I'm planning on having my dd #2 naturally- pain med free. I have decided to do this after a lot of research, reading a lot of books, and trying to minimize interventions since I will be having her at the hospital. With dd#1 I did have an epidural and had some issues with (tmi) going pee for months after. I also hated being confined to the bed and not able to eat or drink water.
Anyways, my reason for this post is to see what has personally motivated all of you to do things naturally. Being that I am so close to my due date I am extremely nervous. Im hoping that hearing why others have such a strong desire to labor/birth naturally will motivate me further. Thanks in advance!:)
Re: Personal Motivation
One of my biggest things (and it won't apply to 98% of the board), is that because we had so much medical intervention to get pregnant (IVF, 4+ months of medication), I'd like to welcome this baby into the world with as little medical intervention as possible.
There are other things too, like a (hopefully) easier recovery for me, knowing that my body was made for this, etc.
I also know the other benefits of it, but those are the honest reasons that drugs never entered my mind in either of my labors.
For DS my motivation was mostly wanting to avoid a C-section. I knew that epidurals were linked to an increased rate of C-section. Additionally, I wanted to experience labor fully and give my baby the best start at life.
For the next LO, DS's birth is my motivation to avoid an epidural. With him, I was induced with PreE, got an epidural for a reason other than pain management, and ended up with a high-intervention, unpleasant birth. It was not a good experience and my recovery was very difficult. If I am able to stay low-risk with the next LO, I'm planning to do things differently: birth center, midwife, etc, to avoid a medicalized birth like I had with DS. It's not really the epidural that bothered me, but rather everything that went along with it.
BFP#2: EDD 2/11/14, MMC confirmed 7/15/13 (growth stopped at 6 weeks), D&C @ 12 weeks 7/25/13
If you have not already, read Ina May's Guide to Childbirth. It has really helped my confidence level and made me feel calm.
My main reasons for wanting to go med free are not to be restricted to a bed, not to experience the possible intervention spiral and to recover as quickly as possible.
Good luck! You CAN do it....your body was made to
We are so thankful that our second daughter, Lillian Elizabeth "Lily", was born healthy and happy on February 11, 2013. We love her to pieces.
We lost our first daughter, Hannah Grace on May 4, 2011. She was buried on May 14 during a beautiful service at my home church. We are grateful that if she could not be here with us, that she is healed and whole with the Lord. We look forward to the day when we will get to meet her. We love her so much.
Pretty much all of this for me. Plus I have a fear of being one of the few to get a spinal heachache from it. During labor I kept telling myself "I can do anything for a day."
All of this! And as far as Ina May's G2C, the whole first chapter is story after story of natural births. They make me feel empowered and really excited when I read them. Best of luck.
I am not completely sure yet, but I would love to do it... I'm not sure because I basically have no idea how it works (my books are on their way from Amazon)...
My main motivation until now is that I live in Holland and here almost no one get the epidurial, I guess if they can do it then I also can. I can handle pain quite well and I think I would be proud of myself if I can pull it off. In adition I think it's easier to recover after going all natural and I really want to avoid complications because of interventions if everything is going so well (Thanks God).
Variety of reasons.
1) I've had a spinal tap before and the experience and post-tap headache were things I in no way every wanted to replicate. The idea of a needle in my back again just freaked me out.
2) I've had my fair share of medical issues, I really don't like hospitals as a result. I will tolerate them, but I don't like being hooked up to things, stuck in a bed, or being told I can't eat etc.
3) My pregnancy was healthy. I was healthy, I was still exercising and doing well. I didn't see a reason I shouldn't be able to handle giving birth. I biked 50 miles when I was 9 weeks pregnant. I knew I was strong and had a high pain tolerance and good endurance. So basically, I decided that I was capable of an intervention free birth, so therefor I was going to do it.
4) I really didn't want a c-section and the healing time associated with it, and I'd read about cascading interventions so I figured that not having any interventions from the start would give me the best chance of not having a c-section.