A Natural Birth Convert- Birth Center After Hospital Induction
I don't know if I will ever get tired of birth stories. This is an amazing one with lots of details. It reminded me of sensations from my babies births that I had forgotten. Empowering, painful, hard and amazing- this is all that birth can be. I love it!
Enjoy!
~
When
you make the decision to give birth in a birthing center with a midwife
and not in a hospital, people have questions. Some people are
well-meaning, some kind of snarky or just downright judgmental. Some act
as if you are carelessly putting your child at risk because of your
hippie ideals- that anything other than a hospital birth is dangerous
and life-threatening. A year ago, I probably would have been one of the
judgmental ones. I didn't understand the desire to have a natural
childbirth, even though I had already given birth once before. I'm
ashamed to say that I called a dear friend "crazy" for not wanting an
epidural. I was woefully ignorant of the entire process of birthing.
With my first-born, 2 ½ year old Charlotte, I was convinced that I
didn't have to actually know anything about birth- I was getting an
epidural after all, and that would do all the work for me. I would be
blissfully pain-free and wouldn't have to do anything- the baby would
just come and I wouldn't feel it (if it only really worked out that
way!)
~
When
I got pregnant with Violet, I fully intended to use the same ob/gyn,
the same hospital, I would still get the epidural, but this time it
would work and not run out for an hour of transition and three hours of
pushing. The one thing that I knew I wanted to be different was that I
wouldn't allow the doc to induce early for no reason. But- I remembered
the pain of the contractions before the epidural. I knew I needed
some breathing or focusing techniques to get me through to the
epidural. So I bought a Lamaze book. It changed everything for me! All
of a sudden, reading about natural childbirth, I realized that EVERY
problem I had during Charlotte's birth, every single thing I hated about
the experience, was due to drugs- the induction and the epidural. Those
problems followed us long after her birth when she wouldn't breastfeed.
Looking forward to Violet's birth, I realized that it was necessary to
avoid any unnecessary medical interventions if I wanted to have a less
traumatic birth. This seemed shocking to me: I was going to have to put
my body through the worst pain imaginable for it to be less traumatic.
But it's true.
Charlotte
was induced at exactly 39 weeks. This was done for absolutely no valid
medical reason. The doctor asked if I wanted to wait to go into labor on
my own or schedule a time with the hospital to have her. I was worn out
with being pregnant and just didn't want to do it anymore. No one told
me there were risks to an induction- that I was more likely to have a
c-section, that you're forcing your body into doing something it's not
ready to do, that pitocin makes for stronger contractions, that you
increase the risk of distress to the baby, that you will be given drugs
expressly forbidden in pregnancy. I never looked into it and agreed to
the procedure.
I checked into the hospital on a Thursday morning, January 22, 2009,
when they spent the day ripening my cervix with a drug called Cytotec. I
found out later that Cytotec is actually quite dangerous, and has been
linked to fetal and maternal death. The manufacturer says not to use it
for inductions. 24 hours later, they started pitocin. The contractions
were so intense that Charlotte pooped in utero, something not at all
uncommon during induction. I got an epidural at 4 centimeters that wore
off for the last four hours of labor. But even though I could feel
everything and easily move my legs, I wasn't allowed to move off of my
back to make pushing easier. I ended up pushing for three hours, before
delivering via vacuum extraction. She was born at 10:03pm,
they cut the cord immediately and took her from me to be suctioned for
meconium. It would be almost a full 30 minutes before they gave her to
me to hold for the first time. They had already done her eye antibiotic
and bundled her- I didn’t get any skin to skin time with her. It became
evident at the very beginning that she wasn't nursing well. She could
latch very well, but couldn't suck. Bottles were the only way to go,
because they dripped and didn't require work on her part. I know now
that the combination of a sore throat from the suctioning for meconium,
the sore head from the vacuum extraction and an immature suck-swallow
reflex from being early are responsible for her poor sucking. I regret
every day that I was not able to nurse her. I was going to get it right
the second time.
I
was 36 weeks pregnant with Violet when I panicked. I couldn't birth in
that hospital again, even naturally. I had been around and around with
my ob/gyn about certain policies, especially about IV fluids. The
hospital does not allow women in labor to eat or drink at all, therefore
they put you on IV fluids, something that can make moving around harder
and can interfere with breastfeeding because you can get so
waterlogged. She wouldn't hear of a heplock instead. This makes no sense
to me. The rationale is that if you have to have emergency general
anesthesia, you can aspirate your stomach contents. But it's rare to be
generally anesthetized, and rarer that you would go under without them
protecting your airway. If you were in a car accident on the way home
from the buffet, they can't operate because you have a full stomach??
