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A Savvy Mom

The Birthday Story

Posted by camilla on September 28, 2010 in childbirth, labor and delivery, motherhood, natural childbirth with 5 Comments


So I scrapped the first draft of my birth story, but I guess I’ll tell you how I started out. I was going to tell you about the process of my labor — when contractions got intense, how far apart they were, and how I figured out how to cope with the pain. When I started writing it that way, it became pretty clinical and dry, which doesn’t accurately portray the experience that Eric or I had. I also had an eloquently written disclaimer about natural birth — how it is right for some people and might not be right for others. But that seems pretty distant from my emotional experience as well.

What I can tell you for real is that I am a whole new person. Birth is a bridge you cross, and the whole of it collapses behind you once you step foot on the other side. I know now that I will never be the young girl that I was at twenty-two, carrying on about frivolous things, and I won’t be just a wife to my husband anymore. Sam will always be in the mix. He peppers the thoughts of my future with birthday parties, long nights dealing with fevers and coughs, after-school activities, growing out of clothes and shoes too fast, getting dressed for prom, and graduation, prepping for college in the month of his birth, and finally, leaving us behind to become his own person. It molds my future with possibilities that are not my own, tears and laughter that belong to someone else, and hopes and dreams that I will do anything to defend.

But it’s the bridge that I’m talking about here, the one that led me to this place.

There’s nothing that you can do that will completely prepare you for labor. I tried my damnedest to learn every possible aspect of what would transpire within my body to deliver my little boy. I read for hours, took my twelve week class, had marathon conversations with my doula, and figured out the process that I thought we would follow. I made a birth mix on my iPod (didn’t use that at all), practiced my cat-cow stretches (unbearably painful during labor for me), and packed my bags weeks beforehand (the only useful items for labor were cold, cold water and chapstick). I am a planner — and I tried to plan everything. It doesn’t happen like that, but I’m truly glad I did all of the work and preparation, so that I could be as ready as possible.

I went into labor at 39 weeks and 2 days, on Sunday afternoon, September 12th. Contractions actually started the night before but didn’t get regular until about 3PM that day. First they felt like strong cramps, which didn’t really bother me. In fact, it made me feel that I could cope the whole way through.

We called our doula to come around 8PM that night, after I had started my labor song, which would continue for the next fourteen hours. A friend of mine (who delivered the week before) had suggested that I hum to match the pain, which is probably the best advice that I got or could give. I vocalized with big “Ohhh” sounds in time with each contraction. This is what got me through much of my labor. I also used my doula’s Tens Machine, which helped for a long while during early labor. The other gigantic help was that my doula came to labor with us at our house for three hours, and chatted with us and petted our dog while I paced and moaned. The feeling in me at that time was nervous and anticipatory, and the pain was low, strong, and pressing. I  happily talked away during each pause between the pains, not yet withdrawing into what my doula terms “labor land.”

At 11PM, we decided to go to the hospital. By this time the contractions had become more intense, and I had three in the car. This had me clawing at the seat and arching my back in the air — all I wanted to do was walk off the pain. Be mobile, pace, moan.

Once we arrived at the hospital, I was placed in triage for two hours, viewed by residents and medical students, and strapped to the bed with monitors on my swollen belly, all trying to get a “good read” on Sam’s heart rate.

Want to torture a naturally laboring woman? Strap her to a bed and tell her to be still while a 24 year-old med student asks her if she has AIDS or Hepatitis B.

At the end of this marathon triage, I was told I was only dilated three centimeters, which meant I was still in latent labor, and not in active labor. Apparently you enter active labor at four centimeters, and all of the work before that is … what? Not active? At that point, I was pretty disheartened. With the pain the way it was, I knew I wouldn’t be able to sleep at all through the night, and it would likely be all of Monday and into early Tuesday morning before I would deliver Sam. Up until that point, I had been excited. Hearing that my labor might take another whole day took some of the wind out of my sails — especially since I was hearing this around midnight. They told me I had the option of going home and coming back, but that seemed like such a step backwards in time. I told the resident I’d rather not go home, since my parents were on their way, and everything was in order for me to be in the hospital.

