Oh, yes - water! I'm still so undecided...I can imagine messing about with the machine would be a bit of a distraction in terms of 'shutting off' your rational brain. I suppose the only reason I was considering it was because it was suggested to me that perhaps I might want a contingency plan for alternative forms of pain relief, just in case I find I can't handle labour. But I kind of think I want to handle it by myself, without other forms of pain relief (chemical or not)! I suppose if I hire one, I could always just have it there, in case, and have my husband be in charge of it so I don't have to think about it. Hmm...thanks so much for your thoughts on this!




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. A regular TENS machine for pain relief is a unit which has two dials to increase intensity and frequency of stimulation. If you were to use one of these in Labour, (I did) all you need to do is set it to the intensity and frequency that suits you and let it do its thing. As things progress, you will become desensitised to the stimulation so will need to turn up the intensity, and this is as simple as turning up one dial. You would not necessarily do this for each contraction, just as you needed it over time. (Or get your support person to do it). In this way, it works as a background pain relief according to the 'pain gate' theory of pain relief - basically, flood the neural pathways with stimulation of a particular frequency and the nervous system prioritises this message over your pain messages from Labour (it can only pay attention to so many messages at once!!) hence you don't 'feel as much pain. Also, as someone alluded to earlier, it also works by stimulating the section of the brain responsible for the release of pain mediating hormones... hence, more feel good hormones floating round your body. 
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