Archive for the ‘birth trauma’ Category

Becoming a Green Mother

A symbol strongly associated with babies, for some reason.

“Babies are EXPENSIVE!” someone exclaims.  Everyone nods in agreement.  Then the list begins, “Hospital bills, crib, diapers and more diapers!  Formula!  Not to mention that they outgrow their clothes in three blinks of an eye!”

That’s the current myth.  Heck, I believed it.  My pre-birth parenting skills seemed hinge on the THINGS I bought for the baby, as if buying tons of bottles, strollers, a gorgeous round crib (which I’ve been trying to sell for AGES, having never been used), pacifiers, diapers, etc. would prepare me for the most momentous life-change that I’d ever never be ready for.

That’s right ladies and gentlemen, I would never have been ready for motherhood until the moment was upon me.  Even if I’d read all the AP books out there (I’d read exactly zero), gone to parenting classes, and watched every How To Care For Your Newborn video available on YouTube, I would never have been ready to be a mother.

There are some things that you can have intellectual knowledge of, but still know nothing about.  Pregnancy, birth, and parenting are very solidly categorized as such, in my opinion.  So, I was the best consumer mom that I could have been, nurturing the child in my womb by valiantly tackling garage sales and Target clearance racks.  I amassed the usual baby paraphernalia, but I was already starting to show my green tendencies.

I shopped online for the best deals (package deals, clearance items, seconds) on cloth diapers and bought 2 dozen fitteds, LOTS of prefolds, covers, and snappis.  Since I’d bought the line that babies were expensive, I figured I’d do cloth and save myself a few bucks . . . along with giving my baby’s bottom a more comfortable ride.

I pre-washed them, stacked them in their assigned bin, and waited for my home water birth (which I’d been paying for out of pocket- $$$=better birth?) to commence and conclude satisfactorily so that I could finally use my round crib with 16 piece bedding and those perfectly fluffed cloth diapers which I’d so lovingly prepared.

My life was epically derailed as I failed to progress through a long labor.  We ended up in the hospital, and my baby’s first experience in life was not on my triumphantly heaving chest covered in afterbirth, but on a neonatal resuscitation platform out of my view.  The next week introduced sugar water into his diet long before his first attempt to nurse.

The pacifiers at the hospital were plugged into his mouth over and over again as the NICU nurses called my room and waited with little patience as I made my way to that wing hobbling around an episiotomy which has forever changed the landscape of my cervix and pelvic floor.

The nurses briefly, and by rote showed us how to bathe our son, how to change disposable diapers, and asked repeatedly about whether or not we would circumcise (NO!).  It took weeks to build up the courage to snap that first cloth diaper on my son, and I’d like to say we never went back . . . but I’d be lying.  We were hooked on disposables, regimented into the use of pacifiers, and scared to do any one thing differently from the Nurse Mandate of Infant Care.

The crib that was never slept in . . .

The crib that was never slept in . . .

But my hippie-mom tendencies (which I credit to being an intuitively-led person), fought their way to the surface:  It started with cosleeping.  I found nursing so much easier, and there that gorgeous crib was gathering dust.  I could have used the [WARNING: Thrifty moms avert your eyes!] $600 on something else.  The breast pump and all those bottles I bought — I thought I needed them for some reason, but I read a lot of breastfeeding books during the pregnancy and worked really hard with Bailey to have a successful and exclusive nursing relationship and thus didn’t need or use bottles.  They would have been useful, had I gone back to work.

Then my midwife suggested “E.C.” to me which blasted the disposable vs. cloth debate right out of the water.  At five months, right after introduction of solids (Never doing that again!  Child-led solids for the next kid!) Bailey developed severe food allergies which really made me aware of food content: additives, preservatives, and unrecognizable concoctions.  As a nursing mom, I had to go on an elimination diet to make sure my milk was safe for Bailey.  Cooking at home every day, I’ve come to appreciate local farmer’s markets, organic produce, and quality instead of run-of-the-mill.

