying our environment, driving our families into poverty and crushing the middle class," he said. Platner went on to say he supports universal healthcare, aiding veterans and stopping funding for foreign wars. The video was produced by Morris Katz, a top adviser to the Democratic nominee for New York City mayor, Zohran Mamdani, according to the New York Times. "Being a Bernie Bro and Kamala Harris donor is a profile to appeal to Portland progressives, not centrist and conservative voters in rural Maine," Jason Savage, the executive director of the Maine Republican Party said, according to the Times. TRUMP ALLY MIKE COLLINS LAUNCH KEY BATTLEGROUND STATE BID TO FLIP DEMOCRAT-HELD SENATE SEAT Platner, a political newcomer, told Politico that he also brought on Joe Cavello, a former senior aide to Sen. John Fetterman, D-Penn., to help with his campaign. "To call me a liberal, I think is fairly amusing. I mean, I'm a competitive pistol shooter. That's what I do on the weekends," he told the media outlet. "I'm a firearms instructor. I spent multiple years, obviously, in the service utilizing firearms. I also grew up in rural Maine, where guns are a part of our existence." The Democratic challenger list against Collins is growing, and reports say those already in office are trying to tap Janet Mills, the state's 77-year-old Democratic governor, for the seat. Republicans currently control the majority of the Senate by a 53-47 margin. Democrats would need to flip four seats in the 2026 midterm elections to take the majority. CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP A spokesperson for Collins told Fox News Digital that Platner is "just another progressive entering the race." Print Close URL

Scoop: How Dems are preparing to torch a megadonor fighting CA redistricting
Scoop: How Dems are preparing to torch a megadonor fighting CA redistricting

