I want my sister to be in the delivery room with us and my husband is totally against it! I was in the room when she had her 3rd baby and it was completely amazing. This is our 2nd and she asked to be in the room. what can i tell my husband to help convince him? he said if she is in there he wont be! (i think that is just a threat but still) he gets along very well with my sister he just thinks that this should be between just us. I want to give her the opportunity to experience what I got to and since i am her only sister this is the only way she will be able to. TIA
Re: Sister in the delivery room
I'm shocked he's so against it. It's your private parts on display, it's your choice ultimately.
How about if you tell him your sister will just remain by your head and stuff, would that comfort him more?
My sister in law would like to be there, and at first I was a bit weirded out, but I'm really close with her, and this is her first neice/nephew and she'd really like to be there. I asked her if maybe she can be by my head side and video tape.
I'm not much help since I agree with your husband that delivery should be a private moment for the parents to share. However, his "if she's going to be there, I'm not" threat - even if it IS just a threat - is totally over the top and ridiculous.
Just talk to him about why it's important to you to share it with her, and hear him out on why it's important to him to share it only with you. Hear eachother out and go from there.
James Alistair - October 2, 2011
While I understand your husband wanting the moment with just the two of you and it is just as much his baby as yours, you are the one in labor. IMO, that means you make the final call on who is in the room.
Maybe you could compromise by having her there for most of the labor, but when it comes time to deliver, she could leave you alone with your DH (and doctors/midwives of course)? Or maybe you could agree that once the baby is out and checked over, everyone will leave the room so you and your DH have some bonding time alone with the baby (some hospitals probably won't be cool with that right away though)?
Just some suggestions, but like I said, I think it's ultimately your call. For your DH to say he won't be there if she is seems pretty ridiculous unless they have some awful history.
What is his objection specifically? I would try to get to the 'why' of it... Maybe he's worried he will be pushed out and excluded if she is there?
All I can get out of him is that it should be just between us. I dont think it is a matter of him getting pushed out of the way, with my first he was the one behind my head and not on the side view to see all the action!! I will try and talk to him more to see what his main reasoning is. I do think it is a special moment for us too, and I totally understand that but at the same time just knowing how amazing it is and that my sister may never get to experience that if it is not with us kind of breaks my heart!!
That is a good idea about asking for some time right after to have family time! last time everyone was standing right outside the door and flooded the room while i was still being stiched up!! father in law and all!!!
Whoa whoa!! number 3??? lets slow down!!
This 100% You both need to sit down and figure out what you both want and why and then come to a mutual decision.
(I hate the argument that "you're the one in labor, so ultimately it's your decision" I just find that to be a very selfish statement)
When you're half naked, in labor, it SHOULD be her decision. She is the one in a very vulnerable situation. She is the one who needs/wants the support. She has every right to be a little selfish at that time.
I told my husband that if HE wants the choice of who is in the delivery room, than I expect him to be naked from the waist down as well.
Not if its going to ruin the day for him. Maybe he has a horrible relationship with the sister? Should she still be allowed in?
In the end, he is the father, and should also have a say.
The ONLY thing my DH did NOT have a single ounce of say in was my epidural.
Malakai - 8.3.09
Ezra - 12.1.11 ASD
I agree with your husband in some degree. I Had my mom in the room along with my husband when in labor with my son. I can say 100 percent that it did take away from the special moment. I love my mom to death and she was very helpful but she was also in the way (no matter where she was) and it made my husband feel out of place.
This time around It is just The DH and Me, If anyone wants to be involved they can wait in the waiting room lol
However I am not saying your sister shouldnt be involved it is a personal choice between the two of you. It is Important that you discuss all the reasons why you want your sister in the room and explain how important you feel about it. Then From there ask your husband why and what he is feelings. His "her or me thing" is over board but You need to tell him that you cannot understand his thinking if he doesnt voice his opinion or reasoning.
You are the one who will be butt naked and in pain so the end decision should be yours
Eh, I just have a very different line of thinking. Clearly he feels very strongly about it and I think that out of respect for each other they need to discuss it and then make the decision together. Maybe he sees her point and makes a compromise and maybe it would be the other way around, but I think just to use it as sole reason for the decision is unfair. I wouldn't do it with other aspects of my life and I wouldn't make an exception and do that now. JMO.