I guess those hormones got the better of me, and I snowballed into the land of the hippie.  I stopped buying paper towels and replaced them with cloth.  Instead of chemical cleaning products, I use spray bottles with 50% water and 50% white vinegar (great for E.C. accidents on the carpet).  We only bought disposable diapers a total of 10 times before we quit cold turkey.  We replaced them with plenty of inexpensive padded training pants, which are easier to take off in a hurry anyways.

All wrapped up.

All wrapped up.

I can use a simple piece of fabric to wrap my baby onto my body, replacing all of the following equipment: strollers, car seat as a carrying device (only the 5-50 lb convertibles from now on), bouncer, excersaucer, walker (which all should be banned anyways), tummy time mats (because wearing in a sling is the kind of stimulation tummy time is artificially replacing), shopping cart covers, child leashes and more.  5 yards of Osnaberg fabric and a little sewing know-how can make something that can replace hundreds of dollars of equipment: a woven wrap.

Something about motherhood awoke in me a fierce desire to live in an ecologically sustainable manner, to be clever with the resources at hand, and to depend on as little as possible.  I’ve still got a lot to learn from moms like the author of Raising Them Green and sites like The Green parent, but buying things used from garage sales or consignment is more fun than buying new.

I’m having a really good time, getting less and less wasteful, and working toward a lifestyle that will teach my child that the world around us is valuable, not disposable . . . and that we are the stewards of the world around us, just as we are the stewards of our own bodies.

So, what about that myth that babies are expensive?  I’ve discovered that they really aren’t.  You’ve probably already got what you need to nurture that baby in exactly the way he or she needs . . . all those extra things are just specialized tools that might be nice in one situation or another.  All a baby needs is a wealth of love, respect, and your personal time.

Only if you live by the creed that “time is money” should you find that babies are expensive.  In that way, our children represent the wealth of our future — and instead of pushing them aside, we should cherish every fleeting moment with them (as I try to remind myself while waiting out another toddler tantrum).

Take a moment and tell me what you do to make your life more green!  Share some tips and tricks because every little bit counts.  *clears throat* . . . and I was also wondering if anyone happens to want a round crib plus bedding?  I’ll trade you for something!  Offers . . . ?

 

Finding Joy

Every day is a challenge and an opportunity.

For someone who has become a “survivor” it’s sometimes hard to trust that your daily life can be filled with joyful moments.  It’s easier to believe bad things, to harbor bad thoughts, and to stagnate in fear which is the basis of all anger, apathy and anguish.

Since I love to laugh, to smile, and to enjoy life, during the worst points of recovering from our traumatic birth, I didn’t recognize myself any longer.  Who was this new person, so afraid, so angry, and so ready to scream?  Surely not the same person who laughed and laughed after hitting a parked car when she was 18.  The same incident now might evoke certain choice words, shaking, nausea, and a screaming fit which would rival my toddler’s tantrums.

The hardest part about all of this is realizing that my feelings RIGHT NOW are my choice.  I can choose to laugh, and think, “At least no one’s hurt!” — OR I could let an incident like that ruin my day, my month, and make me quit driving for several days, living like a recluse in my tiny apartment.

Only I am accountable for how I react to outside stimulus.  When I studied the Stoics in Philosophy, I felt a resonance.  Your honor and actions are YOUR CHOICE.  It’s an ultimate freedom to meditate on.  If you believe that outside influences control your feelings, thoughts and actions, then you are a slave.

Sure, bad things happened.  Sure, I was hurt.  But I’m not being hurt RIGHT NOW.  The trauma and abuse are over and done with.  Only I can ressurect them, and only I can lay those memories in their grave and move on.

Here are some of my strategies for living a life of joy with PTSD:

1. Look for the good.  Don’t focus on bad things.  It helps if you realize you’re thinking negatively, and consciously revise that thought into something positive.  Ex. “I have SO many things to do!” –> “Now I’m gonna get out of the house!  Maybe I’ll find a bargain or two.”

