thread: Qu for the c/s mummies!!

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  1. #1
    Registered User

    Jul 2006
    6,869

    Qu for the c/s mummies!!

    A fellow belly buddy lady made a good point in regards to researching now 'JIC' it does happen. But i dont know where to start looking. It scares me so much, the whole idea of being cut open, the thought i didnt 'deliver' the baby myself...my body failed me when its done it before, recovery time, not being able to hold my 2 DD's......all of it freaks me....i not sure how to deal with it. Ive read a few things on c/s and the more i read the worse i get. The idea of a epidural or spinal OMG i would hate to feel out of control

    VB are my dream and not a thing about them scare me. The process is amazing, what your body can do, how it handles it. Even the thought of tears or episiotomies (sp?) doesnt phase me...both times ive tore, both times local injections for stitches.....whilst i wont say i LOVED it...but i will so i loved every single second of both deliveries

    Any suggestions from past c/s mummies how to go about this??

  2. #2
    Registered User
    Add aussienic on Facebook

    Feb 2005
    Boyne Island
    6,327

    I have had 3 c/s and if you have any Qn's just ask away..

    I was so scared going in for my 1st one.. in fact I cried with all of them cus it is a very scary enviroment. But I get nervous with things like this and I cry when I am nervous lol

    Recovery is not as bad as some may think.. A lot depends on your frame of mind and how you deal with it all. (IMO) I am not going to sugar coat it and say it doesn't hurt cus it reall does hurt..

    That first time you get out of bed is just so damn painful.. but the 2nd and 3rd time I knew what to expect an I just breathed thru the pain.. I got out of bed at 5 hours post ceasar the 3rd time..

    Anyways any other Qn's shoot

  3. #3
    BellyBelly Member

    May 2008
    1,110

    A couple of things that might help - you won't be able to lift your DD's. That doesn't mean you can't hold them - they'll just have to snuggle up beside you on the bed or sofa. And you do get mobility back pretty quickly - the first day after the surgery was pretty yuk, with a catheter and a drip and some vaginal bleeding still. The second day was so much better - able to move around independently and do most of the baby-looking-after.

    The spinal that I had was a very strange feeling - but inserting it wasn't the ordeal I expected it to be. The local stings, but it does its job well, and you really only feel pressure. And again, it wears off in a few hours. They use cold to check that you really are numb (if you can't feel cold then the pain-fibres are also knocked out) and also to monitor the return of feeling.

    The "it shouldn't happen this way" is a difficult feeling to deal with. You're not going to be having a Caesar for fun - it's going to be because it is in the best interests of you or your bub. So in the end if that's what's needed you have to accept it as something that just has to be got through.

    There are C-section preparation workshops at some hospitals too - it might be worth attending one of these later on.

  4. #4
    Registered User
    Add C~Q on Facebook

    Oct 2006
    By the sea
    2,191

    I have had a VB, a C/S and a VBAC and to me they are all just "different" ways of giving birth. When I found out I was going to have a Caesar it didn't disapoint me, it was just different. She was born at 12.04am and I was walking around mid morning. As aussienic said, getting up the first time is scary more than painful, you THINK you're going to tear (you won't).

    This may sound blunt and I don't mean it to but I think some people over think things. It's one thing to be prepared but another to fill your head with all the scary things about Csecs that can happen when you probably won't even need one.

    We're not having anymore children but if I was pregnant I would obviously prefer a VB but if I were told I would have to have a Caesar it would not phase me. I would gather support around me for the first few weeks after I got home then bang - life as normal.

    I hope for your sake you don't need one, but please don't worry too much about it

  5. #5
    Registered User
    Add aussienic on Facebook

    Feb 2005
    Boyne Island
    6,327


    This may sound blunt and I don't mean it to but I think some people over think things. It's one thing to be prepared but another to fill your head with all the scary things about Csecs that can happen when you probably won't even need one.
    I agree,, Sometimes it is easier to go with the flow.. yes be informed of what is going to happen and what to possibly expect afterwards.

  6. #6
    Registered User

    Feb 2008
    on a journey called life, finding our way home
    629

    wow I think you all said it so well. Be informed but dont over worry. I have had 2 C/S and as scary as they are. It is ok, you will cope better than you probable think you would if you HAD to have one. And i think that is important, like FMN said its not for fun, its to help your baby.
    I hope everything goes the way your want

  7. #7
    Registered User

    Jul 2006
    6,869

    Thanks heaps ladies....

