PART 2
I had felt some niggles the evening before (39+6), starting around 8pm. They felt slightly different to the pre-labour I’d been having, but nothing worth getting excited about. We watched Finding Nemo with DD1 and I said to mum that I felt a bit funny, and she said I was probably dehydrated and that I should have a big drink of water and go to bed. I told her I was going to wake her up really early and pretend I was in labour, and she said she wouldn’t get up if I did that... I went to bed exhausted (having mowed the lawn that morning, haha!) and slept through what was probably a bit of early labour until about midnight when my first intense surge woke me up. I laid in bed, breathing through it. After another one, I decided to watch the clock for a bit and I had 6 over the course of an hour – 10 minutes apart, all consistently 40 seconds long and a very deep squeezing and pulling sensation that I knew was *it*.
At around 1am it was getting too uncomfortable to stay in bed so I got up, and messaged Cass because I was excited (although I probably should have just let her sleep lol). I woke DP up to let her know and she got up with me until 3am, when I sent her back to bed. I sat outside with our gorgeous Labrador, who sat with me through each surge. It was so peaceful on my rocking chair with my iPod on repeat and my dog-midwife at my side. I watched the sun come up and took myself down into a meditation and tried to harness the energy of the new day. Once the sun came up at around 4.30-5am my dog-midwife started to get a bit sooky and whiney and protective, and wanted to sit ON me through the surges, so I went back inside, tried to lay down in bed to rest for a bit but it was quite uncomfortable. DP got up with me and we had some ‘together’ time, just hugging and smiling and she massaged my back. The surges were getting closer together, coming around 8-10 minutes apart at 6am. I could breathe through them easily without any support or cues, although they were taking a little more effort to focus on the breath rather than the sensations. When I felt one building I felt restless, and I would seek out a quiet spot, a wall or a corner, and close my eyes and go into myself. I remember thinking that I was acting like a labouring cow – literally! – who was trying to find the most isolated and safest part of the paddock to birth in.
At 6am I messaged Cass again, and DP and I made pancakes. I woke my mum up, telling her I was in labour and that there were pancakes if she was hungry. She opened one eye, said “yeah right”, and rolled back over. HAHA! I said “no, mum, I’m serious...”, but she wasn’t convinced. I heard DP laughing in the kitchen, and I called out “I don’t know what I can do to make her believe me... maybe if I just have the baby right now...?!”. Mum eventually got up after my next surge, still not fully convinced! We ate pancakes between surges, and DP called her sister to get her to come and take DD1.
Things frustratingly slowed down when DD1 got up, and then again when DP’s sister arrived to take DD1 at around 7-8am. I needed them out of the house, and DP sent them away quickly. Things stayed around 10-15 minutes apart for an hour or two. I got cranky and had a cry, thinking it was all just pre-labour, doubting my body again. I walked around the garden and had a nap. DP sneakily messaged Cass and told her we needed her to come, even though I kept saying that I wasn’t ready to have anyone else here. Things picked back up around 10am(ish) when I got on the treadmill and did a slow walk for 30 minutes. The surges were getting more intense and I needed the physical cue of someone’s hand on my neck the help me keep my shoulders down and help my body relax. DP or my mum would jump in as soon as they noticed a surge coming on and keep their hand on my neck until I was ready for them to let go.
Cass arrived and things were getting faster again. DP, mum and Cass made spinach and fetta pie for lunch and things were going quickly at this stage, Cass kept saying that we might need to go before lunch was ready. Things were getting more intense but not difficult to work through. I remember being a restless cow during this stage again, and retreated to various parts of the house during a surge. Cass had her camera and was taking photos and during a surge I was oblivious to the sound of the camera, but if I was coming out of one and I heard the shutter I would have a little giggle and feel self-conscious.
We were still home when the pie was done, and I ate even though I wasn’t overly hungry, knowing it was important to keep my energy up. Things slowed down again. I was worried about the position of the baby – it felt like she was pushing down on the front of my pelvis and I worried she was stuck at the top. I chucked a little tanty, had a cry because I thought maybe my body wasn’t going to let my baby move down and out, and I got cranky, then Cass got cranky (lol) that I kept comparing this labour to my last labour, and then I had another little nap. Not a long nap, because I’d told everyone that I needed them to make me stay upright and active. Things started up again after my nap, and I vaguely recall vomiting some time between midday and 4pm, and at around 4pm-ish I had some honey toast. Things got really intense from there and I didn’t have much of a concept of time, as I stayed inside myself. I was quite vocal, and found that focusing and visualising the sound moving down and out through my cervix helped get through each surge. I needed a lot of touch and cues to breathe, relax, shoulders down. Cass said I was like an octopus, and they knew I was having a surge when I threw my arms around trying to reach for someone. I felt like I was in a safe bubble when I was near DP, and burying my head in her shoulder during a surge was where I felt safe and relaxed. I think at one point everyone thought I’d have the baby at home, and Cass actually whispered to me “do you plan on having the baby at home” and I laughed although I’m sure it was a totally serious question. I didn’t plan on it, although Cass knew I wouldn’t have minded!
There came a point, around 8-9pm where I went through my crisis point. The surges were tight, and stretchy, and pully, and lots of pressure. I felt movement down, and fullness. I lost it for a bit, vomited a few times, cried, and decided I wasn’t in labour, that if I went to the hospital they’d say that nothing was happening. In hindsight, it was transition, but I was convinced I wasn’t in ‘real’ labour. I had a split second where I was squatting next to my bed and I contemplated just going to the hospital to have another caesarean because I didn’t want to do this anymore. I remember saying that I was going to crawl under the bed and hide. Then I wanted to hide in my walk-in wardrobe. It seemed totally logical to me that I could just run away and hide from it all in a dark corner! A few surges were quite painful as I battled the thoughts in my head and let fear and tension take over. I dreaded each of those surges and fought the build up instead of relaxing and breathing. I am grateful that I was able to use the Hypnobirthing techniques and my whole labour wasn’t like that!!! Except for the few times when I resisted a surge and tensed up, the rest of my labour was very intense and pully and crampy, but not painful.
I’m not sure how long that lasted but once I had recomposed myself I remember knowing now was it. I was ready to get in the car and go to the hospital. I knew I needed to be in the place where I was going to birth. In fact, I said I was ready to go, and then I was sitting in the car with mum wondering why DP and Cass were taking so long. Luckily they didn’t tell me why they were taking their time – DP had rung the hospital and the midwife said my surges weren’t very close together and it was probably a bit early to go to the hospital. That would have definitely shattered my confidence and DP knew it.


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What a wonderful birth you had, despite the little troubles here and there. I'm so happy you got your healing birth, and your gorgeous little daughter to go with your bigger gorgeous daughter



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