Meconium, Home Birth, Hospital Transport and a Healthy Baby
This is quite a journey and there is lots to learn in this beautiful birth story. You can have a healthy baby "post due", you can have a second birth very different than the first, sometimes an epidural helps (can you believe I just said that?!) and sometimes a hospital doc will pray for your birth to go well.
All in all- this is a powerful journey with a simply AMAZING MOTHER!
Enjoy!
Elijah Birth story
On
Wednesday the 28 of November I was 43 weeks 2 days pregnancy and I
was very tired. I had been having consistent Braxton Hicks
contractions about 7 min apart since the previous Thursday. That
night the contractions started to feel different and around 8:30 pm I
started to wonder if it was actually the beginning of labor, which at
this point felt like it was never going to come! By 9:30 I had no
doubt, as the contractions were becoming increasing uncomfortable and
already at every 5 minutes. I told my husband that I was sure that
this was it. I alerted by midwife and my doula that tonight was the
night and to be ready. I tried to lay down to rest but the
contractions were the worst when I lay down and I couldn’t sleep.
I sent my 2 ½ year old with my mom, since I couldn’t lay her down
to sleep and I was not able to concentrate on her. This was so hard,
as she had never spent a night away from me.
Everyone
was expecting a quick labor since my first birth was a little over 9
hours total, and less than three hours from the first intense
contraction. The contractions kept coming stronger so I had my
husband fill up the birth pool. When they were 3-4 minutes apart I
told the midwife and doula to come. They quickly arrived as I got in
the pool. Everyone was very excited for this long awaited day. I
labored as everyone chatted and enjoyed the buzz, and all seemed to
be going well. I was at the point that I started to need to sound out
the contractions. I was having my husband put counter pressure on my
back during the waves, which made everyone think the baby was likely
still posterior (he had been during my pregnancy and remained that
way stubbornly despite me trying lots of ways to get him to turn).
However,
after an hour or so, Denise, the midwife, noticed my contractions
were becoming inconsistent so she had me get out of the pool and walk
around. This helped the contractions return and they were intense. We
decided that I needed to stay out of the pool. A few more hours of
contractions happened. At this point, it appeared that I was entering
transitions based on the way I was sounding and acting. I was
increasingly becoming more and more tired, to the point that I was
falling asleep in between the 2-3 min apart contractions. They then
started to space out some again but were very intense when they
occurred and I was having a lot of back labor. This pattern continued
so Denise suggested I “go lay down to sleep, then wake up and push
a baby out”. I rested for about 2 hours until I couldn’t lay down
through them, but they were still inconsistent. I was very
discouraged and felt like giving up but I my husband encouraged me so
greatly. I had been in labor about 18 hours at this point, but it was
not progressing. We sent the midwife and doula home to rest and we
planned to do the same and hoped it would pick up soon.
I
continued to labor the rest of Thursday day and though the night but
was able to sleep well in between contractions. My daughter also had
returned home and stayed the night with us. Friday morning the
contractions started becoming more regular so we geared up again but
before too long they spaced out to about 7-10 min apart once more.
Disappointed and tired, we continued to try to rest. The midwife came
over and gave me a few suggestions to get labor going strongly again.
We went curb walking and up and down the stairs, tried nipple
stimulation and some other things.
A check from Denise showed I was
making progress but baby was likely crooked in the birth canal. I
continued to experience intense but irregular contractions until
Friday evening when they again picked up. I once again, sadly sent my
daughter to my Mom’s. They were again 5 minutes apart and I was
advised to stay upright so for the next few hours. I breathed through
each contraction while holding onto my husband and swaying. We were
also applying essential oils to help things keep going and it didn’t
take long before they were 3 minutes apart and very intense so we
once again called the midwife and doula to come. Almost as soon as
they got there contractions went back to 5 minutes apart. I labored
hard for hours but once again my body was tired and I began to fall
asleep between contractions. We tried to bring out the breast pump
and walk the stairs to no avail. Labor had slowed down too much
again.
The
midwife and doula went home and I tried to rest. I couldn’t sleep
because the contractions were so painful if they caught me lying
down. So my husband, Mark, stacked up pillows and I attempted to
sleep sitting up but didn’t get more than 2 hours before I was in
too much pain. By very early Saturday they were going again, but I
was feeling exhausted and like I was broken. The support from Mark,
my birth team and the amazing community of friends I have pushed me
to keep trying. Mark told the midwife that we needed to do any tricks
she knew of because he wasn’t sure how much more I had in me. The
midwife and doula came about 1:30 Saturday afternoon. They could see
the exhaustion on my face and the worry that my uterus and baby were
exhausted was expressed. Another midwife was brought in on a
consultation. She suggested that I do anything I could to sleep,
believing that if I rested that labor would pick up strongly and that
my body wouldn’t let me finish, at least not safely, if I was too
tired. I drank a glass of wine and went to bed.