2. If I’m about to “lose” it, I start saying something good (even if it’s the opposite of what I’m thinking).  Ex. “My kid is driving me NUTS; he’s being SO BAD!” –> “Bailey, I know that you’re a good boy, and you know how to listen.”

3. Take chances & get messy.  Let yourself live life.  Avoidant and antisocial impulses satisfy NEGATIVE urges.  If you give in, you won’t feel any better.  At best, you’ll be maintaining the status quo . . . most likely, you’ll feel worse after hours or days in limbo.  Take your friend up on that offer to go out.  Gather courage and be the person who initiates a friend’s night out bowling.  For inspiration watch the movie Yes Man with Jim Carey.

Joy is kissing my sons soft skin as he sleeps.

Joy is kissing my son's soft skin as he sleeps.

4. Forgive.  Forgive yourself.  Forgive those who’ve wronged you.  In many ways, the past is gone.  You’ll never step into the same river twice, so why base your life on situations which no longer exist?  Even if someone wronged you, feeling bad about it for long afterward means that you want to waste your precious energy in the pursuit of fear-based action.  On some level you’re reinforcing your own mental cages, and no amount of vengeful thought will make you any less responsible for your own feelings.  (I’m still working on this forgiveness thing as we speak.)

Anger makes you smaller, while forgiveness forces you to grow beyond what you were.
–Cherie Carter-Scott

5. Meditate.  Thought itself is a flawed tool if we can’t turn it off once in a

while.  You lower your heart-rate, lower instances of heart disease and other ailments, get some perspective, and gain a real connection to that which simply IS.  I was able to join in a gong meditation that really impressed me, and I’m one of those type-A’s who isn’t good at letting go of thought.  If your meditation is found in a hot, sudsy bath tub in which you can lean back and let all your worries go, then make sure you set aside regular time for that.

6. Be giving.  Help others.  I can’t tell you how much my life has improved since I began taking positive actions for others without expecting

compensation or even gratitude.  Volunteer at a shelter.  Offer to help someone lift something.  Give stuff away to people, and do it face-to-face.  Buy someone lunch.  Hold a door open.  Find a venue where you can teach something that you know without charge.

If you knew what I know about the power of giving, you would not let a single meal pass without sharing it in some way.
–Buddha

I’m definitely not perfect, but I no longer suffer from most of the symptoms of PTSD which plagued me for so long after the birth of my son.  I credit this success to my simple desire to lead a life of joy instead of suffering.  As a philosopher, I realize that what I think and how I feel are very much choices.  I consciously choose to seek out joy, and even though I may slip here and there, I will persevere.

I hope that you laugh today.  I hope that you smile today.  I hope that you’re living in a joyful moment right now.  If I can help, just let me know.

–Leslie

 

The Reclaiming Dance

My hips percuss the air, my ankles flexing, my knees bent and pumping like pistons.  My arms are up, fingers and forearms curved and flowing.  I am standing straighter than I do in life — shoulders square, my chin up, my eyes bright, and the corners of my lips curling up of their own accord.

Belly dance is my most recent reclaiming of my own body.  I shimmy, shake my hips, move my body . . . and I feel like I own my body.

For all those sleepless nights, all those memories which interrupted every moment I needed to care for myself or my baby boy, I dance.  For all those fight-or-flight moments which weren’t warranted, for all the hours trapped screaming inside my own head — I dance.  I twist the muscles of my sides, driving my hips up and over, feeling the burn of helplessness wring itself out of me as I dance.  Sweat it out.

It all started with the birth of my son.  Birth is supposed to be a joyous occasion, but mine was a very long experience during which my peaceful home water birth turned into a hospital nightmare.  We lived in the NICU for a week, and then we were sent home in a daze.