Politico

time42 minutes ago

  • Politico

Scoop: How Dems are preparing to torch a megadonor fighting CA redistricting

Presented by MUNGER GAMES — Charles Munger Jr., the megadonor backing Republicans' effort to block Democrats from redrawing California's congressional map, has primarily been known to the public as the bow-tie-wearing champion of good-government causes like independent redistricting and legislative transparency. But there's a lesser-known aspect of Munger's financial giving that Democrats are preparing to torch him on. Munger, a Palo Alto physicist, has contributed more than $158,000 to socially conservative causes over the last 25 years, according to federal tax filings — including to organizations that oppose abortion rights and promote so-called crisis pregnancy centers, and to Christian groups whose leaders have opposed LGBTQ+ rights. Munger's spending, via his charitable nonprofit, is providing fodder to abortion-rights advocates and LGBTQ+ leaders in their effort to build support for Gov. Gavin Newsom's push to gerrymander California's congressional districts in favor of Democrats — a gambit that Newsom says will neutralize President Donald Trump's effort to nab five new Republican House seats in Texas. 'These are pretty terrible donations. He has given to organizations that have tried to strip away rights and demonize members of our community,' said Tom Temprano, managing director of Equality California, the state's largest LGBTQ+ advocacy group. Amy Thoma Tan, a spokesperson for Munger and the campaign opposed to the redistricting effort, said Munger's charitable foundation 'supports a wide variety of causes, particularly those who serve children and families who need extra support.' She added, 'But this campaign is about defending the rights of the voters of California to choose their politicians, not the other way around — anything else is a distraction.' Democratic forces want to make Munger — the wealthy son of Warren Buffett's longtime business partner — a central foil, along with Trump, as they try to convince Democratic voters to turn out for a Nov. 4 special election. Early polling suggests the proposal could be an uphill fight for the party. Munger's advisers say he has vowed to spend heavily to defend the state's independent redistricting commission, a system that he spent $12 million to expand through a successful 2010 ballot measure that gave it the authority to draw congressional boundaries. Good-government reforms have dominated much of Munger's civic spending. But IRS filings for his CNC Foundation, which he's funded with Berkshire Hathaway stock, outline a host of conservative causes. He gave: Jodi Hicks, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood Affiliates of California, is among those highlighting Munger's support of conservative causes. She has been at the forefront of Democrats' redistricting push and spoke at a news conference alongside Newsom last week. 'His contributions to those organizations speak to his values and the agenda he supports — an extreme agenda that hurts LGBTQ people, women and people of color,' Hicks said in a statement. GOOD MORNING. Happy Tuesday. Thanks for waking up with Playbook. Like what you're reading? Sign up to get California Playbook in your inbox, and forward it to a friend. You can also text us at ‪916-562-0685‬‪ — save it as 'CA Playbook' in your contacts. Or drop us a line at dgardiner@ and bjones@ or on X — @DustinGardiner and @jonesblakej. WHERE'S GAVIN? Nothing official announced. BIG NEWS: On Wednesday, Aug. 27, POLITICO is hosting its inaugural California policy summit. At The California Agenda, some of the state's most prominent political figures including Sen. Alex Padilla, Katie Porter and Xavier Becerra will share the stage with influential voices in tech, energy, housing and other areas to chart the path forward for a state at the forefront of critical policy debates. The live and streamed event is free, but advanced registration is required. Request an invite here. CAMPAIGN YEAR(S) THIRD TIME ISN'T THE CHARM — Democrat Will Rollins won't make a third run for Congress despite a proposed redrawn map that could make it easier for him to win a seat representing the Palm Springs area. Rollins called supporters Sunday night to share that he decided not to run due to the financial strain of running two back-to-back campaigns, according to a source familiar with his thinking who was granted anonymity to speak candidly. Late last week, Rollins briefly considered vying for the new 48th district, a 'lean Democratic' seat that combines a portion of deep-blue Palm Springs with rural parts of eastern San Diego and Riverside counties. Democrats drew the district to target incumbent Republican Rep. Darrell Issa, and Democrat Ammar Campa-Najjar is weighing a rematch against him. Rollins, an attorney and LGBTQ+ activist, previously ran against Republican incumbent Rep. Ken Calvert — who would effectively be drawn out of his red-leaning Inland Empire seat under Democrats' proposed map. STATE CAPITOL FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: EAT YOUR HEART OUT — Jesse Gabriel's push to make California healthy again is making headway in the Legislature as amendments to his Assembly bill that would define what foods are considered ultraprocessed have caused some of its toughest critics to come around. 'We heard their concerns and we negotiated amendments and language,' Gabriel told POLITICO. 'I think that speaks to the importance of the process and the fact that we wanted to tighten and sharpen those definitions to make sure that we weren't inadvertently sweeping in healthy foods that we want kids to eat.' Key agricultural groups like the California Fresh Fruit Association that previously opposed AB 1264 due to concerns that the bill's definitions were too broad are now backing the legislation. Several other groups including the Western Growers Association have shifted their positions to neutral. The bill is in the Senate Appropriations Committee. 