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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:
wonderstuff · 23/02/2021 16:42

After my first I remember wondering if this was how people felt after running a marathon, the adrenaline high and sense of achievement was amazing. I'd had a terrible pregnancy and been sick for months and then all of a sudden I felt well again, food tasted nice for the first time in so long. I remember having a slice of toast and thinking it tasted heavenly. Felt fantastic for months.

DC2 it didn't happen, I felt quite cheated. Natural birth, but very slow gentle labour and I didn't really get the adrenaline kick. I had been so looking forward to it.

I can completely understand people having lots of babies, if my pregnancy hadn't been so rubbish I'd be tempted to do it all again. Loved giving birth.

wonderstuff · 23/02/2021 16:51

@Cowgran

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
I felt like this with dd1, I was convinced she was the most beautiful baby in the world and genuinely believed that other mums must be jealous, felt guilty going to baby groups! Obviously now realise that was batshit crazy but at the time I was sure. Motherhood is so weird. Blush
DipSwimSwoosh · 23/02/2021 16:56

No birth was horrific, all 3 times.

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Norwaydidnthappen · 23/02/2021 17:46

It really didn’t feel this way for me. I had three vaginal births and two c-sections. The vaginal births all went drastically wrong so I ended up almost dying which was pretty crap. The c-sections were fine but I was in pain for a couple of weeks afterwards and couldn’t really move. I felt like death for at least 3 or 4 weeks after they were all born and it took me months to feel like myself again. I didn’t see vibrant colours and food tasted the same as always, I forgot to eat a lot.

ZZTopGuitarSolo · 23/02/2021 18:49

As an ex-90s raver, I enjoyed raves much more than I enjoyed giving birth or the bit after Grin

I did get an enormous feeling of contentment after DD1's birth. I'd pushed for 2 hours, and been stitched up, and as far as I was concerned I never had to do it again if I didn't want to.

I lay in the bath with a cuppa and some toast and gazed at her beauty.

Of course I did do it again, twice, stupidly. Never did get that feeling of contentment again.

TweeterandtheMonkeyman · 23/02/2021 18:58

Oh yes - it’s amazing!
First birth - I had a lot of gas & air which was all good fun but felt back to normal afterwards.
Second birth- no drugs at all and afterwards I felt as high as a kite on natural endorphins, it was crazy! (and reminded me a lot of my clubbing days 😜)

BertieBotts · 23/02/2021 19:01

Erm, what?? No. :o

Sorry OP but I think you are a bit bonkers :o and very very lucky!

After both births I just felt utterly exhausted and that I could do nothing but focus on my baby and then sleep. I didn't even want to take a bath/shower.

Tyranttoddler · 23/02/2021 19:08

Trippy? No. Traumatic yes Grin

Ragwort · 23/02/2021 19:17

Errr no - absolutely didn't feel like that, the only thing I felt was to ensure that I never, ever went through the experience again, and thankfully I didn't Grin!

Wavescrashingonthebeach · 23/02/2021 19:25

@wonderstuff

Funny you mention that, as im due my first in a few weeks & been psyching myself up similarly how i did to when i ran a marathon 10 years ago! There was some extreme highs & lows with that, & hitting the wall around the mile 22 mark in freezing rain and in pain, then that last boost of energy for the final bit & the feeling when you go over the finish line!!!!!!!!

I'm really trying to focus on the "pain with purpose" aspect of giving birth. Here's hoping i have a "good trip" haha!

iPhonie · 23/02/2021 19:29

I felt such a high after giving birth.
With my first I had an epidural & I was grinning like a loon while he was practically being resuscitated at a table in the room!
With my second, I had no drugs & absolutely felt like a superhero straight afterwards. Amazing feeling.

Didn’t last long - I’m due DC3 shortly so hopefully I have a nice, calm water birth & feel those endorphins!

ZZTopGuitarSolo · 23/02/2021 19:38

On the other hand, I felt fabulous after my colonoscopy.

I know.

ScarfaceCwaw · 23/02/2021 19:40

I'm genuinely sad that I won't give birth again. And I've done it twice, and only had the euphoria once.

I wrote down the whole experience not long after my first birth, and I'm glad I did. I'll never forget the feeling, but some of the facts are now a bit hazy Grin

TheHoneyBadger · 23/02/2021 19:43

I was a happy loon for weeks after. I'd walk into a room, forget what I was doing there and find it hilarious. I tried to wash my face with toothpaste one day, I remember putting things in the fridge that shouldn't be there, I walked half way to town babbling to ds in his sling only to realise I still had my slippers on etc but none of it was disturbing it was funny and silly and nothing mattered as if I was off my head all the time and everything was exactly as it was meant to be.

