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Before I was even pregnant,
I would drive by the birth center near my home and
think “I need to have my baby there!”
I knew I didn’t want to have a hospital birth.
I had an irrational fear of having a cesarean. It
was a fear that became validated, but with time
I’ve also come to understand the value of
it as well.
We found out we were
pregnant on November 14th and the very next day
I began to bleed. My husband and I went to the local
hospital for answers and found that I had a sub-chorionic
hemorrhage. This particular hospital was not equipped
for obstetrics. The doctors explained that this
was considered a threatened miscarriage and we had
a 50% chance of carrying past the first trimester
but if anything else was to come up to be sure to
go to a different location. I spent the next few
weeks in emotional turmoil while taking progesterone
as prescribed by my midwife. Our first appointment
at the birth center was at thirteen weeks gestation,
my midwife was unable to find my baby’s heartbeat.
My husband and I were sent for an immediate ultrasound.
That was a long drive, even though it was just up
the road…the wait was even longer. The Ultrasound
technician found our sweet little baby, just fine
with a strong heartbeat and the hemorrhage was gone.
I had a feeling it would have been as I had passed
a large, quarter sized blood clot the week before.
I went on to have a pretty normal, uneventful, and
beautiful pregnancy.
I simply adored the care
I received at the birth center, both prenatally
and postpartum! The entire staff knew my husband
as well as they knew me! Most importantly, they
understood my desire for a natural birth as most
of the people around me didn’t have the same
views. At my 38 week appointment, I came in feeling
a bit run down, sweaty, and not really myself. The
midwife’s assistant immediately noticed that
I wasn’t my “giggly” self and
took note. I had an elevated blood pressure reading
that lead to the midwife suggesting I have a NST
and drink some juice. The NST looked great and we
never had another high blood pressure reading, but
to be on the safe side my midwife ordered a 24-hour
urine test to check protein levels and make sure
I wasn’t developing preeclampsia. I felt much
better the following day, but when we got the numbers
back from my urine test, the protein levels were
elevated outside of the normal range. What I didn’t
know about the test was that the urine needed to
either be kept on ice or refrigerated…a mistake
on my end that I would grow to regret.
A few days later, the
overseeing OB of the birth center gave an order
for me to be in the hospital for the full 24 hours
while I urinated in a container. While in the hospital,
I had a biophysical profile and routine blood pressure
checks though never once was it alarming. The nurses
weren’t even sure why I was there, though
they kept insisting that I would be back. How I
wish they had been wrong.
When the urine test came
back, the numbers were well within the normal range
and I was sent on my way. I thought things were
over and I could continue on with my birth plan
at the birth center. A week later, while at my sister-in-law's
house, I received a call from my midwife stating
that the OB wanted another 24-hour urine test completed.
During this call, there was some talk about a cesarean
as the last ultrasound had determined that my baby
was going to be over 10 lbs. As I balled my eyes
out on the phone, she assured me that she didn’t
think that would be the case and to just proceed
with the testing. I came by the birth center that
following Monday to get the urine collection container.
At this appointment I also had a NST and a very
painful and slightly bloody vaginal exam stating
I was still at 3cm, as I had been since the previous
week. My midwife and I were hoping that I would
go into labor soon.
At 3:50 am early Tuesday
morning, July 19th, I jumped out of bed as I thought
I was urinating on myself! I didn’t bother
to grab the container because it was flowing quickly
and I wanted to get to the bathroom. I didn’t
have any more leakage after that, though I felt
that was my water breaking. I called the midwife's
phone line as instructed and she told me to go back
to sleep and get some rest. How could I rest? I
was so excited! I was excited that I didn’t
need to pee in that stupid container AND that I
was going to meet my baby soon! Not to mention I
had only gone to bed around 1am as I was up with
company, excitedly talking about how soon our little
surprise would be joining us.
