I can hardly believe that six years ago, I was still impatiently awaiting this day that would change my life in ways I couldn't possibly imagine. I wrote up my birth story at the time, but as I have since published my other birth stories, I wanted to publish this story as well, with a few additional thoughts. This is for all my friends who enjoy birth stories as much as I do!
On Saturday morning I woke up to my
first regular contractions. “This is it!” I thought, but they
stayed mild and went away after a few hours. The baby was moving a
ton all morning – in retrospect, I think she was probably twisting
around frontwards! I kept expecting the contractions to start up
again, but since nothing was happening I went with my mom to a quilt
show in a historical southern home. It was so hot that I started
feeling sick, so we headed home to rest. That night we watched Star
Wars: A New Hope and I finally went to bed around midnight (what can
I say, I didn't actually have kids yet).
I woke up to contractions at about
2:30am, after a couple of hours sleep. I had been having a lot of Braxton-Hicks contractions over
the past couple of weeks, but these felt different. I timed them for
about an hour and they stayed about 5-7 minutes apart so we headed
for the hospital, 45 minutes away.
Looking back I realized I could have
stayed at home much longer, but it was the first baby and I had no
idea how things would go. I was measuring 5cm at my appointment a
few days before and my midwife thought labor might progress quickly,
so she suggested heading to the hospital as soon as I was having
regular contractions. She also said I had a “perfect pelvis,”
which is about the best compliment you can get when you are about to
give birth!
I had been dreading the long car ride,
but the contractions were still mild, so it was actually pretty
peaceful – not much traffic at 4am. When we got to the hospital at
4:30, I was still measuring 5 cm. After monitoring my contractions
for a while, nurse said to go walk around some and they'd check again
in a couple of hours.
My mom had come with us to the hospital
and by now my dad and cousin were in the waiting room. My dad hadn't brought
anything to do; he said, “I thought the baby might be here by now!”
With all four kids, my mom rushed to the hospital and the baby was
usually born within the hour, sometimes before the doctor arrived.
(See where Adalyn's labor came from?) My cousin walked with
Kevin and I all around the hospital, where she had given birth almost
exactly a year before.
I was checked again at 7:30am but was
still at 5cm. The contractions were coming 3-5 minutes apart but not
much stronger than before. We were officially admitted and after
settling into our room, we listened Enya and tried to rest for a
bit. I spent most of the next three hours walking the halls with my mom and cousin, slowing or pausing during contractions. Every
so often, the nurse or midwife would hook me up to the fetal monitor
and predictably my very regular contractions would immediately stop.
We would wait for ten or even twenty minutes and then as soon as the
nurse left, they resumed their 3-4 minute pattern. I told the nurse
my uterus must have performance anxiety (which after reading Ina May
makes perfect sense).
One last pregnancy picture at the hospital |
Kevin had gone to grab some lunch, so
when he came back we talked together and decided to go ahead with it.
I was a little nervous because I knew things would get more intense.
The contractions had been hurting, but they had still been very
manageable up until now.
My cousin offered to stay if I wanted
her there. I found her presence reassuring since she had been
through all this recently and really knew what I was experiencing.
When my water was broken, there was meconium in the fluid. The
midwife explained that probably everything was okay, but they would
need to have a fetal monitor on me the rest of the time (fortunately
a portable one) and the NICU doctor would be there at delivery to
check out the baby.
My contractions did immediately get
stronger, and I started throwing up. I was glad when that was over
and I could concentrate on breathing. I decided to sit in the shower
and run warm water over my belly and back to help with the pain. I
found the water so helpful that I stayed there for the next few
hours.
Kevin sat/squatted behind me, putting
pressure on my back, guiding me in breathing, encouraging me and
massaging my tensed muscles to help me relax between contractions.
My cousin sat beside me with a cold wash cloth, offering
encouragement, reminding me to breathe, and feeding me ice chips.
During this period, the contractions were intense and I had a hard time not tensing up, but I was able to
manage them pretty well with breathing and was feeling good about
things.
At 3:40 pm, the midwife checked me
again and told me the bad news – I hadn't progressed any further.
She discovered the reason for the lack of progress was that the baby
was posterior (facing forward).
