I'm excited to announce that Ben and I's child has arrived!! Her name
is Naisa (Nay-suh) Fern Delp. Naisa is derived from the Hebrew word
"Nasa" (don't know the actual Hebrew lettering) and it means "The Lord
forgives". Ben was doing some intense Bible study a couple of weeks
before our due date and found this word, told me about it, and we fell
in love with the name. Then after that, I wanted to have a little girl,
because I wanted to use that name. God knew that all along, from back in
December when we conceived. :)
So
Wednesday the 26th, we had our 41 week appointment with our midwife. I
had hoped and hoped we wouldn't make it to this appointment, and we had a
couple days where I thought that labor might be starting, but the
contractions weren't intensifying, and stopped after a couple hours. And
so the week of our due date, I walked everyday for almost an hour every
day, to encourage labor to start.
But still no baby. So I kept walking--doing the same thing at the 41 week mark. But we still made it to that appointment.
I
was emotionally ready to have that baby! I was sick of questions and
ready to have answers! I was swollen (retaining water), my blood
pressure was up a bit, but the baby was moving an measuring well, so I
was happy. But because we were 41 weeks and a couple days, it was
routine to have a biophysical profile done. It's an extensive ultrasound
done for various reasons to make sure your baby is alright. So we had
one scheduled for that Friday.
Misty,
our midwife, gave us some recommendations for natural induction of
labor--homeopathics were recommended. So we went to Kate's Natural
Products and found the little vials. One was homeopathic blue cohosh,
and one black cohosh. The little vials are the size of chapsticks and
contain little sugar pills that supposedly contain those two herbs. But
you can't taste it. At all. So my prescription was to take two sugar
pills of one at hour intervals. One at the :00, and the other at :30. So
the next morning I started taking these sugar pills. And then went
about my daily tasks. . . getting groceries, taking out the trash,
washing dishes, figuring out Medicaid stuff for baby, made granola,
hanging out with friends (I walked with Bridgett that day, to Food
Lion), and I stopped taking them when we went to bed that night. I
didn't feel any different. During the day, I'd had a few contractions,
but nothing exciting, and during my walk, I just had the tightening that
I normally had from walks.
We went to bed around 10
pm, thoroughly convinced that I spent a day taking sugar pills for
nothing, and preparing to go to Charlottesville for the biophysical
profile in the morning.
Then at 2:30 am, I woke up because I was
feeling pressure like I had to poop. So I went and tried to do that for a
little bit, but didn't have any luck, and I moved onto the couch
because that's how I normally would finish the night. But I couldn't
fall asleep--every so often I would feel that same pressure, now feeling
more like period cramps (but more intense) with added pressure, and I
knew that this was the beginning of labor--real labor. I decided to wait
a little bit to wake up Ben, didn't want him to be too tired, if this,
in fact, was not real labor again. But at 3am I woke him up, telling him
that I felt like it was starting.
So he got up with me
and encouraged me along in the labor, which contractions were getting
more intense and closer together. We called our midwife, and she said
we'd probably have this baby Friday night or Saturday morning, and I was
discouraged about that, because I felt like I was in a great deal of
pain already, and how could I continue to labor like this for 22 more
hours?? But she said to call again at 7am, so we labored until then.
During that time, we ate, drank lots of water, and I deep-breathed
through the first contractions and then moaned and groaned through the
more challenging ones. They were getting more intense, and so when we
called Misty again at 7, she said come in at 9.
So we
waited, and counted, and I puked up some of my water and food. It was
agony. I started peeking at the time to see how much longer until we
would leave, and found myself having more contractions in ten minutes
than I had been having before. Time s-l-o-w-e-d and it was killing me.
But we made it to 9am, and got in the car and drove to the birthing
center. The drive also felt like it took forever, because my
contractions were so intense.
When we got there, Misty
was just arriving as well, and she had me \ sit down in her office/ the
exam room. She took my blood pressure (had to wait for a contraction to
pass), my temperature, and maybe my pulse. The student nurse, Meredith,
arrived and they started setting up the birthing room, and filling up
the tub. my contractions felt the worst and most intense while I was
sitting down--especially when I tried to pee in a cup--there was so much
pressure going on.
Once the got the bed set up, I
reclined on it and Misty checked my dilation, and was surprised to say
that I was 8 or 9 cm dilated. She could feel the bag of waters bulging
and with that, I got into the tub--the water covered my belly up to my
chest, took away so much pressure, and made contractions more
bearable. Not that bearable was that comfortable, we were going through
transition shortly after I got in the tub. Misty was explaining to Ben
what would happen when my body started to get into pushing stage right
about when we got in the tub and it seemed just a few contractions after
that, I started pushing, I can't really describe this feeling so
well--mostly that there was so much pressure on everything down there
and I wanted to move that pressure off! so I pushed!
I
would take a break between each contraction, and Misty or Meredith
would check the baby's heart rate on the sonogram. Her heart rate was
fine, there wasn't any complications, and labor was really progressing
quickly. at one point, Meredith asked me if I would like something to
drink, and I said something along the lines of, "I'll have water when
this baby is out."