Around 6 am, contractions
began and were consistent for the first few hours,
about every 10 minutes or so. They became inconsistent
around 10am. I had checked in with the midwife and
she thought it best to stay at home at this point.
Not too long after we chatted, I received a call
from her again. This time, to tell us that the overseeing
OB is offering an elective cesarean because my baby
is measuring over 10 lbs and we had the possible
risks of shoulder dystocia, broken collar bone,
or damage to my tailbone, etc. I burst into tears
immediately. I was enraged and scared over this
offer! Once I gathered myself, I told her thank
you for relaying the risks, but that I am declining
his offer and would like to proceed with our original
birth plan, as I trusted my body. We had a few more
conversations, but when 5 o’clock pm rolled
around, we thought it best to head over to the birth
center for the first round of antibiotics since
my water had been broken for almost 12 hours. I
agreed to antibiotics knowing that if we were to
transfer, our baby may need to go to the NICU for
prolonged membrane rupture and possible infection
if we didn’t have the on-time antibiotics.
We got to the birth center a bit later and never
even saw the birth room. My labor was still inconsistent
and as we cried, we were told the OB was calling
it at 18 hours, instead of the routine 24 hour rule,
and I needed to transfer to the hospital. At one
point I was told that I should have never been taken
on anyways due to my pre pregnancy weight. It was
a hard transfer for my husband and I, and I knew
my midwife was genuinely sad that it had to happen
this way. But, her hands were tied. I was devastated.
I didn’t know that I had other options or
that I could have possibly contacted a doula, since
in this case the midwives don’t go with their
clients.
I went home, ate a peanut
butter and jelly, grabbed our “birth center”
bag, cried while my husband and I held each other
before we headed to the hospital. When we arrived
at the hospital, we were met with the rudest CNM
I have ever met. She was cold, forceful and made
me believe that if I did not receive the Pitocin
induction that instant that I was putting my baby
in harm’s way, especially because it’s
a “big baby”. She made me feel like
the worst person because I ate prior to coming in
and that my midwife should have been clearer in
relaying that I shouldn’t have eaten. I knew
that by eating, I might buy some time from an immediate
cesarean, which I did as it was offered again upon
my arrival. She repeated the words “rupture”
over and over in reference to my water breaking.
Language is very strong and it twisted something
serious within my husband and me. My husband, already
stressed out and overwhelmed, finally lost it and
yelled at her to quit using that verbiage. She calmed
down a bit and got less aggressive, but not entirely.
I demanded an ultrasound as I believed that the
last one saying that my baby was over 10lbs was
inaccurate. The technician stated that I had pockets
of fluid and the baby was measuring right around
8 lbs. That’s a big jump in size…never
heard of a baby losing so much weight in a week
while in utero.
My labor had become intensely
stronger, but insisted on proceeding with the induction.
So there I was lying in a bed with monitors on,
waiting for the induction to begin. At 9 pm, they
started the Pitocin. That shit was intense. I was
yelled at by the anesthesiologist at one point to
let him do his job when I asked him not to poke
me on my wrist bone as the nurse had hurt me there
before when he came to do my IV. The last few times
the nurses had done it, they blew multiple veins;
I was bruised for over a week. That oh-so-lovely
CNM at one point had one arm, blood trickling down
onto her ungloved hands from her injection site,
while another nurse had my other, trying to get
the IV catheter in as well. I felt every contraction,
as they were back to back almost immediately from
the beginning of the induction, that I was urinating
all over myself. I wanted to sit on the toilet to
labor, I felt more dignified there and protected
by my husband as I labored holding on to him with
a closed door. The nurse didn’t feel this
was a great place because they needed to keep me
monitored. So instead, she sat the bed up and put
a bed pan under me. Real classy. I felt like such
an empowered woman…
I was told I was asking
to go to the bathroom too often that I should really
stay in the bed. I wanted to move around. That bed
felt like hell. My husband fought with the staff
to get in the shower to try to manage my labor pain.
