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Miaou finally gets round to it (warning - it's War and Peach)

43 replies

Miaou · 30/08/2005 16:53

Dh very kindly posted ds's arrival on my other thread, but for the benefit of those who missed it, here are the gory details!

Ds was born on Monday 1st August, after a stop-start labour which began the previous Tuesday. I was worried that labour would be very fast, so every time the contractions began, we jumped in the car and went up to the hospital, which is 30 mins away when the ferry is running and over an hour away when it isn't. Consequently by the time I finally went into labour it was my fourth trip to the hospital!

So... Sunday night, following a bout of manic nesting during the day, and low back pain in the early evening, my contractions started at about 8.30pm. We managed to get the last ferry across the loch and arrived at hospital just after 9 ... at which point my contractions stopped (again). I sent dh home (the long way round the loch) as it looked like nothing was going to happen. However an hour later my contractions started again, so I texted dh to turn round and come back! He drank a pint of strong black coffee full of sugar before he set off!!!

Dh arrived just after I got into the pool. The water was gorgeous, if a little hot - it decreased the pain by at least 50% at that point. As the contractions got stronger and closer together, I knelt down and gripped dh's forearms and pressed my head against the side of the pool. I had thought this would be difficult, as I have very painful knees, but the water provided me with so much buoyancy that it wasn't a problem.

Having had epidurals with both dd1 and dd2 the pain was a new experience for me, and I was surprised to feel it much more in my lower back than in my pelvis. I know it sounds cliched, but I found that saying to myself "calm and relaxed" through a contraction, and imagining the pain being attached to a thread which was been slowly drawn out of me, was really helpful.

At one point I remember saying "oh I just want to get out and leave the pain in the pool" - and realised that I was probably in transition! At which point I then thought oh yipee, not long now! (I wouldn't have know about transition if it wasn't for lovely mumset ). My waters then broke - well actually exploded would be a better description - and I was fully into the second stage.

The second midwife was called in at this point - and it was a good job she only lived down the road as my second stage lasted a total of 10 minutes! My midwife said she could see the head, so I put my hand down to feel - I could feel about the size of a £2 coin. At which point I thought, oh this is going to need at least half a dozen pushes to get out - in fact his head was out in just two. At which point the nosey little monster decided to look round - feeling a head hanging out of me and turning has got to rate as the weirdest experience I have ever had!

Anyway, one more push and out he popped, at 2.15am exactly. I was so surprised that he was a boy ? completely gobsmacked in fact. A month later and it still hasn?t sunk in. He was a lovely pink colour, and fairly quiet after a quick demonstration of his lung power. Although he arrived only the day after his due date, he had very long fingernails and his skin was very flaky, so we suspect that the dates were miscalculated somewhere along the line and he was in fact overdue.

The cord was clamped, then I got out of the pool to deliver the placenta. And that?s where the fun started ? bl**dy thing wouldn?t budge! I fed ds, stood up, knelt? nothing. Because I had given birth in a midwife unit, with no consultant on call, they were not able to pull on the cord in case the placenta split. Three hours later (yes, count them, three), it still hadn?t budged and I was too tired to stand/kneel any longer, so I had to be transferred to the city hospital, two hours drive away! Amazingly, ds slept from the time he was fed (at 2.30am), until we arrived back at the cottage hospital, some 7 hours later ? which was a blessing.

Once we arrived at the city hospital I was transferred to a bed, at which point the adrenaline kicked in and I couldn?t stop shaking. It subsided after about five minutes thankfully. The midwife in charge came and catheterised me (removing about 1.5 litres ? OMG!), then pulled on the cord and the placenta came out in two pushes. It was about double the size of previous ones! But was fortunately all in one piece. After tea and toast I was transferred back to the cottage hospital, where I stayed for another 24 hours before going home.

If you got this far ? congratulations! Thanks for reading

OP posts:
Are your children’s vaccines up to date?
Miaou · 30/08/2005 22:08

hi mears - not sure about the cord, too busy admiring ds - I will ask dh. Once ds was born I was probably only in the pool for a couple more minutes. No I wasn't catheterised - went to the loo just before we left. In fact my accompanying m/w was ticked off by the Raigmore m/w for having not catheterised me for the journey!

I didn't have an injection - I was wanting a physiological delivery. Not sure why I didn't have one after the placenta refused to budge. I would have been given one at Raigmore if it hadn't come away so easily.

And yes they always deliver the placenta out of the water

OP posts:
princesspeahead · 30/08/2005 22:09

mears, I had a similar thing with my water birth. FYI - no injection, no clamping, waited for the placenta for an hour in the pool (so guess it would have been delivered there), got out and eventually delivered it on dry land an hour later. So just over 2 hours for 3rd stage in all. Oh and ds underwater for as long as it took to swim him between my legs and pick him up.

mears · 31/08/2005 00:22

Thanks Miaou - I was wondering if hurrying you out of the pool had contributed to the placenta not budging. However, as PPH describes it does not always come away even when left in the pool. If it is clamped before it stops pulsating, with no injection, you can have problems with the delivery of the placenta. When the placenta does not deliver, after about 2 hours (if mum wants to wait), then I give the injection and deliver it by traction. Surprised that wasn't tried before transfer to Raigmore. However, it is out now. Enjoy your DS

princesspeahead · 31/08/2005 10:39

the wait was a little boring. mind you it was worth it - there was NO BLOOD! not in the pool, not when it delivered, not afterwards, and my lochia stopped within a fortnight.
my mw said that with the injection the womb artifically closes down very quickly, stopping bleeding, but after an hour or two when it wears off you can get a lot more blood. when it does it naturally it stays clamped down and there is much lower bloodloss and it certainly was that way for me!

WideWebWitch · 31/08/2005 10:41

ah congratulations! It sounds amazing and I like your typo, peach is lovely!

Twiga · 31/08/2005 19:56

Congratulations again Miaou! Good solid Scots names ! Have enjoyed reading the full details, paticularly as have decided if at all poss to go for the waterbirth thing myself - due today but still hanging on! Sounds like on the whole the water thing was really positive. Your ds will be a month tomorrow!

cupcakes · 31/08/2005 20:05

Beautiful picture. Congratulations!

matthewsmummy · 01/09/2005 20:38

congrats

PeachyClair · 01/09/2005 21:26

Congratulations Miaou

LOL at the title!!!!!!!! That would an excellent one for my memoirs!

blueteddy · 01/09/2005 21:28

Congratulations.
Scrummy baby!

jamiesam · 01/09/2005 21:36

Congratulations, great story, gorgeous boy and he already has his own mumsnet alias - peach!

PeachyClair · 01/09/2005 21:37

There's a Peachskin and me already, no name nicking! BabyPeach ok?

hub2dee · 01/09/2005 22:00

Welcome, Calum.

Congrats !!!

champs · 06/09/2005 18:46

hi miaou!! just found this official announcement

how's callum doing? how's the other kiddies doing and getting on with him? hi to mr miaou too!

puff · 06/09/2005 18:48

He's beautiful - congratulations !

aloha · 06/09/2005 18:56

Aw, he is a perfect peach! Congratulations. YOu have a very beautiful son.

Marina · 07/09/2005 12:32

I thought the excellent title was deliberate too. Many, many congratulations Miaou, lovely birth story

champs · 07/09/2005 15:03

lol, i thought it was deliberate too

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