After that, I walked. I walked through the hospital while my parents talked to my husband. I walked off the anxiety and tiredness while they readied my room. I walked through the labor and delivery room to which I was assigned, and I only barely tolerated the fetal monitors that strapped me to the bed, like clockwork, every forty minutes. I moaned and breathed deeply, sighed and paced. I rocked in the shower and swayed and sang out my labor song. Sometime around two or three in the morning, the room was darkened, I was in the hot hot shower for a brief respite between monitoring, and I began to dream as Sam moved lower in my body, and I opened more and more. Scattered images crossed through my mind, words and phrases came and went, nothing making sense, and I closed my eyes as I lay against the cool metal guard rail, the hot water running over the pulsing muscles in my back.

I wailed to be checked when my nurse came into the room around 4AM. I told Eric that I didn’t know if I could keep going if I hadn’t progressed — and I just knew that I had. The pain had seemed to intensify with each contraction, and I felt my body doing rapid, solid work.

When my nurse checked me, she smiled and said that all that walking had paid off. She told me I had dilated to six centimeters … I felt so proud of my body for accomplishing that much so quickly.

I said, “So it’s going to be today?”

She replied, “Yes. September 13th is going to be a cake and ice cream day in your home for many years to come.” Did I mention my nurse was amazing? She was the most positive and upbeat influence — and she was very relaxed when it came to how long I stayed on that awful monitor that tied me to a three foot area next to the bed.

After that, my sense of time began to blur. I remember the pain increasing, I remember seeking out the shower again, I remember vocalizing over and over.

It seemed that suddenly there were multiple people in the labor and delivery room — I’m not sure how much time had passed, but all of them insisted I stay hooked up to the monitor so that they could get a solid read on the baby’s heartbeat. They said it was too slow, but I could easily tell (even while in the depth of labor) that the monitor was reading my heartbeat and not Sam’s. When the monitor caught his heartbeat, it was strong and solid, so it baffled me as to why everyone was acting like something was wrong. When I saw my OB enter the room, I knew that something was happening.

My nurse was gone at this point, and a temporary nurse had replaced her. She told me that my doctor would have to break my water in order to insert an internal fetal monitor. I started to cry because I knew the contractions would hurt a lot more without my bag of waters as a cushion, and I knew that they would have to stick the monitor into my baby’s head. I had so not wanted any intervention, and it hurt me to know that I had to have it because the hospital equipment couldn’t see the strong heartbeat that was so clear to me. Eric and my doula assured me that it was best to listen to the staff — after all, now I would be able to walk around in my three foot space and not have to lie on the bed while being monitored. And I would avoid a c-section if they had a solid read on Sam’s heart rate.

“I can’t do this,” I said. I was in agony and knew I couldn’t take anymore.

“You can,” said the nurse whose name I don’t remember. “I did it twice, so you can do it.”

“You had two natural labors?” I asked her. “And you did it?”

“Yes, so you can do this.”

“I won’t want another baby,” I said. “I can’t do this again.”

“You will,” she said. “Don’t say that. You will.”

So I laid back and let my water be broken, felt it flow from me onto the plastic sheets on the bed, and watched as the strong heartbeat I knew was there register on the monitor as they attached the probe to Sam’s head. The nurse who had given me those words disappeared, and was replaced by a calm and gentle woman who would guide me through transition.

The rest of my labor, lasting about five hours, was the most intense experience of my life. After my water was broken, the contractions had very little pause between them — maybe thirty seconds to a minute of rest, followed by a lengthy contraction with a mighty peak of grinding downward pressure in my body. After a while, my moaning vocalizations became wails and loud, long screams — the only sounds on the otherwise silent labor ward. I would cry and tell the nurse over and over, “I can’t.” I told Eric, “I can’t.” But they kept telling me that I could, and that I was doing it. I told Eric I thought I would need an epidural if it continued like this, and he reminded me that it wasn’t what I wanted. My body was so tired that I went into my dreamlike state again, trying to lie down on the bed when contractions ebbed, and standing when the pain became so strong that I had to move my body and sway my hips.

