Roy Merlin Piggott
Born November 27th, 1999
8 lbs 7 oz and 21"
The labor began with my water breaking at 5 AM. I listened for heart tones (120-130 right next to my left hip bone). The
medium menstrual type cramps had already started, so I timed them (3
min. apart and 45 seconds long). Even though they
didn't hurt, they were more uncomfortable lying down and not conducive
for sleep. John and Eddie were still sleeping, so I
decided to come tell all my internet friends and some IRL via e-mail. The contractions slowed to about 5 min. and were
completely painless (I had to put my hand on my belly to feel them).
It
was about 6AM when I was done, so I called my
mom first, who lives five hours away and needed to get off work. Then I
called Rhonda, my doula, just to give her a heads
up. I spent the next couple of hours draining the birth tub (I had been
using it to soak in for the last two weeks), taking a
shower, and just getting stuff together. I got John up at 8AM and
started putting him to work and made myself a
mushroom/cheese omelet. During this time, the contractions went from two
minutes then back to five, then three, etc. (not
consistent at all). I called my two friends who were to be here for the
birth (Shaunna the photographer, and Jennifer, who was
out of town, both fellow c/s survivors). I also called a local midwife
who sells birth kits (we only used the hat and a couple of
chux pads, sigh), something else we didn't order in time.
The
contractions would slow down when I was doing something that
required concentration (ie: thinking) then speed back up when I was
doing a mindless task. They were starting to get more
intense around 10:30, where I would lean over a counter, rock my hips,
and moan (for the endorphins). I got back in the
shower (John was still working on the birth tub), sat on the birth ball
and sang. My cervical opening was still too far to reach,
but I felt like I had thinned considerably. John called Rhonda, at my
request, as I was feeling the need of a good back rub
(my lower back was starting to ache). Eddie had woken up somewhere
during all of this and was taking up John's attention
(not that John wanted to do ANY labor support). Don't get me wrong, he
was very caring and asked me if I wanted
anything, etc, but we had decided early on in pregnancy that birth was
just not his thing and we would have others fulfill that
role, so we could both relax. I did get into the birth tub to smooth out
the wrinkles as it filled and Eddie joined me, but we got
out when he wanted to wrestle and dunk me (nothing like a 40lb two year
old hopping on your contracting belly).
By the time
Rhonda arrived with her daughter Elly (didn't look at a clock, maybe
11:30-12:00), I was able to walk through the
contractions, but not really talk (they were still doing a 2-5 min.
inconsistent pattern and very bearable). We talked and did a
mini blessingway (sigh). Shaunna arrived around this time with the birth
kit. We continued to visit while I rocked on the birth
ball and moaned trough contractions. Shaunna thought they were only
thirty seconds long, but I explained to her that they
started out at the peak and then tapered off, but were still going after
I stopped moaning. I was using a wonderful flax wrap at
this point also. Roy was kicking up high in between contractions and I
was tickling his foot. I thought it would be nice to do
heart tones again, so I went and laid down on the couch. Found the heart
beat by my left hip (a little lower) with my prenatal
listening device and then we waited for a contraction and Rhonda
listened (of course, they spaced out again). The next
contraction was very uncomfortable (how do women spend their entire
labor in bed). Rhonda heard some early decels, but it
picked back up again quickly, which is consistant with the way I was
feeling the contractions. I hopped off the couch before
the next contraction could come and decided to make a bathroom trip (my
bowels had been emptying consistently with the
3-4 previous trips). The toilet was another uncomfortable place to spend
a contraction. My vocalization at this time was quite
a bit louder. Rhonda thinks that if I had stayed on the toilet I would
have been giving birth much sooner than I did, which was
soon enough for me. I was more than ready for the birth tub by now and
headed straight there.
