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thread: Birthing on all fours

  1. #19
    Registered User

    Apr 2007
    Inner South East suburbs Melbourne
    1,213

    I've delivered twice in this position and easily find it the most comfortable. I feel less vulnerable, more in control, and it hurts less! I haven't had any tears in three of my five deliveries (one tear six stitches labour #1, lithotomy position, 1 small tear, 1 stitch labour #2, knees to chest position), so I can't say if it made a difference there.

  2. #20
    Registered User

    Nov 2006
    Atop the lookout...
    2,777

    I was too exhausted to stand, I actually knelt on the bed, maybe on all fours, or leaning on the headboard? I had two small tears I think, three stitches, nothing serious at all. It seemed the only comfortable way to go at the time. For pretty much all my serious contractions I was laying on my side, and for each new contraction I had to switch sides! ALL my pain was in my back!

    I am DEFINATELY going to have to read active birth, and work on my leg muscles! Make that ALL my muscles! One uber unfit and no-stamina chick here!

  3. #21
    Registered User

    Mar 2007
    6,900

    Some more things I just read in new active birth about not tearing:

    "Use your own hands to feel the baby's head when it begins to crown and to ease the tissues or even massage them with a little oil. Interestingly, mothers who use their own hands to help the baby out rarely tear."

    "Giving birth in a darkened room with as few people as possible, so you can let go without feeling 'watched', is the best way to avoid a tear"

    "Feel free to shout spontaneously as the baby emerges - as your throat releases, so will your perineum!"

  4. #22
    Registered User

    Oct 2005
    North Queensland
    2,528

    "Feel free to shout spontaneously as the baby emerges - as your throat releases, so will your perineum!"
    That could've been the reason I did'nt tear! Cause I did some serious shouting.

    Looking back on the video...my peri did some serious stretching!

  5. #23
    Registered User

    Apr 2008
    The Purple House, Sydney
    1,811

    I wish I'd been in some other position instead of sitting up and leaning back in the bed (I had a foetal heart rate monitor attached so moving around unfortunatley wasn't an option). I think the position I was in was responsible for the labial tear that i got- five stitches that finished just above my clitoris (I know, that's way too much info).
    I did months of peri massage thinking it would help me avoid tears. The irony is it probably did help me avoid peri tears, but made the labial one much worse...

  6. #24
    Registered User

    Oct 2007
    157

    I had no tearing.

    I laboured on a fitball (despite continuous external monitoring) and then when I started having that irresistible urge to push my cervix was checked on the bed. I requested to stand again in order to push but my midwife said there probably wasn't going to be much difference for me. I birthed on my side and held my legs up (I had very sore shoulders the next day haha).

    Why didn't I get a tear? My opinion is
    * I laboured on a fitball so Bub was in a GREAT position for birth.
    * I listened to my midwife and pushed when they said push and panted and 'held in it' when they said to stop.
    * I was bathed in a warm liquid 'down there' during the pushing stage to keep my muscles loose.
    * I automatically made my mouth into a little 'O' shape and breathed out. It always relaxes those muscles.

    IMO the best thing you can do is push at the right times and pant at the right times. Don't birth too quickly. Looking back, I wonder whether be able to stop pushing was even better for us than I thought, my baby's umbilical cord was wrapped 'round his neck and my OB was able to untangle it easily because I 'held the baby in' after I birthed his head.

  7. #25
    Registered User

    Oct 2007
    157

    I had a foetal heart rate monitor attached so moving around unfortunatley wasn't an option
    I would question the midwives about this next time 'round. I was hooked up to the foetal monitor for my entire labour - I was eventually induced about 18 days after my EDD - and I was able to labour on a fitball and to move about occasionally. I'm sure this isn't always possible, but I hope it can be for me again.

  8. #26
    Registered User

    Jul 2007
    Melbourne
    3,660

    I laboured my whole labout standing or squatting over a toilet. The first two contractions where I was pushing (but we didnt "know") was on all fours. Then she wanted to do an internal because she didn't realise i was pushing - personally I think she just didnt want me to birth him like that. Anyway, I birthed him on my back. I only had a tiny graze.

  9. #27
    Registered User

    Apr 2008
    Adelaide
    1,741

    I laboured on all fours for a while, was the most comfertable position and then changed to an assisted squat to deliver my DD. I did have a 1st degree tear but I felt that I couldn't stop pushing when the midwife told me to stop. I was also monitored as DD came early, but their was no way I could have coped on my back and luckily no one suggested it. My legs were like jelly afterwards though lol, I wasn't very fit but didn't notice the strain on them until after.

  10. #28
    Registered User

    Oct 2005
    North Queensland
    2,528

    I did have a 1st degree tear but I felt that I couldn't stop pushing when the midwife told me to stop.
    This is when its probably better if you either sit or lay down to stop the pressure of gravity pushing baby down onto your cervix even more.

    Just a bit of advice for next time! Good luck!

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