I also had an incredibly trippy point in the birth where I was out of time and it was like some kind of primordial force and I was a rock breaking open - I can't describe it but the word primordial helps and being submerged in a force of nature that was beyond me. I was just a rock and my whole existence and awareness was in having to break open - I was not in the room with my body at that point which is probably a good thing as things were going a bit tits up at that point.

This was all quite ironic as with a history of depression everyone was on high alert for pnd and I'd been worried about it but I seemed to have post natal mania instead. I was so happy and flowing in a blissful energy.

Obviously didn't last forever but yes, I relate to what you're saying.

Cowgran · 23/02/2021 20:10

@wonderstuff

After my first I remember wondering if this was how people felt after running a marathon, the adrenaline high and sense of achievement was amazing. I'd had a terrible pregnancy and been sick for months and then all of a sudden I felt well again, food tasted nice for the first time in so long. I remember having a slice of toast and thinking it tasted heavenly. Felt fantastic for months.

DC2 it didn't happen, I felt quite cheated. Natural birth, but very slow gentle labour and I didn't really get the adrenaline kick. I had been so looking forward to it.

I can completely understand people having lots of babies, if my pregnancy hadn't been so rubbish I'd be tempted to do it all again. Loved giving birth.

I said the same thing. I was convinced I could run a marathon if I could give birth.

And omg that vegemite toast I had after the birth was the best food I had ever eaten. I still remember how satisfying it was haha.

Cowgran · 23/02/2021 20:12

Haha @wonderstuff how funny (but lovely) is it thinking back to those times. Like you I honestly thought the other Mums would be upset when they saw how much more beautiful my baby was. Grin

birdglasspen · 23/02/2021 20:30

Not too sure about this, yes even hospital food tasted good but a hot meal after a long labour and no food allowed cooked by someone else was always going to be good no matter what! I was certainly on a different planet after first baby, although I'd put it down to sleep deprivation. Not light happy thoughts, but do remember looking at DS and thinking what a nice baby I'll look after him really well although he's not mine(!?) and when the midwife asked me her questions for my (release!) I answered positively to them all thinking all the time it was the best way to escape this prison! I should add on a serious note I was fine with no weird thoughts once I go home and was able to sleep. I think the lack of sleep before, during and immediately after childbirth is seriously worrying! I reckon 45 + hours awake with an emergency section then being woken constantly by nurses, other babies, visitors etc is torture! I hope I get this buzz next time instead!

Afonavon · 23/02/2021 20:57

Not with my first birth. That was a tsunami of pain, horrible hallucinations and vomit for days.

Second birth was pain free (comparatively - planned c-section as opposed to back to back flesh ripping horror show of natural birth), and I was on a high in love with my squashed face baby.

Chimoia · 23/02/2021 21:38

I got the endorphins second time around but nothing like that OP.

wonderstuff · 23/02/2021 21:39

[quote Wavescrashingonthebeach]@wonderstuff

Funny you mention that, as im due my first in a few weeks & been psyching myself up similarly how i did to when i ran a marathon 10 years ago! There was some extreme highs & lows with that, & hitting the wall around the mile 22 mark in freezing rain and in pain, then that last boost of energy for the final bit & the feeling when you go over the finish line!!!!!!!!

I'm really trying to focus on the "pain with purpose" aspect of giving birth. Here's hoping i have a "good trip" haha![/quote]
Good luck, I'm excited for you. I thought in that first morning, that I would run a marathon because I absolutely wanted to feel the endorphin hit again. I didn't. In that morning I thought I could do anything. Every muscle in my body ached but that felt alright too.

Mykidshatepastabake · 23/02/2021 22:14

I had severe mental health issues and a anaemia after the birth of youngest dc. Completely over it now though. Nothing 'hippy trippy' about it at all

nodogz · 23/02/2021 23:00

Felt invincible the first time I gave birth. Like could run through walls invincible. It lasted for days.

Thought it was the adrenaline of "not dying" especially as the thought of dying mid-birth was something that seemed a bloody good option as I thought "if I die now then all the pain would go away. I'm not a bit frightened. I welcome death". (I'm a dramatic type, with an inner monologue)

And when I got the hang of breastfeeding a few weeks in. It was just like doing ecstasy. But you can't say that in NCT meet ups.

Level32 · 23/02/2021 23:07

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