Might be too soon but it is definitely on my mind! Please no judgement as we all know whatever mom wants is the best choice for baby
DD: 4/22
FTM/STM/TTM: STM
What does your ideal birth situation look like: I am a big fan of water births. I was planning on having one in the states for my first with my husband present but he couldn't get his visa in time so I decided to just fly down to Mexico 8 months pregnant to have her there. I was so lucky to find and amazing obgyn that was pioneering water births in my husband's hometown. My daughter's birth was a week early and happened way faster than anyone expected. It was 8 hours total from when I started feeling contractions. Although it hurt like hell and was a wild ride (no meds) the actual delivery was pretty peaceful since I was way more calm in the tub and felt less frantic after I knew I could start pushing. Very lucky to have a complication free birth.
For this time around I obviously want to have a water birth but unfortunately there are no hospitals/clinics that offer it in my area

There are a few midwives that offer water births but they don't accept our insurance and paying out of pocket isn't an option for us. The good thing is that our local hospital (where the obgyns at our family clinic practice) has a wonderful birthing wing with really nice rooms (jetted tubs) etc and really great nursing staff. I am definitely nervous about a dry delivery (wondering if it will hurt more or if I will tear more).
Would love to hear what you all are thinking about this topic
Re: Birth Plan?
FTM/STM/TTM: FTM
I'm not even sure what to imagine! I definitely wish to have a VB, and I've always imagined the birth would be done at the hospital with an epidural because I don't have a high pain tolerance. But I'm also nervous about the size of the needle, so I don't know what I'll do haha. I do have a lot of family members and friends who have chosen to schedule a c-section, and a lot have said it was a worry-free event "like checking in and out of a hotel" lol. So I guess I'm not sure yet, but I'm trying to keep an open-mind and wanting to learn about the different options I can have.
Mine is pretty simple: At a hospital, vaginal birth if possible while keeping mom and baby healthy. Likely an epidural but will see how fast labor is. No episiotomy if possible. Delayed cord clamping if possible, skin to skin right away if possible. Golden hour if possible. (DD1 had meconium so we couldn't do delayed clamping, skin to skin immediately, or golden hour technically although she was given to me pretty quickly after she was checked out and cleaned up).
My birth plan is also pretty simple. My goal is to make it to 37 weeks without Pre-E, but regardless I will be in a hospital, with an epidural. If i have to be induced early and have Pre-E again, I will go with the flow but have a growing list of food for DH to get for me once i'm allowed to eat.
@kvh22 That saline sounds scary...and you sound like a pro with that birth plan! Like I said before, so many things to think of. It didn't even cross my mind about the cord clamping, how soon skin to skin would be, GBS....it really all is dependent on the birth, unique to each person.
@cagncoo12 To have it poked twice, glad it just felt like a pinch then!
@bblair24 Geez, what are the chances to contract while they're trying to stick a giant needle in you?! Sorry the Anesthesiologist was a butt 😂
I felt so empowered while pushing. Like @aguamala said, it was a productive pain. After being coached through the first contraction, I felt in total control & loved it.
I had a second degree tear with DS, so I’d love to not have that again LOL!! Main hope is to actually go into labour, and not be induced and delivering 9 days late 😂.
Married: August 2013
Son: December 2018
Baby in heaven: February 2020, was due Sept
I am leaning toward a planned CS this time, but I want to make sure anyone considering a scheduled C without legitimate medical need understands that this is a major surgery with a significant recovery. Even for routine procedures with no complications, it is not easy and I would strongly urge you to do some further research and have candid conversations with people who have had one relatively recently.
So this will my my 4th delivery. In a nutshell:
My 1st was 18 hours of labor after my water broke spontaneously at home (NO contractions before or immediately after). Lots of meds. Epidural. Tearing and stitches. Harder recovery.
2nd and 3rd were the complete opposite. #2 I labored at home for 1/2 a day with my doula and then my water broke (at home) and baby was born within a few hours. No epi, no tearing, way better recovery. #3 water broke at 6am, baby in arms 3 hours later 🤪 (no epi, no tearing, best recovery).
-Getting to labor at home for as long as possible
-Having our doula with us
-Hospital vaginal delivery
-No drugs or epi
-No tearing
-Quick birth
-Skin-to-skin right after
ahhhh one can hope, right?!
DD: 4/2
FTM/STM/TTM: STM
What does your ideal birth situation look like: My first came fast and I almost didn't make it to the hospital- birth plan is only to be at the hospital and get an epidural!
FTM/STM/TTM: STM
What does your ideal birth situation look like: Without going into details because I don't want my very odd situation making at FTM nervous, I was very little the same as my first. I really don't have a plan right now because everything will depend on this baby's size so I wont make any decisions until much later. I will say a planned CS is absolutely not out of the question for me.
ETA: I just realized I didn't really answer the question right.. it asked "ideal." So my IDEAL situation would be firstly safe and health mom and baby is top priority, secondly in hospital, active until epidural, short labor/quick pushing, vaginal, no tear, no assistance (forceps, vacuum, etc), skin-to-skin, delayed cord clamping.
The Thinking Woman’s Guide To A Better Birth by Henci Goer
Birthing From Within by Pam England
Ina May’s Guide to Childbirth by Ina May Gaskin
Childbirth Without Fear by Grantly Dick-Read
I've also been listening to this podcast (literally called pregnany podcast
I also really like expecting better and cribsheet by emily oster. Expecting better is the pregnancy one and cribsheet is essentially babies first year but starts at birth with a chapter on the first 3 days (newborn baths, circumcision, blood and hearing tests, rooming in, infant weight loss, jaundice, delayed cord clamping, vitamin k shot, and antibiotics in the eye). Expecting better has a chapter on birth plans. Her approach is to present the data to you so you can make your decision. I think she presents it well. As opposed to the books above (Ina May's and mindful birthing) which have obvious perspectives, hers is written so that two different people can read it and come to their own conclusion. She's not overly trying to convince you one way or the other. I'm a data junky so it could be a lot for some. If you'd rather read on specific types of delivery methods, there are various books on hypnobirthing, the bradley method, and a few others, I think. I haven't read any of those, myself, though.
Married: August 2013
Son: December 2018
Baby in heaven: February 2020, was due Sept
Married: August 2013
Son: December 2018
Baby in heaven: February 2020, was due Sept
The hospital I'm delivering at this time offers nitrous oxide, and I'm excited to try that out. I'm still planning to get an epidural unless labor goes really fast. I heard the nitrous helps you not freak out about the pain as much so I'm hoping to use that as soon as I get admitted, then wait til it gets more intense (but not unbearable) for the epidural. Last time I definitely waited too long to ask for the epidural.