A Bag of Water That Leaks and Repairs Itself- A Birth Story
What a fabulous birth story. It shows how healthy and amazing a birth can be when we allow the natural process to unfold even when the birth is different than the norm. What an blessed mother and baby. Our bodies are capable of knowing what to do and healing themselves! This birth could have been very different.
Enjoy~
Aiden's
Birth Story.
Aiden was born on
Friday, March 30th
at 9:45 a.m., at 40 weeks 4 days, but his birth story starts at 37
weeks when I had my first contractions. Having had Braxton hicks
contractions forever (since 20 weeks or so), I knew these were a
little different, they were very uncomfortable but not necessarily
“painful”, but the cramping sensation was very different than
BH’s.
Our midwives let me know that it could mean he’d be earlier
than 40 weeks, OR it could mean nothing, and that some people just
have contractions before they go into labor. The real contractions
often caused BH contractions, and they were random in timing and
never had any progression so I readied myself for him to be late,
what I’d been expecting all along. I thought for sure I’d have
two April Aries boys, with Mark being my first April Aries boy.
Friday, March 16,
at 38 weeks 4 days I went to the bathroom and had a strange “I’m
leaking?!” moment where I thought I’d finished peeing but there
was still liquid trickling out. I was in the bathroom trying to
figure out what was going on long enough that Mark came to check on
me. After only a few trickles and no gush we decided I must have been
peeing and I went back to bed.
At 2:45 a.m. I got up to pee and again
had the same strange sensation, and this time smelled the liquid and
it definitely didn’t smell like pee… So we called our midwife who
said it was probably a small leak and to go get as much rest as we
could because I’d probably go into labor within 24 hours. Long
story short, we spent the next day awaiting a labor that was still
two weeks away. Sunday a more high-tech test (more high tech than the
litmus paper used on Saturday to confirm it was amniotic fluid) at
the midwifery center verified that I’d probably had a small tear
that repaired itself and we were back to status quo.
I had my last day
at work on Tuesday the 27th
and spent Wednesday doing a bunch of projects around the house, as
well as going on lots of walks. Toward the end of the day on
Wednesday I started to feel like he might never be born, and between
a growing anxiety that he’d be really late and my incredible
physical discomfort I was not in high spirits. But Thursday I woke up
with a fresh outlook, and started to make to-do lists of things I
wanted to get done as well as scheduling date nights for the weekend
to go to a few of my favorite restaurants.
Between cleaning the
bathroom, vacuuming and miscellaneous other household projects I
noticed that my contractions seemed to be a bit more regular than
usual and I timed a few of them at 10 minutes apart. While still
being fairly certain that it didn’t mean anything, I decided to
head to the gym to go for a walk on the treadmill, since a “Pineapple
Express” was rolling through the Northwest and it was pouring out.
I texted Mark to tell him that I was having a lot of contractions and
going to walk, and headed off. I only lasted 20 minutes on the
treadmill before I felt like I was having one constant Braxton Hicks
contraction, and decided to head home via the grocery store where I
stockpiled a bunch of my favorite foods and staples for the weekend
(since I was still banking on him being an April baby…)
The rest of the
afternoon was uneventful. I continued to have contractions about 10
minutes apart and continued to tell myself not to time them because
it didn’t matter. By the evening I admitted, to myself and Mark,
that I was feeling “a little weird”, but we proceeded with plans
to have a friend cook us dinner. We finished with chocolate cake
around and headed to bed around 10.
At 12:45a.m. on
Friday the 30th
I awoke to a giant kick from Baby, and felt my water starting to head
down—I said very calmly to Mark “my water’s breaking” and
hopped out of bed to grab a towel just in time to get it on the floor
under me. It was not a flood of water but was significant enough in
size that there was absolutely no doubt that my water had just broken
“for real”.
After relaying the news to K, our main midwife, we
got back in bed to try and rest. Just as soon as we did that I felt
Baby wiggle his head and then a flood of water came pouring out—this
time I was not so calm, since Mark wasn’t jumping out of bed and
grabbing towels I said “there’s TONS of water!!” and that
snapped him into action. Once that was cleaned up, we got back in bed
and turned on Bon Iver and I’m not sure if Mark actually fell
asleep, but I tried to rest between contractions that had immediately
gone to 6-7 minutes apart once my water broke and much stronger .
