in other news

things i haven't posted about but need to:

- my sister is pregnant

- my grandmother--matriarch of the family, the core of it all--died on june 6th

- matt was laid off of work

i need to write about my grandmother and her death but i don't know when i will be able to. i guess this post is just to remind myself to do it. i have a lot to say about her.

i'm so happy my sister is pregnant! cousins are as good as siblings when they're that close (in age and geographically). plus she scored on the hand-me-downs with this timing.

as for matt, yeah--fck the hippodrome. we knew it was coming, but as ever, they literally told him "ok go home you're laid off now until further notice." the bastards. so we're on the hunt to get him the hell out of there for good, and in the meantime he's getting unemployment (a whole $200 a week) which i feel really weird about. but oh well. we have yet to discuss what we're going to do about my job... i really do not think he's up for being full-time dad. i think he's terrified, actually. i know i am not ready to leave her.

the postpartum experience and planet motherhood

8:42 PM by rhiannon 0 comments
i'm combining these two subjects because they are interrelated and i'm way behind in terms of keeping a current record of things for my own future reference...

the postpartum experience

otherwise known as "the downside to childbirth:"

- my nether region felt bruised beyond comprehension for about two weeks; it was really a chore to walk (waddle, really) for quite a while. no pain from the stitches, thankfully, but the bruised feeling was bad enough.

- uncontrollable crying for nearly two weeks. i wasn't depressed (at all) but i found myself bawling at random intervals in all-consuming bursts of raw emotion. it was worse when i was tired; twice when i tried to nap i ended up hysterical over nonsense for hours at a time, such that my mother-in-law tried to convince matt i needed therapy. it was just the hormones working out of my system...

- impossibly terrible, excruciating, laborious bowel movements. i hate to talk about this, but seriously, it should not take an hour and constant lamaze-style breathing to complete a normal bodily function (despite having missed out on it myself, i now know what it must feel like to birth a baby unassisted, crowning and all. seriously). combine the physical difficulty with an intense fear of ripping stitches--and feeling like they will--and you get a very unhappy mama. this continued for a week and later reoccured as well.

- tiredness. happily, i have not experienced the infamous "sleep deprivation" problems that so many parents complain of--my baby is a good sleeper and i don't mind waking up a few times a night. but after 5 days of no sleep pre- and post-labor, exhaustion doesn't begin to explain it. and i couldn't nap because i just kept crying every time i tried.

- bleeding for 2.5 weeks. not that bad really but a tad bit annoying. combine it with a freakish amount of gross tissue (retained placental fragments) coming out around 2 weeks and it gets a little worse.

- urinary incontinence. oh yes. i was horrified and so worried it would continue, but thankfully i have recovered most of the muscle tone down there and don't leak pee anymore. i still have to be careful if i'm messing with running water on a full bladder, but i'm confident that will go away shortly.

- "baby fat." 30 pounds of it.

- surprise pain in the stitches at week 5; apparently something tore or a stitch fell out and now it burns like hell to pee and nevermind the other...

- fear that i will never be totally recovered or back to myself; specifically, an intense fear of sex. i'm afraid it will hurt, i'm afraid it will be disappointing for matt, i'm afraid that it "won't work" in some way or another,* and i'm afraid that being afraid will ruin it. i dread the thought of having sex again, as much as i want to... i guess i'm basically just afraid that it won't be the same. i'm sure it won't, actually... i'm scared to know just how different it will be.

those are the main things that suck after having a baby, at least for me. it's also very frustrating not to be able to do normal things for yourself, like shower every day, clean the house consistently, make food when you get hungry, and leave the house at-will, but those are secondary to the actual issues in my opinion.

planet motherhood

in the business of being born, one of the women says of birth: "it's like somebody flips a light switch and you go to the moon." that is a perfect description of 'what it's like to be a mother'... you're still you, but it's like you shifted into a parallel reality, you're operating on a totally different frequency from before. i am no longer the main character in my own life, and i can't even remember what it was like ever to have been. now is all there ever was, and baby is the center of the universe. i'm relieved that it's possible to feel that way and still not give a crap about pink lace dresses and cutesy bullshit; it's not like i instantly became a soccer mom or queen of the playgroup, i just had my brain switched out for a different model somewhere during labor, and this new one sees everything from the perspective of a mother.

