Things My Husband Says

In this week’s edition of things my husband says I’m going to share two different stories.

First, my husband’s FB status after I gave birth to our son, which I thought was really sweet.

“Mr. S has just bore witness to a strength in my wife that I never seen in any man…and today we welcome into the world my prince, Baby S.!!!!”

Second, what my husband said after looking in our refrigerator and freezer, and seeing all the breast milk I’ve been pumping and storing.

“Do your breasts think you’re feeding twins?”

He can be really sweet when he wants too and a total comedian when you least expect it.

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Wordless Wednesday

Meet Baby S :)

 

 

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“I Feel Like Something Is Coming Out of Me…”

Read part 1 and part 2 first…

At 4:30 am on Friday, March 9, 2012 the nurse came in to wake me up, and move me to labor and delivery. After a very small breakfast (that the nurse scraped up for me since hospital dining doesn’t open until 6:30) and being hooked up to the monitors, the process started around 6:00 am. Mr. S realized that if Baby S came today our birthdays would all have the number 9 in them (9, 19, 29). Less than an hour later the nurse came in and said they had to stop the pitocin because Baby S wasn’t handling the contractions well at all.  It was at this point that she mentioned the contractions I had the night before that he hadn’t handled well either. I asked her what that meant and she said that depending on what my doctor says it might mean a c-section. At this point, I woke up my husband, who I had told to get some sleep before it really got serious, and he was livid. This was his fear that doing a medical induction would not only harm the baby, but me as well.

I texted my parents to let them know what was going on, since they were about an hour outside of Atlanta by this point; and then called my sister-in-law an OB/GYN resident at another hospital, so that she could explain everything to me in non doctor language. She got there before the doctor and explained what the next steps would be—they would either start the pitocin over in smaller doses or go forward with a c-section.

The nurse came back shortly after my sister-in-law arrived and restarted the Pitocin. She said they would do smaller doses for longer periods of time to see how the baby’s heart rate looked. At this point, I made up in my mind that as long as the baby’s heart rate was high that I could take the pain no matter how bad it got. This time his heart rate was steady, and I knew we were going to be okay. The doctor came in to visit and explain what would happen. He said that depending on where I was at 4 or 5 pm that evening they would break my water or take me off the monitors and pitocin let me get some rest and try again the next day. If I didn’t make progress the next day, I would have to have a c-section. As he was leaving my sister-in-law made sure to introduce herself and I’m convinced this made them even more cautious about how they handled me the rest of the day. It let them know that we knew someone who spoke their language lol.

The rest of Friday went pretty slow. My parents made it in safely and we were just waiting on my mother-in-law. I spent some time rereading Book 1 of the Hunger Games series, and remembered that I needed to order the baby’s moses basket. Yes, I was still thinking about things I wanted him to have when we got home during contractions. My husband handed me the iPad, so I could order it and shortly after the contractions became a little more intense. I moved to the birthing ball for a little while and my husband massaged my lower back, while we talked to my actual doctor, who wasn’t on call that day, but stopped by to check on me. I tried to convince him to stay and deliver the baby, since I wasn’t exactly a fan of the doctor who was on call that day, but it was his wife’s birthday and I didn’t want him to end up getting divorced it was bad enough he was late for lunch with her to come check on me lol. He pretty much confirmed what the other doctor said, and told me who was on call the next day.

At about 2 or 3 pm the contractions became really intense, and I could feel tears coming out of my eyes. I asked for my iPod and put in my headphones, so I could listen to music to help me relax and tune out everyone else. My husband held my hand and watched the monitors, and when he saw one coming reminded me to just breathe. I asked him how the baby’s heart rate looked and he said he was doing just great. I said if he can do this I can do this too. At one point, I asked for my phone and I called my younger sister who had been induced 3 years ago, because I knew she would be able to relate to the contractions. She reminded me to be strong and that I could do this without an epidural, and that we didn’t want my induction to end in a c-section like hers. I hung up and put my headphones back on and tried to find my happy place.