'Taking a step back, we really feel like California has helped to change the national conversation around food safety and around school nutrition,' Gabriel said. — Juliann Ventura REPUBLICANLAND ON THE BOOKS — Former California Republican Party Chair Jessica Millan Patterson's anti-redistricting campaign committee, which Playbook first reported on, has filed initial paperwork. It's called 'Stop Sacramento's Power Grab.' BALLOT COUNTER — Republican Assemblymember Carl DeMaio's political fundraising group Reform California filed an initiative that would bar state legislators who approve mid-decade redistricting efforts from serving in Congress for 10 years after. Big-money players on the Republican side are planning to focus instead on fighting the redistricting measure, but the group's ballot initiative draws attention to the personal stake that state legislators have in the redistricting wars. As POLITICO reported Friday, the redrawn maps that Senate leader Mike McGuire has endorsed would allow him to run for Congress when he terms out next year without waiting for Rep. Mike Thompson — whose seat he's said to be eyeing — to retire. McGuire is one in a long line of congressional aspirants in the Legislature, including state Sen. Scott Wiener, Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas and Assemblymember Jasmeet Bains, who could end up running under the new lines, as Playbook previously reported. The partisan breakdown of Wiener's would-be 11th district wouldn't change under the map, while Rivas' would-be 18th district would grow slightly more Republican. Bains' challenge against frontline Republican Rep. David Valadao would become easier by design, though Bains signaled to KCRA that she wouldn't support the redraw. GAZA CRISIS FIRST IN PLAYBOOK: HUMANITARIAN AID — The California Legislative Jewish Caucus Leadership Foundation is donating $25,000 to groups that provide humanitarian aid to Palestinians in Gaza. The contributions will go to IsraAID, chef José Andrés' nonprofit World Central Kitchen and Clean Shelter. They'll serve as a recognition of the wartime conditions in Gaza by the state Capitol's Jewish Caucus, members of which have become increasingly critical of how Palestinian civilians are being treated while reaffirming calls for Hamas to release its hostages. 'As proud Jews, we will continue to stand up for our people and push back against those who spread lies and propagate hate,' Gabriel and fellow Jewish Caucus co-chair Scott Wiener said in a statement. 'At the same time, Jewish tradition teaches that all life is sacred, and our hearts break for the innocent Palestinians, including so many children, killed in this devastating war and lacking food. In such moments, Jewish tradition calls on us to act.' CLIMATE AND ENERGY BACK TO SCHOOL — From meeting with Formula One officials about fossil fuel-free cars in the United Kingdom to touring recycling facilities in Canada, legislators kept busy over summer recess. As the Legislature reconvenes for a final sprint, read more about the trips and their takeaways in last night's California Climate. TOP TALKERS RETHINK THE RECALL — District 4 voters in San Francisco should reject the recall for Supervisor Joel Engardio, who's faced some backlash following the permanent closure of part of the Great Highway, and instead focus on 'broader structural changes' like charter reform, The San Francisco Chronicle's Editorial Board writes. A recall for Engardio, which is set for Sept. 16, is 'destined to have a chilling effect on bold moves' unless there's wider reform, the board says. SOUNDING THE ALARM — Officials in Anaheim issued a warning following immigration raids over the weekend that they described as 'the most significant and disruptive federal enforcement' the city has seen in weeks, The Los Angeles Times reports. Targeted enforcement in Anaheim has ratcheted up since mid-July when a federal judge issued a temporary restraining order blocking federal agents from using racial profiling to carry out arrests, officials said. AROUND THE STATE — City workers have begun to clear one of San Jose's most prominent and longest-running homeless camps amid pushback from advocates and encampment dwellers to postpone the sweep. (The Mercury News) — Rep. Dave Min is facing backlash for a since-deleted social media post following the recent meeting between Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin. (The Orange County Register) — The Trump administration is quietly taking steps to circumvent federal laws in order to shield its multibillion-dollar deal to become the biggest stakeholder in a Las Vegas-based company operating the nation's only rare earths mine in California. (POLITICO) Compiled by Juliann Ventura PLAYBOOKERS SPOTTED: ON THE DIAMOND — State lawmakers competed in the annual NorCal vs. SoCal legislative softball game Monday evening at Sutter Health Park, the home of the River Cats and Athletics. NorCal took the contest 7-6, to a tipster's dismay. WELCOME TO THE WORLD — Virginia Boney Moore, senior manager for public policy at Amazon and a Trump White House and NSC alum, and Andrew Moore, chief of staff to Eric Schmidt and a State Dept. alum, on Aug. 5 welcomed Margaret Roberts Moore, who came in at 6 lbs. 13 oz and 19 inches. Pic ... Another pic PEOPLE MOVES — The Western States Petroleum Association Board of Directors promoted Jodie Muller from COO to president and CEO of the oil industry group. Muller will on Sept. 1 succeed Catherine Reheis-Boyd, who will remain in an advisory role through the end of the year to aid with the leadership transition. — Rachel Tochterman is now comms director in the office of state Sen. Tom Umberg. She previously served as comms director for Rep. Ami Bera and as deputy chief of staff for former Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg. Playbook has not yet inquired what Tochterman thinks of Umberg bringing back his beard for the end of the legislative year. — H. James Abe has joined Buchalter as an intellectual property shareholder in their Los Angeles office. He was previously a partner at Alston and Bird. BIRTHDAYS — Symphoni Barbee, legislative advocate for Planned Parenthood Affiliates of California … Daniel McGreevy, comms director for Assemblymember Mia Bonta … Julius Genachowski of the Carlyle Group … Farhad Manjoo ... Meta's Eva Guidarini … Rob Damschen … Ari Johnson … BELATED B-DAY WISHES — (was Monday): Barbara Bluhm-Kaul ... Susan G. Golding ... Roger Zakheim ... (was Sunday): Sabrina Schaeffer … Andrew Pratt … Mark Molaro … (was Friday): Joshua Groban IN MEMORIAM — Former California Building Trades Council president Andrew Meredith has passed away, the labor group announced Monday. Meredith led the trades from 2021 to 2023, becoming one of the state labor movement's most recognizable voices, before moving onto a labor relations job in the offshore wind industry. WANT A SHOUT-OUT FEATURED? — Send us a birthday, career move or another special occasion to include in POLITICO's California Playbook. You can now submit a shout-out using this Google form.

