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Why does nobody talk about how trippy birth is?

98 replies

Sobloodyexhausted · 23/02/2021 09:34

I’ve had three babies and each birth (and subsequent week or so) was like being on heavy-duty mind altering drugs. All your senses change - food tastes amazing, colours are more vibrant, you see things from a new perspective, your brain functions differently (after my last birth I swear I became really wise, eloquent and insightful for about two weeks before the new born tiredness kicked in and it ebbed away).

It feels like this is a very well kept secret in Western society That it would somehow not be proper and seemly for a new mum to admit to tripping her tits off instead of experiencing more gentle feelings of love and serenity for her newborn?

It tickles me no-end that seemly ‘ordinary’ women like your grandma or Tina from accounts, or Mary who volunteers in the charity shop around the corner may have all experienced something so ‘out there’ it would make a 90’s raver swoon. How can women ever feel we are anything other than extraordinary and amazing having been through this and brought a new person onto the world? It’s at once earthy and crystalline shiny, raw and spiritual. An experience that changes you like no other.
Without meaning to sound like a hippy, I think it gives you an insight into the meaning of the universe that is totally unique. Even if you hold no religious beliefs I don’t think you can experience it without feeling you are part of something amazing and so much bigger than yourself. After giving birth I’m no longer afraid of dying because I’ve already been to the end during labour - if that makes sense?

Can you relate? I hope it’s not just me and that others out there will say yes! I know what you mean - I had this too!

I wanted to add that I’ve also experienced the flip side of this after a bad birth (my first) where I still got the soaring highs but also crashing lows too. Most terrifying experience of my life felt like I’d fallen into a pit of mental unwellness which took a good year to climb out of.

OP posts:
tolerable · 23/02/2021 11:07

i have absolute recall of ds1s birth.hes 25.the drugs were horrible..amd yet i begged for more..and got them.they were slapping my face,i was screaming shoot me n save the babee.i didnt push.i was on the ceiling looking down at me...i had to be woke up-when he cried..i was weirdod right up for months.....second baby.15 yrs on,i was fazing in and out and i said is this our cd?,eh its the best music ever..n midwife said..you asked us put the music off cos was making you feel sick....i said am gony push andeverything druggie seemed to leave n auto pilot kickt in. ..

Wnikat · 23/02/2021 11:07

Not the actual birth but immediately afterwards, yes. Totally off my face.

Munkeenut · 23/02/2021 11:08

@gigity

I felt shit after my CS.
This is normal, these people are just weird don't worry

Interested in this thread?

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gigity · 23/02/2021 11:10

@Munkeenut I also had a VB without intervention & actually felt pretty good after that. That's one reason the CS hit me harder, I thought it was the easier option!

PlinkPlink · 23/02/2021 11:13

I got some floaty vibes and chatted shit with gas and air and pethidine (though I'm sure it was diamorphine). I had the best time in between my contractions 🤣

The floating stayed with me for a while until the exhaustion kicked in.

Not the same with DD. Home birth, only gas and air. But I did get some pretty good endorphins after... she just wanted to feed and feed and feed. So I got like a 3hour long cuddle with her after she was born.

BogRollBOGOF · 23/02/2021 11:17

I felt euphoric for about 36 hours after DS2's birth, he was a skin of the teeth successful VBAC and he took to feeding well. Then the impact of my tattered pelvic floor kicked in and the worsening of SPD. I didn't leave the house for a month which is really bad for me!

DS1's birth was long with an EMCS and 36 hours in HDU. I was given pethadine, and it locked me in with the pain of being on fire from my ribs to my knees. It wasn't quite trippy, but it was a disconnection of myself and the world. I flatly refused it under all circumstances for birth 2. With birth 2, I retreated into myself again, but my head could focus on breathing with what my body was doing. I also had the hypno birthing track looping on MP3; after my MW asked about it and loved it, she said it kept her calm too Grin

SinkGirl · 23/02/2021 11:18

Not a single word you’ve said rings any bells with me, sadly. I struggle just seeing photos of women holding their babies after birth, since I had an Emcs and they were whisked off immediately without even a look, but now I know some of those women were also feeling this I feel even more put out.

Darcy86 · 23/02/2021 11:19

Well I'm due any day now with my first and I hope I get a similar experience to you, OP! It sounds fab Grin

Mochudubh · 23/02/2021 11:31

@FudgeSundae

Errr... nope. I felt exhausted, sore and confused and then after the first day super emotional and teary. It was absolutely NOT in any way a high.
Same here.
snackmammy · 23/02/2021 11:32

Definitely for 24-48 hours after my second I was on a real high never felt adrenaline like it!!

DisappointingAvocado · 23/02/2021 11:35

Yes so much this! I was mostly out of it for both my (wonderful) births. I remember occasionally coming back down to earth and actually laughing at my husband at what he was missing out on. Actually genuinely a bit gutted I'll never get to experience it again (very much finished at 2). Also total euphoria for at least the first week after #1. Having a toddler around as well brought me back down to earth a bit more quickly with #2 but I still remember feeling very serene.

sonnysunshine · 23/02/2021 11:39

Completely with you. I found in particular people that didn't take any sort of pain relief (excluding gas and air) quite often have this experience. I was so high (naturally) after DD was born I felt like I could mind read what she was saying. everything is incredibly vivid from my births even though they were years ago. After no sleep and labouring all night I almost went ahead with a birthday party for one of my older kids as I was so full of energy

sonnysunshine · 23/02/2021 11:40

I should add after 2 weeks I felt like death warmed up for the next 6 months so swings and roundabouts!

