Read Part 1 here.
2:00 PM: After my doctor broke my water my wonderful
doula showed up. I feel very blessed to have met Rachelle. We wanted to hire a doula when we decided to really go for this natural birth thing, but I didn't have a clue how to find a doula that I felt comfortable with being there when I gave birth. Rachelle moved into my ward several months ago and was just getting certified to be a doula. I'm so glad that she agreed to be there for my birth. We've become very dear friends in the last few months and I was so glad that she was there! Part of me wanted to have a doula that knew my story, who knew that the last time I had a baby he died... who knew that I was in remission for cancer and that we've waited a long time for this baby. I just wasn't sure how I would be emotionally at the birth and I wanted someone there (besides Trent) who knew what this meant for me.
When Rachelle showed up, Trent left to go find some food before the party began. That's when I lost it. I couldn't help the tears from flowing. I was so upset, frustrated, mad... There I was sitting on the bed, waiting the impending contractions to start, and Rachelle grabbed some nail polish out of my purse and some oils and gave me a great foot rub and painted my toenails. She made me talk it out. She made me talk about what it was that was bothering me so much. There were quite a few little things that were bothering me, but the big thing that I was so upset about was that I really wish that my body could do something "normal" for once. Not to always be having complications. I just wanted to have a normal, natural birth. There is just always something going on with me it seems... and I get tired of it. I really did not want to be induced, yet here we were having an induction. Rachelle reminded me that yes my body was having a hard time and there were complications, but that I was about to do something amazing! In spite of the complications I was going to get to let my body do what it was born to do... birth a baby. I was going to have my baby the way I wanted to, and I was going to rock it! That's exactly what I needed to hear... and with pretty red toenails and a new outlook on the events ahead of me, we started labor.
And I did indeed rock it (or at least that's what I'm telling myself)...
Contractions came on and off, but around
4:00 PM they started getting regular. We tried different positions to labor in but the one that was most comfortable with was sitting on the side of the bed. I wanted to keep my body upright so that I could have gravity do it's thing and hopefully not have too long of a labor. We turned the lights off, played some soft soothing music in the back ground, and my labor team (Trent and Rachelle) and I did the whole thing together.
Resting between contractions...
Here is basically how it went... Whenever I would have a contraction I would put my arms around Trent's neck (who was sitting on a stool in front of me) and I would just try to melt into him. I was feeling most of the pressure/pain of the contractions in my lower back and stomach, so Rachelle in her doula wisdom took a bed sheet and wrapped it around my stomach and tied a knot in the back. Then with every contraction she would use her body weight and pull on the sheet to give me counter pressure in the front and she would use her other hand and push on my lower back to give me counter pressure there as well. It was amazing! That was my epidural right there... and it worked surprisingly well. Rachelle would also touch my shoulders if she could tell they were tense and it would remind me to relax. She would talk to me, remind me of my "special place" that I would go to in my head like the hypnobabies would have me do. I don't know if it was just because I knew that an epidural wasn't an option, or if it was because I never really felt like I needed it... but it honestly never crossed my mind during labor to even want an epidural. Sure it was intense, and there was pain, and darn it I was not able to wrap my mind around how to put myself under hypnosis while I was having a contraction so I could have a pain free labor, but it was totally manageable. I never cried, or screamed, or felt like I was out of control. Was it the worst pain I've ever felt in my life (as most people tell you natural childbirth is)??? Not by a long shot! I've been in much worse pain before. The beauty of how childbirth is designed is that you get a break between contractions. Yes they were intense, but only for a short time and then I could take a break and talk, drink some water, suck on ice chips, gear up before the next one started.
Being that I was having a VBAC they wanted to be monitoring the baby's heart rate at all times. But since I was not laboring in bed in a good position for them to do this externally, they had to put an electrode monitor on his head. I also had an IV for penicillin since I was strep B positive. And the worst "hook up" that I had was the horrible magnesium sulfate. I've heard horror stories about this drug before... and they were all true! I guess people with HELLP syndrome can go into seizures they give all patients with HELLP magnesium sulfate to prevent that. This is also a drug that they use on women who are in preterm labor to stop their contractions. So what they did was wait to give me the mag sulfate until I was in active labor, in hopes that it would not cause my labor to slow down. So while I was in the thick of labor, having contractions every 2 minutes, they hooked me up to this awful drug. I didn't want it, but they basically told me that if I didn't take it I would be going against medical advice... which opens a whole new can of worms. So I consented, and they started this awful drug in my IV. It made me get super hot and have really blurry vision. So the rest of the time I was in labor I did so with my eyes closed, and Trent and Rachelle were great about putting wet washcloths on my forehead and neck to try and ease some of the discomfort. Thankfully it did not stop my labor.
I labored on the side of the bed for a long while and then Rachelle wanted me to change positions. I ended up still staying upright and laboring on a birthing ball by the side of the bed. I had no clue where I was at with my dilation and I didn't know how fast things were progressing, just that the contractions were getting really strong and closer together. After being there for a while my contractions changed and started feeling even more intense. This was where I felt like I couldn't do this forever... and my contractions started to change. I started to feel like I needed to push at the end of the contraction. So we called in the nurse to have her check me. She told me that I was dilated to an 8 and to call her back when that pushy feeling didn't go away between contractions. It was literally about 2 contractions later that the pushy feeling didn't go away.