At
2:30 a.m. I declared sleeping a lost cause and was too uncomfortable
to be in bed any longer. Mark got up and started readying things like
the birthing tub and I turned on music and lit candles and tried to
get in the zone in the living room, laboring mostly on the couch at
this point with contractions that were 4 minutes apart and seemingly
intensifying with every one. At 4a.m. I called our midwife, K, back
and said “I know you said to call in the morning but what if my
contractions are 4 minutes apart” and she said “call me if they
are 4 minutes apart for an hour” to which I said “they have been
for half an hour” and she said “call me back in 1/2 an hour if
they stay there”.
This was a turning point for me mentally because
in my gut I knew it wasn’t going to be the next night when I had
this baby—and I wanted someone to come be with us. BUT, in my
rational brain (which was still working at this point) I knew I was a
first time mom and I’d only been in active labor for 3 hours and
she was probably right, I should relax and they’d come by in the
morning. I went back to laboring with Mark and tried to relax…
But at 4:20a.m.,
after a couple back to back contractions, I called her and said “ok
they are still 4 minutes apart” and she must have gathered from my
tone of voice that I was needing someone to come support us. She
said C., her apprentice, would be over soon. Mark was a tremendous
source of support throughout my labor, and I was simultaneously
really glad we had a chance to work through the first couple hours on
our own, as a team, and really glad that we were moving into the next
phase where we’d have the support of our midwives too.
C. arrived a
little before 6a.m. and Mark told her my last contractions had been 5
minutes apart, which I knew was not right, there was no way I was
getting any more than two and a half minutes of down time. So I
quickly said “No they’re not!!” and went back to leaning over
the exercise ball and waiting for them to time them again. C. said
“they aren’t that far apart” what seemed like very shortly
after that and then things snapped into action.
I was getting further
and further away from reality but have hazy memories of her texting
our main midwife, and her and Mark taking turns applying pressure to
my back through my contractions. I was still mostly laboring on the
couch on all fours or leaned up against the wall, and contractions
were probably 3 minutes apart and STRONG. I don’t remember much
around this, but I knew I was going to throw up and that I didn’t
want to do that in the dining room—there was still a rational part
of my brain working briefly and I convinced them to move the bucket
to the kitchen just in time. That then made me want a shower, even
though I hadn’t thrown up on myself I wanted to feel clean before I
got in the birth tub I guess.
But so began the
‘Bathroom phase’ of my labor—which is a blurry, and not as
positive phase—the water in the shower wasn’t warm enough, and
felt terrible touching me, the bathtub was cold and hard and didn’t
allow Mark to give me the counter pressure I needed. At some point in
here (7:45 a.m. from what they tell me) our other midwives arrived
and I have a hazy memory of A., the third person on our team coming
into the bathroom and telling me I was doing a good job, and then K.
coming in and suggesting that they check me.
Knowing that 1) I would
have to lay down for that and 2) if they told me I was only 4cm I
would have DIED, in my head I entered the “I don’t know if I can
do this phase”. I told them I couldn’t lay down to be checked and
somehow I became convinced that if I left the bathroom they’d want
to check me so I kept saying no to moving into the birth tub too. And
kept asking Mark to make sure it wasn’t too early to get in the
tub.
Somehow they
talked me into getting in the tub, and I was SO happy once I was in
the warm water; it was just what I needed. In hindsight, I know I hit
transition in the bathroom. Once I was in the tub it was clear to me
that my baby was on his way out and we just needed to work together
to make that happen.
I was laboring leaning against the side of the
tub, holding both of Marks hands through the contractions (it’s a
miracle I didn’t break his fingers!) for the hour of pushing before
we met our baby. I know that K. was talking me through the time in
the tub, but I was in “laborland” and only recall her telling me
to reach down and feel Baby’s head as he started to crown, and I
didn’t feel like I could change positions long enough to do that,
but after she had Mark look and suggested it again, I finally reached
down and felt this velvety, pointy little head and it was just the
inspiration I needed to get through the rest of the pushing.
That and
as they monitored his heart tones they were moving the Doppler down
with each contraction—so I could tell I was making progress, since
his heart was moving down. I don’t know how long it was between
feeling his head and his entrance into the world, but I remember K.
telling me what to do when he emerged and the next thing I knew he
was gasping and blinking in my arms, and Mark was right there with
us. He was absolutely perfect.
It’s been five
days since he made us a family of three, and I have spent all day
every day in bed with him, marveling at him and the entire process of
pregnancy and giving birth.
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