Hey mommas, as a first time mom I find myself very curious about what exactly is going to happen when that big moment finally arrives. Will I be at work? Will I be home alone on rest while SO is at work? Will I have to call a neighbor? Will he be able to be there in time for the birth? (he's military and actually could even possibly deploy) so many variables. I thought it would be fun to hear others stories from the time you went into labor and how you knew it was time... to the time you were able to leave the hospital and come home with your LO. What's your story and how far off from your "plan" was it?
Re: Share your labor/birth stories.
From there I got a dose of fentanyl, which helped for about 30 min. Then much screaming, I seriously had no control over it, they came to do the epidural and told me that if I felt like pushing they could just skip it. I said over my dead body. As it was only a small patch on my right thigh went numb.
I was put on oxygen and I ended up delivering laying on my left side so I wonder if there was a drop in sats. I did end up with an episiotomy, but probably never would have known if it wasn't for the sound of the scissors. At that point you can't distinguish the pain from the rest of it. (And for the record my husband says I healed up nicely there, no difference at all)
we were team green the first time around and I was honestly expecting that movie moment where the doctor says "it's a girl/boy!" I ended up having to ask, as a response the nurse who was about to wipe the baby off held the crotch toward me. That's right, the first glimpse I had of my first baby was his balls....
As for my "plan" for my first delivery (the hospital gave us a form and everything), I just wrote at the top of the page, "pain medication requested" and "everyone gets out of this alive". So it mostly worked.
we stayed in the hospital 2 days after he was born (we didn't really need to stay that long but the insurance covered it and why not have the backup from the nurses and the pain meds?)
https://forums.thebump.com/discussion/12649121/birth-stories#latest
He was born on the day that was supposed to be my last day of work before maternity leave
I had prodromal labor, which is labor that comes on hard and fast but isn't consistent. Within two hours of contractions starting, I was shaking and nauseated like I was in transition, and my contractions were one on top of the other. I was suddenly worried I'd be having an accidental homebirth, so I had hubs call our doula. But by the time she was at our house, my contractions had slowed down and eased way up. She sent us to bed for some sleep
My labor continued like that for the next day, ebbing and flowing. Hubby and I spent the day together walking the neighborhood. We'd stop and sway on the sidewalk while we rode out contractions together. It was July, and the flowering trees were gorgeous that day. He picked a flower for me and the baby, which I still have, dried and displayed in DD's room. DH gave me back rubs. I listened to my Hypnobabies tracks. I tried all kinds of wacky positions to get DD engaged and get labor moving. My doula came and checked in on us and helped me make cupcakes for my hospital care team, and told us to try and get more sleep that night. We got a couple hours of restless sleep, but by midnight, things started to really pick up.
I sent hubby and my doula out of my bedroom because I just wanted to be alone. I loved rocking on my birth ball leaning on the edge of my bed so I could easily sleep between contractions. By 1 AM, my doula had us packed up and we were headed to the hospital where we continued our groove. My doula was fantastic about applying counterpressure to my hips when I had to lie down in the hospital bed for fetal monitoring. They had me lying on my left side, which made contractions really intense, but my doula was so soothing.
My midwife came at 7 and asked if she could check me. I was shocked to hear I was completely dilated! I was still managing contractions well, although wasn't feeling pushy yet. She said that was because my water hadn't broken and was cushioning baby off of my cervix. She said she had another mom in labor she needed to go check on at her other hospital and asked if she could break my water so she could be sure to be there when my baby was born. I really wanted her there, so I consented. She warned me that I'd very likely be overcome with really intense pressure and the urge to push. But my sweet DD wasn't in the best position, her head was cocked to the side, and after my water broke, she got stuck. My body surprisingly gave me a break from contractions for about half an hour.
After that.... things got hairy. I climbed into a warm jetted tub in the pitch black, and I swayed through my contractions there. DD ground on my pubic bone for five hours, unable to descend because of her position. My body was exhausted and contractions were petering out. We tried pumping for an oxytocin boost to no avail. I consented to pitocin to avoid a c section, but I had been laboring for so long and my pelvis hurt. I asked for a walking epidural, just enough so I could rest for a moment. My anesthesiologist missed my epidural space three times, and then gave me a spinal block instead of the walking epi I asked for. My nurse pulled my IV just as my blood pressure began to plummet from the unexpected spinal block. I had no wherewithal to be as furious about these things as I am today. My midwife took care of these mistakes ASAP.
