thread: Is what I said stupid?

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  1. #1
    Registered User

    Dec 2008
    1,431

    Honestly.... kinda. Its just that I *knew* everything about labour & birth too before I had my baby... and its different for everyone. I know that you are getting educated about labour & birth and thats fantastic and I really hope that when its your turn that pain is productive, but for others it might just be pain.

  2. #2
    Registered User

    Dec 2006
    In the Angelic Realm
    1,675

    SG what you said isn't wrong at all hun.

    Im going to be gentle hun.

    I have a zero pain threshold. I was sh*t scared of birth. Yes, i fell pregnant, it was my decision and i knew it had to come out somehow. I was praying for a c/s the day i got a BFP.

    Fast forward 37 weeks, i began stressing at each OBs appt where i was told the head was down. I was freaking. Lucky at my 37 week checkup, i was told DS was transverse lie. I was over the moon. The had said the only he was going to come out was via c/s. That was the best news of my life.

    For DD i chose to have a c/s - again scared of the pain. Don't regret any of my birth choices.

    My 2 x c/s were great. I was up the next day for both of them and looked after my babies 24/7 even in hossie.

    So i can understand if people are scared of the pain. I know it doesn't last forever, but some people have a real phobia. I just wish that females are allowed to choose their birth choices, whether it be vaginal, drug free, drugged up, elective c/s. It is their body, so they should choose. Of course medical advice should always be taken in tricky situations, but if you want a c/s from the start, then you should have one.

    I hope you get your birth choice hun. I am waiting in anticipation for the day i read your pregnancy announcement

    Just my

  3. #3
    BellyBelly Member

    Dec 2005
    3,130

    i think if you said the exact same thing AFTER you have the baby no one would laugh at you. and i hope you still think the same way after bub comes along! :-) it is productive pain but it still hurts like hell! :-) i dont understand wanting a c-sect over a V birth either. it seems a lot scarier to me! and its kinda nice to go through all that hard work to get your bub. the other thing that doesnt make sense is it is gonna hurt no matter the size of the baby, bigger doesnt necissarily mean less pain. DD2 was bigger than DD1 and i coped with that labour a lot better! :-)

  4. #4
    Lucy in the sky with diamonds.

    Jan 2005
    Funky Town, Vic
    7,070

    I got the best advice from one person and it resonated with me through all my births. It was given to me by my BROTHER.

  5. #5
    Registered User

    Feb 2005
    Sydney
    2,597

    What you said wasnt dumb at all, you havent experienced labour yet, and your right it is a productive pain. I agree Henry G's book is good I read that and also did hypnobirthing too in my first labour.

    To be honest with you I was in labour for 36 hours ending in emergency c/s , for me the labour was far more painful than the c/s and recovery, everyones experience is different, and chose with my 2nd baby never to go through it again and had an elective c/s. (Also for medical reasons)

  6. #6
    Registered User

    Jun 2006
    Where the sun shines brightly!
    906

    Unfortunately these women sound very ignorant, uneducated and unempowered about the whole birth process and just what the female body is capable of. Labour certainly is productive pain, but the silly thing is, the painful part is the contractions (especially toward the end), not the actual delivery of the baby from the birth canal - that is nothing compared to the contractions - at least for me and other women I've spoken to!!
    All this fear about a baby coming out of your vagina is ludicrous. Just turn on the discovery channel and you will see every mammal doing it - its natures way.
    I would send them each a copy of Henci Goers Book - The Thinking Woman's Guide to a Better Birth. They are probably completely unaware of the risks of a c-section - and how it can increase the chances of miscarriage and uterine rupture in a subsequent pregnancy, not to mention higher rates of PND due to the absence of endorphins, and feeding problems in the baby due to the antibiotic residue in breastmilk (necessary to prevent infection after c-section).
    Oh - and another thing - all that stuff about having a big baby is another bulldust way to frighten women into a c-section. A 6 pound baby will often have the same head circumference as a 9 pound baby - a couple of pounds of meat on the arms & legs is not going to make an ounce of difference once the head has been birthed. The baby will look a little healthier, is all!!
    Last edited by JellyBean; September 19th, 2009 at 12:44 PM.

  7. #7
    Registered User

    Mar 2004
    1,547

    'Big' babies do not hurt any more than average sized babies. I have done both - I had two 7lb babies and then my third was 9lb. I can definitely say that my first birth hurt a lot less than the next two - but that is only because I had an epidural! Other than that, the pain was not worse with my third than my second. Labour hurts - full stop. But I would not be looking at a c/s as a way of avoiding the pain, after all it is major abdominal surgery - hardly pain free.

    sg- I don't think what you said was silly, labour pain is productive pain. But it still hurts like hell - in a way that you won't understand until you experience it yourself (sorry if that sounds patronising, I don't mean it to, it's just that it's true) - and when you are in the thick of it, there will be a point where all you want is for it to stop. I guess these days, with all the pain relief options available to us, many women feel like labour pain is unnecessary, even though it is productive - why make yourself a martyr if you can have an epidural and feel nothing?