Around 4:30 or 5 pm the doctor came in to check my cervix and discuss our options. He told me that I was 2 cm dilated and my cervix had thinned. In his words, this was “good progress for the day.” I was sad considering I expected to have made more progress, but I welcomed the break and opportunity to eat and sleep. I knew that either way Saturday was going to be a big day and I was finally going to meet my son. Our parents came back in the room and we told them the news. We sent everyone home to get some rest, and I ordered food. Mr. S fell asleep and I decided to bounce on the birthing ball now that I was no longer attached to machines. I was hoping that my contractions would continue on their own and bouncing on the ball would help my cervix open more. If I was lucky my water would break on its own and I would not have to deal with the pitocin again in the morning. I eventually tried to sleep without Ambien this time, but woke up every 2 hours to use the bathroom. Every time I woke up, I bounced on the ball until I felt sleepy again.

The next morning the nurse came in around 6:30 am to wake me up, but I was already up and bouncing on the ball. I asked about my breakfast, since Mr. S asked the doctor to start later, so that I would be able to actually have a real breakfast. My breakfast never showed up, so around 7 he went to the cafeteria to buy me something, and fed it to me while they redid my IV. Somehow I knocked out the catheter for my IV in the middle of the night, so we were back to the drawing board. This time an actual nurse did my IV and she switched the positioning because she felt it would work better for a woman going through a natural birth. The doctor came in to check me around 8 and I was 3 cm and 90% effaced, so she decided to break my water at this point. This is where the “fun” really started… before she left we asked about other drug options and she told me that they could give me fentanyl to sleep through the contractions.

This time they increased the pitocin by 2 every 30 minutes or so, and I was definitely feeling the contractions. Unlike yesterday, by 10:30 am I was curled up in pain and not handling the contractions well at all. I remember being in the middle of texting one of my “virtual doulas” and just stopping, because the pain was so bad. We tried me sitting in the rocking chair and it didn’t help. The only thing I thought would help was being in water and that wasn’t allowed because of all the machines they had me hooked up too, so I willingly went back to the bed. I put on my headphones again and turned on my “Birthing Baby S playlist.” I tried to sing through the contractions, but all I could do was cry about how painful and close together they were. I finally let the nurse check me she had been asking for about an hour and I didn’t want to say yes only to be disappointed. To my surprise I had dilated two more centimeters in 2 hours. She upped the pitocin and I promise every time I saw her walk near the machine I wanted to smack her, but that wasn’t very nice at all. Around 11:30 am the nurse came in and she seemed worried about my blood pressure, apparently it had been increasing all morning. She asked me if I had high blood pressure during the pregnancy I hadn’t and she asked if I felt any pain in my chest I didn’t. At this point I asked for the fentanyl. I felt so bad asking for it because I felt like I was going against my natural birthing plan, but I literally couldn’t breath between the contractions and I was scared they would do a c-section if I didn’t start relaxing.

When she left the room I asked my husband what they expected my blood pressure to be like right now of course it’s high they’re forcing me into labor and I’m in pain. I’m sure he wanted to laugh, but he just held my hand and reminded me to breathe. For about an hour, I was able to rest in between the contractions. It didn’t take away the pain and a part of me feels like it was more frustrating because I would doze off and then wake up confused and in excruciating pain every 2 minutes. At some point, my husband left the room to eat lunch and my mom was with me. She looked like she was going to cry watching me in pain, and I felt bad for making her look so sad, so I asked her to go get Mr. S and I told him not to leave me anymore. Unlike the day before our parents didn’t stay in the room with us while I labored, I vaguely remember my dad coming in to speak and quickly leaving once he saw me go through a really hard contraction.

By 12 noon I was screaming louder and writhing in pain, the doctor checked me again and I had dilated to 7. She told him we would have a baby by 4 pm. My husband looked me in the eye and repeated what she said, but all I could say back was “this hurts so bad and I don’t know if I can do this anymore.” He asked me what part of the arena is this right now, and I wanted to laugh at his reference to the Hunger Games series, but I couldn’t because another contraction hit.  The fentanyl had worn off and my blood pressure was rising again, so he asked them if they could give me more. At this point the contractions were every minute and I had little to no down time for breathing, so I didn’t sleep in between the contractions like I did earlier, but I did stop anticipating the next one long enough to catch my breath. Every time a contraction hit I would look him in the eye and he would breath with me, and remind me that I was doing great. At one point a contraction hit and I opened my mouth and before I caught myself I had bit his arm. I immediately apologized and he was good about it although I’m pretty sure I really hurt him.