mothers know fear. one of the episodes of hysteria i mentioned before was due to my realization of all this... i was laying down to nap and suddenly i was struck with the thought of something--who knows what--happening to rowan, and my world may as well have collapsed around me. i lost it completely, and learned in that moment what it means to fear. i had never been afraid until that moment, and now i carry that understanding with me all the time... it is the scariest thing imaginable to think that something might happen to your baby. ever. i forgive my mother all the times she annoyingly grabbed my arm while crossing the street, or whatever.

my capacity to love has increased exponentially. nevermind the all-consuming, throbbing-through-my-veins love that i have for my baby (and her daddy by extension, in addition to his own merit), i find myself overcome with love for the innocent in general now, to a degree i never knew before. my heart breaks at the thought of any baby sad, scared, in pain, or just without love. they are SO vulnerable and so needy and deserve only love and comfort. i read a story recently in the local news about a newborn left in a box on the side of the road (she was ok in the end) and i cried for an hour in sorrow over it. we watched the curious case of benjamin button and i almost lost it in empathy for the poor little old man baby at the beginning. it is now outside of my ability to imagine how anyone could hurt or abandon a baby. i could love any baby.

i am more patient than i ever thought possible. scream as she may, i can love her and wait it out.

i now understand what it means to be someone's child. all my life i have been slightly irritated by and cold towards my mother's undying affection (and deep need to share it)... it's my own little issue: having trouble expressing familial love despite feeling it. but things look very different to me now, having a daughter of my own who i want nothing more than to hold and cuddle and love. i feel terrible now for all the times i was unresponsive to her love, knowing what it must feel like to have my baby brush off my affection. i understand how much it means to a parent to get a smile or a hug or a kiss from their baby, and i am sorry i was so stingy with mine. in a similar way, i realize now what my mom means to me; i understand what it means that she is my mother just as i am her child. i need her now as much as i did when she rocked me to sleep every night.

there are so many little things to love about being a mother... when she sleeps for more than a few hours, i miss her and have to fight myself not to wake her up, when she nurses she uses her expressive little hands to "knead" my breast like a kitten, just before and after a smile she sticks out her tongue and when she smiles she cocks her head and scrunches up her nose adorably, when i change her diaper she wiggles and grunts and makes funny faces at me, in the bath she always looks surprised and delighted by the warm water and fights me when i massage her until she realizes it feels good, her silly "poop faces" that my sister made a song about... so many things. you really can't imagine how much you will love them until they show up.

and despite the tiredness, the frustration, the lack of control over your own life, as soon as they smile at you again you forgive all of it and would gladly do it again.


there is nothing better in the world to me than that crazy little grin.




*too much information warning!: the first time i attempted to orgasm post-partum there was an intense painful ache in my vagina afterwards, and it has come back every time since. i can't find any info on what or why so far... but it sucks. at least i can still have them, i guess.

she's a month old


i finally got one of her impossibly adorable smiles on camera... *melt*

rowan's birth; my story

WARNING: this is extremely graphic and may make the weak-of-heart a little queasy. it was not an easy or pleasant experience, in the end, and i spared no details in the telling. it may also bore you if you don't want a play-by-play description of labor and birth.

around 1.30am on 5/15 my water broke. i woke to a small puddle around my nether regions, got up to pee, and went back to bed with a towel under me. when i woke up again around 730am, i was sure it was amniotic fluid and i told matt i was "leaking" (which i later learned he did not full comprehend). throughout the morning it continued in a slow stream, and around 1030 i saw the aptly-named mucus plug, at which point it hit me that i was really going to have the baby, so i called my mom and then the birth center to see what i should do.