The nurse only agreed after getting numerous approvals
from attending staff. It was not comforting in the
slightest. The lights were bright; they were in
my space trying to continuously monitor me. It was
frustrating. They kept asking me why I wouldn’t
get the epidural, that I shouldn’t do this
to myself. I was just trying to give myself and
my baby the best birth possible. I didn’t
want any more drugs. Closer to morning I received
another (upon the many, many random and unsolicited
checks before) cervical exam. The nurse told me
I was at a 9, almost 9.5cms! I was elated! I knew
I could do it! Shortly later, a different and much
welcomed CNM came in and checked. According to her,
I was only at an 8. I felt beyond defeated. I was
done. She suggested the epidural to get rest, I
declined- but agreed to Stadol instead. That did
nothing but make me queasy. I had the incessant
need to push, though I was nowhere near complete.
They told me to hold it, don’t push; do anything
but push. My husband needed a break at this point
and fell asleep. I remember grasping on the side
bedrail, full fetal position screaming in pure agony
as I fought my body’s desire to release the
pressure. This felt like it went on forever.
The sun was up and I
was lost; I finally agreed to the epidural. I slept
for a bit after the epidural and woke up with the
urge to push. The CNM performed another internal
exam that clarified that I was ready to. I asked
if it was ok, then stripped myself naked and screamed
to turn the damn epidural off. I don’t know
if that request was honored, but I had feeling.
I pushed to the sound of them counting, to the feeling
of my perineum stretching with the CNM’s hand,
looking at my husband’s ghostly white face
as he held a knee. I pushed. And pushed. And pushed.
My husband could touch and see our baby’s
hairy head. But she wasn’t getting anywhere
closer to crowning. The baby’s heart rate
never dipped. The midwife even cleared that with
me in the immediate postpartum visit; our baby was
such a trooper. Three hours later, after they asked
me to yet again stop pushing and put me in an exaggerated
lie to try to get the baby to turn, I was vomiting
with each contraction and fighting my body’s
needs. My husband was crying to me, afraid and sad
that there was nothing he could do for me. He was
exhausted. I asked for the cesarean as I felt like
I was going to break, physically. I didn’t
know that the nurses and CNM were already working
on getting this ordered with an OB. My husband tried
to talk me out of it, but I told him it would be
alright, that I was done and this needed to happen.
Shortly after that exchange, I found myself on an
OR table, being yelled at to sit still or they would
need to knock me out. They were trying to get a
spinal in as I could feel everything with only the
epidural. As I sat hunched over, baby in my canal
and contractions on top of one another, I mustered
as much strength as I could to hold still and on
the third try they were successful. They laid me
down, tied my arms down, and put the oxygen mask
on. I could feel the warmth rush over me, the contractions
fade and my body was no longer part of me. When
my husband came in I made sure to ask if he grabbed
the camera! He looked so silly in his scrub outfit.
The attending OB made the statement “Why couldn’t
you birth this baby?”
At 2:26 pm on July 20th,
my sweet husband announced to me that our little
Grace was here. We didn’t know if it was to
be a boy or girl. It didn’t matter. I cried
very briefly with so many different emotions. She
never made a peep. They tried to get her to cry,
suctioned her as routine, and even then there was
barely a sound. She was born with a peaceful demeanor,
despite her birth journey. I saw her briefly. They
wouldn’t allow her on my chest, but my husband
lifted her beanie so I could smell her lovely scent.
And then she and my husband were gone as I was barking
orders at him to not allow any tests, shots, or
ointments.
As I lay there, unacknowledged,
listening to Queen playing on the overhead and the
nonsense chatter of the staff as they tried to mend
my broken body, I remember thinking that this was
the last place I ever wanted to be. The OB told
me when she was done that I was “skinny”
again and come bikini time, the scar wouldn’t
even be seen. I met my baby girl again in recovery,
just for a quick latch close to 4:30 pm. The lactation
consultant basically shoved my nipple in her mouth
because I was so swollen with fluids. Soon after,
she was taken away again, with my husband in tow.
