So now that the carseat and vaccination debate has been brought up for the 1,000 time, I have a different question:
I know we all had different birth plans, some wanting natural, some wanting drugs, etc. In the end, some of us got the birth we were hoping for, and some didnt. For those that had a hardcore birth plan that you were 100 percent determined to achieve, when would have been the point where you would have changed your plan, and went a different route? Would it be if the baby's heart rate dropped? If you were in labor too long? Etc.
I am not trying to start a debate on which type of birth is better, I guess since I didn't have a birth plan, I am curious as to why some people would/did change their plan and why some didnt. My friend is a birth photographer and her latest client had her water break on Wed. She was having the baby naturally in a birth center. She was 100 percent determined to do everything naturally and let nature takes it course. The baby was born 72 hours later, blue and lifeless. After a breathing tube was placed, he eventually started breathing on his own. If that was me, I would have waited 24hrs after my water broke and then would tell them to drive my azz to the hospital and get the baby out of me. My plan would be out the window because frankly, I am a wimp and wouldn't want to labor that long or take the chance of baby having problems, being stuck, etc.
So I guess at what point would you, personally, throw your birth plan out the window?
Re: Random Question....
I wanted as natural a birth as possible. I had no choice but to change that plan when DS was two weeks past due and I had to be induced. I was hoping to do it without an epi, but the pitocin was more than I bargained for and I got one after 10 hours of
BFP 1/18/11, EDD 10/1/11. Born at 37w5d on 9/15/11.
***BFP Chart***
"There will come a time when you believe everything is finished. That will be the beginning.
I had to make what I felt was a tough decision with N; she was frank breech. My pedi and I discussed natural the whole time with the caution of a possible c/s if she decided not to flip. We gave it until 38 weeks, and I had to decide whethe
Well, I do think you are being a little unfair to this woman, since you don't know the story. There are plenty of people who have babies in hospitals and are born blue and lifeless with a short labor and no prior warning signs.Sadly, this happened to t
I didn't have a birth plan. I did talk with my doctor and said I would prefer not to be induced, no episiotomy, and delayed cord clamping if possible. We were in the middle of nowhere and the hospital was very.. different, so delayed clamping was not s
My birth plan was fairly fluid. I was waiting to see how labor progressed before I made any decisions regarding pain management/medication. I REALLY didn't want to be induced, but I didn't get much of a choice in that when my BP spiked at 3
I had not only one but two unplanned c/s. with Alastair I was in labor for 45 hours. I got my epi after 42. It was neither what I had wanted originally nor was i happy about it. But, after all, I got a healthy baby boy to take ho
I was pretty relaxed about my "plan" from the get-go. I said all along that whatever ended up being necessary was necessary and I'd accept that, but I did have a progression I preferred for my approach: try drug-free but if I needed/wanted it tha
BFP #1: July 12, 2010 Natural M/C: July 26, 2010
BFP #2: January 30 ,2011 Born: September 29, 2011
BFP #3: January 5, 2013 Born: August 25, 2013
BFP 1/18/11, EDD 10/1/11. Born at 37w5d on 9/15/11.
***BFP Chart***
"There will come a time when you believe everything is finished. That will be the beginning.
I didn't plan on getting an epidural, but I also didn't plan for the alternative properly - NOT getting an epidural.
My water broke in a SLOW trickle for about a day before I realized what was going on. Went to the OB for my normal weekly a
I had a birth plan, written in an Excel spreadsheet, color-coded, copied and handed out to everyone. I was convinced I was going to have an easy, no complications birth, but to make myself not look totally crazy, I added a line on the birth plan that s
I was 100% committed to natural birth. I even switched insurance groups in the first trimester to an office 20 miles further away because they had midwives that you could see throughout your pregnancy and give birth in their hospital connected birthing