I
got 2 hours before the contractions woke me up. In the span of an
hour they went from every 8 minutes to every 3. I was so fearful of
them spacing out again I was crying to my husband and telling him I
obviously couldn’t do it and to take me to the hospital. He called
my midwife to come over to encourage me but by the time she arrived
contractions were 2 minutes apart and I couldn’t talk to anyone. It
seemed like this was the end. Contractions were the most intense and
I was in my own world for a while.
Then it seemed like I was in
transition once again and the baby would be here soon. But my old
enemy was creeping up on me and I could feel the sleepy eyes pulling
at me in between the 1-2 minute contractions. As I feared, they once
again slowed down to about 5-6 minutes apart. At this point, to
everyone's disappointment it was obvious that my body was just too
tired and I couldn’t rest on my own. We decided to transport to the
hospital to get an epidural and rest and at least be able to birth
this baby vaginally. I was terrified because I knew the fight that
was ahead of me for all the reason I chose homebirth. I knew I would
be stuck with hospital doctors and nurses who were likely
disapproving of my choice to homebirth. I didn’t want to fight
against hospital procedure that I didn’t believe in.
I
prayed and we went in, arriving just after midnight Sunday morning. I
was kept in triage for over 2 hours to determine if I was in labor,
although within minutes they could tell I was contracting every 3-4
minutes and found me dilated to a 5. When I finally got a room, they
wanted blood work and other things before I could get the epi. So I
continued to labor naturally with barely enough energy to stand, but
God forbid I had to lay during a contraction. Mostly Mark just had to
support my weight.The resident doctor came to talk to me and almost
instantly suggest a c-section. She was rude in general, but I told
her that I was there to birth vaginally and I explained my new
revised birth plan. She was obviously annoyed and she left the room.
Then I got some amazing news. The midwife and doctor practice that I
had seen for my confirmation of pregnancy and 20 week ultrasound, and
originally selected as my birth team before I decided on homebirth
due to their reputation with natural birth, agreed to come and do my
birth instead of the residents. I later found out the resident called
and practically begged them to come because they didn’t want to
deal with my crazy ideas.
It
took 6 1/2 hours but I finally got the epidural and I went to sleep
for a few solid hours before my homebirth midwife, now acting as a
doula and friend, came to the hospital. My contractions hadn't picked
back up and she suggested that the best chance I have to birth the
baby vaginally was with pitocin. Baby was getting more stressed and
he had to come out. I sadly agreed and we started the lowest dose
possible. I was so upset by how differently my birth was turning out
to be. My other doula friend arrived and the day was spent sleeping
and talking and trying to remain positive. Progress was very slow
going, but we also had an amazing nurse who was very kind to us about
being a homebirth transport. After laboring for 18 more hours in the
hospital I was a 9 1/2. Another midwife friend who was there was
massaging me and pushing on pressure points to try to help me finish
dilating and after a few practice pushes I was complete.
However the
baby's heart rate was becoming increasingly worrisome and I was told
that baby had to come out soon. No one wanted me to have to have my
legs held back and purple push, but if that is what was necessary to
avoid a c-section than that is what I would do. With the next
contraction I began pushing, having no idea if I was doing it
correctly or if I was making any real progress. With each push
everyone around me surrounded me with love and encouragement. Pushing
was exhausting but as soon as they told me they could see hair I knew
I could do it. At one point, I had a very long respite in between the
pushing contractions, which I used to try and catch my breath. I
later learned that the OB was actually praying or me during this
pause.
He knew they could only safely let me push a few more times
before the situation could turn into an emergency for the baby. The
tiny respite was just what I needed. A few more contractions and half
his head was out. I reached down to feel it. I wanted my baby NOW. I
was burning down there and it hurt to push but with everything in me
I pushed and his head came out. His body followed soon after and I
got to lay eyes on MY BABY. They handed him to me and everyone prayed
he would breathe since we knew there was so much meconinum in the
water and his heart rate had been off. He let out little cries and it
was amazing. They still had to cut the cord earlier than I wanted and
suction him but he was healthy.
They stitched my 2nd
degree tear while I got to know him. Beautiful with dark hair. He
was everything I had been waiting on and working so hard for. He
instantly nursed like a champ. 8 lbs 12 oz and 21 1/2 inches long and
he looked just like his sister. He was amazing and very healthy. They
examined my “overdue” placenta and found it to be very healthy as
well. The OB dismissed the possibility that I was really that far
along, even though I was certain about my dates. This was not the
birth I planned for, and I actually felt like my body failed me for a
while. I may never know why, but this was the birth he needed.
My
birth story is kind of known around my natural parenting community
now. I don’t really know why, but I have been called a super mom
and amazing. I never felt like I was those things, actually quite the
opposite. I never imagined I would be one of the very rare women that
actually needed pitocin. I actually joke around with friends, that
since I was the martyr, and they will likely never know anyone else
in our community with such a hard labor, that their births will
likely go fine!
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