i went in for an assessment and learned i was about 1cm dilated. i wasn't having contractions. i lied and said i didn't know what time the water broke; the midwife and i agreed we'd call it 730am since we couldn't be sure (she was kind enough to help me buy some time on the 24-hour clock by doing so). she also stripped the membranes for good measure. she told me to go home, get my stuff, and come back to the birth center, from whence i should take brisk walks as much as possible to help encourage labor to start. i was told if nothing was happening by 7pm that we would need to use castor oil which i did NOT want to do... so i got my stuff, settled in, and walked to maude's for lunch and to see matt, who was very surprised to hear i was technically in labor!

i made it back to the birth center around 3 with my lunch, and after a brief...discussion...with the on-call assistant regarding when castor oil was to be started, we consulted as my mom showed up. the midwife was clearly anxious at this point, because nothing was happening; i still wasn't having contractions. so we decided to try nipple stimulation with the electric breast pump and combine it with black and blue cohosh tincture every 15 minutes for an hour. an hour later, nothing. they checked my dilation and i was still at 1cm... somewhere in there matt arrived and the shift changed so i was now working with the midwife i had always known would be at my labor (she is the one who helped me through the bleeding incident at 12 weeks). she said it was time to take the castor oil, and suggested i go home to do it and try to get some rest before it kicked in, and to call her at 1130pm. matt had a horrible toothache and headed to the doctor for some antibiotics and pain pills. my mom went with me for support.

on my way home i stopped and got a 4oz bottle of the stuff and some ice cream to make a milkshake... let me just say this: castor oil is nasty stuff. and 4oz ain't no small dose, either... it's straight, thick oil. *shudder* i tossed it in the blender with the ice cream, some milk, and a little bit of chocolate, and sucked it down through a straw at the back of my throat as quickly as possible. after that my mom and i went for a walk to kill time and try to get my uterus into gear; and to distract me from the awful nausea my castor-oil-filled belly was feeling (when you burp that stuff, it's like drinking it all over again. i am actually feeling ill just remembering it!). anyway, within an hour i was hit with the explosively powerful digestive-system-emptying qualities of the castor oil, and beginning to get contractions. it's nasty, but it works.

the next few hours are a total blur for me; between cramps from the dose, true contractions, and horrendous diarrhea, i was in another dimension of confusion and discomfort. i remember taking a couple of baths, spilling candle wax on the floor, and eventually listening to very loud tool music (lateralus, mostly) while rocking on my pilates ball, but other than that it's a senseless mass of ick in my mind. by the time 11pm rolled around i was in full-blown labor, vomiting, and dazed. matt called the midwife, my mom showed up (after having left to get some rest herself), and we went back in to the birth center. karen--my dear doula--met us there. sometime during the night my dad showed up as well.

at the birth center they told me i was dilated to 4cm. i labored in every position imaginable; in the tub, on the bed, on the ball, on the toilet, in matt's arms. i labored for an eternity and for no time at all. it's strange how a moment can last forever and hours can fly by all in the same experience. labor contractions are like nothing else in the world; every one pushed me to my utter limits of endurance, and yet with every one i was able to tell myself "it's just one contraction, just get through this one and you'll survive." and the eternal instant would be over. my coping mechanism was to relax as completely as possible through each one, relaxing in spite of the pain, loosening my muscles, and breathing deeply and slowly. i won't say it helped the pain, but it kept me from screaming and from fighting my body. i surprised myself by making labor sounds, too... the deep, round OOOO came naturally. at some point during the night, they told me i was 7cm and it was ok to push if i got the urge. when i did, it was the strangest feeling ever--my body took over and i felt like my insides were involuntarily trying to eject something... there was nothing i could do to stop it, even had i wanted to. so the pushing began.

they tell me i pushed for something like 7 hours total; i have no idea if that's true. all i know is that i pushed, and pushed, and then i yelled, and i got angry... i put every ounce of my being into moving the baby down my birth canal, and nothing happened. consistently. she just wasn't moving down, despite my body's urges and my conscious efforts. coming up to 7am (saturday 5/16) our midwife consulted with her backup OB and we were given permission to try for two more hours before mandatory transfer to the hospital... but the extra time made no difference. the hands in my pelvis, putting painful pressure on the spot i was to push towards, made no difference. getting angry didn't help, and neither did talking to the baby. (lucky for all of us, her heart rate had never faltered through all the stress of the labor, which is the only reason i was allowed to go over the 24-hour limit.) they told me there was a muscle "in the way" in my pelvis that was blocking the passage and they couldn't move it out of way enough to help rowan descend.

