Giving
Birth To An Angel
A
Sensual Birth told by Laurie Morgan
The
night before my second daughter was to be born I started having comfortable but
regular contractions. They came five minutes apart for half an hour, so I
called my mom and my girlfriend Bridgette to let them know that the big event
might be soon around midnight. I was thirteen days past the estimated “due”
date, so I was really emotionally ready. When labor stopped immediately after I
hung up the phone, I decided to go to bed. I wasn’t having contractions when my
husband John got up in the morning, so I let him go to work. Late in the
morning, my 22-month-old daughter Christiana and I started the day as usual,
getting breakfast and watching a little TV. Contractions started again, and
although they weren’t painful, they were definitely strong, so I called John to
wrap things up at work and get home as soon as possible. I looked forward to
having his loving attention.
While
waiting, Christiana and I showered and got dressed. I was very deliberate about
showering and brushing my teeth and hair. Not only was this relaxing and
invigorating, it was also a spiritually cleansing and satisfying personal
ritual that really helped me to loosen up. This was in stark contrast to the
disgust I had felt following my first daughter’s birth, not having had the
chance to wash up before hand and then being bedridden for three days. I also
donned a white embroidered lace nightgown that I had handmade for the occasion
of my pregnancy and labor. I had purposefully kept it clean and ready the last
two weeks preceding this day.
When
Johnny got home around 12:30, we relaxed together on the couch. He breathed
with me through contractions and was verbally encouraging. His loving presence
was an important part of my opening up. By now we were both aware of the
sensuality surrounding birth. Creating this child was an intimate act of love
between the two of us, and birthing in a loving way simply and naturally
completed that act. As a result of my healing, I was much more able to “open
up” during this labor. I had finally become able to make my vagina wet and
loose by fantasizing about making love to my husband, so while I labored, I
graphically visualized having sex. John and I both welcomed the idea of
actually having sex during labor (in fact John offered to perform oral sex on
me right in the middle of it...what a man!), but I just happened to be focused
elsewhere at the time. In the days preceding I had masturbated frequently. I
found this to be an intensely pleasurable, loving, and appropriate preparation
for our baby’s birth. Laboring in the environment of my own home was crucial to
accepting these feelings.
John
and I also prayed together and called family for more prayer and emotional
support. We listened to inspiring Christian praise music and I rocked in my
rocking chair. I sucked on a grape popsicle. I ate lunch, and generally made
myself comfortable. I also began getting supplies ready, like plastic sheeting
and linens. I even set up the video camera, which in the excitement we ended up
forgetting to use. When contractions got really strong, I made myself a little
nest of pillows to lean on at the end of our spare bed, and told John that it
was time to call Bridgette to come. When she arrived about an hour later, I was
in the living room, concentrating on opening up and relaxing my pelvic muscles.
I had an overwhelming feeling that if I relaxed enough, the baby would come out
too fast. That feeling was affirmed every time I stood up, when gravity would
cause the downward pressure to increase unbearably.
While
Bridgette set to preparing homemade chicken soup in the kitchen, I went to my
bedroom to spend some time alone. It felt incredibly appropriate to crawl the
whole way on my hands and knees, and so, as ridiculous as it may seem I did.
Christiana entertained herself and visited off and on throughout this stage of
labor, tenderly lavishing hugs and kisses on me. I delighted in cuddling and
playing with my two year old daughter, despite dire warnings that labor would
frighten her from people who didn’t understand that she is like a soul mate to
me.
When
transition started, I panicked and began to have a few painful contractions, so
I had Bridgette rub my lower back while John occupied Christiana’s attention.
After a few minutes, I became fearful that I wouldn’t be able to handle the
intensity of the contractions if this labor continued for as many hours as my
first had. What I didn’t realize was that the baby was about to be born, and
that the painless contractions I had been experiencing earlier were those
“hours of labor”. Bridgette expressed her confidence in me, helping me to
remember that I could regain control of the pain once the “pushing phase”
started. After she suggested a few times that it would take the edge off the
contractions, I gratefully crawled into the warm bath she prepared. As I sat
upright in the tub, Bridgette vigorously swished water over my belly and labor
immediately became bearable again. I then re-focused on my goal--a gentle and
painless birth.
