Washington Babies

If you didn't use drugs, how did you get through transition?

Hello all,

This will be my first baby, and I'm aware that I really won't know what I'm in for until I'm in L&D, but I would like to try for a natural birth and am looking into what might be most useful in helping me get through it.  I'm particularly scared of the transition stage.

So for those of you that got through childbirth without drugs, what did you do to manage the pain?  Anything you'd do the same/differently next time around?  

Thanks!

Rebecca

Re: If you didn't use drugs, how did you get through transition?

  • I had drugs but I didn't get checked before the epi so I'm not sure how far through transition I was.  I loved being in the tub but it slowed my progress so I had to get out of the water.  Try the exercise ball, your partners massaging you and tub if you can.  Good Luck!
    BIG Brother born 10/19/07 little Brother born 1/31/12
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  • I had an all natural child birth, I don't really know when the transition stage hit, I was in active labor for about 10 hrs.  I made the decision I wanted to go drug free, (if at all possible) before hand. My husband and best friend both knew my wishes before hand as well as the nurse.  They were my support team and really helped me through it.  Moving around helped a lot, walking, sitting on the ball etc.  I remember being very focused on what was happening and just letting it happen.  I had a terrible pain in my back and I think that was worse than any of the contractions.  As soon as my little guy was out back pain was gone and I felt great. Good luck, and do what feels right for you and you will be fine.

     

  • I would highly recommend a doula! I don't know if I would have been able to go natural the first time without her (my second labor was really fast). It's really common to feel like you can't do it anymore during transition. I remember thinking I didn't think I could do it much longer. I couldn't talk through the pain at that point, but I remember my voice/moaning getting higher-pitched and my doula helping me lower it again. She really helped me stay in control and get through it. Yes it is hard but it's so worth it, you can do it!
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  • A doula and the tub worked wonders for me.  Good support is key and being in the environment that is most comfortable for you.  I really needed to focus/went inside myself during labor.  I couldn't stand any noise or talking around me.  I was so glad to be at the birth center where it was quiet and dark and I knew I would be taken care of.  I had planned for music and lots of other comfort measures, but didn't end up using them.  Take a class focused on med-free birth, that really helped increase my confidence.  Read positive birth stories, watch videos of undisturbed birth, choose a care team you trust, and have a plan that covers how you want things handled if it doesn't go your way.  
  • If at all possible get in a warm tub. Knowing I was in transition was always enough to get me through it. Knowing that I was so close to holding my baby. My secret is just lavender oil and a personal water mister.

    The other important question you will probably have is how do I know when to go to the hospital. When your contractions last more than an hour get into a warm tub at home. Just relax and listen to music or whatever. GIve yourself about 15 minutes to relax if after that if feel they are getting more intense then have your husband get everything in the car while your continue relaxing so you only have to worry about getting yourself to the car. If while in the bath the contractions stay the same just stay put at home (and/or in the tub.)

    Most importantly ALWAYS trust your gut. If you feel something isn't right get the hospital and don't let them send you home. (Trusting your gut is your most valuable tool.)

    Mama to Z - 5.5 years, G - 3.5 years, & M - 1.5 years.
  • First I want to say this is a great question! I had two natural births and transition was really obvious for me both times. They broke my water both times around 5cm and that's when it hit for me. The first thing I did was throw up on my midwife (oops, lol) and then contractions were unmanageable ( I knew I was in transition b/c of these indicators- throwing up, doubting yourself etc). I was able to go right into the tub both times at it was amazing!! I actually am not sure how I would have gotten thru without it. Also, this is the time where its great to have a support person who has been thru it before (aka someone besides DH). They know what to say and how to help you focus. For me, this is when I had to be completely still, closed my eyes and just focused on breathing and relaxing. Another thing that really helped was using a really low voice to sort of moan thru contractions. I just kept telling myself that my body knew what it was doing and was working hard to have the baby, and I was one step closer to delivery. You can do it! :) 
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  • Just curious, but where are you delivering?
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  • I had a long early labor and 2 hrs of active labor. Get into positions that feel good (I was leaning forward on things). My husband held my hips together a lot. And I used yoga breathing to "breath through" any pain. Sometimes I vocalized a little hum into my exhales.

    Transition for me was also a moment when I thought I couldn't do it, there were a few "ow ow" contractions, maybe 2-3  in a row (whereas up until then I could totally manage them). The nurse asked me to try and wait another hour. But suddenly I was feeling pressure, and after that the urge to push. Transition was already done!!!

    Pushing felt good, couldn't help but push and I liked that I had full sensation (and wonderful natural painkillers flowing, which made it so I didn't feel any pain after that). 

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  • imageblueLu25:
    First I want to say this is a great question! I had two natural births and transition was really obvious for me both times. They broke my water both times around 5cm and that's when it hit for me. The first thing I did was throw up on my midwife (oops, lol) and then contractions were unmanageable ( I knew I was in transition b/c of these indicators- throwing up, doubting yourself etc). I was able to go right into the tub both times at it was amazing!! I actually am not sure how I would have gotten thru without it. Also, this is the time where its great to have a support person who has been thru it before (aka someone besides DH). They know what to say and how to help you focus. For me, this is when I had to be completely still, closed my eyes and just focused on breathing and relaxing. Another thing that really helped was using a really low voice to sort of moan thru contractions. I just kept telling myself that my body knew what it was doing and was working hard to have the baby, and I was one step closer to delivery. You can do it! :) 

    This is alot like what I was going to say. I know alot of people would recommend a doula which I think is great. For me both times my mother and sister where my extra support people, they had 5 natural births between them and knew what was important to me.

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  • imageskenyon:

    For me both times my mother and sister where my extra support people, they had 5 natural births between them and knew what was important to me.