I must gave been pushing for twenty
minutes (I really have no idea about time), and I asked how we were
doing, and they said things were moving right along--couldn't see the
head yet, but it was in its way. At this point, I was pushing while
leaning forward on the edge on the tub, and Ben was sitting in the edge
behind me. I was 'vocalizing' a lot (low-pitched screams/groans,
anyone?) and continued to do so until Misty suggested it would be more
productive if I left more air in my lungs to push the diaphragm on the
uterus. And then they suggested to try a different position, so I leaned
back on Ben's legs and wrapped my arms around his knees and held his
hands, and then let my belly, hips, and legs be supported by the water.
We found that this was a much more productive position to push in, and
soon they could see the head, and were commenting on how much hair there
was. :)
At one point I reached down to feel and I
felt the hair, and the head coming out in a point. Did you know that's
how the head first presents itself? But by the time the baby is all the
way out, those bones reshape again. Crazy. Totally God-created. Well I
kept pushing and soon the head was crowning. I was super shaky from all
the effort I was putting into each push, but it was worth every push. My
motivation was meeting this baby, and I was prepared to push through
the pain to do that. One of the things that I learned during my research
is that the point where the woman thinks, "this is too much, I can't do
this anymore" is the point where you have to push harder. So the entire
labor, I had this in the back of my mind, and was doing my best to bear
the pain and push through it as needed. During pushing, I must have
reached that point. Not the "I can't do this anymore" feeling, but the
"I need to push through this pain" feeling. There was so much pressure,
though, that I was prepared to push her out no matter how much pain I
felt. I was ready to meet her.
I
remember feeling the "ring of fire" (down down down in the burning ring
of fire) and saying so ("Oh, There's the ring of fire.") and soon
Naisa's head was out. I asked if the cord was around her neck, but there
wasn't enough give to take it off then, so she waited until I had
pushed her out completely. I pushed maybe a couple more times, and I
felt her body slip out. That was pretty bizarre feeling, and I felt a
great release of pressure.
Then Misty handed her to me.
My first words afterward were, "We have a child!", in disbelief that
this little person had been growing inside of me for nine months and a
week or two, and was ours, seemed huge (and long) in comparison to my
belly, and (at that point) was still attached to me. I took her in my
arms and put her against my chest and then remembered we had one more
surprise--so I lifted her out of the water and saw that she was a girl!
:) Ben and I were so excited, and we started calling her Naisa right
away. We tried breastfeeding right away but she had trouble latching on
to my flat nipples. I was going to birth the placenta in the tub, but
wasn't really feeling any contractions, so we got out of the tub--we had
to do a good bit of maneuvering to get out--Naisa still attached to me,
and I was still bleeding a little. Once we got out of the tub and back
on the bed (which was already lined with several absorbent pads for me
to sit on), we decided to cut the cord. Ben got to do it, while Misty
instructed him. Misty did a little kneading on my uterus (if you are
prepared for it, its not that uncomfortable), and I birthed the placenta
(Misty said it was rather large. They didn't weigh it, but she thought
it was at least three pounds.), and she also removed the rest of the
membranes and I had to cough to assist with that. it's much harder to
cough than you might think after giving birth-- you contract your pelvic
floor when you cough, and mine was all worn out. I was still pretty
shaky at this point, and my lovely husband was bringing me lots of water
and snacks.
Misty then checked to see if I tore. She
said I did, but only a little and it didn't need stitches. :) Yay me.
Misty did the newborn exam around 1pm, and Naisa was 9lbs 3oz! Bigger
than I expected to push out, but I was very proud of myself. :) Her head
measured 12 and 3/4 inches, her chest 14 1/4 inches. :)
Misty
had to take some of the blood from the cord/placenta to get it tested
for the blood type because I'm Rh negative. We didn't know what Ben's
blood type was because he doesn't like needles. So we were prepared
(with a prescription) to get the Rhogam shot after birth, but not
excited about it at all.ut when the midwives tested the blood, they saw
it was negative and when they sent it to the hospital, it came back O negative. so I didn't have to get a shot in my butt (and that saved me a long wait at the hospital to get it done, as well.)
My
labor and birth experience was great for many reasons. I really didn't
feel the need to time my contractions consistently because I knew that this labor was real--it felt different (more painful) than the other times.
It was intense enough that I knew it was the real thing. I didn't worry
about being dilated in the weeks before she was born, where some
practitioners might routinely check their patients for dilation in the
weeks before birth, Misty didn't. Being dilated, but not in active labor
at 40 weeks (or 41!) doesn't really do anything but add to the
anticipation. Misty hypothesized that I probably dilated a centimeter
each of those times I thought I was in labor--practice/preparation
labor. But we didn't know, and just because I might have been dilated
didn't mean labor would start soon or not. That's the mystery of labor.
It starts when my body signals it to, not because I ate spicy food, or
walked a lot, though those things helped prepare my body for labor (ok,
probably not the spicy food).
And once we got in the
tub, after I was checked once, I didn't need to be checked for certainty
that I was 10 cm dilated before I could start pushing--I started
feeling the urge and could go with it. Then after it was over, there
wasn't a rush to get out of the tub, time got to melt away while we
spent our first hours together. Naisa's cord was cut after it stopped
pulsing (probably a half and hour to forty five minutes later) and I
delivered the placenta with her in my arms. Then she had her newborn
exam two hours later. We only had to stay until I peed once and we got
instructions for leaving. So we were on our way home with Naisa around 3pm that same day.
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