Ive seen some people's comments about the epidural helping them through labor but my intention is to not get one. I've had several friends who have made it through and say the pain is manageable and I've had others say I'd be crazy to not get one. Any suggestions from those who did make it through labor without one?
Re: To get an epidural or not to get an epidural, that is the question
2nd round exp 8/20/18.
At the birth class i went to, the nurse/doula who taught us said that of all hospital vaginal births, between 89-91% wind up getting the epidural. She said basically what you said - most of the time the people that don't get it are the ones that get there too late, or the baby comes so fast that there wasn't time to get the anestesiologist in there. Or it is the people that just really really did not want one, and had a high enough pain tolerance and enough support and plans in place to avoid it. But that winds up being a very small percentage of people. So if you don't want one and wind up getting one, don't feel ashamed or like a failure. So few people go without it. And as the instructor told us "no one should ever have to experience their personal pain threshhold, not when there are completely safe options to avoid it."
I wish i was enough of a rock star to avoid getting one, mostly because it would be awesome to be up and walking around quickly after the birth. But I'm a sissy about pain, and really I mostly want one so that i can relax and sleep a bit before the pushing starts. And also so that i can't feel them stitching me up afterwards. But i'm hoping to hold out until at least 6cm so that it doens't wind up slowing my progress down.
Also, I needed to factor in DH....he went in not knowing much about labor and such and he really struggled seeing me in pain and feeling helpless as to what to do/how to handle everything. I almost felt worse for him watching me than what my contractions were pain-wise (almost). That was another reason the epidural was a wise move.
Andplusalso, once I got it, I went from 2.5 to 8cm in about 35 min!
If I'm offered an epidural and am considering it, my hope is that the nurses (and our timeframe) will allow me a take a few minutes to pray with my husband before finalizing the decision. As much as I would prefer a natural birth, what's more important is that birth isn't a traumatic experience where I decide I'm not having any more kids... because I should have just taken epidural.
Either way, just praying for a healthy and happy baby in the end.
@delujm0 I also don't believe that epidurals are "completely safe options" either. The nurse shouldn't have said that. There is always the possibility of a complication with the most minor procedure, which terrifies me as a healthcare provider. Very unlikely, but it's possible.
Listen to your body and don't feel guilty if it's saying the pain is too much. I hope everyone has a wonderful birth experience, drugs or not.
After my son was born this time I was really shaky and didn't feel well. I didn't want anything that would make me foggy but I did accept an IV form of ibuprofen and it helped me get things together quickly to nurse and welcome my newborn.
Repressed? No. I just a find getting sexually stimulated by your child going through your birth canal borderline pedophilia.
Borderline pedophilia? That's extreme! Crawl out from under that rock!
I will agree with @Frogger5 on the epidural, I went in with an attitude that I would try to go without the epidural unless I felt like I really needed it and honestly.. I needed it. I'd been having contractions for days I hadn't slept in 50 hours and the epidural gave me an hour and a half of pure relief so I could rest before pushing.. It wore off and I felt every part of pushing and was up and walking as soon as I was all stitched up. I'm glad I didn't give myself a strict plan to go natural otherwise I would be feeling guilty about the epidural and all the pitocin, instead I'm just happy I got through it and my little girl came out healthy!
That being said if that is someone's plan and they want to stick to it then I will support them!
I know a woman who got a spinal headache that required multiple medical interventions due to the epidural during the birth of her third child. Do you know what she said when I asked her what she would do if she ever had a fourth child? She said "I'd get the epidural again." Spinal headache is a serious but not deadly complication. I haven't known anyone who regretted an epidural either, and that incldues another friend whose epidural didn't fully take, leaving one side of her body numb and the other completely unaffected.
I reaize that the epidural isn't completely risk free...0.025% of people who get them wind up with life threatening conditions associated with them. But 0.015% of women in the US still die during child birth. I mean there is always SOME degree of risk, even with natural birth. I'm supportive of whatever a woman decides to do, i'm just not supportive of women who use their natural births as a way to look down on women who have gotten the epidural. There is no wrong way to birth a child. period. Do what's right for you, and do not feel bad about it if you went into it wanting to go med-free but wound up with an epidural or c-section. As long as mom and baby are healthy afterwards, you had a successful birth.
(Both me and baby are doing great btw!) Definitely agree with this. I find it so odd when people attach a weird moral value to pain relief in childbirth. I totally get that epidurals aren't for everyone - I didn't love the dead leg effect, and I can see how the risks involved may put people off. But every labour is different, every persons pain threshold is different, and women should not be judged for requiring pain relief.
Well, maybe that's true for some, but not for me. I was in the right mindset, but maybe it was that I had no proper tools (preparation) to make mindset matter. Or maybe this mindset unfortunately fails to tell you the pain is very F'ing real.
I almost lost consciousness from the pain, meanwhile I was sitting on the birthing ball trying to visualize my vagina opening like a rose, waiting for an orgasm. My contractions were coming in waves of four or five at a time, so they were much longer than a minute. It was ridiculous. So I am glad I tried med-free for as long as I did 16 hours, until stuck at 8 cm), and I am glad I got the epidural when I did. I am glad I am not the type of person to feel an ounce of guilt or failure about that.
There is a helpful podcast in The Longest Shortest Time series, where the hostess speaks with Ina May Gaskin and basically calls her out on this. On the fact that if women are led to believe it's all a matter of mindset, what does that mean for the women who try but "fail"? Ina May responded that it was never her intention to send that message. Definitely worth a listen.
Sorry to be preachy, but this was my biggest lesson in labor and I don't think it's fair to keep letting women like me believe you can just will away the pain of childbirth.
I don't see any reason to be in pain if I can safely avoid it. Yes, there are risks, but every pill I've ever taken for migraine has had a risk associated with it.
I'm a FTM too and would like to go as far as I can without....but if I need one, I'll get one
I do always make my patients make eye contact and I breathe with them if things are getting out of control noise, pain and room wise.
I'd do an epidural next time too, no question.