Around 1:45 pm I started insisting that I needed to push. My husband kept telling me not to push, because the doctor said no pushing yet. I told him to go get the doctor because I need to push now!!! The doctor came in to check me and I was fully dilated, but my cervix was still only 90% effaced. She said maybe pushing would help the rest and they turned on these bright lights, lifted my bed, and spread my legs for pushing. The doctor and nurse tried to explain how they wanted me to push, but the contractions were so close it was really hard for me to do 3 things at one time. (Sidenote: This is an awful way to push out a baby and I see why so many women have started doing home and water births)

Our moms had come back in the room at this point, but they knew I only wanted the two of us there throughout this part, so they asked if they could just wait behind the curtain. The doctor asked me if it was okay and I really didn’t care I just wanted to start pushing at this point. The nurse held one leg and had my husband hold the other one. The first 2 times I pushed I didn’t do the three things they said at once, but the third time I heard the doctor say she saw my son’s head. I think it was around this point when I yelled out, “I feel something coming out of me.”  My mother found this line absolutely hilarious. The doctor had them call for a baby nurse, since we knew the baby was coming really soon. I pushed again, but not hard enough and I kept telling my husband that I couldn’t do it anymore that I was so tired and just wanted to sleep. The nurse came and held my second leg and my husband came back up towards me. He told me he saw the baby’s head and I was being so strong I just had to push a little longer. I tried pushing the next contraction and this time one of the nurses said the baby wasn’t doing well and his heart rate was plummeting. It was at that point that I forgot about all the pain I was in and I pushed with all my might. As I braced myself to push again, my husband asked me if I heard that sound? Our son was crying and I started crying. I couldn’t believe that I actually did it and with no epidural. I waited for the doctor to stitch me and for them to tell me he was okay and they laid him on my chest before cleaning him. I instantly felt a burst of love. He was absolutely perfect.

Baby S was born at 2:28 pm on Saturday, March 10, 2012. He weighed 5 pounds, 8.7 ounces, and was 18 inches long. Despite being smaller than the “average” 37 week old baby he spent no time in NICU and was perfectly healthy.

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Medical Induction It Is…

Read Part 1 first…

On Wednesday, March 7, 2012 I woke up early with my husband before he left for work. He reminded me to be assertive with the doctor and ask a lot of questions once he called. By noon he still hadn’t called and I had spent the entire morning doing even more research. If you frequent the Mamademics fan page on Facebook, you probably saw a status message that read: Awake early eating raisin toast and drinking raspberry leaf tea, while researching calcifying placenta and the risks of refusing induction at 37 weeks. Yea it’s a serious morning in Mamademics world. How’s your morning?

This time what I found scared me. There were several first hand stories from women on message boards with “textbook” pregnancies that resulted in a stillborn somewhere between 38 and 40 weeks. Most of those women were told that their placenta had started to calcify, but unlike me the issue was not caught in time, because their pregnancy seemed healthy and normal. This new information worried me, but I still was not ready to say yes to being induced, AND my doctor still hadn’t called me yet. If he hadn’t called then everything was okay.

Around noon that day I decided to take a nap, but I left my phone in the living room. I was startled by UPS waking me up about an hour or so later, and saw several text messages from my husband. Apparently, the doctor’s office had the wrong cell phone number for me, and my doctor had been trying to get in contact with me to no avail, so he called him instead. My husband told me to call and let them know the updated number, and that the doctor might call our home phone number soon. He reminded me once again to be assertive and to ask all the questions we came up with on Tuesday night; and to not just say okay to whatever he said. I don’t handle confrontation well and we both know that I have to write things down to make sure I get them all out.

