Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Happy 21st Birthday, Margaret!

Twenty-one years ago today, my husband and I drove 50 miles from our midtown Atlanta home so that I could give birth to our first child in a rural hospital's birthing center. The decision to drive past 5 or 6 well-regarded hospitals, all with maternity units larger and more sophisticated than the one we selected, wasn't difficult. (But it was a little dicey when the first stage of my labor progressed so rapidly that I had to put my feet on the dashboard and use "B-98.5 FM" as a focal point while en route.)

In 1988, the Cesarean Section rate in metro Atlanta hovered around 35%. I was an intrapartum nurse, who had dutifully pushed more than my fair share of laboring patients to the OR due to presumed fetal jeopardy, only to watch--delighted and perplexed--when the vast majority of infants came out screaming: pink, flexed, and oxygenated. I was certain there were better ways to have a baby.

When I gave birth, I was a healthy, young woman at 41 weeks gestation, the far end of a planned and uneventful pregnancy. Back then, nurse-midwives offered a better approach to caring for women like me, and I believe they still do.

I wasn't morally opposed to surgical birth: I just didn't want to give birth that way unless it was necessary. So I shopped for care, using indicators I understood, like C-Section rates, episiotomy rates, and the number of infants still breastfeeding at 3 months. (If you have a C-Section in a facility where only 15% of the infants are welcomed that way, you probably need one.)

Although my daughter seemingly could not wait to arrive, labor slowed as we reached the hospital, a lull that's pretty typical when laboring mammals are disrupted. And it took a long time, quite a long time to finish transition and birth my 8lb 3oz baby, who had chosen to position her hand alongside of her face for the journey.

In the late '80's laboring women were allotted about 2 hours to get their first baby pushed into the world. And I can remember feeling worried as I approached that mark. It was around that time, however, that my nurse-midwife--who had delivered 3 other babies early that morning--settled herself in, assessed the situation, and began providing very specific directions: "Pull back this way, now push." "Try this." "Push again: harder!"

Eventually, I was but a push away from having a baby. Or so it seemed to everyone in attendance. (While I was in labor, I was nicer than I usually am and, after 3 hours of pushing, I had become something of a sympathetic patient to the nurses on the unit. So, in addition to my nurse-midwife, primary nurse, and husband, I had a gaggle of interested L&D staff members offering support.) But still, I could not push that baby out. "Push harder, one more push, and the baby will be here!"

The voices became louder with each contraction, and I remember thinking, "How in the world did I wind up with precisely the kind of mad, directive, cheering crowd we had driven past all of those other hospitals to avoid?" But, as my grandmother had opined, giving birth was a lot like shitting a ham. There was, literally, no room to worry about anything else.

That's when my midwife, Margaret, did the most amazing thing: She told everyone in the room to be quiet. Then she tapped my leg, kind of brusquely and said, "Look at me." So I stopped doing whatever I had been doing that hadn't resulted in birth. The contractions abated. I looked at her.

"Why won't you push your baby out?"

There was a very long pause. "Oh, Margaret," I said, "I'm really afraid to be a mother." And I cried.

The quiet in the room turned to silence. I could sense the staff shifting and felt their gazes move toward the ceiling. By the time I delivered my firstborn, I had probably witnessed upwards of 500 births myself. And I knew that this was not an everyday announcement. A stuck baby and "being stuck" were infrequently differentiated in the world of traditional obstetrics I had come from. And I had never witnessed an intervention like the one I had just received.

But Margaret knew what she was doing.

She took her time responding. And when she did, I remember her saying something like this: "You are young and healthy. You've worked hard to get this baby here, and it's ready to come out. And your life is going to change when it does. There are no guarantees in this world, but I think you'll be able to handle whatever changes come along. And I think it's time to let this baby go."

With the next contraction, there was no holding back. Moments later, my husband and I were welcoming our own baby: pink, flexed, and screaming. We named her Margaret Claire.

I've thought of Margaret's words many times over the years. And they're with me again tonight as I once again prepare to leave my daughter in a college town 800 miles from my home. You'll be able to handle whatever changes come along. It's time to let the baby go.

See you at Thanksgiving, Mags!

11 comments:

Kim said...

What an awesome story!!!!

My first baby was occipital posterior and I could not push her out. The would not let me get off my left side. The doctor decided we'd do a C-section and then informed me, dilated to ten and pushing, that he was going to go have dinner first.

When I shifted from the gurney to the OR table, so did the baby. All of a sudden I yelled "The baby is coming!!" and heard "I checked her before we left..." and I felt myself go paralyzed (yes, I was paralyzed PRIOR to sedation) and Lillian was delivered C-section.

When I decided to switch doctors for baby #2, I picked up my records.
Lillian was so far down the birth canal, they reached UP and PUSHED HER OUT THE C-SECTION INCISION!

Unbelievable.

If I had just had someone to believe that I could do it...

Reality Rounds said...

This story will be profiled on my blog. Be prepared for some birth junkie comments :)
Great story

Diana said...

Great story! Thanks for sharing!! :)

Megan said...

Beautiful story, really moving.

Alison said...

I'm a mama at 38 weeks and have a 2 year old son... and this story had me in tears. Mainly the part where you are now sending your daughter off to college. That seems so far away for me, but I'm already emotional for it.

lafondsi said...

Fabulous story. Thanks for sharing.

Paula said...

Hello,
I came via reality rounds. I am moved by your story. Did you remain in contact at all with your midwife? What an awesome thing to be named after such an empowering person. I wonder how your margaret feels about it. I will continue to read with interest!

I'm a doula and IBCLC and thinking about working towards a nursing degree. I drag my heels cause it feels like such a huge commitment to be a full time student. But when will I do this if not now. I would be an old student at 38, but I am not getting younger.

Best to you- Paula

Barbara Olson, MS, RN, FISMP said...

Thanks for the nice words. My midwife is still in practice and I sent her a link to this post the other day.

Good luck with your professional ventures.

Minnesota Mom said...

So beautiful - thank you so much for sharing your story!

Donna Ryan said...

This story was sent to me by a fellow Bradley Instructor. She sent it to all of us located in the Ft. Worth area. It illustrates some wonderful points. Thank you for sharing your story -- and how powerful the mind is when it comes to birth. Our midwife said, with our first homebirth, "Birth is 90% in your head, and only 10% of what happens to you." I believe this and I teach this. Your story will be read in many upcoming Bradley classes in Tarrant County.

Anonymous said...

What a fantastic story. Similarly, when my first son was born about 8 years ago, I was not pushing & yelling & apparently trying NOT to birth my him, and the midwife asked, "what is it that you are afraid of?" and I think I screamed, "I'm afraid I'm going to split in half!" and she said, "oh, honey. Your pelvis is stronger than that!" and he was born 2 contractions later.

I just withdrew from nursing school in my 2nd out of 4 semesters. I'm not sure that nursing is right for me - I figure if it is, I can go back later for a 2nd degree/MSN program or something. I'm looking forward to reading more of your blog - thanks for your writing!

 
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