Hi ladies! I've lurked here quite a bit, but I am officially 9 weeks pregnant, and am looking forward to discussing natural childbirth with my Dr. at my first appt on Friday!
I have already come across a few people who, after I mention I intend to go med-free (this is my first pregnancy), immediately tell me how I'll be "screaming for the drugs" (because they or their wife did) or simply say "Yeah, good luck with that" in a very condescending manner.
What is a polite way to respond to this? Is there one? Or do I just keep my mouth shut? A friend of mine just had her baby, and went natural, plus I've read your stories, so I know I'm capable!! I just want to tell these people to shove it, but I don't want to be rude.
Lastly, any advice in general is welcome! I'm planning on reading The Bradley Method, and think I'd like to read about hypno-birthing as well, but not sure what book...
Thanks in advance!!
Re: How to deal with Nay-sayers?
What is a polite way to respond to this? Is there one?
You could simply say "I'm aware its hard work but the goal for me is intervention free."
I will say, I got tired of being polite, especially towards the end and ESPECIALLY to repeat offenders that continually told me "Good luck!" in a snarky way or "you'll see." It was always funny to me that most people that told me that were either 1. MEN or 2. had never given birth. If they were one of the above, I was not very nice to them in the end. BUT the best revenge to all the naysayers was being able to tell my natural story and prove them wrong.
One piece of advice, educate yourself. Coming back with facts about the interventions and what risks they pose always made everyone shut up around me! Good luck getting the dumba$$s off your back!
DS #1 born 05/25/2012
BFP#2: 06/12/2013 ---- loss
DS #2 born 4/08/2014
BPF#4: 2/1/2016 --- 2/23/2016 suspected molar pregnancy--- 3/15/2016 D&E - diagnosis MM
BFP#5 - 9/22/2016
* formally bornmommy
Why it would come up at all when you are 9 weeks pregnant is beyond me.
Seriously, at 9 weeks nobody even knew I was pregnant outside of my husband, my mom and myself.
I mean, good for you. Go for it. But if you don't bring it up, it is unlikely to come up.
I'm planning on going med-free for many reasons as well, but honestly, it's rarely come up throughout my pregnancy. Only very close friends have asked - not even my mom has enquired- and I haven't offered the info to anyone outside my MW, best friend, doula and DH. I've gotten some unsolicited advice from friends (eg. "Remember, the epidural is your friend!") but its been easy to ignore. I agree with pps, don't bring it up, and if you encounter naysayers, ignore them.
Ultimately the process of going med-free is about commitment, so this is good practice for sticking with your plan.
A lot of smiling, nodding, and "well we'll find out when the time comes." Because that's true- you WILL find out when the time comes. Hopefully what you will find out is that you are well prepared, strong, capable, and lucky- and if there are more babies in your future then you can say, "Well I did it once before..."
Along with not bringing it up unsolicited- because people that are rude enough to mock your choices NOW are surely rude enough to rub it in your face should your plans not pan out as expected.
And a general rule of not arguing with rude drunks
After an issue with my grandfather-in-law last week we aren't discussing our birth with anyone. We're calling it a private matter.
You could just say, "I intend to go without drugs if I can but until the big day we won't know what will happen." When they say "good luck with that," just say as sincere as possible, "thank you."
Especially if they are the fear mongers who claim they know what's best for my body based on their own experience.
The "you'll see" attitude will be challenged with "I trust myself and the processes my body will go through."
I see the 'you'll see" attitude as an affront on woman and their universe given power to bring life into the world. And through my words I want to affirm women and their strength.
My response is kind of snarky and maybe completely untrue, but it usually works. I just say that my Mom had two easy, unmedicated births with no pain, just some discomfort (this is true) and that how easy birth can be is largely genetic. So I guess my family just has better genetics than yours.
(That's the part that I don't think is true, but it sounds good.)
In reality, both my Mom and I have extremely high pain tolerances. Things that would be painful for an average person isn't painful to us. It's almost borderline in being bad because my Mom broke her foot once and didn't even realize it for a few days until the swelling got really bad. I'm guessing that's a big reason that birth wasn't painful for her, and why I'm hoping it won't be for me.
B born 7/15/13, C born 3/2/15, #3 on the way May '17
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