born March 20, 2012 at home,
told by Kimberly:
(the same birth story from father's perspective
is at the bottom of this page)
I can’t adequately
describe the birth of my daughter on March 20, 2012
until I tell the story of the birth of my son on
September 13, 2010. These births are two defining
moments in my life.
Shortly after my husband,
Ryan, and I married in October 2009 we were fortunate
enough to get pregnant in our first month of trying.
On Christmas morning, 2009, I took a pregnancy test
and it was positive. I ran into the bedroom and
woke up Ryan to tell him the great news. Merry Christmas,
here’s a stick I peed on!
The pregnancy was amazing.
I reveled in my pregnancy and the excitement of
our future family. About halfway through the pregnancy,
a friend recommended the book A Thinking Women’s
Guide to a Better Birth and everything in that book
spoke to me as true and the way I wanted to bring
my son into the world. We changed our care providers
to a midwife heavy practice that would do a waterbirth
in a hospital setting. We took a Bradley Class together,
read several natural child birth books, did labor
rehearsals, made extensive music play lists and
had an insane birth plan. We spent countless hours
preparing for the birth of our son and didn’t
consider any other options. I told every one of
our plans to have an intervention free childbirth
which was met with a lot of skepticism but I stood
firm that we were making the best decisions for
me and our unborn child.
At 39 weeks I started
having nightly back spasms that radiated from between
my shoulder blades around to under my right breast.
While they didn’t occur every night, when
they did I would be up all night vomiting. My care
providers kept reassuring me that this was a normal
part of late pregnancy and one midwife mentioned
that I was having prodromal labor. I was miserable
and started to feel discouraged but I still refused
induction at both 40 and 41 weeks in order to let
things occur naturally. At just over 41 weeks, I
had another episode and finally sought out a chiropractor
for relief. I was fortunate enough to find Dr Alexa
Fagan from Totally Chiropractic and her support
for our birth plan immediately put me at ease and
we instantly hired her to be our birth doula. The
adjustment helped a lot and after more than two
weeks of the “prodromal labor”, I again
felt rejuvenated about the idea of our pending waterbirth.
At 41 weeks and 3 days
I had a horrible night of back spasms and vomiting
and Dr Alexa pushed me to go to the hospital, knowing
something was wrong. I was also feeling very run
down as I hadn’t slept or eaten in over 24
hours. At the hospital, my blood pressure was extremely
high and blood tests were taken. While waiting for
the test results, Ryan was very adamant with the
hospital staff about our plan of having a natural
childbirth. A few hours later, an unknown doctor
came in to give us the blood test results which
indicated that I had severe HELLP (Hemolysis, Elevated
Liver enzymes, Low Platelets) syndrome. My platelets
were at 30 when they should have been at least 150
and my liver enzymes were over 400 when they should
have been less than 40. The liver enzyme level indicated
a significant liver degradation which was leading
to that “back spasms” which were actually
starting at my liver under my right breast and radiating
around to my back. The platelet levels were low
enough that the possibility of hemorrhage was very
great. We had never heard of HELLP syndrome until
that moment and everything we had been planning
for months came crashing down around us. We asked
for a few minutes alone to digest the information
and console each other over the loss of our birthing
experience but the doctor refused to give us more
than a minute. We reluctantly agreed to an emergency
c-section and were informed the surgery would be
performed under general anesthesia because my platelets
were far too low to receive an epidural. We were
also told that Ryan couldn’t be in the OR
because I would be sleeping and wouldn’t need
the morale support. We were too broken to fight
anything. The only thing I could think was to ask
Ryan to give our son skin to skin contact as I would
be unable to do so for awhile.
While in the bright,
cold OR, I was terrified and alone while they prepped
for surgery. I just laid there heartbroken and scared
while they swabbed my belly, put in the necessary
IVs and blood pressure probes. I didn’t know
if the baby or I would survive the surgery and I
didn’t want to leave Ryan alone. The preparation
lasted for about 20 minutes with only one nurse
providing me minimal comfort. I asked them to tell
me when they would put me under, but they didn’t
so one second I was awake getting prepped and next
I woke to extreme pain. My son, Maximé, was
born to a cold room surrounded by strangers and
was not able to be lovingly held and stroked after
such a shocking transition from the womb. I spent
the next three hours in recovery while my husband
spent the next three hours fighting off nurses attempting
to supplement Max. When I finally did see my son,
I was still so drugged I had a difficult time holding
him. When I looked down at him, I saw a little stranger
and felt nothing but anger. While still in the hospital,
I would look over at him in the little plastic bassinet
and wonder if babies born to mothers who didn’t
love them die of SIDs at a higher rate than babies
who have mothers that love them. I was heartbroken
and overwhelmed with guilt that I didn’t love
my little baby. I knew if anything happened to him,
it would be my fault.