    Another silly question:

    Now im sure its not the case...but is an emergency c/s and elective both done the same way?

    By that i mean the emergency one is a 'rough job' is it...like they take the same amount of care? I automatically think 'emergency' and it being a rushed 'hurry and get the baby out, miss all the importnant stuff' just to get bub out asap.

    Does that make sense?

  8. #8
    Moderator

    Oct 2004
    In my Zombie proof fortress.
    6,449

    The main thing to remember with emergency c-sections is that everyone will be on auto pilot and just do what they normally do. So if you want something a bit different they may forget, so don't be afraid to speak up and say something.

    I had it listed in my birth intentions what I would like to have happen if I needed another c-section. My midwife knew what we wanted as I had discussed it all with her and she was their to help follow my wishes where possible. My main thing was getting breastfeeding established quickly and to make sure if bubs and I were separated that someone was to hold bubs till I was ready, no going to the nursery. So glad I thought about it as I had a emergency c-section under a general.

    So best to be positive about the possibility and have plans in place in case it does happen, it seems to be easier to handle if you do so.

  9. #9
    BellyBelly Member

    May 2008
    1,110

    There are a couple of differences - putting in a spinal and having it work takes time (10 mins or so), which in a real emergency you may not have. So some emergency CS are under general anaesthetic. If you already have an epidural in from the labour then they will try to use that for the CS as well.
    The other difference is that you don't get to choose who performs your emergency CS - you get the obstetric registrar or whatever obstetrician is closest!
    If your bub is in distress then the paediatrician gets priority access, regardless of whether it is emergency or planned.
    The get-the-baby-out part of an elective CS is over very quickly anyway (my forms list "labor" as 3 mins from cut to placenta out...). Stitching you back together and cleaning up takes some time - which if bub is OK and you are awake you will be able to spend getting to know bub.

  10. #10
    Platinum Member. Love a friend xxx

    Jan 2008
    hoppers crossing
    2,380

    i hasd a c/s with my son but had no choice or say in it it had to be done. i was sooooooooooooo nervous and scared but the nurses made me feel so much better they talked to me and explained all that was happening and it wasnt comfy at first but the worse bit is after when it starts to wear off....the pain for me lasted a night but it was worth it for a healthy son

  11. #11
    Registered User

    Nov 2007
    Gold Coast, Australia
    397

    Kim hun, make sure you give them that birth plan at your last antenatal appointment!! so at least if they try and give you any greif then you have time to fight for your rights.

    eg: immediate skin to skin
    Sheet being lowered etc upong babes arrival.

    Yep 3.5 months of horrid bleeding, i had an ultra sound and they left a whole heaps of membranes in me. My OBGYN wanted me to D&C it, but i refused.... i had enough invasive procedures carried out.

    You can make it very beautiful for yourself, but i understand your dissapointment.

  12. #12
    Registered User

    Jan 2008
    109

    I had no choice but to have a cs. I am very litte 4ft 8. My ob gyn basically put it like this. You will need cs. If waters break it is bye bye baby. Yes scared the cr@p out of me. I had scheduled cs and had spinal. Was awake the whole time. Got to hold DD while they stitched and cleaned me up. Got to breastfeed her in recovery. Loved every moment of her birth.
    Was at first disappointed that I had to have cs. I also then was not able to breastfeed. Look at my DD now and have no sense of disappointment.
    It was painful at first but not nearly as bad as I thought it would be. I was somewhat amazed. I remember it being painful when I first got out of bed but was surpirsed at how quick I recovered.
    Yep I would do it all again if I was to be so lucky!!!!!

  13. #13
    Registered User

    Sep 2005
    In the middle of nowhere
    9,362

    Kim, I had one of those code red type emerg c/sec. They said at 7.21 we need a ceasar NOW and at 7.29 she was in the world. No joke, you can't see my scar. it was a rush job sure, but they are as professional as if it were planned. Even more so. These people have trained for years to do that. I was up and about hour after and rarley felt any pain associated.
    I didn't plan it that way but it had to be done.
    Use some positive affirmations.
    Ask if you can see the inside of a theatre so it isn't so foreign.
    Your body doesn't 'fail' you. I'm greatful there was a medical intervention tha allowed my daughter to be born alive.