When my cell phone rang and I saw the hospital number pop up, I immediately started to shake. My doctor joked about me being a hard woman to reach and then asked me if I was ready to have a baby this week. I replied, “maybe.” I’m sure my response caught him off guard, because he asked me why maybe. I went into all my questions and fears. My biggest fear was the fact that I know most first time mothers who are induced end up having a c-section. I also know that when you’re induced you are hooked up to monitors constantly and it makes it very hard for someone with a natural birthing plan to use any of the techniques they have planned, since you’re confined to the bed most of the time. I asked him how long they would let me labor before doing a c-section. He said typically a couple of days as long as neither the baby nor me are in distress. I asked him if I would be able to labor in the water with the cordless monitoring, but he reminded me that they would have to monitor me constantly, so the water is a no go; but I could use the rocking chair and birthing ball. I also asked him if I absolutely had to do this now or if we could wait a week. His response: “If it were my wife or my sister, I absolutely would not want her to wait.” He reminded me that I was in fact full term and my little ones lungs were developed; and that he more than likely would not have to be in the NICU; but if we waited who knows what the outcome would be.

At this point, I asked him to give me a rundown of what would happen. He explained the process to me they would admit me in the evening and place cervadil in my uterus to thin my cervix; and I might go into labor on my own that night some women do, but more than likely I wouldn’t and they would start the pitocin the next morning. Then he said he wanted me to come in that night, but no later than tomorrow. He waited for me to make a decision, and I told him I needed to call my husband first and call him back.

Mr. S was not pleased. He wanted me to wait until he got home from work so we could talk more, but I needed to call the doctor back before the office closed. I explained my position to him that while I really didn’t want to be induced, the chance of having a stillborn absolutely terrified me. So, we agreed to go in on Thursday. I called the doctor back and told him we would come in tomorrow and we scheduled the process to start at 3:30 pm. I called my parents to give them an update and my mother let me know they would leave out on Thursday evening, and see me Friday morning at the hospital. My mom could tell I was upset and she knew this is not what I wanted to do at all, but she reassured me that I was making the best decision for Baby S in the long run. I started doing random things around the house to kill time while waiting for Mr. S to get home from work; and repacked the hospital bag with smaller onesies for the baby.

Once Mr. S came home from work we put the car seat in the car, and decided to do my belly cast. We also decided to do some walking and other things to hopefully naturally induce my labor. We talked and while we still weren’t in total agreeance I knew he would support whatever decision I made. I realized that all I was thinking about was the chance of losing our baby, but he was thinking about the risks to me and the chance he would lose both of us. The next morning I went to work with him, so he could submit student grades, and I walked up and down the stairs while waiting for him. We went and picked up lunch and then took another walk around our neighborhood, and made our way to the hospital. During our walk we went over the birthing plan again and what he’s supposed to do if I ask for an epidural or if one of us goes into distress and he has to make the final decision. I reminded him to always ask if the baby or me are in immediate danger and if they say no to ask them to give him a second to think before pressuring him to make a decision.

On the way to the hospital I decided that I was going to pretend that this was the Hunger Games, and I was Katniss Everdeen. My husband hasn’t read the books, so I had to try and quickly explain it to him. I packed my Kindle, since my mom suggested trying to read through the pain, and decided to start rereading the series.

As soon as we got there I started having a change of heart, and after a paramedic student failed to get my catheter for IV in initially I was so ready to go home. I know I have small veins, but messing up to the point that there is enough blood to make me change my gown and the nurse change my sheets is unacceptable. I really wanted to cry and complain, but instead I just looked at my husband and reminded myself why we were doing this right now. They hooked me up to monitors, so they could keep track of the baby’s heartbeat and my contractions. The doctor came in and checked my cervix I was only 1 cm dilated and in her words “that’s a thick cervix” *sigh* that’s not what I wanted to hear at all. The nurse came in and put in the cervadil and later brought me an Ambien, so I could sleep. I tried to get some sleep and prepare myself for the long day ahead of me. I vaguely remember the nurse waking me up a few times in the middle of the night to adjust the monitors, but no one told me that I was having mini contractions that Baby S wasn’t handling well until the next morning.

To Be Continued…

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To Induce or Not to Induce?

If you are not following Mamademics fan page on Facebook, you missed a very important announcement. Baby S made his grand entrance on Saturday, March 10, 2012 at 2:28 pm; weighing in at 5 lbs, 8.7 oz, and 18 inches long. He came 18 days before his “due” date via induction.

This is the first of three posts detailing his birthing story.