I had horrible post partum
depression for about 6 months. Our breastfeeding
relationship was initially terrible and aside from
bleeding nipples, I got mastitis days after he was
born and had to supplement him because my supply
plummeted due to the severe fever. The lactation
consultant I hired to come to my home told me my
son would likely die of SIDs because I was supplementing
him. As if I didn’t have enough guilt to carry
around (my husband forbid her from coming back to
the house). My son didn’t sleep well and would
sometimes only sleep 7 hours in a 24 hour period.
I was so angry and exhausted. I picked fights with
my husband and was generally unhappy and bitter.
I just wanted ONE thing to work out well, anything.
Nothing had gone as we had planned and I felt like
a huge failure, a horrible mother and I kept asking
myself if I made the right choice in becoming a
mother. I felt like people blamed me for what happened
because I hadn’t allowed my care providers
to induce me at 40 weeks.
Our breastfeeding relationship
healed itself after several months and we were able
to share that together for over a year, when he
weaned himself. Over time I grew to love and cherish
my son. His spirit and character make me laugh every
day and he has taught me more about myself than
I ever expected one person could. He has taught
me unconditional patience and forgiveness and he
made me realize that even though things don’t
always work out like you expect them to, you can
choose to learn and grow from the experience. He
gave me the greatest gift, the gift of being a mother
and for him I will forever be grateful. I am honored
to be his mother.
When Max was 9 months old, I found myself pregnant
(surprise) and I was immediately plunged back into
the depression I felt after Max’s birth. I
had a massive amount of fear and was not emotionally
prepared to handle the idea of a new pregnancy.
We immediately transferred care to a highly regarded
VBAC friendly practice. The first midwife we saw
indicated that I was a good candidate for a VBAC
but we still had to see the maternal fetal medicine
doctor to get his consent. During our appointment
with him, he started giving us the risk factors
of advanced maternal age during pregnancy and we
had to inform him that I was high risk because of
a previous HELLP diagnosis, not my age. Even so,
we felt we were making the safest decision, ensuring
we would get our natural birth experience while
having the safety net of a hospital setting.
During each prenatal,
I had to request my urine be tested because urine
checks weren’t standard for their pregnant
patients. I also had to request blood tests as they
weren’t inclined to check my liver levels.
During one appointment I was told that while my
risk of uterine rupture was not really any higher
than that of a mother with no uterine scarring,
I would still be required to have consistent fetal
monitoring while in labor. When I requested justification
for this requirement since my risk wasn’t
higher, I was given a story about a baby that went
into fetal distress because his cord was wrapped
around his neck and they wouldn’t have known
had they not had consistent fetal monitoring. This
has nothing to do with the risk of uterine rupture.
On an emotional level,
I spent every day of my pregnancy in some state
of anxiety. The first trimester was a blur of depression
and extreme exhaustion because Max wasn’t
sleeping well. I immediately started an extreme
Brewer’s diet which equated to at least 140
grams of protein a day in an effort to keep HELLP
syndrome at bay and I became obsessed with counting
protein and tracking every single thing I ate. I
also started obsessively checking my blood pressure
over and over again becoming more and more anxious
as it would elevate with every subsequent check.
By the second trimester, I was feeling more at peace
with the idea of having another child and I eased
up on obsessing about my blood pressure but I still
continued on with the diet.
At my 6 month prenatal
appointment, I was told my chance of having a VBAC
“all depended on who was on call” the
day I went into labor. We finally admitted to ourselves
that we needed to rethink our approach and commit
to doing what we really wanted, a homebirth. While
scared of a reoccurrence of HELLP syndrome, we knew
we would not be given the opportunity to birth in
a peaceful manner if we stayed with our current
care providers. Upon recommendation from Alexa,
we interviewed a homebirth midwife, Kim Verbarg
from Sweet Child O’ Mine, and absolutely loved
her calm and measured demeanor. We didn’t
have to think twice about asking her to be our care
provider. We all agreed that vigilant testing would
keep us apprised of any potential problems.
