The
day that my daughter was born, my son and I awoke early (5:30 am) which is very
rare for us. Usually we are up around 8:30 or 9:00. I started to have
contractions accompanied by abdominal cramps. The contractions were nothing
new, as I had been having them off and on for weeks now. I ended up in the
bathroom, as I had loose stool. I thought that the cramps were due to a mango I
had eaten the night before so I didn't take them seriously. As usual, my 2 and
1/2 year-old son and I went to the local library for story time at 10:00. We
usually walk around town afterwards, but this time we came straight home. I
kept thinking that a heating pad to my abdomen would help with the cramping.
At
home, I read books to my son. At 12:00, I called my husband Erik to come home
and help with lunch and our son. I wanted to either stay in the bathroom or
curl up in bed with a heating pad. When Erik came home thirty minutes later, I
had a bloody show. I then knew that this was it! I was so excited - we all
were. I got the changing room ready with Erik's help, Erik got our son some
lunch, and then the two of them went for a walk outside to let me be alone - as
I wanted to be.
At
around 2:30, Erik put our son down for his nap. I began feeling hard back labor
as the contractions intensified. I knew that things were starting now. I asked
Erik to massage my lower back and he did . . . for three hours! (It felt so
good, I wouldn't let him stop, even to pee!) The air was cool as it was lightly
raining on this Thursday afternoon. I had a small portable heater going on to
warm the room for my baby's arrival. In the beginning of this, what I call
"working labor" (labor I need to focus on), I stood up holding onto the front
of our wooden changing table. I sang something that sounded like an Indian
chant as I rocked my pelvis back and forth. I pushed up on my abdomen to move
the baby off my lower back and towards my cervix. This helped with my back
pain, as did the massage Erik was doing.
During
transition, I rested between uterine "hugs" by leaning forward onto a mound of
pillows stacked up onto the changing table. From this time on, I was totally
silent as I concentrated on complete relaxation. I repeated to myself, "I am
completely relaxed. My body knows exactly what it is doing. I am not fighting
this in any way." I got down onto my knees, holding onto the front of the
changing table when I felt the urge to push. With my hand, I felt the bag of
water pushing out of my cervix. . .like a bubble. It was very strong and thick.
I tried to break it with my fingernails (thinking the water flow would whoosh
the baby down), but the bag would not pop. After a few strong, intense pushes,
the water did indeed break and I felt the baby descend the birth canal. Erik
said that he saw meconium in the water. This slightly panicked me. It took
about 5 pushes for my daughter to be born. Erik was excited when she crowned.
He was doing perineum massage with oil and supporting my perineum with his
hands. Her head came out and I yelled, "Ouch!" as I felt myself tear toward the
front of my yoni.
She
came out slowly . . .her head, shoulders, waist and finally out came all of her
with a small gush of water. Erik caught her and placed her in my arms, as I sat
down to hold her close to me. "A girl!" I knew she was a girl. She looked so
small and so beautiful. I looked up and there was my son standing in the
doorway. It was dark out, with the rain, and the room was lit with candles . .
. and with the light coming in from behind the doorway, he looked like an
angel. He had awakened from his nap when our baby cried her first cry as she
was being born.
It
was now 5:30pm. I told my daughter that I loved her and that she was wanted and
I thanked her for coming to live with us. We all welcomed her into our family.
We watched the cord and when it started to turn white. . .Erik clamped one end
and cut it. He caught the cord blood in a test tube to test for the RH factor
later (I am Rh- and my husband is Rh+). As it turned out, her blood type was
Rh-, like mine. So I had no need to contemplate the RhoGam question, which I
did with my Rh+ son.
We
were both cold and Erik drew us a warm bath. As I was getting into the tub, the
placenta dropped right out (about 10 minutes after her birth). I cleaned the
blood off of us, I seemed to be bleeding quite a bit. I got out of the bath and
blood poured out of me. I told Erik to give me the shot of pitocin that I had
in case of emergency. He did and the bleeding slowed, then stopped. Soon we
were warm and cozy and nursing in our family bed. Erik put the heater in the
bedroom, so that we stayed warm. We weighed and measured Scout, she was 9 lbs.
10 oz. and 22" long! Erik cleaned up everything and fixed dinner for himself
and our son, and some tea for me.
My
son had been born at home with a midwife who was a sweet dear friend, but I
planned to have this baby unassisted. It was so nice not to have anyone else
there to interfere or disturb the birth.
Even talking bothered me. I need silence at birth. Now as I look back, I wish
Erik had not said anything about the meconium because the fear that something
might be wrong caused me to push her out in a rushed way and I tore. I did not
breathe her out as I wished to.
During
my pregnancy, I spent 15 minutes a day visualizing the birth. And down to the
minute it was the way I visualized it, except for the pain, the blood and the
tear. But I did it! I had an unassisted homebirth. I had no fear and was
relaxed. I am happy with this birth and feel proud of myself. There is no other
way to give birth.