For months, I forgot it all.  Then it all started to rush back into me.  The yelling and screaming, the blood, the crazy out-of-control feeling . . . I couldn’t sleep, eat right, or take care of myself.  I kept losing my temper at my husband for stupid little things.

Imagine the terror of it — all of a sudden realizing that you’re a shattered mirror.  I couldn’t watch television.  Every pregnant woman screaming for an epidural on a sitcom made me want to smash the TV.  A commercial for the local hospital’s “birth center” made me want to chew my own limb off to escape.  I couldn’t stay in the same room with women who began discussing their births.

Months of my life were wasted in this limbo of fear.  I started to torture myself with more research about birth.  I’d sit in front of the computer screen with tears streaming down my face as I read something that MIGHT have helped our birth, MIGHT have saved my son from his distress.  I’d open a book about birth and end up hurling it across the room with a scream that dissolved into tears.

I hid my broken heart.  I went out and plastered on a happy face and found playgroups.  I took a free class on slings and carriers, bought a nice buckle carrier online, and started a love affair with babywearing.  I threw myself into mothering with all of my formidable tenacity.  I was a breastfeeding champ, utilized baby sign language, did Elimination Communication with my baby, wore him in slings, and spent a lot of time bonding.  I put my mind and heart to work being the best mother I could, using gentle and natural parenting techniques.  Then I started to teach others how to use slings and carriers to simplify their lives and ease the transition into motherhood.

It was helping others that finally started to drag me out of my dark cave.  I would help a mom and baby with their ring sling, and the smile on their faces would keep me warm inside for the next week.  I’d teach someone how to do a back carry, and the look of surprise and satisfaction was all I needed to get me going.

Slowly, I conquered the demons which plagued me.  I banished the waking nightmares.  I forced myself to remember all of the birth, even parts I’d blocked.  I endured playgroup conversations about birth, and found that I could actually participate without fleeing.  I found a forum for women who’ve experienced birth trauma.  I slowly opened up, until I told a few select friends about my birth experience, and I WASN’T LAUGHED AT OR DISMISSED.

I kept teaching, filling my life with happy mamas and babies.  I continued to read about birth, returning to the idea that I might work with pregnant ladies again, an idea I’d abandoned in my desperation and fear.  Maybe I could be a doula or midwife!

I requested a copy of my medical records and did a self-exam to refamiliarize myself with my body.  Self-maintenance took longer, and the temper flares still interrupted my days, but slowly and surely I got better.  I told myself I would get better, and that I could redefine myself.  I blogged a lot, talked about birth, ideal birth conditions, interventions, and birth trauma.  All those sleepless nights, I wrote and studied.

Finally, my best friend, her husband and my husband banded together to convince me that I needed to join belly dancing class.  I was still reluctant to leave my baby, but I took a chance.  For someone who’d loved dancing before her pregnancy, I hadn’t danced in a very long time.  I went once and kept going back.

I love the flamboyant remarks of the older woman who teaches us.  I love the sensual gyrations, the precise skill of isolating muscle movements, the music, the feel of bodies moving in sync, the feeling of power . . . the exile of helplessness, and the sense of well being which envelops me during and after each class.

I reclaim my body as I dance.  I reach toward a peace and joy that I KNOW I can achieve.  I got this far, and I know I can get even further.  Most times I’m a survivor, but even that stigma falls away when I tie on my hip scarf and step into the circle.


