(Two hospital
births, then an unplanned, unassisted home birth. Says she and
her husband would love to have a planned, unassisted home birth
next time.)
My name is April and
I want to tell you how thrilled I am about the birth of my daughter,
Katie. I started to write about it but kept thinking back to
my other two births. I want to share Elizabeth and Dale and their
births with you too. I am afraid it has turned into a long story.
Elizabeth was born in
October of 89. Jeff and I did not plan the pregnancy or
her birth. After fourteen hours of painful labor (and many unheeded
requests for drugs, C-section, death, anything to stop it all!)
I was told to start pushing. When the nurse wheeled me
into the delivery room I noticed the mirror placed for moms
to see the birth was shattered. (I am curious about how that
happened.) I was helped onto a metal table and my legs were strapped
into stirrups. A stranger entered and explained that my doctor
had left town about twenty minutes before! His brother could
attend me.
PUSH! 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10. Breathe. (You know the routine.) When babys head
crowned I was given an epesiotomy. (A large, nasty one I found
out later.) Elizabeth was born weighing seven pounds, eight ounces.
When she was placed on my tummy I fell in love right away. I
have always been proud of Elizabeth. As she grew it never crossed
my mind to have another child. How could we love anyone as much
as her? These were my thoughts when I discovered I was pregnant
in March of 95. Elizabeth was five and a half years old.
My labor started when
I was two days overdue. None of the books I read
prepared me for my unusual labor. For four nights I had painful
contractions that stopped by morning. I was extremely tired and
frustrated. At a doctors visit on the third day I was four
and a half centimeters dilated. So all those contractions were
doing some good!
September 12, (six days
overdue) I started having regular contractions. By
the time I got to the hospital and hooked up to all the machines
they had disappeared. The doctor wanted to help labor along.
After four sleepless nights I was not hard to convince. I felt
pressured to go with the flow. I gave all the control to the
hospital staff. Again. I was installed in one of the LDR rooms.
I met the anesthesiologist
and was given an epidural. My doctor came in, started a pitocin
drip and broke my babys membranes. Okay, I was in labor
(of sorts). An hour later our son, Dale, was born weighing eight
pounds, twelve ounces. I cannot forget how very blue he was.
He needed help to breathe. (I could write pages just about those
few minutes of my life.) On the other side of the room the nurses
were massaging him and trying to give him oxygen. I could not
see much of this but picked up on the panic in the nurses
voice when she yelled out the door for Dr. Somebody-or-another
to come and help. Dale did start to breathe (whether they helped
or hindered I could not even guess). I was still worried though.
He was not attentive and it was several hours before I was able
to breastfeed him successfully.
I love my son; however,
I have ambivalent feelings about the day he was born. It took
longer to connect with Dale but it did come. He has changed the
way I view myself as a mother. I feel much more capable now.
I know there was always a place in my heart for him. He brings
me great joy.
Dale was not yet a year
old when we started wanting another baby. I did not expect to
feel like that so soon. I knew I could not change the things
I regret happening but I think that was my motive anyway. At
first I started charting my cycles to avoid pregnancy. When we
noticed we were having more intercourse on my fertile days than
the whole rest of the month we knew our goals had changed. For
the next seven months we tried to get pregnant. I read everything
I could find about childbirth. I made the most complete birth
plan imaginable. I wanted the perfect birth with no regrets.
Then our finances took
a dive. That changed our minds about having a baby. Since we
had not conceived before we did not think we needed to use contraception.
LOL! Four months later I became pregnant.
Just like the first
two this pregnancy took me completely by surprise. There were
some differences though. I no longer believed the presence of
a physician ensured a safe delivery. I chose a midwife. By the
end of my pregnancy I had discarded my birth plan. Honestly it
was only a safety net before. Every birth is different and I
disliked the idea of having the script I had written
for myself. I felt secure that Chris, my midwife, would not interfere
with nature unless necessary. She agreed to only do internal
checks when requested. Both of her own children had been born
at home. I had talked to Jeff about a home birth but we had opted
for the birth center. We live on an island and felt it would
take too long to get to a hospital if we needed one.
As my expected due date
approached I felt prepared and confident. At an exam two days
before my EDD I was dilated three and a half centimeters. That
night I woke up with contractions five minutes apart. They came
regular but never got strong enough to go to the birth center.
(I wanted to wait until the last minute because I was reluctant
to be apart from my kids.) It was a good thing we didnt
rush off because sometime during the early morning hours I fell
asleep. When I woke the sun was up and the contractions were
gone.
March 20, was life as
usual. During the last week that means at least two warm baths
a day! Just after 11:00 that night my water broke during a trip
to the bathroom. I called the midwife to ask how often I should
change the pad I was wearing. Chris told me to forget about the
pad and get my butt to the birth center ASAP. I argued that I
was not having contractions but would be in by 12:30. (Still
trying to avoid leaving the kids.) I thought I knew better. Haha!
Immediately after hanging up I felt the first contraction. Aarg!
