Hi M.,
Congratulations on your pending gradutation!
And welcome to the mommy club!
Like you, I was pregnant when I graduated college back in Dec. 2006. (8 1/2 months, with twins, to be precise) Both then, and now, it felt like the timing was perfect. A natural end to my academic life (woohoo!) and a natural beginning for my family life. I decided to give myself 6months after my girls were born before embarking on the job hunt. Their father and I aren't married, but we live together and are absolutely committed to one another. We often talk of marriage but don't feel the expense of a wedding is feasible or necessary at this point in our lives.
So that's a little about me and my perspective. And now to get to your questions. I've had several friends who interviewed while pregnant, and not showing, who got a great response from the interviewer, only to never hear from them again once their pregnancy was disclosed. Unfortunately, this is the norm in the job marketplace. My advice to you is wait until you are ready to start working to start the interviewing process. You already have so much on your plate with finishing school and bringing a new life into the world that prepping for interviews and possibly learning a new role at some company is just over the top. Interviewing now probably wont do you any good anyway, because any prospective employer will take one look at your belly and think "maternity leave", and dismiss you without a second thought.
so i encourage you to not underestimate the enormity of what you are already set up to accomplish: graduation and giving birth. Trust me, that is enough for even the most divine of goddesses to handle.
And from my personal experience, the one thing I truly regret about being in school for most of my pregnancy, was that I never really took the time to just sit back and marvel and enjoy the miracle of the growing new lives inside my belly. I gave much more attention to final exams and papers and presentations, instead of focusing on what i now know to be so special and so, so fleeting. So take lots of 'pregnant belly shots', take time to just appreciate the magic of the present moments of being pregnant.
and once the baby arrives, dont rush going to work. i know it seems crazy to look at the finances and see that you have more mouths to feed and less people working to feed them. but bonding with your baby is the single most important thing you can do with your time and no amount of money can buy back the first year. Baby needs mommy more than mommy and daddy need $$. That may sound preachy, but it's true. You can and will make it work. Remember that you have many more resources available to you than you might expect. Family and friends will certainly lend a hand. and don't forget to reach out to the community. WIC nutritional support for nursing mothers has been a blessing to my family--i use the vouchers i get from WIC every month to go shopping at the farmer's market on the weekends. A little help from here and there goes a long way. And before you can even blink, the first year is past.
As for me, I was absolutely set on getting a job asap after my girls were born. All through college, that had been my goal and my plan: get the degree, then get the good job, then make lots of $$$. When I found out i was pregnant, i didn't really change my plan much. I just decided to take 6 months to breast feed my girls, then I would go get a job and let someone else (daycare) raise them.
Well, my girls are 13 months old now, and I have had several really promising job interviews that didn't end with me getting the job. Each time that's happened, i am majorly bummed, but I know in my heart that it's just not the right time yet. My girls still need me. I am still breast feeding them which I think is a major reason why they have never been sick.
Don't get me wrong, I REALLY REALLY want a great job. But now, after living for a year on next to nothing, and being out of this world happy spending this precious time with my girls, I have realized that in order for me to change my current situation, whatever job i finally do accept has got to be something that i feel great about doing and the financial compensation must be extraordinary.
I guess the moral of my story is this: it's great to plan and dream and work toward goals, but in the end the divine plan for your life will prevail.
I hope you find some wisdom in these words somewhere. I was compelled to write because it wasn't that long ago when i was in your shoes.
I wish you many blessing and lots of luck on your path.
Best,
Tiff