A
few contractions later, I told Bridgette out of the blue that I wanted a break
in the intensity of labor, and miraculously, it came. My prayers were answered
with a long, contraction-free moment in which I was able to regroup and rest.
Soon my body spoke again, clearly telling me that it was now time to push the
baby out. Bridgette wondered aloud how far along I was, so I checked inside and
was able to feel the head. What a delight! A few seconds later, there was a
gush as my water broke. While pushing with an irresistible urge, I
instinctively turned onto my hands and knees in the tub. I remember very
clearly the intense pleasure of feeling my baby’s body move downward inside me.
The spreading apart of my muscles and bones and the joy of voluntarily allowing
my body to do it’s work was both arousing and exhilarating. An instant later,
Bridgette could see the baby’s head, so she called John and Christiana to come
into the bathroom. I found it amazingly satisfying to pinch my clitoris to
relieve the burning sensation while I savored the soft, wet, slightly furry
head of the emerging new person pressing on my eager fingers.
John
came and cupped the baby’s head in his hands, so I relaxed knowing she would
not fall head first into the tub. With one more contraction and three pushes,
Angelica Marie Morgan was born into her father’s hands! She was a bit purple,
having birthed through the cord that had been around her neck, but after I
turned over and rested her on my tummy, she quickly developed a healthy color.
We all felt euphoric. After wrapping mom and baby in a towel, John suddenly
remembered the video camera and began taping.
When
we identified and announced that the baby was a girl, Christiana, who had been
standing by quietly, now exclaimed, “Baby sister! Baby sister!” I was utterly
triumphant! “Pop a cork,” I said, “I feel like having a party!”, as Christiana
reached into the tub to gently touch her sister for the first time. Then
Bridgette went to stir the chicken soup, leaving us to have family time
alone. I had begun making plans to get the two of us out of the still
warm tub when Angelica began to root around for her first meal, so I settled
back in to nurse my four-minute-old daughter. When she was done, John and
Bridgette helped us out of the tub and dried us off. Still connected to my
daughter by her umbilical cord, I energetically walked over and settled us into
our family bed. Once there, Angelica and Christiana nursed together.
A
few minutes later, I felt another irresistible urge to push, and out came
Angelica’s placenta into the disposable underpad I had been sitting on.
Bridgette wrapped it and gently set it alongside us. Later, I cut the cord when
the babies were contented, having finished nursing. John started making phone
calls soon after, while I snuggled with my two little girls. By that time the
delicious smell of chicken soup had spread throughout the house, so we all
happily devoured our dinners while recalling and celebrating the afternoon’s
fantastic events. Bridgette’s recipe for chicken soup still brings back great
memories every time I make it.
Christiana
and I ended the birthing day by sharing an herbal bath while Angelica
acquainted herself with her father. I remember laughing with Bridgette over the
irony that she had prepared the herbs to aid in healing my perineum so
carefully, and I hadn’t even torn. I even used toilet paper without pain thirty
minutes after giving birth. We chose not to disturb Angelica until she was well
settled, so it was not until that night that we found out she weighed 8 lbs. 14
oz. with a head circumference of 14 inches. A few days later we measured her at
23 inches in length. Besides enjoying my labor and birth, I was positively high
long afterwards. I was delighted to find that I was remarkably energetic the
entire night. I even filmed my husband interacting with his new daughter just
hours later from the living room couch.
Commentary:
The following is the commentary that I have always included with my birth
story: “You may note that there are a few things missing from this birth story.
No one told me when I was in labor. No one checked or recorded my dilation,
effacement or station. No one told me when or where to sit up, lie down, eat,
drink, or pee. No one screwed wires into my baby’s scalp. No one ruptured her
membranes. Angelica was not touched by any one outside of her family as she
entered the world. No one shoved a bulb syringe into her tiny newborn nose. She
began to breathe in her own time, while still receiving oxygen from her
placenta. She was not taken from me to be swaddled and isolated in a plastic
warmer with a pacifier in her mouth. She was warmed under a towel by her skin
touching mine, and comforted by a warm breast and her mother’s milk. Angelica
was not exposed to the germ filled atmosphere of a hospital. In fact, the first
other place she rested outside of my arms was on her Father’s chest, rather
than an isolete or car seat.