I rested, the pitocin did its job (thank you modern medicine!), my midwife taught me how to push since I couldn't feel a darn thing. My midwife helped MIL catch DD and place her on my chest, blue and slimey and beautiful. DH and I had never felt more in love! She latched right on and nursed happily for an hour. Even though her birth was such a roller coaster, I'd do it again. Her personality sure does match the drama of welcoming her to the world! The day after, my midwife came to check on me and the first thing she said was, "Well I hear at the nurses' station that Violet is quite the pistol!" Truer words were never spoken.
I had prepared for a natural hospital birth using Hypobirthing techniques. I had two weeks off and on of false labor (time-able, strong contractions, that would go all day, then stop by night time around midnight). Then, at the end of my 38th week, DS flipped to frank breech and they scheduled a c-section for when I was 39+2. On the morning before my scheduled surgery, I started my maternity leave, had a BIG breakfast and sat with DH wondering what we should do on our last day off together without a child yet. I felt like I had to pee suddenly, so I got up and headed to the bathroom, promising to decide on something to do when I got back. As soon as I got to the bathroom, my water broke. It was like a never-ending, pulsing river that smelled like cake batter.
This baby has been favoring the breech position so far, and I've been working with a webster-technique certified chiropractor to work to correct my hip misalignment to *hopefully* give him room to engage head down like DS couldn't. If he does, I'll try for a vbac; if not, I'll have a rcs...hopefully with more proactive control for nausea and migraines, and where DH can help me do skin to skin sooner.
Do you know about the Spinning Babies Daily Essentials yoga flow? A friend of mine suggested it to me after her third baby was malpositioned. I just plain stink at at-home exercising, so I'm going to an actual Blooma yoga class to help this baby get into the best possible position. BUT the daily essentials yoga flow is supposed to do the same thing. Are you doing inversions? If so, how are those going? I dread inversions....
I'm finding myself fantasizing about "accidentally" birthing at home. Vi's birth was so peaceful and felt so right when we were at home. The hospital staff did their best to leave me alone, but they still felt intrusive to me. I wish you a very beautiful, healthy home birth!
I tried some of the spinning babies positions and a bunch of other wacky things like light & heat positioning last time in the few days between when we realized he had turned and when my water broke, but it just wasn't meant to be. This time, I'm trying to be more proactive in encouraging head down, but I know with a heart-shaped uterus, it just may not happen (it raises likelihood of breech positioning). Since I started with my chiropractor though, I've gotten some clearly head down days which is giving me hope.
I had initially wanted a natural birth but consented to an induction because I wasn't feeling anything close to what the other women on TheBump board at the time were feeling before their labors so I suspected that I would be going over the 42 week mark, anyway.
My MIL had come to town from out of state and had planned to stay for a month; she had taken the time off of work and everything. And her plane ticket home was scheduled for the next week because she had convinced herself that I would deliver early as she had done with each of hers.
I am very introverted and had made it very clear to MIL and my aunt (who is the closest I have to a mother) that I didn't want them in the hospital until the baby was born. But the night I was induced, my aunt drove into town and we went out to dinner so I could have a big meal before my midnight induction. DH and I checked into the hospital. Nothing happened for about 12 hours, maybe some light contractions from the pitocin but nothing major. By that point, I had dilated to a 2.
Then, MIL and aunt arrived unannounced. I told them they could stay for a little while but when contractions became bad, I would hope they'd go back to our house and wait for the call. Shortly after, the OB broke my water in an attempt to get things moving.
Contractions got harder.
MIL and aunt did not leave. I remember being pissed about them not listening to my request, pissed about the fact that the tv was on the whole time to a fuzzy channel that was playing Law and Order nonstop, and pissed that my contractions were so hard that I couldn't vocalize my frustration. I was checked again - 2cm.
Hours passed. 3cm.
Now I was hungry, not allowed to eat, and getting really pissed. I had DH doing counter pressure while I leaned on the bed, backwards. At sometime around dinner time, MIL and aunt go to the cafeteria or food kiosk in the hospital and bring back something for DH. I looked at the nurse and said, "seriously, I'm about to eat because this policy is an outdated joke". I can't remember what she said but she basically shot me down. OB came by and I could tell that he was as impatient about this as I was but told me that as long as our vitals were good he wasn't worried, - I'm still at 3cm - so I asked if pain meds might help my body relax, maybe let me sleep and see if the cervix would dilate some more while I was relaxed. He said he recommend it but knew I wanted to avoid them so it was my choice. I got the epidural, got a couple of hours of sleep and was checked again - 5cm.