As some of you know I had a pretty “textbook” pregnancy and I assumed that a complication free pregnancy would lead to a typical delivery story… boy was I wrong. On Monday, February 28, 2012 I went to my routine 36-week checkup and everything seemed fine until my doctor measured my stomach. For the first time he looked at my chart and re-measured, he then asked me when was the last time I had an ultrasound, which was 20 weeks since my pregnancy was “textbook.” He said the number was a little off and he wanted me to schedule an ultrasound for my next visit. I didn’t think too much of it and I was excited to see my little munchkin again. Well later in the week my husband mentioned it to his sister who is an OB/GYN and she told him the worst-case scenario, which was if they felt the baby wasn’t growing at the appropriate rate they would induce my labor. Of course hearing this freaked me out, but my husband reminded me that this was worse case and he highly doubted we were going to fall into that category. I decided to finish packing my hospital bag just in case, and we put it in the car for the next doctor’s appointment.

On Monday, March 5, 2012 we arrived at the doctor for our ultrasound and 37-week appointment. Baby S kept covering his face and we were only able to see his boy parts lol. The technician let us hear his heartbeat, which was very strong; and let us see his lungs and him practicing breathing. She took some measurements and we could see that he was measuring about a week and a half behind the “average.” After she finished we met with my doctor and he did his normal check of the heartbeat and measured me again. He seemed a little more pleased with the measurements this week, but then he pulled out the technician’s results. He explained to me that they were a little concerned about his weight at this point, but his fluid levels were good and he was proportional. He said he wanted me to go to a perinatal specialist that week, so they could take a look at the placenta and make sure he was getting enough nutrients. He reiterated what my sister-in-law had told us about inducing my labor if they didn’t feel he was getting enough, but that he highly doubted this would happen.

I didn’t believe him. When we got home, I started attempting to put together his pack n’ play, so he would be able to sleep in our room. My husband reminded me that we still had three more weeks and for me to just relax, but I was completely freaked out.

The next morning we arrived at the perinatal specialist where I filled out a ton of paperwork and waited to be seen. The ultrasound technician came in and asked a few questions. She then showed us our son’s heartbeat and lungs just like we saw the day before. She also showed us his umbilical cord and let us know that the blood supply looked great, but nothing about the placenta. She did some measurements and told us the doctor would be in to see us and take a few scans of her own. The doctor came in and asked a few questions. She took some scans and then told us that Baby S was measuring 2.5 weeks behind the average at this point. Her estimation was 5 lbs, 4 oz, which was 5 oz less than our doctor’s technician said. She told us that it looked like my placenta had started to calcify and that she would talk to my doctor to determine if they wanted to induce me before the week was out. As soon as she left the room, I burst into tears. My husband held my hand and reminded me that the most important part was getting our son here and that he was healthy.  She came back and said that my doctor would call me later that day, but that they both agreed I should be induced before the end of the week.

As we were walking out all I could think was that somehow I had failed my child already and he wasn’t even outside of me yet. I also couldn’t stop thinking about the fact that this would totally kill my birthing plan, and from all the research I’ve seen the statistics for first time mothers who are induced doesn’t end well. More often than not those women end up having c-sections and I absolutely did not want to go that route.

We called our parents and gave them an update, and headed home to start preparing. I got online and started researching calcifying placenta and induction. Initially the information I found made me feel like the doctors were expecting me to have a bigger baby because that’s the norm nowadays; but I’m a pretty small woman and I ate relatively healthy the entire pregnancy (very little processed or fast food). In addition, my husband was under 7 pounds when he was born, so I never expected to have a 8 or 9 pound baby. I started to read up on all the side effects of induction again, and I told my husband I didn’t think I wanted to go through with it anymore. If our son had to come early, I wanted it to be on our terms and maybe we could do natural things to induce my labor. He agreed and we came up with a list of questions to ask the doctor, when he finally called.

In the meantime, we went to pick up the baby’s car seat from UPS (long story), and stopped into Target to buy onesies for a less than 7 pound baby. By 5 pm my doctor still hadn’t called and I know they take their last patient at 4:30, I started to think that the perinatal specialist had been a little overzealous in her assessment. We went to bed that night convinced we were not going to have a baby this week, and ready to refuse induction.

 

To be continued…

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