We did not divulge the
change in our birth plans to anyone because we didn’t
want negative feedback and unfounded advice from
people who know nothing of homebirths or midwives.
I also didn’t want everyone to tell me they
“told me so” should things not go according
to plan. I was now excited about the prospect of
having another child and was very happy with our
decision to transfer care. As my pregnancy progressed,
even though I was very much looking forward to the
experience of a homebirth, I started getting more
and more anxious about my blood pressure and blood
draws. After every prenatal, I would go through
each number from my lab results and obsess over
the slightest drop or elevation. I was meditating
almost nightly and taking about a massive amount
of supplements that were supposed to help with high
blood pressure, or liver function or platelet formation.
I would drink teas recommended on midwifery websites
that were supposed to help with this or that only
to find out they were discouraged in the Brewer’s
Diet because they were diuretics and then I would
obsess over whether I destroyed my chances at a
healthy pregnancy. I knew that my blood pressure
elevation was largely due to my anxiety. Realizing
that my mental state was my biggest enemy, I made
some decisions to force myself to let go, even if
just a little bit. Ryan hid my blood pressure cuff
and I asked Kim to not give me the results of my
weekly blood draws.
As my guess date approached,
I started getting chiropractic adjustments several
times a week and afterwards Alexa would spend an
hour attempting to calm me. I wasn’t scared
of labor or any problems that may occur during labor,
I was scared that my body would fail me before I
even had the chance to go into labor. My guess date
came and went and I received several aggressive
acupuncture treatments, ate spicy foods, inserted
evening primrose oil capsules, walked, bounced on
my exercise ball, had sex, etc. in an effort to
kick off labor. Every second of every day revolved
around trying to convince my body to go into labor
and every day I was getting more frustrated with
my failed attempts. After 41 weeks, my husband and
I made a plan spanning several days of methods we
would attempt to induce labor, to include castor
oil. We decided that if we hadn’t had the
baby by 42 weeks and 1 day, we would walk into a
hospital and request an induced trial of labor.
I had pretty much given up hope.
At 41 weeks and three
days, I decided to try acupuncture one more time.
The same day, a hypnotist came into Dr Alexa’s
office offering his services to pregnant women.
I booked an appointment with him for that afternoon
in hopes to work through my previous birth experience.
The session was extremely relaxing and allowed me
to let go of some of my anxieties. I finally understood
that it was out of my hands.
Early the next morning,
I woke up at about 2 am with some contractions,
but didn’t think anything of them because
I had been having contractions for weeks. I woke
again at 9 am with stronger contractions about 6
minutes apart. I called Alexa at 0930 and she said
she would come over soon. The contractions continued
between 5 and 7 minutes apart and I started thinking
they might be false labor because the timing wasn’t
exactly consistent. At 1030, I was standing in front
of the kitchen sink and I felt a small gush of water
but still wasn’t exactly convinced my water
had broken and thought maybe I had just peed on
myself (hey, it happens!). The contractions immediately
started getting stronger but were still easily bearable.
When Alexa got to the house at about 1100, my husband
left for the store. I talked to Kim who told me
another mother was also in labor, and she asked
me to keep her apprised of my progress.
Immediately after my
husband left, my contractions got very intense,
were lasting about 90 seconds and were about three
minutes apart. I tried to labor on my side and on
the exercise ball but settled on laboring on all
fours on the couch with my butt up in the air and
my head on a pillow. I was amazed at how quickly
the contractions went from mild to intense as I
thought the intensity would be gradual (and I a
bit disappointed that I wouldn’t be able to
bake my daughter a birthday cake). As my contractions
continued, I went into a zone within myself. I focused
on breathing in and moaning out during each contraction
instead of focusing on the pressure. I made a very
conscious decision to keep my body and face completely
relaxed during each contraction and would remind
myself that relaxation would help labor progress
quicker, a key point learned in the Bradley classes.
I was reminded of something Alexa told me, “I
thought of the contractions as pressure, not pain.”
I thought to myself, “Pressure my ass. This
fucking hurts.” A couple hours into labor,
Kim’s birth assistant, Megan, arrived and
Ryan got back home.
