**second part of long post**
Nothing came close to what happened to my body in birthing. I went in
pretty sure it was going to be fine, for I knew I could cope with, and
recover from, immense pain. I had a space in my head I could go to, to
distance myself from what was happening. It was what I did when the ear
wick was pushed through, and I actually told people I'd have no problem
with the birth, as having endured that, nothing could top it. I thought
I'd just pop in and revisit that peaceful space if it got too bad -
after all I was 42, first birth, morbidly obese and already crippled
with pain by SPD - it may hurt a lot. There were huge reasons for not
undergoing an epidural, not least of all was my position as sole carer
for my husband and there being no other support at all for us - I could
not afford a spinal injury from bad aftercare just as I could not afford
a caesarian: no one was going to be taking care of this baby but me.
The hospital had been kind enough to order from another unit, an
electric 'superbed' that would carry my weight and move me around as
required should I end in in surgery (as everyone predicted I would.)
I'd been on oral pethidine for the last week until the induction for
pre-eclampsia, and on IV pethidine whilst in the hospital.
Therefore, I would argue, that I was in a supremely good state to give
birth without pain medication. And, indeed, I coped with the ravening
beast that fell upon my body and ate me from inside out, for several
hours. The midwives and I were of one: we knew the risks to me of an
epidural, and I could not have received better support at not having
one. After 14 hours, I was at 3 cms. I was also not in the room. I
had left to a dark and nasty place that was not letting me go. I do
remember, in my screaming thinking about two things: I was only ever
screaming on an out breath, so my baby should be fine, and at last, I
could scream. I was _allowed_ to scream in child birth. This second
feeling of relief was short lived as the midwives piled in on me to stop
me screaming. They did it nicely, and with great concern, I was
screaming far too long on said outbreath, and they were worried. But I
felt robbed . I also, I now realise as I type this, fell more deeply
into the pain after the release of screaming was taken from me.
I came to with my birth partner standing over me, me sitting on the end
of my bed, wondering why my back was freezing. She and the midwives had
watched a reluctant anaesthetist try and insert three tubes into me, one
after the other, during contractions. Whenever the contraction came, I
moved slightly up off the bed. He was shouting angrily at me and
telling me I was going to put myself in a wheelchair if I didn't stop
moving. He had been at the point of calling to have me removed to
theatre, when my birth partner, bless her, leaned into me and brought me
back into myself by the power of her will. She locked eye to eye with
me and called me back into myself. I sat, in silence, and did not move
a muscle through two contractions, whilst the baboon behind me finally
got the tube in. I was stone, chanting that my baby needed a vaginal
delivery, and I would not move.
The previous guy had been a wonder - I hate shift changes! As the agony
receded, I became aware of a huge tension in the room, and how utterly
furious the midwives were by how I'd been treated as he'd shouted at me
not to move during a contraction - by his trying to insert the tube
during a contraction. They refused to make eye contact with him, and I
could hear their scribbled notes practically tearing the paper as they
wrote. Steam poured from their ears and I fancied I could see blood
trickling down from their pursed lips as they bit their tongues. They
knew I was not the shy and retiring type and they were wondering where
this would lead. He was bristling up for a fight. I reduced him to
slime by thanking him quietly for doing all the could for me, and how
grateful I was, and he dribbled away under the door. He'd been
terrified of putting in a tube to someone as overweight as me, even
though my back hasn't got much fat on it: he'd been furious his senior
had said I could have one, and apoplectic I'd only requested one after
the senior was off duty. I'm pretty sure he felt I was a pathetic
wretch for making so much drama about some pain.
I still needed air and gas, even on top of the epidural, as the pain in
my cervix, which was what had thrown me utterly I suppose, was so sharp
and tearing and utterly about damage and fear and shredding, was still
too strong. My lead midwife sat with me for several minutes, adjusting
the drip patiently up and up, until I was no longer in pain. I never
lost feeling in my legs. This is an important point, for they've found
with patients who claim to be in more pain that they 'should' be, that
even seeming overdoses of things like morphine, do not not overwhelm the
system if the person really is in a lot of pain. And also, most self
medicating patients, stop the medication at a pain level below that
chosen by the 'expert' - where they can still 'feel'.