Anyway, my ob seemed to have difficulty understanding why I wanted what I
wanted. That in combination with her inducing me with Charlotte (a
highly questionable decision), the use of Cytotec, and the memories of
that ward made me want something different. Something better.
I
first called a home birth midwife. After our initial conversation, she
said I was a good candidate, but upon reviewing my records, she had to
deny me. I have Mitral Valve Prolapse, a very common, completely
harmless heart “condition.” She was not comfortable with this- and I
appreciate it. I don’t want someone taking chances! I did cry for days
after that, though. The midwives who deliver at the hospital in Ocala would not take me so late in my pregnancy. Finally, I found The Birth Place in Orlando,
who agreed to take me so late, and besides a little concern about
making it in time during labor (it’s a 90 minute drive), I was
overwhelmed by the staff there. It's such a comfortable environment. The
midwife, Anne, reassured me over and over with her trust in the
process. I was pretty sure this was something I could do. There would be
no IVs, no continuous fetal monitoring, no restrictions on eating,
drinking or moving around. They would delay cord cutting, and delay eye
antibiotics until breastfeeding was established. There would be very few
internal exams. I would be carefully monitored, the baby would be
carefully monitored, and if any serious complications arose, the midwife
is well trained and equipped to practice life-saving techniques before a
transfer to Winnie Palmer Hospital for Women and Babies would
be arranged. Birthing is not a disease. In a healthy, normal pregnancy,
your body knows what to do. I find the birthing center option to be
much safer than the risk of interventions in the hospital.
Violet was due on August 18.
Being pregnant during the hottest summer on record (I don’t know if
that’s true, but it sounds right!) is the worst. But I refused to take
medical intervention to end this pregnancy. You take one thing, and
before you know it, you're flat on your back in the hospital bed unable
to participate in the birth of your own baby. For 14 days before I went
into real labor, I had contractions every day. They would get close
together every night, then disappear in the morning. They got
increasingly more painful. I was getting upset at all the starting and
stopping, and the contractions would very much interfere with my sleep.
On Wednesday the 24th, I was up all night with contractions that were 7-8 minutes apart. At 6am,
my husband decided to call in to work, and we headed to Orlando. My
sister lives 10 minutes from the birth center, so we figured that we
should head there while I was still comfortable. When we got there, my
contractions stopped. Fully stopped. In the afternoon, we headed to the
birth center for a scheduled check-up to find I was still 1 cm. Anne
sent me to Winnie Palmer for a biophysical profile since I was almost a
week overdue. Then she said to head all the way home and rest. The
profile showed that the placenta was in good shape, the amniotic fluid
was abundant and baby was moving well. We drove home.
The very next morning, I awoke with contractions 2 minutes apart. At 3 am,
off we went again to the birthing center. All the way in Orlando.
Again. By the time we got there, contractions were happening less than
every 10 minutes. We agreed to go to my sister's and wait it out. Jason
and I agreed that we were done driving back and forth. We weren't
leaving Orlando without a baby. My parents were home with Charlotte, and
didn't mind keeping watch on her.
The
next morning, Friday the 26th, I was in terrible pain. My bladder hurt
me so badly and desperately that I could barely stand or change
positions. It was constant and unrelenting, accompanied by an
overwhelming urge to pee that I couldn't satisfy. I would pee, stand up
and immediately feel the urge to pee again. I told Jason that the pain
was so unbearable that we needed to get checked out. I called Anne and
told her we were going to head back to Winnie Palmer to see if something
was wrong with my bladder. We arrived at Winnie Palmer at 12:30
and waited and waited and waited in triage. There were so many people
there that we had to sit in the hallway. I continued to have
contractions there. At 4:30,
after an hour of tracking, we discovered that contractions were 4
minutes apart and steady. I called Anne, and she said to come in. So
after 4 hours of waiting, we split the hospital. I thought about how
bizarre it was to be standing in front of a hospital that delivers
12,000 babies a year in full-blown labor, waiting for Jason to get the
car so we could go somewhere else. Isn't it always the other way around?
We
arrived at the birthing center right as another baby was being born.
Anne saw us in good time, and happily told us that I was at 4 cm.