Haveyouallgonequitemad · 23/02/2021 11:44

Yes dear I get you and totes agree but no time to read all this right now

ILovemyCatsSoSoMuch · 23/02/2021 11:46

The only trippiness I had was hallucinating from tiredness, after having been awake for 84 hours straight (before, during and after labour)

DavidsSchitt · 23/02/2021 11:46

"It’s at once earthy and crystalline shiny, raw and spiritual"

Yeah. No

SilverStory · 23/02/2021 11:53

Yes, total euphoric high with each of mine. Especially on the third when I had no trauma to my vulva at all. Seriously didn't even feel like I'd given birth within a few hours. It was unbelievable after an episiotomy first time and some "grazing" second time which was significantly more painful than the stitches.
I got the day 3 crash with the first two where I got all teary and lost the high. No crash on the third, but plenty of tears after about a week as we struggled horribly with bf.

SingleHandSue · 23/02/2021 11:58

With my first I’d been in slow labour for 43 hours and hasn’t slept for days, but once he’d been born I could have ran a marathon.

Bizarrely I felt the healthiest and fittest I ever had. I had a midwife follow me in to the shower room afterwards to make sure I didn’t fall, and they tried to get me in to a wheelchair to go on to the ward afterwards, I couldn’t believe how ridiculous they were being, I felt I could do anything.

With my second there was a midwife shortage on the labour ward so was very much left to my own devices straight afterwards. DH had gone to make phone calls but like my first labour I felt on top of the world.

Instead I had some weird out of body crazy experience. I blocked the door with newborn DS in his cot in case someone tried to steal him, then I headed to the shower where I haemorrhaged a shit load of blood on the floor, I tried to clean it up with towels but I was slipping about in it. Luckily I snapped out of my weird dream like state and was able to call for help and moved DS from guarding the door.

Childbirth is indeed trippy! 😄

astarta · 23/02/2021 12:07

I am very glad that you shared your experience, as I thought perhaps I was alone in feeling that way. I have given birth twice and both times it was natural, quite quick (3 and 2 hours respectively), and generally not complicated labours without intervention. It was not easy though, they were the most painful and extreme few hours of my life and I had grade 2 tears the second time. Both times I experienced a profoundly altered state of mind. It was like I had a door in me opened, which had never been opened before and that I had not suspected existed. It felt like the gates of hell had opened and I was climbing down to fetch the precious soul of my baby to bring into this world. I felt like for a few minutes I was looking into an indescribable chasm between this life and what preceded it. It is an overwhelming, fascinating but also scary feeling. The first time it was very scary as I wasn’t sure it would be successful. The second time I had more confidence in my body but it was still very painful and hard. But yes, the new perception of everything that one has afterwards, the wisdom you have mentioned, the ecstasy, was both transcendental and, at the same time, very real. There was nothing delirious about it. The senses were very sharp, my thoughts were the deepest in my whole life. This altered state lasted only for two to three days afterwards and then exhaustion took over. I suspect that a similar experience might occur to mothers with quick, uncomplicated births without much medical intervention. It is perhaps caused by an enormous volume of hormones flooding the body within a very short period of time; a phenomenon that one otherwise would never experience. I would not have another birth just to experience that but I am very grateful that nature compensated me for all the unimaginable efforts and pain with a unique spiritual experience.

FTEngineerM · 23/02/2021 12:07

Ha - yeah!
I cried to DP 3-4 weeks PP that the buzz had gone. I feel like it was over. My shiny bright cloud free outlook where everything was AMAZING had started to fade.
I’d been up for 3 days in labour then a baby plonked on my chest and I was like ‘argh I’ll stay awake forever’ jokes I took a nap that evening but it was real unrelenting euphoria.

Mammyofasuperbaby · 23/02/2021 12:17

Nope, never experienced it but both of mine were c sections so I've never been in labour and as both were born ill and prematurely any positive feelings were taken over by stress and worry.
However I have had 3 miscarriages and after 2 of them (had strong contractions ect) I felt peaceful and very relaxed, sorta how I feel on codine bit with out the shakes, nausea and general out of it feeling

HoppingPavlova · 23/02/2021 12:20

Nope, nothing at all like that with or after birth, whether it be for 1minute, 1 day or 1 year for any of mine. Just a sore, tired body and sleep deprivation. Lucky to remember let alone articulate my own name, no chance at having deep and insightful revelations and the world in no way seemed ‘clearer’ in regards to senses, was more in a haze of mind fog.

Catslife123 · 23/02/2021 13:23

100% yes! I felt like I became invisible in labour and I couldn’t look at anyone or it would break a ‘spell’. I was in a labouring bubble in my mind. No drugs at all either time. As soon as my babies were born it was like the bubble around me popped, and I could suddenly see the people around me and speak. I was on a complete buzz for a good 2-3 days after each birth. Absolutely full of wonder and felt superhuman. Great to hear of other people’s experiences like this.

Cowgran · 23/02/2021 16:08

I didn't experience it in the "trippy" way you describe but I remember feeling a euphoria like nothing I had felt before. I felt like I was a superhero and just wanted to talk about birth and tell everyone about it. I felt like I could easily do it all over again and was just obsessed with my baby. I told my MIL that I felt sorry for all the other Mums because my baby was so much more beautiful. Blush

icebearforpresident · 23/02/2021 16:32

I was high thanks to the gas and air! The thought of another few hours on it almost makes a third kid worth it.

When I had my eldest the song ‘I can’t feel my face’ by The Weekend was everywhere and I had it stuck in my head while giving birth because I literally couldn’t feel my face, the G&A made my nose & lips go numb. This had me in hysterical laughter and my husband on the verge of pretending he didn’t know me. My lovely midwife saw the funny side thankfully.