Birth Story- Diabetic Mother, Accidental Unassisted Home Birth (VBAC) at 42 Weeks
I wrote four intros to this birth story...
I don't know which one to use.  
All I can say is that this is a great birth story.  A healthy baby.  A happy mother.  A baby born at home to a diabetic mother at almost 43 weeks.  Oh- and it was an HBAC.
This is more than a birth story.  It is a statement about the politics of birth, particularly what is deemed "high-risk" and what happens when women have to make hard choices in an imperfect system.   
Enjoy! 
I wanted to share my most recent birth story with you--it was my third hbac, and baby was born at 42w5d--which is a big deal to me because as a woman with type 1 diabetes, if I were to birth in the hospital, I would not be allowed to carry my baby beyond 38 or, at the most, 39 weeks. Which is how I ended up with my primary c/s--a prophylactic induction at 37.5 weeks, which turned into a c/s for fetal distress. So I birth at home.
Here's my story:
I
 made it to 42 weeks before I got impatient. My mom and my mother in law
 had been here for longer than they were hoping to be here, and we were 
all suffering from Antsinpants disease. Plus, I'd gone to 42 weeks, and I
 wasn't sure how comfortable I felt going much longer than that, 
especially with my pre-existing condition (doctors have this 
irrational-in-my-opinion fear that my placenta will age prematurely, and
 cause baby to be stillborn, but I can't find actual documentation of 
this happening in real life. However, due to their fear of this, people 
with my condition, who birth with a doctor, will be induced at 38 or 39 
weeks, regardless of how the mom or baby is actually doing). So at 
42w1d, I took Castor oil to try to get things moving along. 
I
 took the Castor oil at lunch, and by 3p, I was having noticeably 
regular braxton-hicks. They continued through the afternoon, so after we
 tucked the older two kids into bed, my husband and I took the toddler, 
and went to out local Wal-Mart to walk around for an hour or so. The 
contractions got to the point at which walking was getting uncomfortable
 (plus, it was, like 11p and I was exhausted), so we packed up and 
headed home, expecting we'd have a baby that night.
When
 we got home, I was so tired that I just fell into bed, and didn't wake 
up until morning. I was disappointed to discover the next morning that, 
not only had I not had a baby, but my contractions had all but stopped. I
 showered and took a nap, and hoped they'd start up again, soon. They 
reconvened at supper, and, after a few hours of their being fairly 
strong and fairly regular, I texted my midwife to tell her that I 
thought I might be in labor. At bedtime, I nursed my toddler to sleep, 
fell asleep myself, and assumed I'd have a baby that night.
I
 woke up the next morning, still pregnant, and the contractions were 
on-again-off-again. I was frustrated and tired, and fed up with not 
knowing what was going on. I told my midwife that things had stalled 
again, but I'd started having bloody show, so I knew things were moving 
along, even if labor wasn't starting in earnest, yet. I had bloody 
show--gobs of it--all day that day. The contractions didn't stall out 
completely again, but they weren't regular, either. I went to bed 
completely exhausted, hoping I wouldn't have a baby that night. 
And
 now it was Friday--Good Friday, actually. I'd had prodromal labor for 
3.5 days, I was tired, crabby, frustrated, and over all the uncertainty.
 The moms took the kids for a walk, and I decided to go to the store 
because I'd been stuck at home for the past three days. I got out, got 
some lunch, and watched a show while the house was empty. I contemplated
 what eternal pregnancy might feel like. 
That
 afternoon, the contractions picked up again. They were very far apart, 
but they were definitely stronger than they'd been. The moms went 
grocery shopping that night, while the kids, my husband, and I stayed 
home. The contractions were growing stronger still, but were still quite
 far apart. I started looking around on http://www.spinningbabies.com,
 to see if it had anything to say about prodromal labor. I found some 
information on a technique called "The Lift and Tuck," that they 
purported would help a stalled or inefficient labor. The post warned 
that it could make labor progress very quickly, but after almost four 
days of prodromal labor, I rolled my eyes and said, "Yeah. Right." I 
tried it through a few contractions, and it made them immensely more 
manageable, so I figured whether it helped improve my labor pattern or 
not, it made me more comfortable, so, by golly, I would do it anyway. 
The
 moms returned from grocery shopping, and I helped them put groceries 
away for a few minutes, but I had to keep stopping to work through 
contractions, so I went to bed. My toddler came in for milkies, but I 
sent him out because I wasn't ready for the super mega contractions that
 nursing him was going to bring on, unless I was going to get a sleeping
 toddler out of the deal, and he wasn't close to being ready to 
sleep. I sent him out to watch Mythbusters with daddy. The contractions 
continued to ramp up, and I suddenly realized I was grunting and pushing
 through them. Which freaked me out, because I wasn't yet ready to 
commit to the idea that I was even in labor yet--fool me once, and all 
that--so I definitely knew I shouldn't be feeling pushy yet. 