Finally!!! Real labor had begun. She and Shannon, the birthing
assistant, settled us in to the Van Gogh room, decorated in Starry
Nights. It's a comfy room- a large (real) bed, a couch, a birthing tub.
It does not have the sterile, clinical feel of a hospital. My orders
were to walk in laps around the center to get contractions really
moving. I did this for at least an hour before telling Anne that it
really hurt my bladder and that I needed to lie down. I know she was
very worried that labor would stall if I wasn't walking, but she trusted
me. Luckily contractions continued. I got through contractions by
breathing and focusing, and also by singing. It sounds odd, really, but I
would sing show tunes throughout the contractions. It helped me focus
on my breath. My favorite was "Man Up" from Book of Mormon.
Time
gets a little hazy at this point, but about 4 hours in, Anne checked
me, and I was 5cm. I was discouraged. 4 hours and one centimeter? I
confided in Anne that I had a real fear that I would sabotage my
progress because I was afraid of the pain to come. I think it's only
natural to protect yourself from pain instead of urging it on. I told
her that though I don't have any proof, I was worried that with
Charlotte I didn't push right because I was afraid of how it would feel
to push her out. Anne listened and encouraged me that I could do
anything and that I would be holding my baby soon. She had me lie down
in bed with Jason and we turned the lights out. She wanted me to try to
sleep between contractions. She was lying on the couch. I tried to rest,
I really did. I was able to drift away a couple times between
contractions, but they really started to hurt at this point. I could no
longer talk or sing during them. I would push air out in a shushing
sound and demanded that Jason apply serious counter-pressure on my lower
back. He was pushing so hard that his arms were shaking, but it wasn’t
enough for me. I seriously wanted him to beat me in the back. I remember
reaching back and pushing his hand even harder into my back., and
feeling his arm shaking with the effort. Anne recognized that these
contractions were getting us somewhere- she kept encouraging me to stay
in the position because it was working. I was getting upset with her,
because I wanted to avoid the pain- why would I want to make it hurt
worse? Oh yeah- we want labor to progress!
I
noticed that my legs were shaking, probably from low blood sugar. I had
had very little to eat that day, and had managed to only graze on
Golden Grahams and granola bars during labor. Jason had bought me a
Publix sub for after labor, but I asked for it then. It's amazing how
your body really knows exactly what it needs. I picked the vegetables
off without even thinking about it. I needed the turkey and cheese. I
ate about half the 6 inch sub, and that really did the trick. I could
concentrate more on labor and less on the low blood sugar. I knew I
needed the energy for what was coming.
It
was about this time that Anne suggested I try my hands and knees. She
put a birthing ball on the head of the bed, and had me rest my upper
body on it. I will forever remember my face pushed into that birthing
ball. I can instantly recall exactly how those contractions felt. It is
safe to say that this was the worst pain I had ever felt in my life.
Every contraction would rob me of my breath and it seemed my sanity. I
wanted it to stop, but I kept going. It’s fair to say that if an
epidural had been an option, I would have easily taken it. But that
wasn’t an option. Jason and Anne provided lots of counter-pressure, and
would also press against my hips, which helped. It didn't make the hurt
go away, but I needed it. Each contraction was a stab in the bladder
that wrapped back to my lower back. I really wish I could describe the
feeling, but I can't. Really- it was the most ridiculous pain. I wanted
to arch my back or rock, but the very thought of moving was nauseating. I
had been using low moans
through contractions up to this point, when my low moans became more a
siren, and finally I was just screaming. I appreciate that no one tried
to stop me. Screaming was obviously exactly what I needed to do.
Anne
checked me then, the second and last time. She reported that I was at 9
centimeters. I instantly asked if I could get in the pool then. Anne
said, "Amy, I don't think there's time. It takes 30 minutes to set up
the pool." I begged her to do it anyway. She started working on it and
Jason stayed with me to provide counter-pressure. It seemed only a short
amount of time before I was being helped out of my nightshirt and into
the tub. What a relief that water was! It just took a little of the edge
off, but I still didn’t want to move. The pain was still intense.
My
45 minutes in the pool were the antithesis of my three hours of pushing
with Charlotte. With Charlotte, there was bright light and four people
constantly counting and barking at me to push. Here in the pool, there
was total silence. The lights were off, and Anne had a small flashlight.
The Beatles station was softly playing on our Pandora app on the iPad.