The thoughts that circled through my head were the San Culpa affirmations that I had practiced in prenatal yoga during Savasana relaxation. I am powerful. I am connected to all the women who have come before me. I am a strong woman, and I can accomplish anything. Even as I screamed, “I can’t,” I tried to take in the “You can” from those around me, and I focused on the positive affirmations I had practiced over the past months.

When my nurse checked me again, I was dilated to 9 centimeters, with only a small bit remaining until I could push. I kept trying to convince her and my husband that I was ready to push. (Eric said this lasted for an hour or so before I actually started pushing, but it seemed like a short time in my mind.) My nurse told me I would know when I was ready, and she went calmly about setting up a delivery table and notifying my OB that I would soon be ready to have a baby.

As much as I wanted to push, I was terrified that it would hurt more than what I had already gone through. But yes, I knew. I could feel my whole body thrust down, the pressure overtaking me, and I screamed fiercely as the feeling swept through me.

“It’s time,” I said, and this time, the nurse believed me. “I’m ready to push.”

Let me pause to say that I thought this would be the scariest part — after all, a woman’s body opens completely to birth a child, and with that, the experts are fond of saying, comes pain. (If you haven’t read about the “ring of fire,” you will in your birth related studies.)

So I was scared. But here’s where the magic comes in — the pushing, the part that we as women are groomed to be terrified of, is exactly why I am so glad I didn’t have an epidural. I would have missed out on the most powerful experience of my life. I can’t imagine not feeling every push, not knowing when to reach down and touch my baby’s head, not FEELING him enter this world.

If you’ve done your research, you know that you have all sorts of chemicals in your body that do work for you. Well, adrenaline and endorphins are at work when you are pushing.

When Eric and the nurse helped me up onto the bed to start pushing after that last horrible contraction, these chemicals flooded my body. I felt an amazing rush of energy, and suddenly the pain vanished. As Eric and my calm, collected nurse held my legs, I finally bore down and felt my baby’s head travel lower and deeper through my body. The feeling was incredible — I was able to do work after ten hours of crushing contractions. Sam was moving lower — and I could feel him with every push. I watched Eric’s face between pushes. He was smiling and laughing as he saw our child’s head come into view. I could feel my the top of his head as he started to crown, and I reached down to touch him and his wispy hair. I was overcome with emotion … I was birthing my child.

The nurse told me to control my pushing so that I wouldn’t tear — and so that the doctor could arrive in time to deliver Sam! I tried to breathe through each rush of energy and slow down, but I couldn’t. He was coming fast, and my body was thrusting him quickly forward. I yelled that I had to keep pushing; the pressure was so great that I could not possibly stop. My doctor arrived about ten minutes before I gave birth — just in time to catch Sam. I gave my final pushes, guided by my doctor, and felt my baby’s head enter the world. In just one more push, his body followed. I heard a throaty, forceful cry — his first announcement of life. I watched as Eric cut his cord, and they put Sam onto my bare chest. My first thought was that he looked like my husband; my second was that I would have to try my hardest to be the best mother possible for the rest of my life.

My legs were shaking and I was shivering as I held him. The nurse covered us with warm blankets and brought me ice water. Sam was fussing and making noises, still covered in milky vernix and fluids. I was examining his fingers and toes as the doctor told me to push one last time to deliver my placenta. I barely felt it — I was still on the incredible high of delivering Sam.

Eric went to go get my parents to come meet him. I handed him over to my husband to be weighed and measured. I smiled and watched as my parents took pictures and bustled around the room. There was a whirlwind of energy and celebration that didn’t die down until Sam was safely asleep and I was delivered to my recovery room, legs still shaking.

I remember saying to Eric, as Sam nursed contentedly, “We did it. Look what we did.” And he replied, “No, you did this. It was all you.”

I can’t say that any birth experience is more empowering or life-changing than another. I only have mine to go by. I can say that I’m glad I made my plan, educated myself and got what I wanted for Sam’s birth. I know I am so lucky that the only intervention I had to have was the monitor — so many women plan to birth naturally and then need interventions that alter the experience they wanted. I know that I am blessed to have had a positive natural experience at a small hospital with amazing doctors and nurses. And I know that this experience was right for us — I feel so connected to Sam because we were partners in this experience. I talked to him in my labor dreams and told him that we could do this. And we did — the first experience we had together as mother and child.