Cathy talked about breastfeeding being healing - and I cannot agree with
her more. For I have connected with my body in a way I never ever had,
my entire life, through breastfeeding. But, actually, that journey
began there and then, in the birthing room. For as I sat, feeling my
baby push through me, out and onwards cm by cm, and wondering if the
'ring of fire' would hurt under this amount of pain relief (it did!) I
heard my body talk to me clearly. It was whispering to me, as I sat and
chatted and relaxed and dozed. It was saying "Please don't ask this of
me. I cannot do this. I cannot make it. Please don't ask this of
me." So I sat, free to do so, freed from the agony that had stopped me
thinking, stopped me being in charge on my body, and told my body it
could do it, and it would, and Hugh was born without complication and
latched on and was suckling before the cord died, and I had no stitches
or any other intervention. When my OB arrived in the morning, she was
sleepy and tired, as she'd spent the night literally waiting for the
phonecall to come in, and had actually booked the theatre for me before
she left for home. She was shocked to her core, but incredibly
pleased. (That's for all you that 'know' which Mums will make it, and
which ones won't! ;-)
Now, I said this was about breastfeeding, and it is. But I don't have a
'pain' story about breastfeeding, so the birth one has do stand in for
that. And the detail is there, because we often talk about walking a
mile in other people's shoes here. Sometimes we talk about always doing
it, sometimes we get annoyed with others doing it more than we think the
mother 'deserved'. We get so fed up with women giving up at the pain of
a hang nail, we make sweeping generalisations about not needing pain
relief, or about a bit of back bone being all that's required.
My point is, that when it comes to pain, no one can walk a mile in some
people's shoes. Well, at least, not without this amount of detailed and
powerful writing! Sure, there are loads of women, dis-empowered, have
been taught helplessness at their mother's knee, listened to the horror
stories etc etc etc, who do run away and hide at the first 'ouch' of a
latch. I accept that utterly. (Just as I see my son fall off a
climbing frame with a bruising bang and pull himself up and go back on
again, whilst I see more precious flowers bump one finger, and scream
the place down.)
But there are also strong, determined, self-aware, bold brassy and
self-empowered woman who say "You know, this hurts really badly..." and
I wonder how often they are listened to? In the move to re-assert the
naturalness of birth and breastfeeding, and the power of woman, I fear
we are often dis-enfranchising the most powerful of us.
I've been involved this week in online support of a young first time
Mum. Baby is 13 days old, and her nipples were 'ripped up' in the first
few days. She's had LLL latch advice in, latch has been corrected, but
positioning is poor. Baby is gaining well. She came online to say
"This is excruciating. I'm considering pumping it's so bad. My nipples
are still being ripped up. Tell me it's okay?" Loads of advice about
carrying on lathering in Lansinoh, working on positioning, keeping on in
there. I mention she check for tongue tie and Reynaud's. All hell
breaks loose - how can I be so negative? Can't I just accept it can
hurt, and tell her to keep going? Women don't need to be told there is
something wrong for a bit of normal pain?
Mums with tongue tied babies come in, and ask about nipple shape.
Nipple is out of shape after pull off. More disagreement - look it's
only a bit of pain, everyone can get through it, let's not put bad
thoughts into women's heads: no one needs to be told there might be
something _wrong_. They just need to be told it will get better, and to
keep on with it.
Hmmm....? "Excruciating" "Torn" "Ripped Up"
Sometimes, ladies and gents, if we say it hurts too much - it does. Not
only can you not actually walk a mile in most people's shoes when it
comes to pain - you have no way of knowing how not being listened to
will effect the mother. I have friends who kept on in there, in total
agony, until it 'magically' lifted - usually at about six weeks. One
friend, on asking the midwife for help for the pain, was advised to bite
down on a stick. Which she did, every feed, for six long weeks. She'd
cry at the thought of a feed, pull herself together, wipe the tears
away, put the stick in her mouth and then pick up the baby and try not
to scream out loud. She had screamed a few times, and she was terrified
she was scarring the baby mentally. She had air and gas for birthing,
and states that breastfeeding hurt more than giving birth - lots more.