finally, 9am, the midwife said it was time to go to the hospital, and i broke down. she said we were looking at an assisted delivery via forceps/vacuum if the baby was down far enough; if not, they'd have no choice but to do a c-section. i knew she wasn't down far enough, and i cried. i was so indescribably dejected--all that effort, all my positive thinking, all my preparations with herbs and whatnot over 9 months, wasted--it was awful. i have never felt so down in my whole life. i failed. we packed up and went to the hospital.

i don't know how i survived the car ride--it was bumpy and i was having non-stop contractions--or walked through the hospital halls, but eventually i was in the labor room and instantly all control, even my sense of having the ability to participate in basic decisions, was gone. the birth of my baby no longer had anything to do with me. i was hooked up to monitors, given an IV, attached to a BP machine, and messed with by no less than 6 strange women who never looked me in the eye or asked my permission to manhandle me. i was, however, allowed to keep pushing in an attempt to birth naturally while we waited for the OB to arrive. my midwife and assistant were graciously allowed to keep working with me under the direction of the hospital's midwife... so the ordeal of pushing continued despite me having absolutely no energy left for it. (they had put me on pitocin also, to make sure i had minimal latency between contractions, which just made me more tired.) after a long while of this the OB came in and said we didn't have her down far enough, and her heart rate was dropping precipitously during pushing which was making him nervous, so he screwed an internal monitor into her head despite my tears and objections. then he said he wanted me prepped for surgery "just in case"--i learned later that he told my family i was going to have a c-section. (i was told it was too late for an epidural and that if i did have a c-section it would probably be under general anesthesia, which was my worst nightmare come true...being unconscious for the birth of my baby.) then he left to give us a few more minutes to push.

by about 1130am i just couldn't do anymore. i was done. the doctor came back and said the baby "might" be low enough, and that we could try the vacuum but it might not work. i signed a release stating the devil could take my soul and anybody else's if the doctor decided it was medically necessary, i was given a foley catheter "just in case," and they started shaving me where the incision would be. i asked what the pain was going to be like with the vacuum, since i couldn't have an epidural for this; he said i was going to get a "pudendal block" (local anesthetic like when you have a tooth worked on) but that i would still have sensation. i should mention that i was crying non-stop at this point, in unceasing pain from contractions, and exhausted beyond my wildest conception of what i could endure. i was told to save my energy so i could push hard when he started to pull on the baby's head. he gave me a big shot of lidocaine or something into my vagina on each side, and my right leg went numb along with (i assumed) my birth canal.

here it gets blurry... my memory recorded only snippets of things... i don't remember pushing, though i must have. i remember hearing other people shouting, and i heard my own voice wailing. i remember vividly the sensation of him pulling her head with the vacuum, like someone plunging a toilet inside of me. it failed to deliver her, but brought her down more, so he switched to the forceps. and ripped her out of me. it felt like she was torn away from my body... it was so fast, and so scary, and so unnatural, to feel it and not feel it at the same time. (the injection--or my wild state of mind--must have dulled any sense of 'pain' but left me fully able to feel the pressure and movement of the delivery.) i felt the tear--or the cut?--of my own tissue as her shoulders came out, i heard her cry, and i cried. she was covered in blood and her head looked awful, but she was out. i was hysterical. not from pain, per se, or even joy, honestly. i was so sad and so tired and so relieved it was over (or so i thought). they put her little body on my chest and she nursed and i just kept crying. her poor little head was so stretched out, it broke my heart. but she was perfect. it turns out the cord was wrapped around her neck (twice?) and holding her back, which is the other part of why she couldn't descend. we didn't get to have the quiet alone time i hoped for, the idyllic bonding moment, mostly because i was so distraught. but she was with me for some amount of time while the hospital staff bustled around, and she nursed, and she looked at me... it kills me that i do not have a clear memory of those first moments with her. if i could do it all over again i would, just to have that time back so that i could pull myself together and truly absorb the moment. but even though she was given the opposite of the gentle waterbirth i wanted to greet her first breath on earth, she never seemed to be affected by the violence of her exit from my body. i am thankful for that above all else.

