I have been hearing a lot about inductions because of health issues and well for many other reasons. I hope it doesn't come down to that for me, no one does.I have heard that many times an induction brings on much stronger, painful contractions which can lead to women giving up and wanting the epidural. As I am thinking about all of the different scenarios for birth, I thought it would be great to read natural birth stories from having an induction! How were your contractions? Did you get through it naturally? Thanks ladies!
Re: Induction that led to a natural birth?
I was induced at 41w2d because of some concerning results of an ultrasound administered at 41w1d. My midwives knew I wanted to go naturally, but recommended induction because of concerns about the baby. I trusted my midwives and consented to the induction the next day. We induced with Pitocin at 1 pm. I was already having some early labor contractions and in retrospect think perhaps I should have just waited it out, but the midwives appeared to be quite concerned about letting me go longer. Anyway, within 20 minutes of the Pitocin hitting, the contractions were intense. I am not going lie - the pain was unbelievable. I was not successful in practicing any of the breathing/relaxation techniques that I had planned to do. The contractions were almost immediately around a 7 on a scale of 1 to 10 and came almost seemingly on top of each other. Throughout all of this, I had bad, bad back labor and my doula and DH took turns applying heat with a rice sock and doing deep, deep massage on my lower back. This went on for 6-7 hours and I began to enter transition. The contractions then became a 10 on that scale and were mind-alteringly painful and intense. During transition, my water broke on its own. Through out this time I felt like I had to poop like crazy - the pressure was intense, but my midwife, who had entered the room by then, told me to try to "relax my anus" - she said that over and over - in retrospect, I find it hilarious. About 30-ish minutes later, I sat down on the toilet, they wanted me to try to pee. I couldn't pee and felt a sudden burning and overwhelming need to push. The MW came into the bathroom and asked if I wanted to move to the bed. I didn't. She said, ok, lean back on the toilet seat and give me a gentle push so we can see where we are. I did and she said, ok, with the next contraction, give me a big push. After that one, she told me that I needed to push through the burning, not fight it (she was amazing and could tell I was afraid of the pain). Three pushes later, our baby girl (gender was a surprise!) was born. 7 lbs 13 oz, 19.7 inches. 8 hours of labor, 12 minutes of pushing. Pitocin, but no other drugs. I didn't intend to deliver her on the toilet, but I guess that's how it goes sometimes! In retrospect I wish I had moved to the bed because the MW could have provided more perineal support if I was on the bed pushing using the squat bar or on my side, and I did have 2nd degree tearing. I had bruises on my arms from beating on the underside of a table in my room (apparently this was my way of dealing with the pain) and almost lost my voice because I yelled and shrilled so much. It was an amazing, liberating, empowering experience. Induced, but epidural-free birth IS possible!!
ETA: And our little girl was JUST fine - the u/s was... you guessed it... unreliable. I don't regret our decisions because I'm thankful that she was 100% healthy and given the information we had at that time, I think induction was the right choice, but I was also annoyed that, in retrospect, the induction was unnecessary.