The midwife tried to
manually turn the baby internally – the one time I remember screaming - but
was unfortunately unsuccessful. Because of the baby's position, I had
started having bad back pain which made the contractions much more
difficult. I also felt very discouraged, thinking, “All that work
and no progress. The baby is stuck. This is going to go on forever
and is only getting worse.”
The midwife wanted me to get on hands
and knees for a while to see if the baby would turn. I got back in
the shower, kneeling on a yoga mat, but this time the water and
breathing weren't doing much. The whole universe compressed into the
space of one shower, the world was lost in pain, and time itself
stood still in deference to the cosmic force of labor.
Because the baby's head was putting
uneven pressure on my cervix, I was completely dilated on one side so
my body felt ready to push, but the other side was not complete. I
didn't recognize the desire to push – I just knew that during each
contraction my body seized up, my concentration broke, and I found
myself gasping and unable to breathe. The back pressure was
unrelenting and even in the brief breaks between contractions I
couldn't function clearly. I started telling the others, “I can't
do this.”
The midwife said, “Just stay here for
20 more minutes. You can do it.” When I kept saying I couldn't do
it anymore, she would say, “You've just got 5 more minutes,”
stretching out each 5 minutes into 10 and 15 minutes more. Somewhere
inside my mind I knew the game she was playing, but I was too
absorbed to argue. Who was I to judge twenty minutes from two hours,
when time had ceased to exist?
In reality, it was about an hour until I
went back and laid on the bed. All my muscles were tensed and
fatigued, but I was too overwhelmed to relax. The midwife gave me a
narcotic shot, which allowed me to rest some between contractions. I
was pretty out of it, but I could still feel all the pain, and I
didn't think I could handle it anymore.
Though I hadn't planned to
have one, I told the midwife I wanted an epidural. She told me to
make sure I was 100% certain about it, and after a few more
contractions I decided I was. The nurses started me on some
preparatory IV fluids and the midwife checked the baby again. The
baby had turned somewhat, but now her head was crooked so her ear was
facing down, and I was continuing to dilate unevenly. After
unsuccessfully trying to turn the baby again, the midwife had me turn
on my side hoping gravity would help.
I had to wait for the IV fluids to
finished, but at 5:15 I was ready for the epidural. The
anesthesiologist had been called, and the midwife checked me one more
time. She said, “I don't think you want this epidural – you're
ready to push!” I could hardly believe it! I really thought it
would be hours more before I got to this point. She asked if I still
wanted the epidural and I said no. I was still in pain but I didn't
feel so discouraged anymore. The end was in sight! With a bustle of
activity, everyone got into delivery mode.
I found pushing much easier. The
contractions weren't as bad because now I had something I could do –
what my body had been wanting to do all this time. I was working
with them instead of just riding them out. I pushed for about 40
minutes. I kept my eyes closed almost the whole time and
concentrated. Afterward I discovered I had a big fat lip – I must
have been biting down on it. I could hear the nurses and midwife
calling encouragement and helping me know when to push. Kevin stood
beside me and held my hand. Everyone exclaimed when they could see
the baby's head with all her hair.
And then, at 5:55pm, baby was born! I
heard her start crying right away, and she was whisked off to the
side where it seemed like a whole pack of doctors and nurses were
waiting to check her out.
At first I just felt incredible relief. I
couldn't quite connect what had just happened to “I have a baby
now.” I was aware of all kinds of activity – Kevin cutting the
cord, the nurses telling her weight and length and apgar score. In
the meantime, the midwife was still with me and I felt consumed with
the final stage of labor. I had a moderate tear, and though the
stitches didn't hurt as much as everything else had, I just wanted it
to be done. I was shaking all over and my arms felt like dead
weight, but I had returned to the land of time and space.
During the whole time, I didn't really
even look at the baby. I thought this might seem uncaring, but I had
the idea that when when I saw the baby I wanted to be able to really
concentrate on her, and I felt like I wouldn't be able to do that at
the time.
She was pretty thrilled about the examination |
Yup, still not sold on the outside world |
My other birth experiences were quite
different - a whirlwind delivery and a peaceful, even enjoyable labor - but I am glad that
this is my story of becoming a mother. It helped prepare me for what
was ahead.