Giving
birth in a culture that continually depicts labor as painful and dangerous is a
feat in itself these days. Everywhere we look we're shown images of women
screaming while giving birth, and masked doctors heroically saving the day. TV
medical dramas abound with women being rushed into operating rooms for
emergency C-sections, and sit-coms are notorious for showing laboring women
bitching at their guilt-ridden husbands for making them endure the "trials of
labor." Nowhere is birth depicted as a pleasurable experience. It's no wonder
that most women fear it.
Some
women, in fact, are so afraid of birth that they literally can't conceive. I
spoke with a doctor recently who told me that she was infertile. "My husband
and I have had numerous tests and there is absolutely nothing wrong with us
physically," she said, "but I've always been terrified of giving birth. I've
known since I was a child that I was never going to give birth. Do you think my
fear has actually kept me from conceiving?"
I've
spoken with other women who have been able to conceive but unable to give birth
vaginally. They too have wondered what role fear played in their experiences.
Still
others have given birth vaginally but endured a great deal of pain. One woman
said to me, "My sisters and I were all C-section babies. For me, it was a
triumph just to give birth vaginally. Maybe next time I'll be able to eliminate
the pain."
So,
as much as some women may criticize me for saying that one way of giving birth
is more desirable than another, or that there are goals to strive for in birth,
I truly believe there are. And the goal I've chosen to strive for is a
painless, drug-free, medically unassisted home birth.
Red
flags go up - even among unassisted birthers - when I talk about painless
birth. Most women have pain in labor and they're defensive if I say that birth
doesn't have to hurt. Some women feel that I'm "blaming" them for their pain,
but that certainly isn't my intention. Given the culture that most of us have
been raised in, pain, unfortunately, is actually to be expected in most cases.
However,
I don't see birth as inherently painful, and I know there will come a time when
labor will be enjoyed rather than endured. But before that can occur, there
must be a change in the consciousness of humanity, and ultimately that change
has to start with the individual.
If
we truly wish to experience a painless birth, it helps to know a little about
the nature of pain, including its function and cause. Pain is a sign telling us
that something is wrong. It doesn't happen indiscriminately. It only occurs
when we're doing something we shouldn't be doing. The pain is a message telling
us to stop.
In
the case of a laboring woman, it is obviously not a message to stop laboring.
What then, could the pain be telling us? According to Grantly Dick-Read, author
of Childbirth without Fear, fear is the source of pain in labor.
No other natural bodily function is painful, he writes, and childbirth should
not be the exception.
When
a person is afraid, messages are sent to the body telling it there is a danger
out there that must be fought or run away from. Blood and oxygen are instantly
sent into the muscle structure, enabling the frightened person to strike out or
run. But the extra blood and oxygen must come from somewhere, so the body
drains it from organs it considers nonessential for "flight or fight." This is
why people turn white when they're afraid. The body knows that the arms and
legs need that blood and oxygen more than the face does.
Unfortunately,
the body considers the uterus a nonessential organ when it comes to flight or
fight. According to Dick-Read, the uterus of a frightened woman in labor is
literally white. It doesn't have the fuel it needs so it cannot function the
way it was designed to, nor can waste products be properly carried away.
Consequently, there is pain. So, to eliminate the pain we must eliminate the
fear.
Of
course, sometimes that's easier said than done. Fear runs deep in our culture
and many of us could spend a lifetime (or two) purging ourselves of the fear
we've developed. Even the most "enlightened" people have had childhoods that
weren't perfect. And even a child who is raised by fearless parents, still has
to live in a culture that is constantly emphasizing the "dangers" of being
alive. I'm reminded of a statement made by the late Eric Sevareid. "The biggest
big business in America," he said "is not steel, automobiles, or television. It
is the manufacture, refinement and distribution of anxiety."
And
yet, eliminating fear is not impossible, for there is something that is much
more powerful than the most all-consuming fear - FAITH. Faith is believing that
all is well. Faith is knowing that we're not alone in the universe. Faith is
understanding that the consciousness that created us does not want us to suffer
in birth or in life. Faith is trusting that our bodies were designed to give
birth safely and painlessly. Faith is accepting the fact that we are the
creators of our lives and our births.
Faith
is not the opposite of reason. Having faith does not mean that we sit back and
do nothing during our pregnancy. When we have faith, we understand the
psychological origins for the majority of pain and problems most women
encounter in labor and we do our best to face and conquer our fears. We don't
run to "specialists" for "blood work" or urine tests or vitamins, for we know
that with good food (neither too much, nor too little), fresh air, exercise,
and the proper beliefs, our babies will thrive.
Having
faith is the first step towards eliminating the fear/tension/pain cycle that
most women experience in labor, for faith leads to relaxation, and relaxation
leads to pleasure.
There
is no doubt that the energy of birth is powerful. But its power can be like the
wind that scatters the seeds of the willow tree, or a sunrise that bathes the
sky in a beautiful yellow light. This is my vision of birth. Someday, I know
the rest of the world will share it with me.