Sisters In Birth- How One Sister's C-Section Led To Another Sister's Home Birth
This story illustrates how the impetus to have a home birth for many women has nothing to do with what celebrities are doing, and everything to do with how women are treated in the hospital. A tale of two sisters-
Enjoy-
Sisters and birth- Finnigin's (and Ozius's) Birth story
Before I can write my birth story
for Finnigin I guess I need to write a pregnancy story. My story is so
tangled in my sister's story.I found out I was pregnant with my third
child when my younger sister, Merissa was at the end of her pregnancy
with her first. (Yay! hand-me-down maternity clothes!)
She had decided
to go the traditional route and have a hospital/ OB birth. I had always
wanted to have a midwife and a homebirth but I guess I was scared of
going outside the box of 'norm'. My Aunt had had all of her children at
home including a set of twins, who weighed in at 6lbs 9 oz and 6lbs 11
oz! (My preemie daughter had weighed 6lbs 10 oz) but my Mom had had me
and my 3 siblings in the hospital.
My sister Merissa 41 weeks |
Merissa had
actually gone to her first prenatal visit and realized that HER Dr.
Williams was the same Dr. Williams that had delivered all of us back in
the 80s (I can't make this kind of stuff up).
She really liked her
and was comforted by the fact that she was a very experienced Dr. and
we knew that she had delivered my brother breech vaginally, which even
then was uncommon. My sisters biggest fear was having a c-section (who
ISN'T afraid of a c-section??) so she felt more comfortable knowing Dr.
Williams was a veteran.
I was about eight weeks along
when my sister went into labor. She was a week and a half past her due
date and big as a house. After having contractions all night Saturday
night she headed to the hospital about noon. Dr. Williams wasn't there
and wouldn't be expected until the next day.
She was about 4 cm dilated
and the first thing they did was break her water. My sister had been
there less than four hours when the Dr. started talking about a
c-section. We were all very much against that, which seemed to piss the
Dr. off. The Dr. was horribly mean so of course the nurses followed
suite. A little back story: My sister has severe anxiety and had been
off her med through her entire pregnancy, so I think the mere mention
of the word 'c-section' stopped her labor dead in it's tracks.
We
mentioned this to the doctor,my mother and I, rather forcefully (I
guess bitchy would be more accurate) which really incensed her. My
sister had been adamant that she didn't want pain meds either. I went med
free with my first son and knew from experience how hard it was to get
the nurses AND doctors to respect those wishes, and it was no
different for Merissa. A c-section looked more and more eminent.
I had to finally go home and take
care of my two older kids. I wanted to go back but it was REALLY
hitting me because my sister's fear was my fear. My Mom stayed with her
while she labored all night. After telling the doctor off, she pretty
much left Merissa alone. In a bed. By herself. ALL night.
The
doctor told her she wasn't allowed to get up, and told the nurses she
couldn't have anymore ice chips. I really feel like the doctor was
trying to punish Merissa. She wasn't fitting into the hospitals 'plans".
The next day Dr. Williams finally got there but Merissa was exhausted.
She was stalled at 9 1/2 cm, hadn't eaten in over 24 hours and was
starting to get delirious.
My beautiful nephew was born via emergency c-section Monday afternoon weighing in at 10lbs 3 oz.
Me 41 weeks |
......Oh yeah this was supposed to be My birth story LOL
I hurt so bad for my sister. I
knew, KNEW that she could have done it. The doctor totally sabotaged
her labor....but sadly that is a typical hospital birth. I still hadn't
had my first prenatal visit and at 13 weeks finally MADE myself see an
OBGYN.
She was nice, the staff was nice, I HATED it! It felt like the
hospital. I never went back. My mom was disapproving about finding a
midwife "Just go to the doctor like EVERYONE else." I started scouring
the internet LOOKING. As I was looking I stumbled upon Multiple
Blessings, a midwife who had helped deliver lots of twins, named Robin.
She made me think about my aunt SO much, so I took this as the sign I
needed and sent an email.
I know I must have sounded like a
nervous wreck when we talked on the phone. Robin was SO reassuring.
She soothed my fears like nothing else had. I was amazed that she came
to my house for each prenatal visit.(
'You mean I don' have to leave my house?!") I had had high blood
pressure with my first pregnancy and delivered at 36 weeks, so that was
always an issue.
I learned so much about pregnancy being cared for by
Robin. You would think that I would know all of this since I had two
babies before this but doctors don't seem interested in educating their
patients. The weeks went by and we developed a great relationship. Her
student midwives, Jean and Heather would practice determining the
baby's position on me (being a guinea pig is fun! lol) And my
appointments felt like visiting with friends, not the emotional ordeal
that doctors visits had been in the past.
My due date came and went. We
looked back at my dates and figured out that my Oct. 8th due date was
probably more like Oct. 15th. There is NOTHING more horrible than being
40 weeks pregnant and being told, Nope you have maybe 3 more weeks to
go. Uhhhg I was miserable trying to take care of my kids and house.
Getting my son on the bus was almost impossible.
A 50lb 4 year old with
autism and a hugely pregnant Mommy who can't pick him up or chase after
him don't mix well! :( My wonderful sister would bring the baby over
and I would hold him while she got Emerson on the bus, or more
accurately carried him to the bus while he threw an atomic meltdown
because school was "YUCKEEEEEEYYYYY!" I don't know what I would have
done with out her!
Okay now, after that novel of a back-story on to the birth story!
