Skip to main content

A Birth Story

We decided to try a midwife and I had started to seriously doubt that decision. I was 41 weeks and 1 day pregnant and very anxious about this baby making her appearance. I was tired of the pitying looks and comments from Gabe’s bus drivers and branch members. I was tired of feeling like a hostage to an unborn child. I was tired of feeling anxious and coming up with back-up plans for if she came at night or during the day. I was tired.
            I woke up the morning of May 15, 2017 and said to the baby, “Alright, you are done, you are coming out today!” Then proceeded to walk 2.5 miles, take my evening primrose oil capsules, and various other wives tale, natural (excluding castor oil), labor inducing remedies. I climbed into bed that night feeling frustrated. I had had no contractions despite everything I tried. I felt like my body was broken. I kept having thoughts about my other children’s labors. I was induced with both of them and maybe my body just didn’t know how to go into labor by itself. I was panicking. If my body doesn’t know how to go into labor by itself, what would/could the midwife do? Why did I decide I wanted a midwife for this baby? Among other less than desirable thoughts, I fell asleep.
            I had to use the toilet. It was 12:30 AM. I stumbled to the bathroom realizing that I might not have made it in time. I went back to the bed to see that the sheets were indeed wet. My water broke. I waited for the contractions to start. I woke Randy so I could strip the sheets off the bed, told him that my water broke and kept waiting. I called the midwife at 1:30AM to ask what to do. She said to go back to bed and try to sleep, and then call her back when the contractions started. It took a while to get back to bed; the baby was going to come soon and I was excited.
            The first contraction woke me up at 5:50ishAM. I got nearly a full night’s sleep. I called “the help” to let them know that I was in labor and they were on deck. The contractions were already 5 minutes apart lasting over a minute. I called “the help” back and said I will need you sooner than I thought. Everything and everyone was in motion from that point on.  
            Randy and I were in the Aspen by 6:40AM driving to the birthing center. I didn’t want to sit because the pain was so intense. I was trying to remain in control of my brain as I whined/moaned/cried and gave directions to the birthing center. We were taking a path we hadn’t practiced due to how fast the contractions were coming. Randy kept reminding me that we needed to get to the birthing center to have the baby; he was not prepared to deliver a baby on the side of the road.
            We pulled up to the birthing center just before 7:00AM. We mounted the steps arduously. We got into the birth room and the midwife wanted to check my progress. I was at an 8.5-9 centimeters dilated and the midwife felt there wasn’t enough time to fill the birthing pool before the baby would make her way out. I asked if I could get in the shower. I was in my laboring mind so I really don’t know at what time I got into the shower but upon further reflection, I was in there about 35 minutes. My yoga practice and hypno-birthing strategies had fled me. I remember saying, “It just hurts so much!” and then screamed in agony. The only thing that seemed to help was to chew on ice chunks from my water bottle. I have no idea why ice chewing broke the pain for me but I am grateful it was there.
The midwife suggested that I sit on the toilet to help progress things. I had come off of my hands and knees and was standing in the shower at that point. I sat down and felt the baby drop the last little bit and she was crowning. The midwife said she couldn’t catch the baby if I was sitting and she didn’t want the baby in the toilet so with help, I stood back up and my body started to push the baby out without me telling it to. The midwife told me to slow the pushing. It was one and a half pushes and Eden Bonnie made her debut into this world.
I stood there holding my beautiful baby girl and I was filled with relief. The pain stopped, my body relaxed and everything was right with the world once again.
They laid me on my back on the bathroom floor to wait for the placenta to stop pulsing. While there, the second midwife mentioned that the baby looked and felt like a 10 pound baby. My other children were 7 pounds 5 ounces and 7 pounds 10 ounces. I had a hard time believing that this one would be much bigger. After I got back into the recovery bed and rinsed the baby off, they brought the scales over. She was a 9 pounds and 8 ounces heavy. She was 21 inches long and had a head circumference of 37 centimeters. She was not a small baby.

We recovered at the birthing center until noon and then I was ready to go home. We loaded us all up, came home and watched Sherlock. It has now been two weeks since she was born and I can honestly say I am proud of what my body was able to do. I am glad to know that my body is capable of going into labor by itself. Eden is a beautiful addition to our family. We are completely enamored with her. Thank you for all the prayers, pitying looks and comments, and support. I have truly felt the effects of those efforts. 

Comments

  1. Yay, I love your story!!:) So glad Eden is here safe and sound!!:) Thank you for sharing your story, I love reading birth stories!!:)

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

The End of a Chapter

We said goodbye to Canyon View today. Canyon View has been Gabe's school for the last two years. Once upon a time I posted a post about how we suspected Gabe was autistic and now here we are two years and a couple of months later getting ready to send him off to kindergarten. I have tears pooling in my eyes right now as I look back at where we started and the amazing progress he has made. Facebook notified me about a memory from last year at the end of May when I celebrated him saying "mom" clearly for the first time. He's speaking in full paragraphs now (if he has something he wants to share). He is toilet trained. He is so incredibly smart. I have tried to express my gratitude for the teachers that have been on this road with us. Much of the progress he has made is because of your efforts and I am so grateful to you for being his other moms and a support to me. We will continue to have meltdowns, hard times and struggles, but we have an amazing foundation of love an...

A Series of Unfortunate Events

We borrowed out our van to a friend. She drove it to Salt Lake where it broke down. It is still there. We had to call a tow company to take it to a repair shop but our insurance only covered 5 miles and the nearest place is 7. So we will be getting an over-charge bill from Geico. We have never made a claim with Geico. The automatic online claim application denied us. So we had to call Geico and talk to a live warm body to get coverage on 5 miles. Keeping in mind that we have been Geico customers for 9 years and never made a claim, I think it would have been nice had they just covered those two extra miles. (Randy has been a customer for a really long time I was added to his policy almost 5 years ago.) The tow company never called to confirm that they had dropped off the van, the mechanic didn't call to tell us they had got the van. When we called during lunch today the mechanic said they had it, run diagnostic on it and don't know what is wrong with it but it is most likely the...

Because sometimes Facebook isn't good enough.

I decided to try blogging again. In the middle of the night, I start to write long political arguments that maybe sometimes start to be interesting enough to put out on the web. Scary right? Facebook just doesn't offer the right medium to put my ideas out there. In the beginning Facebook was the shiz! and then they started letting 13-year olds sign up and that was the end of a good thing. Facebook was a way to help people stay connected, and now it is a place to put your suped up emoticons and pictures of things that we really don't need or want to see in the first place. We do it because its there and its easy. Click the like button, click the share button. Sometimes I think there needs to be a "justify your reason for liking this <blank>" pop up just so that we actually have to think about what we are doing. Initially we see a something that was funny, or true so we share it only to discover the next day that it really wasn't that funny or true and in fact...