Resources for Birth Trauma:

http://psychcentral.com/news/2008/08/08/ptsd-after-childbirth/2716.html
http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0CYD/is_6_38/ai_99376500/
http://www.wholebirthservices.com/uploads/PTSD_and_Birth.pdf
http://www.solaceformothers.org/
http://www.sharonstorton.com/
http://www.sheilakitzinger.com/BirthCrisis.htm
http://www.pennysimkin.com/
http://www.angelfire.com/moon2/jkluchar1995/my_story.html
http://www.tabs.org.nz/
http://www.ican-online.org/
http://www.amazon.com/Understanding-Dangers-Cesarean-Birth-Contemporary/dp/0275999068
http://www.amazon.com/When-Survivors-Give-Birth-Understanding/dp/1594040222
http://www.amazon.com/Birth-Crisis-S-Kitzinger/dp/0415372666
http://www.amazon.com/Born-USA-Broken-Maternity-Children/dp/0520256336

 

You Know the Meaning of the Word

I’ve been taking a lot of time to process this, and I wanted to share something with you. I wanted to let you know that I have never complained about and will never complain about the pain of childbirth.

There are plenty of reasons, of course. When I was laboring at home, in and out of the pool, I didn’t experience anything more painful than period cramps. The natural sensation of laboring is much more intense than period cramps, but I didn’t experience any pain worse than those I’d experienced before on a monthly basis.

Some women labor very painfully, and I acknowledge that. I’m not diminishing your experience if you had an extremely painful childbirth. I’m just saying that my birth experience has never been about pain.

That is a good reason not to complain about the pain of labor, but that is not the reason I choose conscientiously to abstain from that verbal jockeying.

Labor and “contractions” can actually be wonderful sensations. If a woman is supported physically, mentally, and emotionally, labor can feel like rushes and expansions. Labor can be pleasurable, interesting, empowering, satisfying, and, for some women, orgasmic. Knowing that I could have tried to re-frame my experience to be “a most interesting sensation to which I owe my full attention” as Ina May Gaskin suggests, is a good enough reason to avoid complaining about the “pain” of childbirth. Again, that is not my reason.

The fear and terror that our culture has instilled in us regarding the pain of childbirth NEEDS to be addressed. Grantly Dick-Read found the social expectation of pain during labor to be a self-fulfilling prophecy. Uneducated women associated with the poor classes during his time showed him that childbirth can be matter-of-fact, calm, and safer without an overwhelming fear which, according to Dick-Read, has negative physiological effects which cause and reinforce pain in the uterus.  The upper class women “knew” that childbirth hurt and that they were ill suited to the activity on the merit of their delicacy.  Unsurprisingly, Dick-Read’s observations showed upper class women in hysterics and great amounts of resulting pain, often needing chloroform.

Reassuring young women (and actually ANYONE) that labor does not have to be mindlessly painful and frightening is a worthy cause, but it is not the reason I will never complain about the pain of childbirth.

Complaint itself is a negative form of communication, but it’s a time-honored tradition.  How else would we let off some steam, tell our best friends about our frustrations, or get to hear how ridiculous our own complaints are once they are voiced?  Sometimes complaining is the beginning of necessary change.  Unfortunately, complaint is addictive and oftentimes just reinforces the negative thought patterns, excacerbates the situation, and lets us goad ourselves into acting in unwise ways.

Is it a distinction of classification that I am making when I say that I will never complain about the pain of childbirth?  Unfortunately, I wish that were true, but it is not.  I want the right to complain about childbirth if I so choose.  I’m not saying that I just don’t like to complain.

I will never complain about the pain of childbirth — Are you ready? — because it was STOLEN from me.

That’s right.  Someone took that option from me.  Everything was fine and dandy when we transferred.  Then things started happening, spiraling out of control.  It’s true that I made the call to start the Pitocin on the advice of my midwife.  It was my choice, and thus I have never regretted it or had nightmares about it.

We went in to the hospital, having labored for days, and my midwife was met with such hostility and suspicion that she broke our signed contract and left the hospital instead of supporting me as a doula in that setting.  She advised me not to allow the observation period and to ask for the Pitocin as soon as possible.