i thought the worst was over at this point, but i could not have been more wrong. i can't remember if i was still having contractions, but the placenta* came out and after a break of some period of time during which my parents were allowed in and matt helped them wash and weigh rowan, the OB had to stitch me up (yes, they brought in my family while i was left there splayed out, feet in stirrups and half-numb, crying, torn, and bleeding everywhere). i had been given an episiotomy (without being informed or consenting), and still i had something like 8 tears, and at least one was third degree. i want to say that the hour it took him to put me back together was worse than all the hours of labor, and even the delivery. it was horrific. i felt the actual stitching for a great deal of it, and for some reason i was experiencing insanely painful and inexplicable pressure on my anus during the whole thing, such that i was sobbing and wailing the entire time. i had been through far too much trauma and was too weak and delirious to tolerate any more pain. i still feel that way, actually... my emotional pain tolerance has not recovered yet, and any minor pain lately causes me a lot more emotional upset than it normally would.

during the entire time this was happening my mom and matt switched off holding rowan; she never left the room. she was perfect and healthy, amazingly, despite the long difficult labor. she seemed to know her daddy, too, because she quieted down and responded to him immediately when he took her. at least one of us was able to take advantage of her "alert period" after birth.

we stayed three days in the hospital because of some stupid bureaucracy plus a little confusion on the last day. they held us--officially--the second day because we "refused the vitamin k shot and she was born with a vacuum;"** because assisted birth can cause hemorrhage in babies and we didn't give her the clotting agent they wanted us to (considering she probably has a clotting disorder like i do). we were supposed to go home the next morning but we spent all day waiting for a prescription that the midwife forgot to call in. i have never had to sleep in a hospital before, but damn it sucks. in fact i didn't sleep at all... nurses came in almost every hour to hassle me for vitals, wake the baby up for vitals, give me a medication, ask me if i fed her, or whatever other random bullshit they could think of, so it wasn't really easy to get any sleep. plus i was strung out, depressed, and in pain--i now think i was suffering from PTSD for at least the first week after her birth. i slept about 3 hours total over the 5 days following it. anyway, the stay at the hospital was uneventful other than having lots of appreciated visitors.

rowan was more than fine; she was nursing perfectly, healthy, calm, and apparently happy. she had a little bit of jaundice, which is normal for breastfed babies prior to mom's milk coming in, and no other issues. she slept a lot and was attentive and adorable when she woke. before we left they said she had "almost" lost too much weight, but i was told just to feed her like crazy and everything should be fine. i, on the other hand, felt like someone had beaten me with a two by four between my legs--bruised beyond belief, but no pain from the stitches or anything. thankfully the only pain i had during the immediate healing process was a dull bruised sort of ache. i did have nightmares when i finally slept, however, and crying fits for about two weeks. (i'll post another entry detailing my postpartum experience later.)

as i think back on our birth experience one month ago, i still don't know how to feel about it. as many things as i have to be thankful for, there is a balance to be mourned, and i am having a hard time with that. i mourn our loss of the natural birthing experience, of a quiet and peaceful entry into the world, of bonding happily uninterrupted in the moments after birth, of being in a comfortable space and bringing her home to our bed right away. i mourn her trauma; the vacuum that disfigured her head and the forceps that bruised her face, the unloving hands that bathed her and suctioned her mouth and put a monitor in her scalp. and i mourn my own pain and humiliation; physical, mental, and emotional...i have scars on all three planes. i also have guilt: i wonder now if my stubbornness in not acquiescing to a c-section wasn't more dangerous and risky than if i had let it happen--assisted birth (w/ forceps or vacuum) has been known to cause fetal death, brain damage, disfigurement, etc. part of me feels that maybe i risked too much for my own pride in demanding a vaginal birth... i know that is neither here nor there because we both survived without incident... but i do have a sense of slight shame for what may have been irrational egoism in the moment. i am told i was "so strong" and "amazed" everyone with my willpower and endurance, but all i can feel--still--is sorrow for the failure to do it naturally, and now, a sense of having only barely avoided a potential tragedy of my own making. i do not think i will ever be able to feel proud of this birth or to claim it as the victory i am told it was. i hope i am wrong, but it's hard to take pride in knowing that without medical intervention one or both of us probably would have died... it isn't pleasant to be forced into feeling grateful for an establishment i loathe.