John got out his harp and
Rhonda, Shaunna and Elly went to the kitchen to get me some baby carrots
and some lunch for themselves. I had checked
my cervix shortly after entering the tub and could finally feel the OS
(cervical opening). I felt about 5-6 cms and 100 percent
(about the thickness of a t-shirt cuff) and it was 1:30 PM. on the first
bite of my second carrot, transition hit, I spit the bite out
and started moaning and rocking my way through the contraction. I tried
to sing the duet between Eponine and Marius from
Les Mis where the first line is, "Don't you fret M'sieur Marius I don't
feel any pain," and John and I both started laughing,
since it was obviously untrue. The next contraction, I tried sitting
down in the tub (the others I was leaning over the edge on
my knees). HELLO thigh pain! I couldn't get up, so just rode it out. The
next one I was back on my knees and the thigh pain
was still there (it was straight down the front of my legs, hip to knees
and just as intense as the pain in my lower belly). This
was also the contraction where his head came right on down and I even
had a few seconds of pushing urge in the middle.
I
checked my cervix and the head was already starting to spread my labia
(so this would be plus four!!!). This is also where
reality left and I was quickly losing it. I couldn't feel the edge of
the cervix and thought the head had come down without me
dilating fully (remember I was only a 5-6 twenty or so minutes before
hand). The next two contractions were full pushing
contractions, but I was fighting them thinking my cervix would tear. God
was very kind to me at this point and gave me a
couple minute break. I flipped over and supported myself with my hands
and feet (imagine a crab) and used one of my hands
to protect my perineum. Rhonda (having her first good view and it was
very visible) told me that it was the head (which I
knew, but thought it was pushing through my cervix) and I pulled myself
together and realized it was OK to push (well, sorta).
The next several contractions were of me going from pushing to panting
in an effort to stretch my perineum. When I would
squat, I couldn't stop pushing and needed to slow it down again. After
about half an hour, I couldn't stretch any more. I was
VERY vocal through all of this with deep instinctual grunting and
saying, "OUCH." Rhonda got in the tub with me and
supported the bottom while I supported the top (Shaunna was holding my
head out of the water and John was filming). She
was trying to encourage me to push him out, not realizing how tight I
was and that I was giving it everything I had. Rhonda
also noticed his scalp turn color and was getting concerned. It still
took a few more contractions and I decided that I was
going to tear and I would have to squat. I got the head out in the next
contraction and we waited for a minute so I could push
the shoulders out. They were also pretty snug and I was holding the
cord, so it would slip past his shoulder. This took one
and a half contractions. Then he was born and I quickly lifted him to
the surface, but the cord was short and wrapped around
his arm and neck and we had to untangle him first.
Roy was purple and a
little floppy, but he had made a little noise when I
first lifted him and I knew he was going to be fine (no one else was
panicking, but John wanted someone to re-assure him). I
sucked the dime size amount of mucus out of his mouth and he started
grunting. We continued to gently massage him and
Rhonda put the hat on. He was still a little blue after the first
minute, so I gave him a little puff in his nose, which he didn't like,
and that got him to cry just a little, then he was pink and lively, but
serene.
Shaunna thought to ask what time it was, and it
took Elly a few seconds to find a watch (everyone took theirs off) and
announced it was 2:40PM. Roy and I cuddled in the
tub for about fifteen minutes (I was expecting that wide eyed stare, but
he was resting). I stood up to deliver the placenta,
which we knew had separated due to the pink water, but wasn't getting
the urge to push. I had John get my "placenta out"
tincture and within seconds I was pushing. I didn't have good leverage,
so I squatted back down and pushed it out in a couple
of minutes. There was a bit of retained membrane, so Rhonda twisted it
till it let go. I knew I had a tear on my labia at this
point, because she would brush it every once in a while and that was
uncomfortable.
When I stood up again I realized I hadn't
breastfed yet, so I did. Roy latched on just fine (He was lying
peacefully in my arms this whole time). They helped me out of
the tub and over to the couch where I breastfed some more and we had a
photo-op (Roy was wearing his new Pooh outfit
by now). My mom made it about an hour after the birth, just in time to
help clean up.