DH went home to let the dog out, I think, and I was checked shortly after he came back. Still at 5cm. I had now been 22 hours in the hospital and had only dilated 3cm since I checked in.
Around 10pm, something happened and I can't quite remember what. I think either my or the baby's heart rate started doing something they didn't like and as soon as an oxygen mask was placed on me (although I didn't feel like I was having ANY trouble breathing) my family started freaking out. When my OB came in for the distress call, I asked him the liklihood that this was going to result in a c-section and he said, very likely. He told me, after the heart rates stabilized, he would give me a few more hours before he would make the recommendation, then he checked my cervix again.
4cm.
what the f?
I told him I didn't think anything was going to happen by that time so they began the prep for the surgery.
I don't remember much about the c-section. I remember a tugging sensation on my abdomen, my DH not knowing what the f to do and being scared to death. I remember lots of shaking and worrying that my shaking was going to screw up the surgery. I remember looking over my shoulder at our son as they were weighing and tagging him and recognizing the left foot that had been the most prominent kicker of my ribs and thinking, "that's the foot! my god, he has big feet." and I remember shaking too much to feel comfortable holding him until they wheeled me back to the room, so I ended up being the last person to hold my son.
and then I remember the nurse asking me if I wanted something to drink. I told her I wanted a Coke because I needed some damn glucose because they had "denied me food and water for over 24 hours due to an outdated, medically unsound policy". Another nurse brought it to me and, when I went to take a third sip, told me to slow down. I glared and took another, long, glorious sip.
This time, MIL will be keeping DS so if she tries to pull that crap about staying in the room the whole time, I WILL tell the nurse to kick her out. and I will be bringing my own damn food and eating it, even if I have to hide it under my pillow and sneak bites. I have a feeling that I won't have as much trouble dilating this time - my hormone levels have been higher this pregnancy - and have already expressed to my doctor that I will not consent to an induction until I have exceeded the 42 week mark.
We arrived at 6 and cervadil was inserted at about 930. Painless. They told us to sleep and we would see how it went. We didn't really sleep - too anxious! By 730 am, I wasn't contracting but I had dilated 1cm. Doc came in and broke my water to get things moving. Pitocin was started and the journey began!
I labored hard until 330 pm. No pain meds. I couldn't be on the birthing ball as his heart rate dropped considerably when doing so even though it was comforting to me. I had hard back labor. Was only dilated 4 cm after 9 hours. So disappointed. The docs observed a few contractions and said that the way my body was reacting to the contractions was essentially fighting itself from allowing further progress/dilation. They suggested an epidural so I could relax and see what happened. With my illness, I agreed and was exhausted so I figured why not. I wasn't ever opposed to meds, I just wanted to see what my body could do.
Got the the epidural at 430. Hardest part was them timing it around a contraction. My nurse was wonderful with helping to support as they didn't allow DH to be in the room (sterile environment needed). Other than that it was a breeze and within moments I was in tears as I was pain free. Catheter was easy and painless as well. I slept on and off until about 10 pm when I was in a lot more pain.
They me checked me and we were ready to push! For me the pain wasn't just pressure as they said it would be - it literally hurt so it took us a second to realize. Doctors came in and got us set up by 1030 and we were pushing! 20 minutes later he arrived! Healthy, pink, and so clean (which I was surprised about!) We did skin to skin for the first hour and it was the best hour of my life. The placenta was easy to pass (I didn't have to really do any work) and I had a tiny tiny internal tear. A quick stitch and we were set!
Had to wait an hour to get up bc of the epidural but the skin to skin was worth it too! DH got to finally hold him while they helped me up and to the bathroom. This was interesting with the perinatal bottle. The nurse helped me with it and while uncomfortable for us both, we laughed and it was all "I know what you just saw exit me and this oddly isn't that weird anymore!" You lose a lot of shame in the delivery room!
We were taken to our room (I personally loved that we switched rooms after birthing - clean, more homey) and settled in for a bit. They took DS for a few tests related to my health concerns so I dozed for an hour or so. They checked my BP 4 hours after delivering it and it was perfect - 120s/70s. It had been 140-150/90+.
My bleeding was actually rather minimal and recovery was pretty easy. The padsicle sandwich was awesome - the ice pad, layered with tucks pads and sprayed with dermaplast was amazing. And you can take it all home! Do not buy in advance as you'll be charged for it anyway! I really didn't mind the mesh panties - they held the pad in place and were easy to change.
The nurse belly massages weren't exactly fun but had to be done. The shower was amazing. Food was decent (really just was starving so I didn't taste most of it!) All in all it was a great experience!