in the end though, it was all worth it, of course. i have an incredible little girl who is my reason for living, and if my body and my pride were wounded in the process of producing her, so be it. i suspect that i will always wish it had been closer to my fantasy, but the universe is what it is and that's ok too. someday, before she is too old to answer honestly, i will ask rowan what happened in there and why her birth had to be like that. maybe she will know.



*my placenta was a medical anomaly: it had two lobes (instead of looking like a kidney) and something strange about the veining and the cord which i was too out of it to comprehend at the time. all the medical staff were surrounding it and talking and confused, the midwives were taking pictures, and everyone was saying "i've never seen that before!" so they kept it to send it to pathology but there was nothing wrong with it--apparently it was just really weird. i'm trying to get more information about it but for now all i have is a gross picture and hearsay from matt about what they were saying. (ok, just googled it and learned something: bilobate placenta.)

**we did do the PKU though now i can't help but wonder if i shouldn't have (florida retains newborn DNA for at least 5 years and it's not clear whether they use it for research; i am looking into this to find out how to make them destroy her sample). we didn't do any of the other routine treatments or tests on her.

slow updates...

good god; when they tell you you won't have time for anything else once the baby arrives, they aren't lying! i have been wanting (desperately) to post updates but every time i sit down to write little missy wakes up and needs me...

i'm a week behind on taking pics of her, too--i'm trying to post a new one every week but we're halfway through her 3rd week already! she's going to be a month old on saturday. sheesh. they change so fast... she is already much bigger and more grown up than she was. i miss the little tiny baby who cuddled me at the hospital *sniffle*

ok, lame post, but she is crying now so i'll have to get the good stuff out later. btw, my sister is pregnant now! yay for close cousins! :)

fun facts for this week:
- she's started smiling in response to singing, tickling, and talking--big crazy grins, almost like she's laughing--and it is seriously the most beautiful thing i've ever seen. if i could look at nothing else for the rest of my life i would be happy.
- i'm practically vegan again because she apparently has a milk intolerance (not uncommon for babies); every time i eat ice cream or cheese or whatever she has terrible stomach problems later.
- cloth diapers are not nearly as bad as everyone tried to tell me they would be. in fact, i think there are no drawbacks to them at all. they're cheap, easy to deal with, comfortable, and i don't feel guilty about waste. and i haven't had issues with leaking either. if we were using disposables we would be spending around $30-50 a week on them. my standard diaper regime right now is prefold secured with snappi, covered with a dappi. they are a bit big on her but they work like a charm, and i only have to wash the prefolds every 2 days or so, and i line dry them to save energy. (side note: elimination communication is... impractical... for me at this point. though i do think the concept has potential, and rowan definitely gives signals when she has to go.)
- aveeno diaper cream is a life saver. as soon as i have a chance i will make my own, but for now that stuff takes away rash like magic.
- co-sleeping happens whether you want it to or not... i did not intend to have rowan in bed with us, but at 3am when she's nursing it's so much easier to just let her sleep there... so we do a little of both cradle and bed every night. i imagine once i am healed and "able" again, this will taper off dramatically, however.

tonight we officially begin the bedtime routine a la "the no-cry sleep solution" just for good measure. i realize she's too young to fully accept a routine, but then again she is a taurus and i won't be surprised if she appreciates the structure. naps are already practically clockwork during the day, as is her nighttime nursing. so we'll see how that goes.

more to come later, including the birth story.