Friday, my “due” date, just before my
Saturday morning, I was having some contractions but they were really easy – easy enough that I was talking and laughing through them. Abram timed them at about 6 minutes apart as he cooked breakfast, but they really were super easy contractions. I’d had harder and at times more frequent ones with Owen – for days. Abram decided that he would take Owen to his usual yoga class and then to a birthday party. After breakfast, Owen and I wrapped the present, and I called our midwife Karen to give her a heads up that something was happening. Abram and Owen blew up the birth pool. Owen gave it a go using it as a cozy place to read,
but when he just couldn’t resist being a bit rough I asked Abram to deflate it - citing my inability to have Owen messing with it for the next three days until we needed it.
After they left, I piddled around the house doing some laundry, reading Amanda Blake Soule’s Soule Mama blog, taking a picture of myself in case I was at my biggest,
putting out some frozen soup to thaw for dinner.
Abram called around
Around
As the contractions got increasingly intense, I began to wonder if I would be able to handle them as well as I had with Owen. I just wasn’t sure I could do this for hours and hours more. Often, my whole body shook with the intensity and energy of the contractions (and yet, I have to say, they were never painful) as I lowed through them on my left side in the warm bathtub in the dark. And then, quite by surprise, I felt my body pushing – part of the maternal-fetal ejection reflex described by Michael Odent – but, it wasn’t time to push.
This was far too early to push.
Of course, my body knew better than my mind, and it continued to push. I raised my right leg up onto the edge of the tub and continued to let my body do its work.
I briefly felt the “ring of fire” as the baby passed through my cervix.
I felt the baby’s head slip down through my vagina with each contraction and involuntary push and then slip back.
I felt for the head as the baby slipped out, and felt a bulging bag of water instead.
I heard Abram answer Karen on the phone that the baby was crowning (at
I felt the head come all the way out.
I kicked at Abram who seemed to be putting his hands toward the baby.
I turned over onto my hands and knees and roared a battle cry and pushed.
Abram slipped the baby through one loop of cord that was around his neck, and the baby’s legs and feet were out (at what we approximate was
Abram passed him! to me through my legs, and I sat down in the warm water and snuggled my baby boy and nursed him (well, worked on getting him to latch) while Abram got something to cover and keep him warm.
Owen and Ariel were surprised when Abram told them the baby was here, and they came into the bathroom to see us. They brought Caedmon a hat and some socks, but we couldn’t get them on in the tub.
When Karen and Katie arrived a little later, I had still not delivered the placenta. We finally decided to cut the umbilical cord which had stopped pulsing for quite a while. Abram held Caedmon while Karen helped me to the bed. Once situated, I tried nursing Caedmon again to see if it would stimulate contractions and delivery of the placenta.
After a bit, Karen offered me some Placenta Out herbal syrup to encourage the placenta to come on, and Abram and Owen held the baby again while I made my way to the toilet where I delivered the placenta into a sitz bath pan on the toilet.
Owen was pleased with the tour of the placenta that Karen gave us. Karen complemented me on such a large and healthy placenta.
Katie did my exam, while Owen looked on, saying “What’s that?”
We all watched the newborn exam, and learned that baby Caedmon weighed 8 pounds, 15 ounces after his first poop. He was 21 ½ inches long, had a 14 inch head, and was perfect in every way.
Ariel quietly slipped out; the midwives left; and we enjoyed the soup I’d set out earlier.
Caedmon slept well that night, but I was still on a birth high.
I was pleased with my body’s ability to birth a baby so efficiently. I was proud that Caedmon had been born with just me and Abram there and that we’d followed our instincts so well. I was comforted to have Ariel there with Owen
and to have Karen and Katie arrive soon after the baby. I was amazed at how fast birth could be. I was amused at the list of things we’d never needed or used - the birth tub, a liner, the hose to fill it, two purchased and one borrowed air pump, loads of labor snacks. . .
In preparation for my first birth, I felt like I needed very little (“some straw in the corner” was how I put it) and focused quite a bit on what I (or we) would do if the baby came before the midwives. Then I’d had more labor than I’d ever imagined. This time, I was surprised but prepared and very, very glad.
7 comments:
Oh Melinda! What a wonderful birth story! I have always dreamed of an unassisted birth like that. What a calm and happy welcome for Baby Caedmon.
That is a beautiful story that should be retold again and again. I love that Abram delivered/caught the baby and that you had so much strength and confidence. Congratulations also to Owen who is beaming in every picture!
Melinda, that was beautiful.
love it! so happy to hear your birth story.
You are a strong and confident woman Melinda, not to mention inspiring. Your family is lucky to have you! This is a great birth story!
Rossitsa
Wow!!! Thats so awesome
Thanks so much for this beautiful story Melinda. Very moving and you are all so blessed!
Stephanie
(Xia and Isa's Mommy)
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