He never left her, not once. The staff kept offering
pain meds, and I had this odd container hooked up
to my abdomen. I wasn’t “allowed”
to refuse the pain meds, but I could opt for minimal
dosage and Tylenol 3. When they took this odd container
off, it ripped the skin off on my abdomen. My husband
helped with my first shower in the hospital that
same night. It sounded like he was murdering me,
and it was only the water rushing over me. Those
fresh wounds hurt worse than the incision. I still
have not one clue what that canister contained.
The postpartum nurses were real angels and came
whenever I needed and kept telling me that they
heard my story and how brave I was. That they were
rooting for me. That some of them had heard me.
Hearing them share their own cesarean and induction
stories while commending me on my efforts made me
feel like a warrior for the time being.
Was she really mine?
How could I be certain? She was taken from me. I
didn’t birth her. These thoughts consumed
me for many months, along with the long string of
what if questions. We struggled with nursing for
the first six weeks battling a few bouts of mastitis,
thrush, split nipples, and latch issues. I struggled
with postpartum depression in the first couple of
months and though I tried to hide it as best I could,
my husband saw through me and tried to get me help
with my midwives. I felt like a failure. That I
wasn’t even woman enough to give birth to
this 8.5 pound, 21.5in long baby! Why did I deserve
this, after all the preparation I had put forth
during my pregnancy? It took many, many months and
fighting to work on finding peace with Grace’s
birth.
When my husband so slyly
called my midwives to set up a “breastfeeding”
help visit, I had no idea that he had cried in fear
to them on the phone because I wouldn’t get
out of bed. When we walked into the center, I seemed
fine but my insides were crawling. It was painful
to be there, in a place that I didn’t have
the dream water birth that I had so desired. It
was another knife to my heart. Meeting with the
midwife we started chatting about the many breastfeeding
issues I had. She then asked how I was feeling and
that Will had called them. I sobbed, telling her
the horrible feelings of inadequacy, failure, and
pain. That I was NOT ok and I didn’t believe
my baby was actually mine, though I knew that to
be irrational. She then pointed me to Healthy Start
and suggested I find ICAN. I had heard about and
attended an ICAN meeting before I knew I was pregnant.
I didn’t think it was for me. I wish that
I would have stayed throughout my pregnancy; I may
have been able to avoid the cesarean, but who knows.
I reached out to Healthy
Start and was assigned a pretty awesome case worker.
As she and I chatted, I felt ok talking to her about
my experience and being vulnerable. She got how
big of a deal it was to me. She put me in touch
with an in-home counselor and I set up a meeting
for the next week. When we began talking, she told
me a bit about herself, one of the things being
that she had no children. When I was trying to explain
to her my birth story and feelings surrounding it,
I knew she didn’t get it. “Well, at
least Grace is healthy!” I immediately shut-off
and sank away, knowing that this was not the avenue
that was going to help me heal. At the end of the
meeting, she gave me a ridiculous homework assignment
and went on her way. I called and canceled the following
appointment and didn’t see her again.
I had attended the one
ICAN meeting in very early pregnancy, but didn’t
think it was something I would need because I was
going to have a birth center birth and there was
no way I was going to transfer to the hospital.
I just wish that when everything began going downhill
around 38 weeks, someone would have suggested, or
that I would have known to call an ICAN Leader.
I attended my first meeting after Grace’s
birth in September 2011, with my husband by my side.
We listened to others share their stories, the meeting’s
discussion topic, and my husband and I shared bits
of ours. I noticed how angry we both were when we
spoke about the birth. It was an amazing feeling
to have our feelings validated and to find that
we weren’t alone. Since that meeting, I have
missed maybe two or three due to unforeseen circumstances.