I
 had to pee (again), in fact, I was feeling like I constantly needed to 
pee through every contraction, which was driving me nuts, so I got up 
and sat on the toilet for a while. And tried to keep from pushing. Which
 totally sucked. So then I decided to heck with it, and pushed 
anyway--but I, apparently made this ridiculous compromise with myself, 
so I only kind of pushed. Which also sucked, and also freaked me out, because obviously I wasn't making progress if I was only kind of pushing, so then I was all, "Ohnoes! I'm not going to ever get this baby out!"
I
 went back to bed because I was tired, and my husband sent the toddler 
in, saying he was ready for bed now. So I nursed (and pushed!) until the
 toddler fell asleep, and then I decided to get in the shower for a 
little hydrotherapy. While I was in there, my husband came in and asked 
if he should maybe call the midwife. Still in denial that this could 
really be labor (yes, I am a little irrational in labor), I said,
 "No; things will probably slow down again after I go to sleep." He 
stood there for a minute, listening to me push and moan, and said, "I 
think I'll call her anyway." 
After
 a short conversation with the midwife, in which it was decided that she
 would head out, since she had a two-hour drive to our house, my husband
 came back in the bathroom and said, "The midwife wants to know how far 
apart your contractions are." He timed my moans and pushes for a few 
minutes, then called the midwife again, to tell her the contractions 
were coming about two minutes apart. "Hope you're ready to catch a 
baby," she said. He laughed. 
I
 moved from the shower back to the bed, and pushed while lying on my 
side for a while, but that didn't  feel right--especially since I was 
still only kind of pushing. Finally, I said, "Oh, to heckwithit!"
 I threw a chux pad on the floor by the bed, knelt down, and gave a good
 push with the next contraction. My water broke. In my pants. Because I 
was still in denial that this was labor, so I'd neglected to remove 
them. Although, I wasn't in denial anymore.
I
 started pushing in earnest at this point; the contractions scooted 
closer and closer together, and got stronger and stronger. I had my 
husband performing counter-pressure duty on my lower back at this 
point. 
"Let me know when you have your next break," he said. "I need to tell the moms that you're in labor." 
"Don't you dare leave!" I gasped. "You'll never get back in time for the next contraction!" 
"I'll make it--I promise!"
"Fine--go NOW!" He ran off, and just made it back in time to slide into home and shove his fist into my lower back. 
The
 contractions were crashing one atop the other, now, and I was feeling 
pressure--the kind no pregnant woman wants to talk about after she's had
 a baby. But this is a true story, and I'm sparing no details, so--. 
"Tell me when you get another break," my husband said. "I need to get 
some more chux pads. And some toilet paper." He was so polite about it. 
"I know--I pooped! No breaks--just deal with it later," I said, as one 
contraction subsided and the next one started up. I had started feeling 
the "ring of fire" as I felt the babies head push past my tailbone, and 
it totally confused me because that only happens when the baby's head is
 crowning. And I couldn't possibly be crowning yet. I still had hours of
 labor to go. At least, that's what my labor-addled mind was telling me.
 Plus, I wasn't in my "labor zone." 
With
 the next push, clarity came. I could feel the head pushing against the 
opening of my vagina. I was having a baby. Now. With only one chux pad 
and no toilet paper. "Here comes the head," I told my husband. "Where? 
Now?" he said. "Yes!" I shouted at him. He bent down for a closer look 
and said, "Gah! There's the head--what do I do?" "Catch it!" And 
so he did. "Body's coming," I warned him, now that the pressure from the
 head was gone. He caught it as it slithered out of my vagina. "It's a 
girl!" he said, as he passed our crying baby up between my legs. I 
pulled my tank top down and latched her on, still kneeling on the floor 
by the bed, the umbilical cord dangling between my legs. 
"Can
 you help me up on the bed?" I asked. My husband was rushing around the 
room, trying to clean blood out of the carpet, and wipe up the various 
bodily fluids that had missed the chux pad. He'd done astoundingly well 
at squelching his inner germaphobe while I was birthing. "Hang on--let 
me get this cleaned up." He lost his head a little in the confusion, but
 a little throat clearing brought him back, and he helped me onto the 
bed, after which, the placenta slid out. 
We
 called the time at 12:36a, although, we aren't for sure, because, I 
mean, when you're having a baby (somewhat unexpectedly), you're not 
going to look at the clock. The midwife arrived two hours later, and we 
all had a good laugh because--well, it seemed like the thing to do. Our 
baby girl was born at 42w5d, weighed 8lbs11oz, measured 21 1/4 inches 
long. 
That's my story.
Comments
xo, Sarah
hustlababy09.blogspot.com
1. Homebirth with an unlicensed m/w or UC (I don't know how easy this option would be in reality--I think I was very, very lucky to find the serendipitous circumstances which I am in).
2. Just insist that you WILL have a vbac, that you will NOT be induced, and to just leave you the heck alone. Unfortunately, this isn't exactly an easy option (or a possible option, in some scenarios, sadly).)