The nurse who was assigned to us was heavily pregnant herself.  She was kind and chatty, and absolutely amazed at how well I handled contractions as far along as I was.  She couldn’t believe how my husband and I held hands, looked into each other’s eyes, and breathed through each contraction.  She asked if we had taken classes or something.  In almost the same breath she’d used to praise my ability to cope, she began to sing the praises of epidurals.  She said, “I would never go through this without an epidural.  Lots of women come to the hospital wanting a natural birth, but they’re so glad to have the epidural when it gets bad.  Sometimes it’s too late to get it, or we have to hunt the doctor down to write up the script and that takes too long.  Why don’t I just have him write it up now, so you can have it immediately when you need it?”

I just nodded at her and let her do what she wanted.  It was easier than arguing with her.  In fact, before my midwife left, the last advice she gave me was to ask for an epidural.  I just nodded at her too.  I think she was more frightened at that point than I was, and NO WAY IN HELL was I getting a needle shoved into my back.  I was in labor, and thus unable to verbalize my extreme aversion to pain “relief.”  It didn’t seem to matter then, because I knew that I wasn’t going to ask for an epidural.

I appreciate the sensations which occur in my body.  I have never just sought to escape from the useful feedback of my sensory network.  I do not take pain pills for headaches, cramps, or anything.  I work through it.  I love my body, care for the temple which houses my soul, and (like a mother who understands that her baby’s crying has significance) attend my body’s needs, using the information that pain provides.  I believe that I have a healthy relationship to my body and the idea of pain.

It is my right to say no to an epidural.  It is my right to say no to sex.  It is my right to say no to anything that anyone wants to do to me.  I am my own person.  As I respect myself and others, so should they respect themselves and me.  I have as much right to say no to pain relief as you have right to ask for yours.  To believe that my “no” means less than your “yes” is a gross injustice.

While I labored at home, I felt nothing worse than period cramps.  When I got to the hospital, the nurse was AMAZED at how well I coped.  My answer to that is that I didn’t have much to cope with.  I was laboring naturally, except for the long delay in progress.  I asked for the Pitocin drip, and I still felt at least a little in control of the situation.

As the drip was started in my IV, I turned to the nurse and said, “I’ve read that Pitocin contractions are much more painful than normal labor contractions?  Is that true?”  She couldn’t answer me, and in hindsight, I realize that she probably did not know the answer to that question.  She had likely never seen a woman labor without Pit streaming through her veins.  It took a little while, but my body answered my question.  Pitocin contractions have nothing to do with labor.

Pitocin is not a natural product in your body.  Your brain cannot regulate the levels of Pitocin in your body, as it can oxytocin.  Yes, it hurts more.  It hurts worse.  There’s a huge difference between a good kind of pain, like the burn and tingle associated with exercise, and bad pain, like when someone is enraged and hitting you with a baseball bat.  Normal labor is like an orchestrated crescendo, each wave cresting and receding, all leading up to a peak when you crown and birth.  I had experienced labor that made sense, and pitocin was like being elbowed in the face in a mosh pit.

Let’s make this clear.  I owned this pain.  I am not complaining about it.  I am explaining, as clearly as I can, the difference between laboring naturally and laboring augmented with Pitocin as I experienced it.  Pitocin contractions were one on top of the next, sometimes there would be a small rest, then three contractions all on top of one another.  There was no time to get a breath.  There was no resting and getting ready for the next wave.  There was no use in breathing, holding hands, or eye contact.  There was nothing but force upon force.

I had asked for Pitocin, but I didn’t know at the time that I could have asked them to start it, then lower the levels to see if my labor could pick up on it’s own.  I wasn’t prepared to deal with the beauracracy and hardships associated with being “allowed” to walk around, or get into other positions to labor, so the pain was intensified by lithotomy position.  I lay on my back, tied down with fetal monitors, rolling back and forth and writhing like an over-turned turtle.

I had back labor.  The nurse and my mother took turns applying pressure on my back, and I thanked them.  I don’t remember if I was making noises, or how I was dealing with those contractions, but I did NOT want an epidural.  My mother and the nurse started trying to talk me into an one.  The doctor’s order was already written up.  All I had to do was say the word, and someone would come shove a needle into my spine to thread a plastic tube of numbing solution into my dural tube.

