Hello All,
I'm 20 weeks pregnant with my first child and I'm planning on a natural delivery. I have an amazing, supportive husband who will be a great delivery coach and we're all signed up for classes to prepare us for the process. I'm becoming frustrated, however, with the reaction I get from family, friends, co-workers when we mention that we're planning on a natural birth. I know that this is a personal choice and it shouldn't matter what anyone else thinks, but I am searching for some advice on how to ignore all the skepticism.
I feel like women who want to birth naturally are not met with a lot of support and this can make the process seem scary. Any advice from moms you have experienced this? What worked for you? How did you handle and overcome it?
Thanks, all!
Re: Frustrated: My plan to deliver naturally being met with complete skepticism
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I honestly don't know why people need to manage other women's pregnancy and births.
My co-worker just had her baby naturally (yeah!). We work in a culture where women get elective C-section, so she had a LOT of unsolicited comments against going natural. She connected to me and another woman who had natural birth and we were her support team at work.
If you cannot find a person or two to lean on, don't forget your bumpies and read read read ! There are way too many ignorant people out there. Educate yourself and use knowledge as power.
The co-worker who just had baby txted me "You were right! I am sore, but it was so worth it!!"
Things don't always go according to the plan, but don't let ignorant people drag you down
Smile and nod, smile and nod. I just never volunteered the information until after the baby was born. You've got this covered and you have a supportive husband and have done your research!
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Don't let them get you down! Read the Ina May book recommended by pp's. I rad it over and over when I'd get scared or doubtful.
I 100% agree that for thousands of years, women gave birth naturally. Women used to give birth in the fields and then go right back to work. Clearly, it's possible.
Both of our (my and H's) mothers had natural, unmedicated births. My mom was induced and did not have pain medication. H's mom delivered twins vaginally without any pain medication and didn't tear or have an episiotomy.
To those that want to use a birthing unit instead of a hospital. Make sure you are aware of everything that can go wrong and when you should be transferred to a hospital, also how far away the hospital is.
I had to be transferred, I was left in sever pain for 2 hours longer than I should have been and then the closest hospital was 1 hour away. My rose coloured classes cleared in the ambulance when I was thanking god that my baby was not the one in need of attention.
I still think that the reason my baby stayed relaxed, happy and not stressed during 4 hours of stage 2 was because I had not had any drugs.
I had a home birth the second time and at the time I was a nurse in a pediatic ICU and my coworkers were very unsupportive. I knew the statistics and what could potentially happen and I knew my midwife was more then prepared, so I never let it bother me. When we had a baby come in that was a home birth transfer to hospital after (there was only 1 my entire pregnancy and none before since I had started working there) I agreed that they needed to come in and said look the midwife did the right thing!
The book recommendation for Ina May is good. Also I recommend taking a birthing class called The Bradley Method. DH and I are taking it currently (I am 29 weeks). It helps provide that extra support you are looking for and helps eliminate any concerns or fears you might have.
Best of luck!
I don't really like the argument "but women have been doing it for a long time" because there are a lot of things in the modern science that benefit people.
I plan on going unmedicated in a hospital with an ob, I am not doing this bc women have been doing this for a long time. I am not getting an epidural mainly because I would like to be able to move around to the positions that I feel most comfortable in for labor and I would like to be able to move around after delivery. There are obviously other benefits such as epidurals can affect the mothers blood pressure, the baby's heart rate, you have a higher chance of needing petocin (which increases chance of needing a c section), shivering, respiratory depression, headaches, nausea, body aches can result.
so you could ramble on all the benefits on just ignore those people.
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I'm a FTM and I learned really fast to not share my desire for a natural birth with anyone but close friends and family. I've had a few people surprise me, including one friend who had no desire for natural/waterbirth, but has been amazing in hooking me up with others who went the natural route. And I was really surprised by my mom, who is about as far from a crunchy, granola person as you can get, but had me and my sister naturally, in a birth center no less! She was shocked when I told her that natural birth is so far out of the mainstream nowadays that it's hard to find people who've gone through it.
My advice would be, surround yourself with people who are supportive (including a midwife/OB -I had to change practices for this reason), don't mention it to anyone who you think won't support you, and know that our bodies are designed for this I'm so grateful for modern medicine and what it can do for women during pregnancy/birth, but I also know, that barring rare complications, I got this!
Love reading everyone's great stories and supportive comments. It's great motivation!