While laboring on the
couch, I vomited a few times and Ryan, Alexa and
Megan all worked to keep me hydrated and I reluctantly
agreed to take a drink between each contraction.
A couple of hours into laboring, I got very cold
and had to labor with a blanket on me. At about
3:00 pm, a few hours into intense contractions,
Kim arrived and told me she liked my “birth
song” of moans. She checked me and noted that
I was 4 to 5 centimeters dilated. She agreed to
let me get into the birthing tub and left to go
back to the other laboring mother, who was having
the urge to push. I knew getting into the tub might
slow labor, but I was looking forward to some relief.
After Ryan filled the tub, I got in and the warmth
of the water and the floating feeling felt so good
against my skin and belly that I was able to relax
my body even more. So much for a little relief…
Immediately after getting into the tub, my contractions
picked up significantly in intensity and length.
I labored kneeling in the tub with my upper body
hanging over the side and I stayed in that position
for hours as any other position was close to unbearable.
My contractions were several minutes long and on
top of each other and I had very little time to
rest between each one. I had to force myself to
remain focused on breathing in and moaning out with
every contraction. Some would grow and subside and
grow and subside several times before they would
end. After a couple of particularly intense contractions,
my lips would be quivering. My husband stayed by
my side quietly encouraging me and reminding me
to relax and breathe when my breathing would get
shallow. His reassuring words were so crucial during
those intense and long contractions and kept me
very focused when I started to feel overwhelmed.
A couple of times I would claim I couldn’t
do it anymore then I would silently chastise myself
for being weak and tell myself to shut the hell
up and labor on. I knew there was no way I was getting
out of the tub so I didn’t have a choice but
to handle it. After each contraction ended I would
silently congratulate myself on successfully making
it through that one. I would try to not think about
future contractions but when I did, I would tell
myself that the next one was going to be easier
than the last one. I was so focused on my breathing
and moaning, I had no idea how much time had passed
until I happened to glance up to see that it was
5:00 pm, 6 hours after intense contractions started.
Between a few of the contractions, my daughter would
be moving so much, I would silently curse her for
not allowing me to use the short amount of time
between contractions to completely rest. I had been
in the birthing tub for about 2 hours when I felt
the undeniable urge to push. It felt like involuntarily
vomiting in reverse, like vaginal dry heaving and
I could not stop myself from pushing. Alexa and
Megan told me I could do some small pushes and Alexa
called Kim and let her know that I had the urge
to push. Kim had just delivered her other mother’s
baby an hour earlier and headed right over.
Kim arrived at 5:30 and
checked me and told me I was complete and +2. I
did a fist pump and said “yes!”. I had
been in my breathing and moaning zone for hours,
but I now pulled myself out of it to push. I was
still draped over the side of the tub and was having
intense back labor and needed counter pressure with
each contraction. I pushed while kneeling for about
30 minutes when Kim suggested I move into a full
or half squat as I wasn’t making much progress.
I initially ignored her suggestion but then forced
myself to move into a half squat to get things moving.
I pushed in a half squat for a few contractions,
alternating legs and Alexa reminded me to fold my
body into a C instead of flexing my hips back but
I still wasn’t progressing. I tried to do
a full squat, but couldn’t get into a comfortable
enough position to push for long. I wanted to rest
through a couple of contractions, but could not
stop myself from pushing. With each wave, Kim would
check the baby’s heartbeat which remained
very strong. Kim suggested I move into a reclined
seated position and again I rejected the idea but
I had been pushing for an hour and was making little
progress. I moved back into a seated position and
held my legs back and with each contraction, I felt
my daughter moving down through my pelvis and had
to silently encourage myself to keep pushing through
the pain of crowning. Kim asked me if I wanted to
feel my baby’s head but I didn’t want
to break my concentration so I declined but Ryan
reached down and felt her head. It took about three
contractions to get her down through my pelvis and
her head out, but once her head was out, the pain
subsided quite a bit. With the next contraction,
I pushed her shoulders out and pushed again to get
the rest of her body out. Feeling her body leave
my body was an amazing and surreal experience and
a wave of warmth and relief immediately flooded
over me. Kim put my daughter on my chest and I looked
down and couldn’t believe I made, grew and
birthed this perfect baby. She had her eyes closed
with a little mad expression on her perfect face.