Sam

Sam

Fear of Labor

Posted by camilla on July 13, 2010 in childbirth, labor, love yourself, natural childbirth, pregnancy with 1 Comment


For those of you who knew me before Eric and I started planning to get pregnant, you may have at least guessed that I wasn’t exactly a natural birth advocate. I thought the idea of a scheduled c-section sounded like a great idea, and the thought of breastfeeding totally creeped me out. I had a colleague who had had an all natural birth that lasted thirty-six hours, and that was enough to convince me that ALL THAT was something I did not want. After all, as Americans in the twenty-first century, we’ve been given the opportunity to do away with pain during labor. Why wouldn’t you want to do away with pain? Why wouldn’t you want to do away with the strangeness and ickiness of breastfeeding? Knock me out, and give me the drugs. That was quite and very much the way of my reasoning.

Fast forward to July 3, 2009. That’s right — almost exactly a year ago. Eric and I formally decided to go off of birth control that day. I only remember it because it was the one week in the summer that Eric was home from a business trip to San Diego (one that he thought I’d be able to go on, but that’s another story), and it was the night that we saw Away We Go, the day before the fourth of July. Yes, a baby. We decided we were going to have a baby in 2010. Exciting. As you might have guessed, I hadn’t given labor too much of a thought, except that I still thought it was a yucky, painful process. One that I clearly wanted to avoid.

And then I read this post on one of my favorite blogs. (And this one and this incredible, beautiful conclusion to follow up. If you read one of those posts, read the last one, please. Yes. So amazing.) And with those words, and her experience, I began to question what I once knew. When I went to stay with my husband his last week in San Diego, I told him that I thought I wanted a natural birth. Of course, he’s always been a big supporter of this, pretty much calling me crazy for wanting a c-section — I mean, that’s major surgery, and why would you want to schedule that when you don’t have to?

Fast forward again to January 2010. I find out I’m pregnant on the day that we go to visit Eric’s family. I read What to Expect When You’re Expecting that weekend, and it only makes me nervous. After that, I start to do my research in earnest. I read everything I can get my hands on about healthy pregnancy, natural birth, and labor: Ina May’s Guide to Childbirth by Ina May Gaskin, Birthing from Within by Pam England and Rob Horowitz, Your Best Birth by Ricki Lake and Abby Epstein, Pushed by Jennifer Block, Hypnobirthing by Marie Mongan, and The Birth Partner by Penny Simkin for my husband and coach. (And I just got The Birth Book by William Sears.)

I began to realize that I was seriously under-educated about pregnancy and childbirth. I began to realize that most of us — women and men — are seriously under-educated about childbirth. As Americans, we’ve also been seriously mis-educated, misled, and misguided about PAIN. We hear a lot of cliches about labor in particular, and we see them on our television and movie screens. We hear this: “You wouldn’t undergo a root canal without anesthesia, right?” or “It would be like trying to push a watermelon out of your nostril.” We hear about how painful it is, how it’s unlike any other pain you’ve experienced, how it’s pure insanity to go it without pain relief. We see women in terrible pain on A Baby Story, lying back as the doctors swoop in to save the day. We see Ellen Page in Juno and Katherine Heigl in Knocked Up begging for epidurals when they go into labor (and Amy Poehler in Baby Mama celebrating her choice to have one in a rather public way). Think about it: do you see any positive portrayals of natural birth in the media? Do you see any portrayals of women being empowered as they choose the way their child comes into the world?

Let me know if you think of some. I can’t.

In fact, I would posit that we’ve been taught to fear labor, fear the natural signals of our bodies, and fear the pain that is associated with those natural signals. We’ve put our trust instead in doctors, who are incidentally, mostly dudes. (Side note: there are lots of great doctors, and natural-friendly ones to boot. But there are plenty who keep on pushing the fear.) By putting trust in someone other than ourselves, and by passively absorbing the fearful images we see in the media, we give up a valuable part of our birth experiences. We get swept away in the wave of fearing pain, and we don’t give ourselves the opportunity to become educated, take control, and guide our birth experience as captain, rather than passenger.