I stood up to go rinse off and assess the
damage (John got Roy at this point), but had to sit right back down
thanks to a head rush. We waited a few minutes and tried
again. I made it to the next room and had to lean over the couch until
the dizziness went away. I had to stop once more
before we got to the shower in our bedroom (all the way at the opposite
end of our LONG house). Shaunna had Roy now,
since John was hovering in case I fainted. I sat on the birth ball in
the shower and aimed the shower head to rinse myself off.
Roy was acting like he wanted to eat some more and I was still feeling a
little faint, so we moved to the hall bathroom with a
tub and I got in with Roy, who promptly went back to sleep.
I examined
the placenta and found it healthy and intact (more
pictures were taken). John finished the Birthday cake and I had a bite.
After our nice bath, I climbed in bed. Rhonda got a
flashlight and my hand mirror and we started counting tears. The two on
the inner labia were pretty obvious. The one on the
left is pretty deep, but short and it is healing fine without any
stitching. The one on the right is probably considered a first
degree, and also not worth stitching. The three on the bottom are
between skid marks and first degree and very minor in my
opinion. I didn't check for any tears inside, since there was no
additional bleeding and if there are any they are healing also. I
have been using an herbal salve. I'm not complaining at all, I would
rather have five small tears than one huge episiotomy plus
a tear any day (and we all know that's what would have happened in the
hospital). The bleeding was also very manageable
and fine, but they wouldn't have let me out of bed in the hosp. and
would have tried to pump me full of pitocin and methegren
(sp?).
I was brought the left over steak from our anniversary dinner the
night before. Then I was ordered to drinks lots of
water and juice and rest. Everyone left around 8PM, except my mom who
stayed till Tuesday morning. Jennifer came the
next day and brought a scale. Roy weighed 8lbs 7oz, but I'm guessing he
was around 9lbs when he was born. He's 21 inches
long and has dark hair like his Daddy.
Now here's another observation that not everyone will agree with. I took
forty minutes to get his head past my perineum
which is why he had a slow start. Now if you think I'm choosing my peri
over my baby, you're wrong. I would have torn badly
if I hadn't controlled the delivery of his head, thus requiring a trip
to get many stitches and would have had to take my
newborn out into the germy world and fight whatever procedures they
wanted to do to him and possibly a report to CPS
from some "concerned" staff who can't fathom the idea of UC [unassisted childbirth]. I also have
faith that God and my instincts would let me know
if his health was in danger to the point that intervention was needed. A
few other reasons I'm very glad this was a homebirth;
my contractions were not consistant till the end and I would have had to
fight off pressure to augment, they would have cut
the cord on the perineum (if they hadn't talked me into another c/s for
fetal distress) and taken him away to "revive" him and
maybe even insisted on "observation," I don't even want to think what my
blood pressure would have been (extreme white
coat syndrome), and don't forget the need to be quiet so as not to scare
the other women.
I also can't imagine doing what I
did on land. The water not only helped with pain relief and stretching,
but I wouldn't have been able to get from one position
to the next in the short time I had between pushing contractions. The
only time pain medication entered my mind was at the
very end and I thought it might be easier to get his head out if I
couldn't feel the ring of fire. BUT, then we're back to the
massive epi [episiotomy] or tear (or both) and maybe FTP [failure to progress], etc. I am grateful for the
pain, because it helped me to ease his head out and
not do horrible damage. I also probably would be labeled as precipitous
delivery, since I dilated so quickly at the end and his
head came down in one contraction. Most of us would think of this as a
blessing, but OB's think of this as a complication and
reason to induce early for the next one.
I probably could think of many
more things they wouldn't have liked about my birth in
a hospital, but I'll stop here. It was the perfect birth for my family
and I. Praise God for blessing us with a wonderful
pregnancy, birth and baby.
~ Joy
Read the birth story of Joy's first son, Eddie.
Copyright 2000 by author
Used by permission