Glad DH and I are on the same page that we were the two that created this little boy, and we will be the only ones (outside of medical staff) that will be in the room.
This...If my husband threatened to leave because my sister was in the room I would gladly show him the door!
Same. I'm glad I'm not the only one out there who doesn't want other family in the room.
I agree with that, but I cant blame him for making that threat. Yes, we as women will be pushing that child out of our bodies, but that child is also just as much our DH's as it is ours and therefore just as much their decision as it is ours on who gets to be in the room.
Was your sister their for your first child's birth? If so I think it's only a fair compromise that it's just the two of you this time around. It should be an equal decision between the two of you.
We alway want our men to play an equal role in raising our children yet we try and pull the giving birth card to get our way and I don't think that's fair.
BFP #1 3/13/13, MMC 4/17/13, D&C 4/19/13
BFP #2 8/7/13, Beta at 4w6d = 3,796
Well ask yourself this, how would you feel if DH insisted his mom or sister be in the room? Wanted them there as badly as you want your sister? Put yourself in his shoes... I'm sure you can understand it's not fair to not compromise.
If you want to try a different angle, maybe have her off to the side (not holding one of your legs but rather behind all the Dr's and nurses) to take pictures. My sis held my leg (DH and I were both perfectly fine with this) and DH held the other and counted. Then after the baby was born, my sis was off to the side taking pics of DH by the baby while the nurses were weighing, measuring, bathing the baby etc. And then when it was time for DH and I to hold DS, my sister was very discreetly off to the side, with the camera zoomed in to capture the moment DH, myself and DS had. Forgot she was even there and have some great pictures of our first moments together that we wouldn't have had otherwise. Maybe try it at that angle. I promise, you'll both love seeing those pictures later. But also, if DH agrees, make sure your sister is on the same page and ok not being all up in the delivery but rather observing from a distance. Still an amazing experience for her, you get her there and DH gets to have that moment with you and baby without your sister right in between the three of you.
I'm not just the MOM in the room; I'm the PATIENT. Therefore what I say goes. That's my opinion. I agree that most if not all parenting decisions should be by agreement of both parents. However, until that kid pops out I'm not a parent. I'm a patient in a strange building full of sick people, mostly naked and completely nervous so I if I want my sister there for support daddy-to-be will just have to suck it up. Pregnancy is the only 9 months you get to be selfish. Enjoy it.
Now having said all that, I wouldn't want my sister in the room!. I watched her first be born, along with her boyfriend and our mother and there's no way I'm having that kind of attention/crowd in my room. I would do much better laboring alone - even without DH - than I will worrying about what everyone else in in the room is or should be doing. I want to labor like a cat...give me a dark corner in a closet and leave me be! LOL
I'm not just the MOM in the room; I'm the PATIENT. Therefore what I say goes. That's my opinion. I agree that most if not all parenting decisions should be by agreement of both parents. However, until that kid pops out I'm not a parent. I'm a patient in a strange building full of sick people, mostly naked and completely nervous so I if I want my sister there for support daddy-to-be will just have to suck it up. Pregnancy is the only 9 months you get to be selfish. Enjoy it.
Now having said all that, I wouldn't want my sister in the room!. I watched her first be born, along with her boyfriend and our mother and there's no way I'm having that kind of attention/crowd in my room. I would do much better laboring alone - even without DH - than I will worrying about what everyone else in in the room is or should be doing. I want to labor like a cat...give me a dark corner in a closet and leave me be! LOL
Uh your body, your choice.
I'm sure he is making an empty threat but those would be fighting words with me. Like... really?? You would really miss the birth of your child out of stubbornness? go eff yourself...
I think it is your choice who is NOT allowed to be in the delivery room, but I think your DH has that right too. He isn't allowed to say, "I want my mom in the room" if you don't want her there. However, if he is serious about this, I think you need to respect his opinion as well.
For me, I would never want anyone other than my DH in the room. If you weren't involved in creating the baby, you shouldn't be there (with exception of the medical staff).