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Lottie’s Birth Story

Wednesday morning I woke up after having a dream that my water broke, which felt telling considering that we were 40+3 at that point. Throughout the rest of the day I felt like I was leaking fluid, but wasn’t sure if it was amniotic fluid or not. The same thing happened with Jr, only this was a continuous leak rather than just when I put pressure on my pelvic floor, which was new. Around dinner time contractions started & had picked up from the Braxton Hicks I had felt on Sunday night. After almost 2 hours of that, combined with the leaking, we decided to go in to Labor & Delivery.

Last bump photo, a whole week before she came!

When we came in everything was good, but we were only at 3cm dilated. The doctor’s talked is through the options of letting labor progress naturally or starting Pictocin right away. We decided to give it a few hours to see how quickly we progressed. In hindsight, I probably should have taken this opportunity to walk the halls, bounce on the birthing ball, take a warm shower, or some other early labor techniques, but I didn’t. It was 9pm (which is my old lady bedtime) and we just watched some trash tv and tried to catch some sleep before the contractions got too intense.

Trying to catch some sleep before labor got too intense.

By midnight we had made it to almost 5cm, but because my water had been leaking all day, we needed to move faster to make sure she didn’t lose too much fluid. So we started Pictocin. It did it’s job and bumped up the frequency & intensity of the contractions. Charlotte did NOT like that. While I am extremely grateful for modern medicine, about every negative side effect of Pictocin happened. Every time I contracted her heart rate would drop (Ted did the same thing), but the contractions were so frequent she didn’t have recovery time between them. After her heart rate dropped to the 40s, they decided it was time to get her out!

Note: I had NOT had an epidural at this point, so as they wheeled me in and were prepping my body for surgery, I was still feeling every single thing. 😬

Little Lottie

Because of the urgency of getting her here safely, I was put under general anesthesia instead of waiting for an epidural. This meant that I was not awake during the procedure, or immediately after. Michael was able to do skin to skin as soon as they brought her back to him. Also, because it was an emergency, Michael wasn’t allowed in the OR with us.

By the time I woke up it was nearly 2am & it was all a bit of a blur. I got to hold her, then they transferred us to the Mom & Baby ward where we set up camp for the next few days.

Lottie’s blessing at 1 month old

Overall, this recovery has been a whole lot harder; from the physical recovery from major abdominal surgery, to the mental/emotional of having an (obviously) unexpected emergency C-section. We are taking it a day at a time and focused on slow, steady healing.

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Junior’s Birth Story

Junior and Ted had dramatically different entrances into this world. After the experience of Ted’s birth, I spent a lot of my 3rd trimester with Junior preparing for postpartum & recovery. One thing that I did was keep active and take Chester for a walk every day. We walked (waddled) about 1.2 miles on a down & back trail in our town. We started walking the trail at 31 weeks, when Ted was able to go back to daycare. Before that we walked our driveway (0.5 mile down & back) until about 28 weeks, when the 30% incline hill halfway down, became too much. Every single morning, Chester and I would drop Ted off at daycare, then go do our 1 mile walk, including the morning of July 30.

39 weeks 2 days, less than 24 hours before baby!

It was later in the afternoon that day that I noticed that every time I stood up from sitting, lifted anything heavy (when I returned from Costco), or otherwise put pressure on my pelvic floor, I had a leaking sensation. I didn’t think that I was peeing myself (although pee leaks happen commonly in pregnancy too), but it also didn’t seem like regular vaginal fluid. So after dinner, I decided that it was time to call the hospital and get a professional opinion. Labor and delivery told me to come in and they’d check me out, if it was a leak in amniotic fluid, I’d be admitted and we’d have a baby within 24 hours! So I gave Ted a hug and kiss, told Michael I’d keep him updated, grabbed my hospital bag, and drove myself in.

Upon my arrival, all of the delivery rooms were full, so I waited in the lobby where families typically wait. It took about 20 minutes for them to finish cleaning a delivery room for me, so I wasn’t checked in until about 8pm. The nurse initially tested the fluid in the pad I was wearing to see if it was indeed amniotic fluid, and the results came back a weak, inconclusive positive. So she did a pelvic exam, with no gushing of fluid, and tested a sample from there. Still inconclusive. She then called the doctor in to take a swab and check it under the microscope, but it took nearly half an hour for him to come in. (Did I mention that L&D was FULL!) He assured me that based on the fact that when pressure was put on the amniotic sack and it didn’t gush, in his experience, it wasn’t likely to be a fluid leak, and that I’d probably be sent home. *Cue staring at the camera like The Office* When he came back (you guessed it) it was indeed amniotic fluid, and we were having a baby!

By now it’s well after 9pm, so I called Michael to update him and tell him that he’d need to find someone to watch Ted because we were having a baby before his mom could arrive the next day. Up to this point the only reason I knew I was having contractions was because the monitor was picking them up, so we had no reason to believe that Little Man was in any kind of hurry. But by 11pm contractions were increasing in intensity and frequency rapidly. So I called Michael, “I don’t think we’re going to make it to morning. I’d hate for you to have to wake someone at 3am because the baby won’t wait. You’d best call now and get Ted set up for the morning.” Our wonderful friends were able to come stay the night and keep an eye on Ted.

