Hi Ladies!
I haven't posted much but I've been an avid reader. Thanks for all of sharing and entertainment and rants etc ❤️
I am considering home birth ... I'm not a hospital/Doctor person unless there is something really wrong with me. Basically it isn't a place I would go to feel safe and relaxed .... That being said I live in a townhouse in the middle of townhouses and I'm not quite sure if it is appropriate to give birth here. I don't know if everyone will be able to hear especially if it is 2am etc.
We don't have birthing centers where I live, but the closest hospital does have private rooms with beds, and an tub and a couch an apparently an ocean view .... Sounds like a vacation except for the hospital part!!
I've notice a few people have said they have had home births or have attempted ... Can you share advice? Pro's / cons?
I want to move and rent a house but my hub thinks that's a little crazy ... And it probably is. Oh the hormones!!
Re: Home Birth
DST T4L
I am seeing a midwife, she said we can prepare for both and I can decide when I go into labor.
That is unless something changes.
Do you live in a detached house? I am worried about being so close to my neighbors.
I also live in a townhouse and would be really self-conscious of my neighbors hearing all sorts of moans and groans. Where I am we also have noise restrictions at night, so the cops could easily be called if we disturbed our neighbors. Just something to look into around where you live.
I hope you find what you're looking for in your search to figure out where to give birth!
At least tour the hospital, if you haven't, to see if it makes you more comfortable. I read (and watched documentaries about) hospitals and dr's and how they pushed interventions and meds and none of it turned out be true for me. There is a whole industry based on causing fear that I think is unfounded in how many hospitals and many Drs today do their work. Honestly, every granola thing that I wanted was available to me at the hospital.
I had two unmediated hospital births that were very text book until delivery when the Drs and nurses had to act quickly. I was hemorrhaging after deliver of my first - requiring a Pitocin shot and hardcore "massage" of my uterus. The second, the baby had meconium all over him requiring some quick maneuvering be some pediatric nurses. In either case, while things turned out for the better without further, major intervention, I was grateful to be in the right place with the right professionals should immediate, further intervention be needed. It was a nice insurance policy.
This fear spreading is the reason that the US has the 2nd highest maternal mortality rate and one of the highest newborn mortality rates in all the developed countries. Women's bodies are meant to birth and somehow, over the last several decades, we have convinced women that they don't know how to give birth. Birth is a beautiful and natural thing and every woman has the right to birth the way she is most comfortable and safest for her.
If you want a home birth, I say go for it. In the moment, what your neighbors can hear or think most likely won't matter at all.
Also check the laws in your state. I believe it's not allowed in some to have a home birth. Do your research and best of luck whatever you decide.
The midwives have to complete a home study and based on moms/baby's health they will make a decision then. They will never allow a home birth to happen if there is any doubt that serious complications will arise. And once in labour if they think something may go wrong they will call an ambulance BEFORE just to have on hand if needed.
Im not telling you this as some sort of horror story to scare you away from a home birth. More a tale of caution so you're aware that stuff like that can happen and being at home makes it very complicated and dangerous when it does.
Where I live midwives are government regulated and home birth is allowed so I do have the choice. Which I am really happy about.
I've been focusing on learning about birth and remember that women have been doing this for thousands of years and our body knows what to do.
We can all plan as much as we would like but it happens when it happens and how it happens! Everyone's story and comfort is different.
Edited to add that after a little looking, I read that it's typically not diagnosed before delivery but technically, it's possible to detect with a vaginal u/s. Very commonly accompanied by excess bleeding after removal.
See figure 1. And that doesn't even go back 100 years.
I'm not saying home birth isn't necessarily safer now, but the logic of "that's how women have always done it" doesn't make sense to me.
I don't think anyone is trying to make anyone else feel bad, they are all sharing their opinions, which is literally what OP was asking for.