    ETA - I agree with Jellybean, there is too much fear about vaginal birth. I do find it hard to understand how someone can be less afraid of having major surgery while they are awake, than of having their body do what it is designed to do and give birth vaginally. I am not saying that it's wrong to feel that way, I just don't understand it myself.
    Last edited by bon; September 19th, 2009 at 12:51 PM.

  8. #8
    Registered User

    Feb 2006
    NSW Central Coast
    5,301

    I don't think it was silly at all. I think it's all the way people *think* of the pain of labour and birth. I was petrified of having a c/s, and thankfully I didn't have to. I was in pre labour with DS for almost 2wks, and gave birth in an hour. The pain of birth does not bother me. The pain of labour is more 'hurty' and annoying for me than actually giving birth. I was in labour for almost 24hrs with DD. I was threatened with a c/s and pushed like hell to get her out to prevent it. Luckliy it worked. To me the pain of a c/s would have been 100 times worse than the pain of labour and birth. BUt again that's just what I think. Maybe for those women, the thought of labour and birth is worse than the thought of a c/s. And for you and I, the thought of labour and birth isn't as bad as the thought of a c/s. Everyone is different.

  9. #9
    Life Subscriber

    Jul 2006
    Brisbane
    6,683

    New Active Birth is a great book too - it really helps you to know how to manage your birth to stop it slowing down and to best cope with the pain.

    There are many different reasons why women choose c/s over vb, and choose pain relief during labour. Some of these are for very good reasons. But there are too many times when women who could have had a pain relief free vb don't - mostly due to fear (and with all the horror stories people tell, no wonder!) and also due to lack of information about how to position yourself to help the labour and breathe through the contractions. I wish I had known what I know now before I went into labour for the first time!

  10. #10
    Registered User

    Jun 2007
    ...not far enough away :)
    1,413

    The wierd thing for me is I am the opposite, I almsot pass out at the thought of a c-sect & it's my greatest fear. But I can't go to the dentist either LOL!

    I agree each to their own in choices, you can choose a c-sect or not........you are given the choice & yes if you have your reasons you have them. I will agree to that.

    But as they say you shouldn't comment til you've had bubs you might think differently. Well perhaps they shouldn't comment until they've pushed bubs out IYKWIM. I get annoyed when people say "oh glad I had a c-sect...couldn't have pushed that out"...well you don't know that you couldn't & it's very different to how you birthed so perhaps keep that one to yourself.

    Nothing stupid about what you said! And I"m not trying to be rude about those who have had or chose a c-sect. I just think you can only comment on what you have experienced yourself. I actually think what your friends said make them sound a little like twats.

  11. #11

    Jul 2009
    Out North, Vic
    8,538

    What you said was not dumb at all and i think you should be able to say what you believe.

    Even though DD's birth was not what i expected and was far from PAIN FREE i did what needed to be done i have my beautiful girl for it, as you said the pain is a productive pain... if everything in life was easy we would all be millionaires, if we never went though pain we would never learn a lesson.

    I am so grateful that DD didn't want to wait for me to get to hosp as i would not have been given any choice about a c/s, i am soooo glad i avoided it even through a risky situation.

    Stand up for what you believe in and don't let anyone make you feel stupid over it!

  12. #12

    Nov 2007
    Earth
    4,434

    Thanks for the support ladies!

    I have a fairly different view on things than my family - they call me a 'tree hugging chicken spanker' -so I don't usually say much about my choices or opinions. I shouldn't have let myself be pulled in to the debate I ended up saying that they'd HAFTA believe me when I finally have a baby, coz I'd definitely be doing it completely drug free and at home if possible So hopefully it won't be thrown back in my face one day...

    TD - thanks for sharing your story I didn't mean to make anyone think that they had to justify wanting a CS, it was more about being blown off. Thanks for being gentle

  13. #13
    Registered User
    Follow Pandora On Twitter

    Jan 2005
    cowtown
    8,276

    I had 2 10lb babies.
    First was induced, very painful labour, had gas, 2 hours of pushing.
    Second, wasnt sure if it was proper labour until I was almost at transition, 5 minutes of pushing, still very apinfula nd me telling mw i didnt want to do it anymore.

    I agree with you, I think it is productive pain, but not everyone sees it that way.

  14. #14
    Registered User
    Add fionas on Facebook

    Apr 2007
    Recently treechanged to Woodend, VIC
    3,473

    I don't want to turn this thread into a Fiona's debrief but I also went into it thinking of it as productive pain and that worked a treat for the first two days. By the third day I was seriously flagging. As my ob said to me beforehand, the LENGTH of the labour has a hell of a lot to do with it. I honestly don't know why women can't accept that their experience of labour may not be the same as someone else's.