The
absence of intervention in my daughter’s birth was fully intentional. I believe
in birth, and I trust life. Healthy babies come out when they are ready. I know
that babies are meant to be born without anyone putting their hands inside
their mothers. Cervixes dilate (or not) even when no one knows how dilated they
are. Monitoring heart-rates, obsessing over dates, poking with needles, etc. do
not make babies healthy or happy. Good genes, adequate maternal nutrition, high
quality prenatal care, and education do that. In truth, most interventions
cause stress, inhibit nature, and dangerously increase the need for more
interventions. Even the relatively interference-free care given by most
midwives often crosses nature’s boundaries. I was quite blessed to have the
help of a friend who is truly trusting and aware of these things despite having
been trained in midwifery.
It
is shameful when intervention meant for life-saving is used when it is
completely unnecessary. The subtle, unkind interference that goes unnoticed
because it is accepted as necessary is just as inexcusable. The violent
suctioning of newborns serves as one good example. It is well documented that
mucus is expelled from the lungs during birth, and that the rest will drain
gently when the newborn is placed on its mother’s tummy. Even when suctioning
is necessary, there is still no excuse for treating the newborn roughly.
The
impact birth has on the rest of our children’s life requires that we as parents
take full responsibility for our caregivers’ actions. Many people go about
choosing their caregiver with the very intention of relinquishing their
parental responsibility of ensuring their child a safe birth. Instead, parents
should take time to gain the education needed to make their own decisions, and
insist that birth attendants honor their wishes. Even if that necessitates
questioning caregiver’s actions, refusing to allow certain procedures, or
actually firing attendants.
One
might also think, as a lot of people have, that I was lucky to have only thirty
minutes of painful labor. But I know that it wasn’t luck. I planned to birth
this way from the start. Before I was even pregnant, I prepared myself by
reading about, praying for, and believing in the kind of birth I wanted. I
learned about the fear/pain cycle, and through prayer, allowed myself to be
freed of anxiety about labor pain. Without involuntary muscular opposition
brought on by fear, my body was able to work as it should--quickly and
painlessly. I also attribute the speed and ease of my labor to the lack of
outside influences. I didn’t have internal exams because I believe that this
unnatural act causes the pelvic muscles to reflexively tense up, lengthening
labor and increasing discomfort. I also know that the signs of labor’s stages
(dilation for instance) can change radically in a short amount of time.
Therefore I believe that when an “expert” assesses where a woman is in labor,
and that assessment conflicts with what her body tells her, the news becomes a
self fulfilling prophecy, and the woman becomes disheartened and exhausted
unnecessarily. This helps explain why women in hospitals often give up on
having a “natural” birth. They are having longer, harder labors because of
their environment. Anyone who could refuse drugs in that situation deserves a
medal!
Women’s
bodies were made to be able to birth without assistance of any kind. I shudder
when I hear glowing accounts of birth that include statements like, “the doctor
had to...”, or, “my midwife needed to...”, because I know that a lot more of
those labors were labeled and treated as high risk than truly were. So many
women are convinced that their baby’s birth would have been a tragedy without
intervention that, were women being told the truth, it’s statistically
impossible for the human race to have survived before the invention of these
procedures. The odds that the majority of American women really aren’t
physically able to birth the way I did are slim. Of the many reasons why so few
actually do, acceptance of status quo, lack of education, and lack of desire
are all within our power to change. Therefore it is our duty to do so.
I
have been incredibly empowered and spiritually moved by my birth experience.
Too many families are missing the same opportunity because of the
over-acceptance and over-application of intervention in labor and delivery. I
hope that the story of my daughter’s birth is encouraging to other families,
and influences them to seek out the information necessary for them to have the
births they want.
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