On Friday,almost a week after my
'new' due date, Robin checked me to see how my cervix was doing. 75%
effaced and 1/2 cm dilated. I could CRY! (I think I did) So we were
going to wait and see what happened over the weekend. After my
appointment Merissa and I met our Mom for lunch.
I started having some
good contractions while we were out but nothing too regular. In my head
I kept thinking maybe tonight. It's got to be soon." ....YEEAAAH, I
don't know why I was giving myself false hope. lol The contractions
continued on like this ALL. Damn. Weekend. 8-10 minutes apart for 4
hours, then every hour, then nothing, and then start right back up
again. I called Robin every time any little thing changed, bless her
heart.
My husband works a rotating shift
and he was starting up on the night shift Monday night. I was nervous
to be alone with the kids in case business started happening. Monday
night around 12:30 (Tuesday morning?) I called Robin because the
contractions were getting more regular and intense. When she got to my
house, she checked and I was fully effaced but only dilated to maybe a 2
1/2. (I could cry AGAIN) She had me take some Benadryl and said that
was a good way to see if this was real labor or not. If it was the real
deal then the contractions would continue and if not then I could at
least get some sleep. She went home to get some sleep of her own and
said to call back later with an update.
Well they continued to get more
regular and intense I started walking around the living room. My couch
is in the middle of the room so I just kept walking around and around.
That afternoon Robin, Jean and Heather showed back up and we got down
to the important business of waiting, again, more. ...waiting...
When Robin checked me again I
think I was close to 6 cm dilated, which was progress but felt like not
enough since I had been in labor since Friday and this was nearing
Tuesday EVENING. Around and around that couch. Around and around.
Everyone was just sitting, chatting, my kind of gathering.
My mom made a
plate of fruit and cheese and every time I came around I would grab
something. A bite of a strawberry, or pop a grape in my mouth. Every so
often Robin would ask "Have you had a drink of water recently?" or
'When was the last time you peed?" I added a glass of water to my
orbital path around the couch and made sure to yell it out every time I
went to the bathroom(which was maybe every 10 minutes) TMI has no
place when you are having a baby.
Jean
asked if I need anything and what I really needed was a distraction.
So out came the mad libs! Hilarious and sort of a mistake because it
hurts to laugh during a contraction, but who CAN"T laugh during mad
libs?? Very diverting. ;)
At this point I had not been left
alone for even a second and felt very well taken care of. Finally
Merissa showed up. She had been dealing with the children and had to
wait for someone to take over before she could come.
I instinctively
knew she had to be there for the birth. My Mom had been there for my
first two hospital births but with Merissa's HORRIBLE, traumatizing
experience I knew I wanted her to be with me. I mean it was her
experience that had given my the push to look for something different.
Something better. (hehe, push)
I think I must have relaxed a
little after Merissa got there because everything started to happen all
at one. I went to the bathroom and as I was sitting there, I hear, and
feel this loud POP. (I think it was just in my head) Finally, my water
had broken! By then another midwife, Joy, had arrived and I called for
Robin. They both came and checked to make sure the water didn't have
any meconium in it. As the next contraction came It was excruciating!
It was time.
Heather and Jean had set up the
birthing chair in my room, so Robin and Joy helped me get there. The
birthing chair looks like a metal frame with a pink pool noodle on it
for comfort. It was the best! As soon as I was on it I started pushing.
I had a death grip on my sister's hand. She was counting and rubbing
my back, just like I had done for her in the hospital all those months
before. I think I was was on that chair for a total of 2-3
contractions and then, there is my sweet boy! 8lbs 14oz 22 inches long!
It's not 10lbs 3 oz but that's still a pretty hefty baby!
Mind
you it had been a mere EIGHT minutes since my water had broken. I held
him until the umbilical cord stopped pulsing. All of us crying( my
husband was there too, did I forget to mention that? lol)
Later my
sister told me that being there, watching me have my baby in the MOST
natural way, was like a healing balm to her memories of her horrible
birth experience. Those two were her only reference of birth and they
couldn't have been more night and day! Hope is the word.
I could get on
my soap box and preach the poor treatment of women in the hospital
system but I think my experience speaks for it's self. When people hear
that I had a home birth the most common reaction is "Wow, you're
BRAVE!" I don't think so. I think my sister is far more brave than me
to have gone through what she has.....
Finnigin |
Ozius |
Comments
My first experience started off as a home birth but ended up in hospital with patronising doctors, epidural, crowds of people at the birth and threats of C sections (even up to the point where we'd almost agreed to it when they realised I was fully dilated... idiots) I would NEVER choose to be in a hospital or advise anyone else to be.
Your birth story has given me courage! What a blissful way to bring a child into the world, surrounded by love and warmth :)
Again, wonderful story with two mama's who should be very proud of their own individual struggles and very lucky to have such supportive sisters!
Does a story like this deserved to be told? YES!
But it is only one part of circle.
Why don't you share stories of women whose babies have died during homebirths because of bad care and other circumstances? Why do you only share stories of outrage over medical interventions?
Can you not see how off balance this is? And women deserve to know more...they deserve to hear all the stories. Do you do it as an agenda or do you feel you are helping women? I hope the latter, but I hope you will see that something is missing. You may feel that you are only representing a small handful of women, but it is growing and you and those like you are some of their major sources of information. On the internet, women like me are a minority and that is why we want everyone to hear the other side. I would love for them hear all sides instead of having it manipulated away from them.
I wish it could all be told without fear of threat or influencing people poorly. If fear of medical interventions can be dealt with than fear of other bad outcomes should also be addressed.