I could hear my husband in my ear getting choked
up. Lily immediately started fussing and I was so
overwhelmed with the entire experience I had a hard
time focusing on anything other than her. All I
could say was “I did it. My baby. I did it.”
They covered her with a blanket and I just sat there
in a daze for a few minutes and then I said “I’m
really hungry.”
Luckily, Alexa and Megan
had decided to order pizza from Pizza Fusion a couple
of hours earlier. When they realized there wasn’t
time to leave and pick it up, as Pizza Fusion doesn’t
deliver, they called explaining the situation and
Pizza Fusion agreed to deliver to us. The birthing
tub is in plain sight of the front door and when
the guy got to the house, Kim was shielding my ass
from the front door, I was moaning like a dying
cow and my husband was trying to explain the situation
as he was paying the pizza guy. The guy just told
my husband "no worries man, it's all nature!"
It was awesome!
After a few minutes
of sitting in the tub, they helped me move to the
bed. Ryan cut the cord after it stopped pulsing,
and the placenta was delivered about 20 minutes
later. Ryan and I marveled over the placenta and
cord for a few minutes. After about an hour, Lily
started nursing like a champ. We all took a moment
to relax, eat pizza and laugh about my answer to
every question while I was in labor.
“Kimi, do you want to listen
to music?” “I don’t care”
“Do you want to watch a different movie?”
“I don’t care”
“Do you want me to put a towel over the edge
of the tub so you’re not laying your face
on plastic?”
“I don’t care”
Born at 6:21 pm, Lily Anne-Marie Arsenault
weighed in at 8 lbs and 3 ozs and was 20.5 inches
long. I labored for 9 hours (awake), with 6 hours
of intense labor and an hour and 15 minutes of pushing.
The intense labor all blurs together with only a
few moments of those 6 hours standing out in my
mind but I clearly remember the entirety of the
pushing stage. I took to facebook letting everyone
know Lily had arrived (my status update was actually
“HBAC, BITCHES!”). People were very
surprised and some even asked if we intended to
have Lily at home.

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The
birth of my daughter was a wonderfully healing
and life changing experience. Birthing her was
the most intense experience of my life but the
pain was necessary and welcome. I immediately
fell in love with Lily, our breastfeeding relationship
is wonderful and I feel like superwoman. For
weeks following my son’s birth I could
hardly convince myself to brush my teeth and
with this birth I feel rejuvenated and empowered.
I have laughed more in the three weeks since
her birth than I have since I was pregnant with
my son. Life is exactly where it should be.
I do have guilt that I didn’t experience
this joy following the birth of my son, but
I understand that I did the best I could at
the time. |
Some do not understand our decision to birth
our daughter in the comfort of our home, but
the care provided by our midwife far exceeded
the care afforded through the Ob practice.
Others may negate the healing power of birth,
but an intervention free homebirth was vitally
important to me and my husband and the shared
experience has strengthened our relationship
and brought us much closer. We choose to birth
our daughter peacefully because that is what
we believe was best for our family. I encourage
women to become educated about birth and to
understand all options, instead of blindly
trusting their care providers. Everyone must
choose the path in which they are most comfortable
but shouldn’t let fear prevent them
from doing something spectacular. A woman
must own her decisions. Women must support
each other and not downplay another’s
experience. My path was long, painful and
full of fear and anxiety, but led me to an
incredibly healing experience.
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born March 20, 2012 at home,
told by Ryan:
My daughter was
born in my living room! I never imagined
I would say that, but I’m so happy and thankful
that I’m able to… not to mention proud!
Once I became comfortable with, and
better informed of the home birth concept, I always
knew that Lily’s arrival would happen safely.
But as the days ticked by following the passage
of Kimberly’s due date, I wasn’t quite
sure if our vision of the home birth would pan out
(I’ve since agreed that “guess date”
is a much more accurate term, by the way). Consequently,
Kimberly and I began to get a little nervous in
the ensuing days, as the recent memory of HELLP
syndrome lingered in our minds. Part of me trusted
that everything would work out just fine and that
the home birth would go perfectly. Another part
of me feared the worst: the midwife would drop us
from her care due to being too far overdue, and
we would have to go to the hospital, where I’m
convinced Kimberly would have inevitably had to
endure another c-section. I feared for the effects
this would have on our family; it would be emotionally
and spiritually devastating to Kimberly, and it
would have affected all of us for months. It would
have made me deeply sad to see her go through that
again. I realize now that I began emotionally “preparing”
(closing off / hardening) a little bit as I started
to slowly accept what I believed to be the increasingly
likely possibility that our plan would go to hell
again, and I wanted to be calm and steady for Kimberly.