7:10ish PM: Then all the excitement started to happen. My doctor came into the room and had me hop up on the bed (not sure how well I "hopped" but I got up there somehow) and she checked me. I was complete and ready to push. The room started filling with people, nurses, the team for the baby. My doctor started to say something about there being variables and I needed to get the baby out quick. I had no clue what variables meant, I guess the baby's heart rate was starting to drop during contractions. That could mean a lot of different things, like the cord is compressed as the baby goes into the birth canal... but it also can mean that there is a uterine rupture. So my doctor needed me to get him out as soon as I could. I tried pushing one time laying on the bed and it was the most uncomfortable way to push imaginable. So they took off the end of the bed and put a squat bar on there so that I could keep working with gravity and squat on the end of the bed during contractions and push.
Oh my... I did not like the pushing stage. I felt like I had no clue how to effectively push the baby out. Each push felt like I was getting nowhere and that the baby was not budging. Between each one my doctor would say, "Come on Meg, you have to get this baby out on the next push." So I would push my hardest... and nothing. This was the first time I really felt doubt that I could do this,
"He's not coming out... I don't know how to push him out!" I said. Then all my cheerleaders would cheer me on and tell me how great I was doing and that he was almost out. It felt like forever, but I guess I was only pushing for 15-20 minutes. At
7:37 PM (just 3 1/2 hours after real labor started) with one final push as hard as I could muster.... I felt a pop and his head was out. I kept pushing between the contraction and his shoulders came out and out slid his little body. I laid back on the bed and they put him right on my chest for me to see.
My darling boy was here! I did it! I couldn't believe it!
And my next thought was how on earth do people push out regular sized babies? I don't know if I could do that! I was really glad that he was so little ;).
Trent cut the cord and my doctor delivered the placenta. I wanted to see it so with my blurred vision I looked at it the best I could.
Even though he was born 4 weeks early he was perfectly fine! He never had any problems breathing or had to go to the NICU. He was 5 lbs 13 oz, so he's just a little guy. But he has done great!! Such a blessing!
I had a few superficial tears that my doctor stitched up. I laid there with my baby and waited for that amazing, euphoric feeling to sweep over me that you are supposed to experience with natural childbirth, but it didn't happen. Instead I looked at my doctor and said,
"I don't feel very good right now."

I'm including this picture above not only so you can see the stats on my little guy, but so you can see pale, pale me in the background. I was losing blood very fast. After you have a baby your uterus is supposed to contract back down to a smaller size, but mine did not. Finally that dumb magnesium sulfate had taken it's toll, and my uterus quit working. It just stopped. Instead of contracting back down it just kept filling up with blood. And this was the most painful part of the whole delivery, having my doctor stick her whole arm up there and pull out massively large blood clots. Oh my, that hurt so bad! The first time I said "ouch" was now. I wasn't handling that very well. So my doctor looked at me and said, "Is it okay if we take you into the OR and put you under anesthesia so that I can do this?" YES!!! That was okay with me. I couldn't handle the pain of her working up there without any pain killers on board. So I passed my sweet boy over to his daddy, and they wheeled me off into the operating room.

I'm not totally sure what happened in the OR, but I know that they had to turn off the magnesium sulfate so that my uterus would start working again. I also know that I had lost so much blood that they had to transfuse two full units of blood into my body. I've never had a transfusion before, but I'm so grateful that people donate blood. It was a scary ending to an amazing birth experience, but I'm so glad that I was with my doctor, in the hospital, to birth this baby.
And this is when they officially told me that I had
HELLP syndrome, and I had no clue what that meant! Not sure why they didn't tell me before that point, but I'm just grateful that they did what needed to be done to help me and my little guy. It wasn't until I googled it on my phone the next day that I realized how scary and serious that was.
I realize that this is the worst picture probably ever of me. I was so puffy and swollen, I'm assuming from the mag sulfate... but it's an important one so I'm sharing it anyway. Here is my amazing birthing team, just after I was brought into recovery from the OR. Rachelle and Trent, I could not have done it without them!
We stayed in the hospital for two days. I had to stay on the magnesium sulfate for 24 hours after they re-started it. That was pretty awful. I couldn't get up to walk to the restroom by myself. I couldn't even lift my legs to get out of bed. I could barely stay conscious when visitors came by and everything was blurry anyway. I was really glad when they were able to take me off that drug.
I left the hospital very anemic. Normal hemoglobin (red blood cell) levels for women should be above 13.5. I left the hospital with mine at 7.5... so extremely low. I should have probably gotten another blood transfusion but I declined it, mostly because I didn't want to be in the hospital for another day. So recovery from this has been a lot harder than I was expecting. I'm taking iron and eating all the red meat and spinach shakes I can handle, but I haven't felt well since I had the baby. I feel like I'm just now starting to feel a little more "normal" as far as energy levels go.
So there it is, Baby G's birth story in a nutshell. We are so glad that he is here and that even though there were complications that we are both okay. I wish that it wasn't so hard for me to have babies... but I now have these beautiful boys that I love so much and am so happy I get to be their mom!