ICAN has been my saving grace (no pun intended).
I have learned so much about the different options
that pregnant and birthing women have and through
others sharing their stories, I have found bits
and pieces of mine. ICAN has allowed me to graciously
re-enter the world of mommy-hood by knowing and
acknowledging that I was not a failure. I’ve
since become an ICAN Leader and have used my experience
and passion for birth to help other moms and moms-to-be
have the best birth experience. Especially when
things don’t go as planned, I can be there
for support and help them find the resources before
and after to make it as empowering as possible.
Whether a mom has a vaginal birth, cesarean, vaginal
birth after cesarean, or a repeat cesarean, I know
that I can help support her no matter the journey.
Two years ago, I would not have been able to see
past the type of birth a mom had; that it somehow
defined her as it had defined me. ICAN has helped
me to see past that and know that birth doesn’t
have to define you, but it does matter.
I had attended a nighttime
moms group at the birth center after went back to
work. It turned out to be just myself and one other
mom; a mom that became a very valued friend. We
shared our birth stories and she told me about this
online group how it had helped her immensely and
I should check it out. That group, making those
connections, and finding the group’s mentor
is really where I found some amazing birth workshops
and events. I had attended a few birth movie screenings,
an in-person moms group or two, and listened to
all the stories shared. The birth trauma workshops
with this mentor were highly insightful. It allowed
me to step outside of the entire birth, and find
focus on each individual major point during the
birth that was difficult for me to bear witness
to again. But through these birth exploration exercises,
I had found moments of empowerment. Moments where
I stood my ground and made decisions I didn’t
realize I had, or how I was still trying to take
care of my husband through it all. Moments where
I knew that no matter what, I loved my baby and
was going to bring her into the world as safely
as possible.
As I found healing, I
got lost in the birth world. For that, I am ever
so grateful. There was a post in a moms group for
a Doula Training and as I had thought about becoming
a doula for a few months at this point I figured
this was the answer! I applied for the scholarship
they were offering and along with one other amazing
mama; I received it! The training never officially
happened unfortunately however, something even better
occurred. I received a call from a now very dear
friend, mentor, and soon-to-be midwife extending
an offer to come on board her birth team as an apprentice
doula. My heart was full and I jumped for complete
joy! I found that helping friends and acquaintances
who reached out with birth questions played an epic
role in my healing and being a doula would provide
so much more. I attended my first birth on Christmas
Eve, 2012 and it was ironically like the Grinch,
my heart grew three sizes that day. With every birth
I’ve attended, I’ve learned so much
more than I think I ever could have. At one point
I had a string of moms that needed necessary cesareans
back to back for a time and I was feeling rather
run down- that maybe I wasn’t cut out for
this. My doula sisters reassured me that the universe
was trying to teach me something…. and it
was. There are true medical reasons for cesareans,
and the key is to not fear or be naïve that
it can’t or won’t happen to you, but
to be understanding that birth is unpredictable
and even the most educated and strong willed mamas
may need cesareans. It’s a beautiful tool
we have that just like other induction medications
and methods needs not to be over used and abused.
Without my husband all
the moms groups, movies, workshops, ICAN meetings,
doula work and healing that I found may not have
come so easily. He sat right next to me in these
ICAN meetings, birth rallies, film screenings, and
reading article after article. He really is my greatest
supporter. I know that I probably wouldn’t
have been able to breastfeed, let alone still breastfeeding
today, if it hadn’t been for him physically
latching my daughter for every single nursing sessions
for the first week of her life. If he hadn’t
made those calls to the midwife, taking me to appointments,
ICAN and La Leche support groups, and just being
my rock who knows what may have happened. I know
that because of him, the successful breastfeeding
relationship I have with my daughter and the avenues
of healing that I have found over the last two years.
We have come so far and have a remarkable bond,
in which I found my Grace. She is my daughter, and
I did in fact give birth to her.
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