BUT… on the morning of March
20th, following a solid week of chiropractic adjustments,
acupuncture treatments, and even a session with
a hypnotist (all of which I think played a role
in convincing Lily the time was right!), Kimberly
finally went into labor. I wasn’t aware of
this when I got out of bed with Max sometime before
8am and had breakfast with him, however. Cathy (my
mother-in-law) picked him up by 9:30 am, and literally
as I closed the door, Kimberly emerged from the
bedroom, saying she was having strong contractions.
She had been experiencing contractions for weeks,
but it was clear that these were different. She
also had a migraine the night before, which was
rare, so at this point I was pretty sure it was
going down for real. I was relieved, to say the
least. I was also pleased, but I wasn’t in
the least bit nervous or excitable. Thinking back
on it, I had an “Ok, sounds good” and
slightly lackadaisical kind of attitude. Perhaps
on a subconscious level I wasn’t completely
convinced that it was actually happening…I’m
not sure. I suppose I could take solace in the fact
that I naturally remained calm. ?
By about 11 am, Kimberly’s water
broke. She called Alexa, who confirmed it for her.
Alexa arrived at the house shortly thereafter, at
which point I made a trip to the grocery store for
a few last minute things. I also got a few things
for Cathy and stopped by her apartment, visiting
her and Max for a while. I didn’t hear anything
from Kimberly or Alexa, so I figured labor was progressing
slowly, so I took my time and played with my son.
But by the time I got back to the house, around
1:30 pm or so, apparently the past few hours had
been very productive. Kimberly was quiet, not talking
much, and had spent pretty much all of her labor
so far on the couch. She murmured to me, “This
is really difficult,” or something to that
effect… She was clearly not having fun, and
seemed quite uncomfortable and a bit nervous. She
vomited a time or two in the trash can. I could
sense that she was having some initial doubts and
that her confidence may have been wavering a bit…
but I knew she would be ok. I knew there was no
way she was going to let herself back away from
this, and neither would I. I tried to reassure her.
I made her a snack and started preparing the birthing
tub and filling it with water because Kimberly said
she wanted to get into the tub. Every question that
Alexa or I asked of her in an attempt to make her
more comfortable was met with indifference: TV on
or off? “I don’t care.” Music?
“I don’t care.” Umm… Ok.
The next few hours happened very quickly;
I’m not sure I can recount the details all
that accurately or in the correct order. Megan,
the birth assistant, arrived, and not too long after,
Kim Verbarg the midwife arrived at around 3 or 3:30.
She told Kimberly that she liked her birth song,
which I thought was a really cool thing to say to
her right off the bat. Something as simple as that
made a lasting impression on me. It just really
hit home how different this experience was going
to be, and reminded me of how wonderfully different
the level of personalized care and attention was
that Kimberly had received from Kim and her staff,
as opposed to our previous experiences with hospitals
and Obs.
Kim had to leave for another birth
but would return soon. Meanwhile, after Kim had
confirmed Kimberly was at 5 cm, she let her get
into the tub, which I had been keeping warm. Kimberly
liked the water… that much was apparent right
away. At this point Kimberly’s contractions
were quickly getting stronger, and her moans were
increasingly long, loud, and deeper in pitch, obviously
reflecting the growing intensity of the contractions.
When they started several hours earlier, Kimberly’s
moans were much shorter and higher in pitch. I found
it interesting how her “song” evolved
over time. The moans were slightly jarring at first,
but quickly became a focal point, especially since
Alexa, Megan and I were being rather quiet and hushed.
As Kimberly’s song had progressed
over the past few hours, they began to have an emotional
effect on me as I realized her labor was rather
intense, especially after she relocated to the tub.
I hadn’t expected this… I thought I
wouldn’t get emotional until Lily arrived.
I can’t explain why, exactly, but her bouts
of “song” made me increasingly more
emotional as they became more intense. Kimberly
was hanging onto me and squeezing my arm or hand
for many of the contractions; my face was very close
to hers throughout this, so I heard it all, up close
and personal, along with the tub water and sweat.