We decided to head straight to the birth center. And then another
contraction. And another. I stayed on the floor where I had dropped
with the first pain. I told Jeff that I would not make it to
the birth center. He did not welcome the idea and seemed determined
to follow our plan.
After helping me onto
our bed he went to get the kids up. Elizabeth came and held my
hand through the next contraction. Jeff still wanted me to get
dressed and tried to put a pair of socks on me. (I remember looking
at him and wondering if he was crazy. I was sweating!) He spent
his time divided between trying to comfort me and trying to pack
the car. When he came back in again I told him the baby was coming
now. He wanted to see. Lying on my side, I tried to lift my leg
and couldnt. He lifted my leg but could see no signs of
a baby. It was then that I noticed Dale was in the room watching
us. He kept several feet away but stayed to see what would happen.
Elizabeth decided to hang out in the doorway. With the next contraction
the babys head was born. Jeff supported it and told Elizabeth
to call 911. Even after the contraction ended I continued to
push (more gently now). That was what I felt like doing. It was
great! To not be distracted and to feel in control of my own
body was awesome. One shoulder, another shoulder and then our
baby was out. It was 11:36. It could not have been more than
fifteen contractions. I spent the whole time on my side and birthed
through my legs.
The baby was red and
started breathing right away! It was a couple minutes before
we remembered to check the sex. A girl. We named her Kathryn
Rose. Sitting on the foot of my bed with Kathryn wrapped in my
bath towel I began to nurse her. My body reacted immediately.
Jeff held the baby while I squatted over the bowl he had brought
me. There was a lot more blood than I had expected. I hadnt
seen any of this with my other babies. I felt very relieved after
the placenta was expelled.
We continued nursing
until the paramedics arrived around midnight. I think most of
the emergency personnel on the island were in my living room.
One of our sheriffs brought his son to see the new baby. Everyone
was excited. A paramedic clamped the cord and Jeff cut it. Kathryn
and I were wrapped in fresh blankets while her temperature and
oxygen level was checked. There was nothing else to be done so
they left us. Chris was on her way over. While we waited Jeff
held Kathryn and I cleaned up the bedroom and took a shower.
I was feeling so good and energetic that Jeff told me to slow
down more than a few times. I settled on the couch with Kathryn.
She nursed while I ate three turkey and tomato sandwiches and
two 12-ounce glasses of orange juice!
At my prenatal checks
I would always see Chris. At many visits I also met with Christine,
a student midwife. After the birth they both came to our home.
All the routine baby things were done. Kathryn weighed nine pounds,
four ounces. She received antibiotic eye cream and a shot of
vitamin K. We were both examined and checked out fine. Kathryn
was a little chilled. We solved that by placing a wrapped hot
water bottle at her back while we lay down to nurse. Soon enough
we were all back in bed.
Before Chris left she
prescribed ibuprofen for the after pains. It did not kill the
pain as well as the codeine and vicodin I took after my other
births. I did not miss the narcotic side affect though. I never
felt too tired to care for Kathryn or my family. Kathryn was
never doped or unresponsive. Overall it was a good decision.
Using the heating pad and deep breathing helped me a lot.
Over the next few days
we relived it all over and over. Elizabeth told us it was exciting
but gross. Christine had shown her the placenta and explained
how it worked. At school she told her third grade class and got
a good response. She received homemade cards to welcome her new
sister. Dale had a lot of interesting questions about where Katie
had come from. There was none of the difficulty adjusting I was
so scared of.
It has been seven weeks
and I have had some down times. It helps when I tell myself that
this is normal. I am still adjusting to this postpartum stuff.
Jeff helps with the kids and what he can. Lizzy and Dale enjoy
Katie even more now that she reacts when they play with her.
This birth has been
an answer to prayer. I have now been given Love, Joy and Happiness.
Elizabeth is eight and a half, Dale is two and a half and Katie
is seven weeks old. (Even the blood came out of my bedspread
on the first washing! Talk about perfect.)
A friend asked if I
would choose the same midwife. I will recommend her for people
who are looking for a birth attendant. Ive read about how
to have a safe do-it-yourself birth and can see no reason to
have anybody but my family around me in the future. I appreciate
Chris coming and felt reassured after her examination. I can
see some good reasons for having a medical attendant. Still,
I dream of having another baby with no intrusions. I really enjoyed
the closeness shared by my family before anybody arrived.
After this experience
I will always choose homebirth. Jeff surprised me the other day
when he suggested we birth by ourselves if God blesses us with
more babies. I know it is a good decision because he would never
take something like this lightly. He had not even been sure that
the birth center was safe enough until he found out it was across
the street from a hospital. I think that birth touches us all
much deeper than we realize.
I have been doing some
reading lately and have come to the conclusion that even those
routine baby things werent necessary. At the
time I had questions but just didnt know enough. It seems
to me that we should be taught these things. I am teaching my
children about how very capable their bodies are. I want them
to know God and how wonderful his creations are.
Back To The Story Index