Our
second pregnancy started out with quite a bang: I awoke in an ambulance one
crisp December morning to the sound of sirens and unintelligible words spoken
over the emergency radio. The young attendant told me I had had a grand
mal seizure and that we were on our way to the hospital. Before passing
out again I vaguely remember looking at an IV drip in my arm and telling him to
take it out because I thought I may be pregnant.
After
hours of tests, they finally brought us the only good news of the day: I was
definitely pregnant, and the baby seemed to be doing fine despite the traumatic
morning. I was sent home with vials of enormous pills and books on living
as an epileptic - my new label. We spent the next several days
researching the effects these drugs may have on our growing baby, and were
assured that I was taking an extremely low dosage of the safest epilepsy drug
possible. But the trauma of this pregnancy was only beginning.
Our
first son came into the world as a classic, beautiful Bradley birth; no drugs,
no artificial intervention, and almost unattended as well! We had just
moved to this tiny, rural town from Los Angeles a couple of months before I
became pregnant, and were surprised and thrilled to finally find an
obstetrician here who was actually a Bradley supporter. Unfortunately,
severe health problems made it necessary for him to suddenly retire during my
eighth month. What were we to do now? Only one obstetrician in town
was willing to take me - a "high risk" late term epileptic patient. It
was then that our nightmare began.
This
man told us that it would be safer for me to have a C-Section because a vaginal
birth may cause a seizure. He said that as soon as I arrived at the
hospital he would break my water (per his policy), start an IV with Pitocin and
give me two hours to deliver before intervening. Then on a Friday he said
that the baby was huge and I would need to be induced the next week. We
spent the weekend agonizing over how we could escape this doctor, and then
Monday he told us that the baby was too small, that he wasn't growing properly
and that I would need to be induced immediately. We suddenly realized
that this guy was trying to schedule our birth so that it occurred before he
left the country for a vacation in Peru. We immediately stopped answering
our phone and we prayed that we would not go into labor while this man was
anywhere near the U.S.
We
knew from the moment I went into labor that this baby was destined for a career
in either politics or academia: we figured out that that man's plane was
probably two minutes off the runway when my first contraction hit! Our
first labor lasted a good 17 hours, so I was planning on at least 10 hours with
this one. After waking my husband's mother to tell her what was going on,
my husband and I took a nice shower to ease the pain a bit. We soon
realized that things were progressing much faster than anticipated and that we
had better leave for the hospital. I got no further than the bathroom
door when I got down on all fours and exclaimed that I was going nowhere!
While my husband and his mother tried to get me into clothes, I reached down
between my legs and announced that I could feel the baby's head.
Suddenly, as if we had rehearsed this scene for years, my husband gently guided
Christopher's head out and my hands swept his neck to be sure there was no cord
in the way. I looked down and said "Honey, he looks like your dad!" and
we delivered his little belly and long legs into our four waiting hands.
My husband's mother came into the room and gave a little yelp; when she left
the room moments before we had no idea how far along things had
progressed. My 2-year old son looked at the baby, looked at us, and said
"Mommy, you have a dirty baby!" and went about his 2-year old business.
Then
the fun began. We called our pediatrician, also a friend of ours, and
told him what had just happened. In our excitement we had forgotten to
check the sex of the baby, which we immediately did when he reminded us.
I sat on the floor nursing Christopher for the next half hour until he arrived
to help. He searched the house for something suitable to use to tie off
the cord, and when nothing ideal turned up he returned with the leather strap
from the barbecue tongs. We used my sewing pinking shears to cut the
umbilical cord, and slowly made our way to his waiting van to take us to the
hospital to have Christopher weighed, etc.
It's
amazing how some people can turn such a beautiful experience into a
crime. We were told we could not have a birth certificate because no one
of any authority witnessed the actual birth. Then we were accused of
doing it at home on purpose, something my neurologist and physician warned me
against for months. Our response was, "if we did it on purpose, then why
did we do it on the carpet instead of the linoleum?" After much
consternation, we finally got approval for a birth certificate.
We
have had another child since then, and have our fourth on the way. All
have been completely unmedicated births, but none will hold the same meaning as
the birth of our little Christopher at home.