Democratic Texas lawmaker spent night on state House floor after refusing GOP demand for law enforcement escort
Democratic Texas lawmaker spent night on state House floor after refusing GOP demand for law enforcement escort

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Democratic Texas lawmaker spent night on state House floor after refusing GOP demand for law enforcement escort

Democratic Texas state Rep. Nicole Collier spent the night on the Texas House floor in protest after refusing a Republican demand to be placed under the watch of the state Department of Public Safety. When Texas House Democrats returned to the Capitol in Austin on Monday, after having fled the state earlier this month in order to prevent a vote on a controversial Republican redistricting plan, House Speaker Dustin Burrows put constraints on their movements. Burrows announced that the Democrats could only leave the House floor if they received written permission and agreed to be under law enforcement escort until the chamber reconvenes on Wednesday morning. The Democrats who skipped out on previous attempts to meet quorum for a special session to approve the redrawn congressional maps will have an around-the-clock DPS escort to ensure their presence when the House convenes Wednesday, a legislative aide told CNN. Democrats had fled to blue states — including Illinois, New York and Massachusetts — as they faced civil arrest warrants pushed by GOP officials in Texas to force them back into the House chamber. The majority of the Democrats complied with the law enforcement escort, showing reporters what they called 'permission slips' they received to leave the House floor and pointing to the officers escorting them around the Capitol. But Collier refused to enter into that agreement and has been confined to the House floor since returning. She can only leave the floor to return to her office under the watch of a law enforcement officer, an aide said, and cannot leave the state Capitol unless she agrees to outside supervision. State Reps. Gene Wu and Vince Perez plan to stay on the House floor with her overnight, the aide said. Wu posted a photo on X detailing some of their snacks for the long stretch ahead - dried peaches, freeze dried grapes, popcorn and ramen. 'My constituents sent me to Austin to protect their voices and rights,' said Collier. 'I refuse to sign away my dignity as a duly elected representative just so Republicans can control my movements and monitor me with police escorts. My community is majority-minority, and they expect me to stand up for their representation. When I press that button to vote, I know these maps will harm my constituents — I won't just go along quietly with their intimidation or their discrimination.' Texas Democrat Beto O'Rourke celebrated Collier's protest on Monday, writing on social media, 'A true hero, refusing to submit, fighting these fascists by herself if she has to. We are with you Nicole!' The Texas House established a quorum Monday afternoon, for the first time since most members of the Democratic minority fled the state 15 days earlier to prevent it from having the two-thirds quorum necessary to advance new congressional maps aimed at creating five more Republican-leaning seats ahead of next year's midterm elections. Early in their boycott, Burrows had signed civil arrest warrants for those Democrats. But DPS officers could not carry out those warrants because the Democrats were out of state. At President Donald Trump's urging, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott and Republicans who control the state House and Senate launched the effort to redraw the state's congressional districts mid-decade — a break from most states' typical practice of redistricting once a decade, after the completion of the US Census. It's part of the party's effort to hold onto its narrow House majority in next year's midterm elections — one that also includes lobbying GOP officials in Indiana and Missouri to change their maps to turn Democratic-held seats into favorable ground for Republicans, and could see the party add more GOP-leaning seats in Ohio, which is required by state law to redistrict. The Texas effort has set off a nationwide gerrymandering arms race. In California, Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom has vowed retribution, proposing a measure that would trigger new maps that could help Democrats pick up five more seats in the state — but only if Texas moves forward with its redistricting plan. This story and headline have been updated with additional details.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store