    My SIL was my "doula" and it was awesome. She has two of her babies at the same birth center- it was perfect! 

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  • imageblueLu25:
    First I want to say this is a great question! I had two natural births and transition was really obvious for me both times. They broke my water both times around 5cm and that's when it hit for me. The first thing I did was throw up on my midwife (oops, lol) and then contractions were unmanageable ( I knew I was in transition b/c of these indicators- throwing up, doubting yourself etc). I was able to go right into the tub both times at it was amazing!! I actually am not sure how I would have gotten thru without it. Also, this is the time where its great to have a support person who has been thru it before (aka someone besides DH). They know what to say and how to help you focus. For me, this is when I had to be completely still, closed my eyes and just focused on breathing and relaxing. Another thing that really helped was using a really low voice to sort of moan thru contractions. I just kept telling myself that my body knew what it was doing and was working hard to have the baby, and I was one step closer to delivery. You can do it! :) 

    I forgot about the throwing up, with my first labor they had a bag handy in case I needed to throw up as I felt kind of queasy a few times. My doula said she knew I was in transition when all of a sudden I said firmly "Get the bag!" :p I didn't end up throwing up, but I sure felt like it!

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  • I'll be delivering at Swedish hospital in Ballard with a midwife (and hubby, which is all well and good, but he's not really in a position to be the voice of experience with this).  Maybe I'll look into a doula as well.  Lots of good advice here; thanks everyone!  
  • I'm working on getting my doula certification and would like to talk to you if you are interested.  You can PM me for my email and/or phone number.
    After 4.5 years our miracle IVF baby is here!
    Born 7/30/13
  • I think two things really helped me.  One was having lots of options.  I didn't end up using most of the techniques I'd learned, but taking the childbirth prep class really helped.  I tried various things- walking, ball, showers, etc, and you can't really know what will work for you until you are in it.  Some things were the same between my two drug-free births, but some were very different.  It was nice just having different options available and that was an area where my husband was really useful- he could remember/suggest other positions/techniques that I was in no position to try and remember. 

    The other really helpful thing was just reading about and becoming more comfortable with childbirth.  Hearing others birth stories- medicated, un-medicated, planned c-sections, emergency- whatever the situation was- just helped me remember that women do this all the time and that no matter what happens, I was hoping for a healthy mom and baby at the end.  During transition, when I'd feel myself start panicking (which can add to the pain) I'd remind myself that the pressure is purposeful, its not because I'm sick or injured or anything scary that I don't understand.  Each contraction is helping the baby descend, helping baby get ready to breathe on the outside, etc.  For me, just really understanding what was going on helped immensely.

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  • I screamed.  It felt like my body was going to explode.  I followed the directions of the Obgyn and nurses.  And I pushed like heck, thinking how the heck am I going to get this kid out. It feels so much better when you get baby out, and you can just take it easy. 
    imageimageLilypie - Personal pictureLilypie Premature Baby tickers Lilypie Premature Baby tickers image BFP on 07/18/08. Miscarriage 07/30/08. BFP 3/25/09. Confirmed second miscarriage, no heartbeat, no growth beyond 7 weeks, 5/19/09. TTC again, on baby aspirin, due to value of 23 on Anticardiolipin Antibodies. BFP 11/15/09. Brown spotting, Beta 3735 11/25/09, Beta 5602 11/28/09. Anticardiolipin Antibodies now negative, still on baby asprin. On 100 mg of Prometrium (progesterone) until 10 weeks. Good heartbeat at 1st appt. 12/16/09. Started taking fish oil. Perigestational hemorrhage and red bleeding 12/17/09. 2nd Ultrasound-8 weeks, still a heartbeat 12/17/09. Baby measured 9 weeks, still a heartbeat 12/23/09. Good NT Scan on 1/8/10, heartbeat 164. EDD 7/28/10. TEAM BLUE! Aidan Thomas born on May 26, 2010. Baby #2, BFP 11/27/11, EDD 6/5/12. TEAM PINK! Noelle Elizabeth born 4/30/12. Blessing from God, Blessing from God, Blessing from God, Blessing from God.
  • I have had 2 drug free births. The two things that helped me the most were the image I held in my head (with my 2nd child, my image was holding her and breastfeeding, with my 3rd child it was my 2 older children coming down the hospital hall to come see us), they were my end goals, and then with everyone contraction throughout transition my thought process was "just get through this one and see what happens" after each one, I didn't doubt I could get through one more. Eventually, there isn't any more, time to push!
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  • I love hearing everyone's experiences! I'm also hoping to do a natural birth. I have fibromyalgia, so I'm used to always being in pain anyways. When I had gallbladder attacks I thought it was just bad fibro pain and let that go for weeks, just dealing with it. I'm not saying that was a great thing, but I'm hoping that since I got through that ok I could this too.
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  • imagerew123:

    Hello all,

    This will be my first baby, and I'm aware that I really won't know what I'm in for until I'm in L&D, but I would like to try for a natural birth and am looking into what might be most useful in helping me get through it.  I'm particularly scared of the transition stage.

    So for those of you that got through childbirth without drugs, what did you do to manage the pain?  Anything you'd do the same/differently next time around?  

    Thanks!

    Rebecca

     

    Will you have access to a birth tub? I got in the tub when things got intense. It was a lifesaver. G was born an hour later in the tub. Things I'd do the same- the tub. Things I'd do differently- not a thing. 

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  • imagerew123:
    I'll be delivering at Swedish hospital in Ballard with a midwife (and hubby, which is all well and good, but he's not really in a position to be the voice of experience with this).  Maybe I'll look into a doula as well.  Lots of good advice here; thanks everyone!  

     

    You probably know if they have tubs or not, but if they don't- I wonder if you can rent your own. I think I remember them saying to me before I switched my care to the Puget Sound Birth Center. 

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