I have been reading a lot of the advice on this particular board and I've found it all very helpful! I'm due any day (today, actually), and I'm trying to get the last bit of my research and preparation in.
A lot of you have said that it is helpful to remind yourself why you want to have a natural birth to get through the especially difficult parts of labor. What were some of your personal reasons for going natural? Is there anything in particular that you repeated to yourself that was helpful in getting through the tough stuff?
Thanks!!
Re: Why natural?
B born 7/15/13, C born 3/2/15, #3 on the way May '17
I’m a modern man, a man for the millennium. Digital and smoke free. A diversified multi-cultural, post-modern deconstruction that is anatomically and ecologically incorrect. I’ve been up linked and downloaded, I’ve been inputted and outsourced, I know the upside of downsizing, I know the downside of upgrading. I’m a high-tech low-life. A cutting edge, state-of-the-art bi-coastal multi-tasker and I can give you a gigabyte in a nanosecond! I’m new wave, but I’m old school and my inner child is outward bound. I’m a hot-wired, heat seeking, warm-hearted cool customer, voice activated and bio-degradable. I interface with my database, my database is in cyberspace, so I’m interactive, I’m hyperactive and from time to time I’m radioactive.
I loved that my baby was so alert when he was born, and he just wanted to look at everyone and figure out what was going on. It was amazing, and I was able to bond really quickly with him because I wasn't all drugged up, and out of it.
While I was in labor, I just acted like the epi wasn't even an option. No one offered, and I had stayed home long enough to be halfway dialated by the time I got to the hospital, so I felt like I could handle it. The thing that really helped me was to just focus on getting through this contraction, and then to rest between them. I actually would fall asleep in between contractions, and I think that helped me reserve energy for pushing. Not everyone has enough of a break between contractions to rest like that, though, so I don't know whether that will help you. The more I think about it, the more I think I wound up getting through on stubbornness, lol. I just basicaly said this IS how I will handle this, and then did it. Because I wanted to.
With my first it was because we spend our entire pregnancies avoiding typical medications and foods and anything that might harm the baby. It seemed very counter intuitive to me to then get drugged up in the last few hours. I figured if I could go without then it was certainly worth a shot. I chose a birth center where an epidural wasn't even an option (but was only a 4 minute drive to the hospital should something go wrong).
This time around, while my previous reasoning still holds, it is more about the amazing recovery time. After my first birth we hung out at the birth center for a few hours, I popped a couple of advil, drove home and felt the insane urge to cook dinner for everyone (and I did). I was in an incredible adrenaline high and I just wanted to take care of the whole world. In retrospect it was bonkers and after talking to friends and family I realized that it is not normal to be up and carrying on with normal life 6-8 hours after giving birth. I just felt healthy and incredible. If I can feel half as good after this birth I will be thrilled.
This for me too. Also, the idea of pushing on my back with my knees all kinked up just didn't appeal to me at all. I tried one push like that and it was totally non-productive. It also just makes more sense to me to be upright from a gravity perspective and since the baby has to rotate to get out. I pushed squatting and then on my hands and knees and DS was out in 20 min, not hours like I heard some of my friends with epis had to push (and 2 friends did that before the baby got "stuck" and had to be delivered by unscheduled c-sections).
DS, May 2011
Good luck in whatever happens!!
Engaged 10/2/1202
BFP (a lil quicker than expected) 12/7/2012
Married to my best friend 12/24/2012
Beautiful baby girl arrived 8/15/2013
BFP #2 3/13/2016
To tell you the truth, my research started because of my cynicism. I work for a medical billing company and can tell you from an inside source that most medical facilities do not have your best interests at heart. They have their own best interests at heart. It is all about money. I don't want my birth to be about money. (Disclaimer: This is obviously not a blanket statement. I'm sure there are exceptions.)
After doing all the research though, I really feel like it is safer for me and my baby to do this without drugs and machines. So it is partially about my and my baby's health.
What is also interesting is that this started out with science. I read scientific, peer-reviewed journal articles and studies. I look up statistics and numbers and percentages. And all that science sort of led me straight into a spiritual reason. It led me to people like Ina May and Michel Odent, who gave me a confidence in my body and my strength. I was made for this and I can do this!
N '13 November Siggy Challenge- Baby Pictures
I'll accept an epi if my birth dictates it. A scenario I imagine would be a very, very long labor, I'm exhausted and have fully utilized the coping and support methods I have. Having planned a home birth with the awesome team I have, I will know we will have tried a heck of a lot for a long time if it came to that.