I think the intensity of the emotions was a strange
combination of realizing that my daughter’s
birth was closer and closer at hand, and an increasingly
deep appreciation for the physical and emotional
intensity of the contractions and the effects they
were having on Kimberly. There was also a swelling
pride and respect for her that was welling up inside
me as each contraction occurred. On several occasions
I actually had to calm myself and choke back that
funny feeling that was crawling up my throat. You
know how we men are…
Which leads me to pizza. Yeah, pizza.
We ordered something like $70 worth of pizza at
some point, expecting to have time to go pick it
up. Well… that didn’t happen. Labor
progressed quickly, and before I knew it, the good
people at Pizza Fusion were at my doorstep, voluntarily
delivering the pizza even though they don’t
deliver. Very nice of them. Also very cool of the
delivery guy to roll with the punches when he saw
and heard a very vocal naked woman in labor in a
tub mere feet away from him when I opened the door.
I thanked him for delivering and said, “Thanks
man… Uhh, I know it sounds kinda crazy in
here,” to which he replied, “Hey it’s
all good man… It’s nature!”
As labor continued, contractions got
even stronger. At one point Kimberly rolled over
onto her back, and one contraction in particular
hit her very intensely…so much so that she
was breathing very rapidly, and her entire mouth
was quivering….for….a long time. It
was very intense to watch…I can only imagine
how it felt. I tried to calm her breathing by quietly
reassuring her in her ear.
After a couple hours in the tub, Kimberly
felt the need to start pushing. After about an hour
(I think?) of pushing while hanging over the side
of the tub, with her knees on the ground, Kimberly
eventually relented to Kim’s suggestion and
rolled over onto her back to push. Then things started
rolling quickly. Soon the baby’s head was
crowning…and I touched it. Kimberly didn’t
want to (I kind of found that surprising) and she
kept pushing. This is where the memory blur really
kicks in: There was encouragement, some loud encouragement
to keep pushing, the head came out further…
and then the head was out… and soon the shoulders…
and then… WOAH! There she was! Kim placed
her on Kimberly’s chest and I felt my face
beaming, absolutely beaming. I think I was crying,
but it was very different from any experience I
had ever had. I’m not sure I’ve ever
had a “happy cry” like that. It was
completely different: light, stimulating different
parts of my face… weird. I just know that
I was beaming and happy and immensely relieved and
proud. Beaming… I keep using that word, but
it’s the best one to describe how I felt.
It was surreal and a truly wondrous thing to behold
and to be a part of.
I reveled in my Facebook post announcing
Lily’s arrival. “DRUG FREE” was
prominent in the post. It felt pretty awesome to
basically say “SEE, bitches? It CAN be done”
to all the skeptics and naysayers and zombies who
know nothing of childbirth but have strong opinions
nevertheless. However, we told practically no one
of our plans ahead of time (unlike Max’s birth),
because we knew what kind of attitude we would encounter,
and Kimberly surely did not need that negativity
screwing things up for her. I was greatly amused
at how we told people after-the-fact. I think we
made a significant point to a lot of people by not
cluing them in ahead of time, and I don’t
think it was lost on them.
My daughter was born
in my living room! I never imagined I would
say that, but I’m so glad that I’m able
to. From where I sat throughout the past 18 months,
the way Lily joined our family on March 20th was
a testament to the willpower and determination of
my wife. It was also a reflection of the innate
strength that all women possess, though it seems
to me that far too few of them experience it through
the opportunity presented by the natural childbirth
process. I wonder how many of them actually realize
that they can do nearly anything that they put their
minds to. Last but not least, Lily’s birth
was also made possible by the support network that
Kimberly discovered and relied on heavily, from
Dr. Alexa Fagan in particular, with her encouragement
and guidance and insistence that Lily would come
in her own time, along with Ms. Megan the Dynamo
Doula, to the internet discussion groups and Facebook
communities who support each other via cyberspace.
Kimberly’s resolve and commitment to experience
natural childbirth and to bring Lily into this world
in the healthiest way possible showed me just how
strong she is (AGAIN… and made me seriously
question myself!) and reminded me once again of
how lucky I am to have her as the mother of my children.
I have a very deep respect for her commitment to
her family and her ability to focus and exercise
her willpower in support of it; and my respect for
her increased tenfold through this experience. I
couldn’t ask for anything more from my partner
and best friend.
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