Michael arrived at the hospital around 1am, and we bunkered down to get what sleep we could. By 2:30am the contractions were painful enough that it was time for the epidural, but due to the filled-to-capacity L & D, it took the anesthesiologist an hour to get to me. After the meds, I was able to get a few more hours of sleep. (Thankfully!) The nurse told me to call her in when I felt the urge to push. What does that even mean?! With Ted, the epidural was so strong, I couldn’t feel anything so I had no idea what ‘the urge to push’ felt like.

At 6:20am, I realized what she meant. I pushed the call button, and when she did her exam, she said, “Normally I’d have you give a practice push, but don’t. Wait until the doctor gets in here.” Then she hustled out of the room to get the doctor. He came in and was surprised at how far along we were. He got Michael, himself, and the nurse in position, then it was time to push!

Jr’s first photo

6:51am brought Michael Jr into the world. They placed him directly on my chest, and Michael was able to cut the cord. We had an hour of uninterrupted skin to skin time, and they did all of his tests while he was on me. It was a relaxed and peaceful environment.

Going home day!

Jr’s birth was such a huge difference from the emergency, rushed feeling of Ted’s birth. But they did have a few things in common. Both were less than 24 hours from start to finish. Both had about 30 minutes of pushing. Both resulted in a healthy baby.

Top left is Junior. Bottom right is Teddy.

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Teddy’s Birth Story

Teddy is my first son, and I had NO IDEA what to expect when it came to labor and postpartum. (I also has no idea if he was a boy or girl.) I had been to the classes, read the books and blogs, watched vlogs, and asked family and friends, but there are so many things that can happen during labor & delivery. This is story of our adventurous Theodore!

Taking Teddy home!

During my pregnancy I didn’t have any Braxton Hicks contractions, so when the cramp-like feelings started Saturday mid-afternoon, we knew it was time! The contractions were still mild and sporadic, so we packed up Chester and went to the dog park. We knew he wasn’t going to be getting much exercise after baby came, so we made sure he had a last hurrah.

That night we slept on our pullout couch and watched movies in the living room. I downloaded a contraction timer app on my phone, and meticulously tracked my contractions. Needless to say, I didn’t get much sleep. Around 5am my contractions were about 1 minute in length, about 4 minutes apart, and had been for about an hour. That meant (according to our class) it was time to call the hospital! Since my water hadn’t yet broken, they said we could come in, but they may send us home. So I woke Michael, took Chester out, and got the house ready to go.

We arrived at L&D around 6am and they checked us in. They said that they’d monitor baby & I for 30 minutes, and if my water didn’t break, they’d send us home. 6:30am came and went, and when the nurses came back they were getting ready to let us go. Then, GUSH! My water broke. We were staying!

Around 7:15am the anesthesiologist came to give me an epidural, and after that things get a bit fuzzy. The meds worked REALLY well, and I couldn’t feel a thing. I drifted in and out of sleep (I had been up all night, remember). Baby’s heart rate was all over the place and kept dropping. They readjusted my position a few times, and at some point they had to inject synthetic amniotic fluid because I had lost so much when my water broke.

A little after 9:30am, I came to just in time to hear the doctor mention prepping the OR for an emergency C-section because baby needed to come out ASAP. They checked my dilation one more time, and I was at 10cm. No C-section needed! It was time to push.

I was still completely numb from the epidural, so I needed a lot of coaching about when to push. Baby’s heart rate was still dropping, so the doctor grabbed the forceps to help pull him out. I don’t remember a lot of Ted’s birth, but I specifically remember thinking, ‘It looks like he is pull starting a lawn mower. I’m so glad I can’t feel that. It looks painful.’

At 10:06am on July 1, 2018, Ted was born. They whisked him over to the baby station in the corner to check that his low heart rate during labor hadn’t caused any problems. Luckily, he was healthy and just had a black eye from the forceps.

Ted’s swollen black eye.

I, however, was a different story. They did end up needing that OR after all. I had severe tearing, and needed quite a few stitches. Michael was able to stay in the delivery room and do skin to skin with Ted while I was in the OR. All of this led to a long and arduous healing process, which I was not prepared for. (But that’s a story for a different post.)

Hospital snuggles with Teddy.

So all-in-all 3 hours of active labor, and 30 minutes of pushing (with some help). I have always heard that childbirth is an ordeal; it uses so many muscles and leaves you exhausted. That is not the experience that I had. Honestly, running a half marathon is still the most physically demanding thing I’ve ever done. It took me a long time to be okay with that, and not feel like I hadn’t ‘earned’ being a mom. (Silly, I know.) Just know that whatever your journey into motherhood, it is valid. You are a mom.