When you fear something, it gets a lot worse, right? It hurts worse, it feels more painful, it is more intimidating, more frightening … so it is with labor. If you fear it, you will automatically tighten up, which works against the natural contractions your body is producing to guide your baby forward. When you work against your own body, and cannot relax, it can hurt a lot worse. Common sense, right? But still, over nine months (and indeed, the many years before we get pregnant), we are developing an image of an intensely painful experience that we cannot cope with, that will control us, that is compared to an illness in the medical world. How can one be expected to work against that fear when it comes to the day of labor?

Adrenaline plays a role here too. If you see a bunch of people you don’t know in your labor room, you get scared at the onset of a painful contraction, or your doctor gives you a rough exam while you are laboring, it can trigger an adrenaline rush. According to Birthing Naturally, “Adrenaline is the “fight or flight” hormone that humans produce to help ensure survival. Women who feel threatened during labor (for example by fear or severe pain) may produce high levels of adrenaline. Adrenaline can slow labor or stop it altogether.” And if your labor stops, you need the drugs, right? So say the doctors.

Well what’s wrong with the drugs? Pitocin and pain relief medications of all varieties help a tremendous amount of women through labor, but they can also mess with your body a bit in ways you might not expect. I’ll comment here about pitocin — it’s a synthetic version of the natural hormone that makes your uterus contract. But it doesn’t work in the same way that your natural hormone, oxytocin, does. It makes your whole uterus contract rapidly and all at once. You might guess that causes pain — not so great pain that might cause you to start seriously needing the pain meds. Pitocin also doesn’t trigger the natural pain relief mechanism your body has to offer — endorphins. So when you get the pitocin, you start needing the epidural, and the epidural, while innocuous to the body in many ways, can slow labor as much as 25%. And when labor slows? That’s right … “emergency c-section.” Sounds nuts right? It certainly happens.

Understandably, many remain frightened of the pain. But many remain unaware of the benefits of laboring sans drugs. You heal faster, you can walk around and try out different positions, you don’t have to have a catheter to pee, you can get in and out of the shower or tub, and you can sneak in a snack or a drink of water every once in a while. Too, you can listen to the signals of pain that your body gives you as positive markers of where you are in your labor. Finally, you are connected to the millions of women who have come before you — your ancestors — who labored naturally. But how do you cope with the pain in a society that tells you pain is unnecessary? Well, that’s the question. How can you?

In all the books I listed above, there are tons of relaxation techniques, exercises, and guided meditation that many women say can help. The Bradley Method encourages slow, abdominal breathing, while Hypnobirthing touts self-hypnosis. Birthing from Within tells about non-focused awareness. There are a lot of options out there. Hypnobirthing even claims that labor was never meant to be painful, and Mongan’s book all but promises a pain-free labor. (We’ll see about that … ha.) Whatever the technique is, the important thing to me is that I get to choose it. I manage the pain, and it doesn’t manage me.

I can’t tell you where I got so confident about this decision, but it happened early on in my pregnancy. I didn’t want this to be something that happened TO me, but rather a whole event that I guided in the best ways I knew how. I’ll state here that I’m not belittling anyone who chooses a different path — we’re all trying to be mothers in the ways that we think will benefit our children the most. I’m also not going to say that I won’t consider pain relief if I’ve been laboring for 36 hours. And I’ll certainly go with a c-section if my baby’s life is in danger. But the important thing to me is that I have chosen to become educated about my options, and not close my eyes in order to let someone else manage the process for me.

That’s all for now.

Welcome to the Savvy Mom Space

I’m a liberal feminist that believes that liberal, feminist ideals should gel with embracing your gender and motherhood (if that’s what you feel like doing). I support all kinds of moms and dads and parents. Oh and, although I totally love that natural vibe and not harming the environment, I supplement my organic milk and fresh fruits and veggies with the occasional Twix, the frequent Oreo, and the daily Coke Zero. I’m opinionated, not easily offended, and a loudmouth in person and on the internet. I am what I am. Welcome.

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