Who would this have helped, I wonder?  Me, who was just focused on the moment, living second by second, vocalizing naturally as an aid (the only one at my disposal) to labor . . . or the two women who were getting more and more stressed out by their lack of control over the situation?  One, a mother who doesn’t know the first thing about being a birth assistant, and the other a nurse used to an almost 100 percent epidural rate in the women she is paid to attend?

They started rationalizing.  They asked me why I didn’t want an epidural.  The nurse said it was safe, normal.  It would help.  My mom was saying, “You can’t do this any more!  You’re too tired!  You won’t be able to push when the time comes!”  The nurse interjected that there were other alternatives like IV pain medications.  She started spouting technical information about how safe and wonderful, etc.  My mom began yelling at me again.

My poor shell-shocked husband had been sent to the couch to sleep, and after a period of several consecutive days up, he slept like the dead.  I sweated and moaned through Pitocin-augmented back labor, twisting the sheets with my legs as I tried to find a comfortable position, and their voices continued.  My mother became increasingly desperate, and the nurse stuck close with quietly voiced suggestions.

I kept shaking trying to ignore them.  Then I started to shake my head, no.  Then I started to SAY, “No.”  And I had to keep saying it.  Even as the senseless onslaught of synthetic hormone caused my uterus to contract painfully over and over without rest, battering my poor unborn child, I had to keep saying, “No!”

Fentanyl. It’s harmless.  A step down from an epidural.  Do it.  You can’t any more.  You can do this anymore.  You’re too tired.  You’re in too much pain.  You will be too tired to push.  To be fair, the nurse had brought up the suggestion of the Fentanyl, but my mother was the cheerleader determined to bring the suggestion home.  The nurse watched as my mother continued to harangue me into submission.

I remember her screaming in my face, and I interruped her by saying, “I DON’T WANT IT –” and she interrupted me again.  “– BUT!  But, I’ll DO IT.  Just stop screaming!  I’ll take it!”

I gave in.

I had so carefully prepared the way for my child.  I thoroughly researched birth and birth interventions.  I had chosen Pitocin with a clear conscience, having researched it.  I knew what Pitocin was, what it could do, and how it worked.  As a college grad with a passion for biology and health issues, I had absorbed a good deal of information about birth.

Fentanyl was not on the list.  Neither was violation of informed consent or how to counter coercion techniques used on a laboring woman.  It’s something so very simple, isn’t it?  You know the meaning of the word.  Am I talking about the word “pain?”  Guess again.

I’m talking about the word, “No.”

I will never complain about the pain of childbirth because it was stolen from me.  I don’t remember much after that moment of capitulation.  The world becomes hazy.  I lose time.  Someone took my glasses.  Upped levels on Pit.  Topped off my Fentanyl.  I have nightmares in which I ask my mommy to tell them that “It’s wearing off . . .” and I can feel the pain coming back, and I get sick and disgusted with myself.

Every time I read a certain book with my son, and we hit the page “I’m as weak as a kitten.”  . . . that’s what I think about.  Me, tied to a hospital bed, weak as a kitten, mewling for more IV pain relief so that my mommy can save me again.  I’m sure she loved being the savior.  Did I imagine these scenarios?  I don’t know.  I NEVER want to ask, because I’m afraid that they’re true.  The world faded away, and I lost myself.

All of a sudden, it was time to push.  (In fact, many hours had passed before he crowned.)  Welcome to the world, dear son.  Your mother was drugged against her will, but she probably liked it and needed it.  The nurse thought so, and so did your grandma.  You were born with your mother’s blood pouring over your crown from her episiotomy (another procedure to which she did not consent).

I could have had a good birth.  I DID have a good birth, at least the first part.  It wasn’t spectacular, but up until the point that certain individuals failed to respect my right to say no, it wasn’t anything I would have had nightmares about.  I have no intrusive memories of laboring at home, or being admitted to the hospital, or saying good bye to my midwife.

