Hi,
I am pregnant with my second child and after a beautiful waterbirth am ecstatic to have been accepted into the same birth centre again. DD is going to be 25 months old when this little one is due and if everything is going according to plan, I would love for her to be at the birth. It just feels right to me. We are a family and I don't see the neccessity to exclude her from this. My midwife is supportive of the notion.
My mother however is not. I want her to be at the birth again (she was there when DD was born, too). We had a discussion about it today and she's really critical of it. I know she doesn't have to understand, but I would like her to see my side. She only thinks DD would be traumatised.
I told ehr they have siblings at the birth centre all the time, but she said: "you don't know what goes on inside those children after experiencing that, seeing their mother in pain,..." I tried to explain that I think it is a beautiful thing to experience as a family, but she thinks that DD won't understand or remember in the long term. She just said: "Do you feel like you missed something because you weren't at your brother's birth?" WTF? How would I know if I missed out on something? I don't know it any other way.
I do however know that I was terribly distressed at having to leave him and my mum in hospital after my first visit. My parents didn't take me to see them again because I just screamed for hours because I wanted to take him home with me. This situation wouldn't happen at the birth centre anyway, because I would go home 4 hours after giving birth. But I just think it would be nice to have DD there right from the start, have her involved, if that is what she wants. Of course i would take her lead on this, if she doesn't cope, she doesn't have to be there.
My mum also doesn't believe that you can prepare a 2 year old for a birth as they just can't understand. I reckon she understands som much already and will understand so much more by then. I know she won't remember much detail, but I do want her to grow up thinking birth is normal and beautiful. Not something to be afraid of. It might stick in her subconsciousness...
Does anybody have some good arguments I could bring? I'm running mainly on instinct here, not a good starting point in an argument, IYKWIM.
Thanks, Saša