  14. #14

    Mar 2004
    Sparta
    12,662

    I had no choice but to have a cs. I am very litte 4ft 8. My ob gyn basically put it like this. You will need cs. If waters break it is bye bye baby. Yes scared the cr@p out of me. I had scheduled cs and had spinal.
    My mother in law is about your height and birthed vaginally three times. I think your ob might have been a bit irresponsible.

    I had an unexpected c-section in the evening. I was up and walking the next morning. I can barely see my scar now, there is no residual numbness in the site.
    It wasn't my birth of choice but nor was it a terrible or scary ordeal.

  15. #15
    BellyBelly Life Subscriber
    Add sushee on Facebook

    Sep 2004
    Melb - where my coolness isn't seen as wierdness
    4,361

    My sister is well under 5 ft and had a VB for 2 of her 3 children. She had a c/s for her last because her surgeon convinced her that she was too small to birth a GD baby, but in the end her baby wasn't a whole lot bigger than her other two, and she is now certain she could have birthed her vaginally as well.

    So I think size doesn't really play as big a part as your ob would have you believe. Small Asian women have been giving birth vaginally for years.

  16. #16
    Registered User

    Dec 2005
    In Bankworld with Barbara
    14,222

    I had no choice but to have a cs. I am very litte 4ft 8. My ob gyn basically put it like this. You will need cs. If waters break it is bye bye baby. Yes scared the cr@p out of me. I had scheduled cs and had spinal. Was awake the whole time. Got to hold DD while they stitched and cleaned me up. Got to breastfeed her in recovery. Loved every moment of her birth.
    Was at first disappointed that I had to have cs. I also then was not able to breastfeed. Look at my DD now and have no sense of disappointment.
    It was painful at first but not nearly as bad as I thought it would be. I was somewhat amazed. I remember it being painful when I first got out of bed but was surpirsed at how quick I recovered.
    Yep I would do it all again if I was to be so lucky!!!!!
    I hate to say it but you were lied to bigtime and he has basically coerced you into having a surgical birth for no medical reason at all. How do you think pigmy women give birth? That is so wrong it has made me really mad to read this.

    Women of ANY height can give birth - mother nature knew what she was doing when she made vagina's so damn stretchy. My mother, who is 5ft 1 gave birth to my sister who was 10lb14oz, 60cm long with massive shoulders with not a single tear or stitch, flat on her back with no drugs.

    Sorry for the big rant, its just that crap like this makes me really mad.

  17. #17
    Registered User

    Jan 2008
    109

    Trillian,
    In this case you are so very wrong. When I fisrt went to Ob Gyn I was very clear with him that I thought that because of my height that I would HAVE to have a CS. The midwife had told me that because I was under 5ft I had no option? This I believe is cr@p as did my ob. What is not Cr@p is that my pelvis was to small and my DD could not move down low enough for me to birth her naturally. The size of my pelvis has also to do with my height. My Ob Gyn did all the xrays, ultrasounds etc to be certain that this was they only option. Along with my hieght I have the bone structure of about a ten year old. So perhaps I should have explained it better. My Ob absolutely did not lie to me!!!!!!!!

  18. #18
    Registered User

    Dec 2006
    between the mountain & the ocean
    757

    after 12 hours of labour i ended up with an emergency c/s due to fetal distress.

    Almost 8 months later, I still find myself thinking about it all and wondering what would be if i didn't have to have the c/s. Would my son be born alive? would i have a better chance of being able to breastfeed? would i have bonded sooner with my son? all these things and many more enter my head almost every day.

    the physical pain was nothing to me, but the emotional part is huge! I thought at the time of the c/s that i was handling it well, but now as i look back, i'm pretty sure i think of it every day, so i can't tell you how to get over the emotional side of it as i'm still going thru it, but the physical side, the pain didn't last that long for me at all, i was showering 7 hours after my c/s and the only reason i stayed in hospital for 5 days was because i was trying to establish breastfeeding.

    I'm not really sure i want to go through all of that again, and I am seriously not considering another child at this stage because i would not want another c/s unless i was put asleep, and i don't want that at all.

    one thing i can definately say is make sure you have a birth plan that includes what you want in the case of a c/s. I didn't include any of these details on my birthplan, and I didn't get to hold my son properly until the next day when i eventually stopped vomiting (the drugs made me sooo sick).