Beginning after a honeymoon period of a few months, I had flashbacks, couldn’t relax, startled way too easily, insomnia, and volleyed back and forth between extreme obsession and extreme aversion to all things birth related.  Added to the struggle of being a new mother was the struggle of being a survivor.  A week living like a ghost at the mercy of the NICU, waiting and waiting to finally meet my son could only solidify the Stockholm Syndrome.

I became a traitor to everything I knew.  Only hours after the birth, I cried and shook hands with the neonatologist my mother said saved my baby.  He scolded me for attempting a home birth, and asked “What were you thinking?” in a South African accent, his dark face hovering in my hazy memories, the remembrance of a stranger staring at me as I pushed my son into the world amidst raised voices.  I cried on his hands as I shook them.

I deferred to the doctors, the nurses, and the system to such an extreme degree that I didn’t even THINK to ask to hold my son.  I just visited him endlessly at his little plastic incubator and dared only to touch him the way the nurses instructed us.  On the third day of his life, while I sat there looking at him, a NICU nurse asked, “Oh, have you held him yet?” as if it were an after-thought! I just shook my head no, and she scooped him up carefully, wires and all, and placed him into my arms, a moment that I will never forget.

So, I have not complained about the pain of childbirth.  Unless I earn the right to complain or abstain from complaint by trial of labor, I can not complain about the pain of childbirth because someone took my choice away.  I experienced pain during my labor.  Then I experienced an artificial pain on top of that.

My RIGHT TO CHOOSE was taken from me . . . and because of that, I cannot ever complain about the pain of labor.  I can’t claim to know what it truly feels like to birth my son, the moment of crowning (the so called “ring of fire”) or the intense expulsion reflex which comes in a trembling rush of adrenaline . . . I can’t claim to know these things.  I wouldn’t have chosen to birth this way just like I wouldn’t have chosen to lose my virginity drugged or stoned out of my mind.

We are supposed to be rewarded by the physical activities which help keep us alive and propagate our species:  eating, having sex, eliminating, labor and birth, breastfeeding.  All of these things are miraculously designed with positive biological feedback systems.  Unless there is something WRONG, these things are supposed to feel good.  A fully engaged, active birth which is pleasurable for the mother is ultimately the healthiest scenario for mother an baby.

This is not an issue of some women thinking they deserve a certain “experience” of childbirth.  This is about sexual and reproductive rights, evidence based medicine, and most of all, it is about basic human respect.

It’s an unfortunate situation when pregnant women have to discuss informed consent (which translates practically to informed refusal) with their OB’s, brief their husbands on their wishes, and hire labor guards in the form of doulas.  It’s an even worse situation when none of these precautions can guarantee that everyone you come in contact with will make the right choice at the critical moment.

From something as simple as trying to massage a woman in labor without her permission, to internal exams or surgical procedures, the best thing to do is to ask gently and listen patiently at every step.  The KEY to avoiding childbirth-triggered PTSD is to make sure that the laboring mother feels in control.  Make sure she gets a choice in the matter, and she won’t have nightmares which prevent her from being the best mother she can be.

Even if there’s a time crunch, give as much information as possible and wait for the OK.  Tell her, “This is what I think would be the best thing to do right now.  What do you think?”

You know the meaning of the word “no.”  Why should it mean less when a laboring mother says it?  No means NO.  Silence is NOT consent.  Always ask permission at every step, listen to, and respect the answer to your receive.  If you’re not prepared to do that, you have no place in the birth room, and I surely hope that you are not a health care professional.

And for God’s Sake, never just assume that anyone is a good choice to lend labor support!  Choose your labor assistants very carefully and make sure you’re all on the same wave length!

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Time to use your critical thinking skills.  What’s wrong with THIS article?  Discuss.