No one told me to do anything at all. I was able to close my eyes, lean
back on the side and do what my body wanted me to do. At first, I
started experimenting with pushing. I had read about "breathing the baby
down" and tried that for a while, but it didn't get me anywhere. I
wasn't feeling the overwhelming urge to push like I had with Charlotte.
Actually, I didn't even know if I was 10cm, but it didn't matter. I was
the one in control. I was the one who was able to direct what was
happening to me. I tentatively pushed, gauging the situation. During
these early pushes, my water broke. What a bizarre sensation- just this
pop. Jason says I was so quiet at first that he was really worried that
contractions had stopped. I tried gentle, short pushes, but occasionally
would really bear down and push hard. When I pushed hard, into my
bottom, I could feel something happening. It was painful and scary, and I
wanted to avoid it. It made my entire body shake. It very much felt
like I had to poop, but it was was hard and painful. I noticed that I was starting to avoid that strong push.
I
suppose it was around this time that I sank into myself and had quite a
conversation with myself. It went something like this, "Amy, no one
else can do this for you. There is no way around this. You will have to
push this baby out. You. No one else can do it. Do you want to meet her
or not? I know it's scary, and I know it hurts, but you don't have a
choice. You have to do exactly what you don't want to and you can't
hesitate."
This
was all I needed. I pushed my feet against the opposite side of the
tub. I pushed with all I had. As she had been doing all along, Anne was
checking the baby's heart on the Doppler. She listened, and I am
assuming that during pushes she heard the baby's heart rate dropping.
She said that I had to push the baby out now. I tried with the next
contraction. Jason said that when I would stop pushing, the baby would
pop back up. Anne said, "You have to push the baby out now, or I'm
making you get out of the tub." It was a good threat! I gathered up
everything I had in my body for those last several pushes. I don't know
where it came from. I could very much feel Anne's fingers, and I
remember thinking how much the whole area hurt. This could have been the
"ring of fire" because soon I was hearing "here she comes" from
someone, probably Jason. I remember Anne saying, "push your baby out." I
don't actually really remember her head coming out. I remember pain,
and I remember them telling me to push, and then I felt her entire body
slide out. I opened my eyes to see Anne working under the water. Jason
told me it was because Violet's cord was wrapped several times around
her body, so Anne had to spin her around to get the cord unwrapped. She
plopped the baby on my chest. I couldn't stop saying, "Wow!" as I held
that wet, squirmy thing.
Anne
instructed Jason to get me immediately out of the tub onto the bed. I
had suffered from low iron at the end of the pregnancy, and Anne had
already told me that she needed to get the placenta out as soon as it
detached, so that I didn't bleed behind the placenta and bleed out. This
happened fairly soon- about five minutes later. I didn’t see the
placenta, and this time I kind of wanted to. How amazing is it that you
grow this entire organ that keeps your baby alive and then comes out?
Jason did not cut the cord until it stopped pulsing- an important thing,
as roughly 1/3 of baby's blood is transferred to the placenta before
birth. This way, baby gets everything back before the cord is cut. I was
so thrilled to finally be holding that little baby. She was a little on
the blue side at first, and needed a little stimulation to really get
her crying well. This took a couple of minutes, but she pinked up really
fast. I was able to nurse her right away.
We settled in with our girl- all 8 pounds, 10 ounces, 22 inches of her, born at 3:14am, August 27, 2011.
Anne then told us that was born with a nuchal hand- she had her fist
against her face as she came out, something that makes it even harder
for momma!
We
took our time getting cleaned up, eating (a Big Breakfast from
McDonald's) and enjoying the little one. She and I were constantly being
checked for anything of concern. Roughly every 20 minutes, they were
checking the baby's vitals, my vitals, and were checking my uterus for
the slightest sign of hemorrhage. I ended up needing 3 stitches- this
was probably the old wound from Charlotte reopened. After almost 6
hours, we were ready to pack up and take her home.
Giving
birth naturally was the hardest thing I've ever done, and by far the
most rewarding. Even though it hurt like hell, I could move, go to the
bathroom, eat, relax, and let my body do what it was made to do. After
Charlotte's birth, I was convinced that my body didn't know how to birth
a baby. I was convinced that only medicine and medical science could
get that baby out. But not only did I go into labor by myself with
Violet, I pushed that baby out all by myself without the tiniest
painkiller. There is no way to go through that without feeling empowered
and that you can do anything at all. I could not be more proud of
myself.
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