She is incredibly compassionate about women who give up from nipple
pain. She listens, and absorbs and sometimes, when she talks, I can see
healing happening around her. She never actually talks about her own
pain to them, but how she listens to other mothers describe how nipple
pain defeated them... they don't feel judged. I wish I could bottle
whatever it is she does, for I know it's usually such mothers that are
so violently vocal about formula versus breastfeeding.
For myself, my birthing pain was so intense, that even now, 3 years
later, I experience actual physical sensation in my cervix from even
thinking about it. It's reduced down to a tightness, and an unpleasant
ache, but for over a year it was so intense, it was like a knife being
stuck into me, deep between my legs. I presume there was scar tissue on
my cervix, from the years of sexual abuse... but who knows? All I know,
for absolutely certain, is if I'd been born a hundred years ago, and had
to do that birth without an epidural, I don't think my baby would have
been breastfed, which would probably mean he'd have died from a murder
bottle, as I'm working class. I think there is a strong risk I'd have
rejected mothering him. I think saying I wouldn't have survived the
birth physically is a bit of a long shot - after all, there was nothing
'wrong' with the birth - it was only pain. But emotionally, I may not
have made it through enough to establish effective breastfeeding. So
maybe I'm saying if he'd been born, from that birth, prior to epidural
but post-formula, he'd have made it - at a distance.
But I've only just wondered now, if he'd have made it on breastfeeding,
if I'd have significant nipple pain.... for since the birth, my ability
to cope with pain has been shot, in precisely the way my husband's is if
he stubs his toe badly. It is returning, my pain threshold, but it is a
shadow of what it was. It means I can listen to him better, when he's
moaning about a stubbed toe: I understand what's happened: I understand
the stubbed toe was the straw that broke the back of the control.
As it was, thanks to the epidural, I'd spent several hours relaxing,
dosing and regaining contact with my baby, and was in a fit state to
ward everyone off over the first few hours (in fact, I marched out of
the hospital at 2am, as soon as I could walk... but that's another
story!). Feeding him did hurt for the first coupla of weeks, but it was
a stretchy kind of 'good' pain. It reassured me, as I knew he was
latched on properly when I felt it.
When the research came out last year about epidurals reducing the chance
of effective breastfeeding, I pondered long and hard on this. As I,
personally, felt it had helped me to breastfeed, not hinder me. So I
asked in the community I post into most often, and off about 300 women
who replied, most of whom were exclusively breastfeeding, 62% stated
they felt their epidural had helped them establish breastfeeding. But
only 35% said they'd have one for the second birth, which I felt was
very encouraging. Many said now they knew their bodies could cope,
they'd hope not to have another one. This so contradicted the evidence,
I wondered if we need not to look at those who'd given up on
breastfeeding, and correlated it to the epidural, but those who'd made
comment about extreme pain, and then succeeded in breastfeeding. Which
brings us back to the point... mentioning extreme pain.
Our wonderful Listmother, Rachel Myr, said in this thread, that 5% of
women require caeserians. I'd really like it if we had a figure, just
as low, but realistic, for how many mothers require serious pain
relief. For I'm telling you - no matter how you feel about crunchie
birth and how natural the process is and how we don't need hospitals and
interventions - some of us need pain relief. Just like when we say we
have serious nipple pain - we mean it.
And it's not because we are weak. :-) Neither is it because we've
been duped by culture.
Finally, I hope the wonderful Cathy knows that I spring boarded off her
excellent post, and that nothing I've said about other people commenting
on weakness and pain in this one, is to suggest she said that, or meant
it in the slightest. I agree utterly with every comment she made - some
people do give up on a hang nail and whinge if they stub their toe - and
they have no cause too! And if any of us take mothers complaining of
nipple pain seriously - it's Cathy! :-)
Apologies to those who feel this is too off-topic. I personally think
it is about breastfeeding - there is a point where you can't separate
birth experience from effective breastfeeding. And, like I said, I
don't have any pain stories about nipples! :-)
Morgan Gallagher
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