Part I
Part II
Part III
Part IV
Sunday, April 11th, 12:00 pm
A nap seemed like the right thing to help relieve my worries about false labor, and at the time the 3 hours I slept felt like a lot but looking back now how I wish I would have slept even longer! By that time both my mom and Kelli had arrived and I found myself wanting to get up and get moving to see if I could make things happen.
Sunday, April 11th, 4:00 pm
Kelli and I went for a 1.5 mile walk, with contractions timing at 41 seconds about every 11.5 minutes. What was there to do other than sit down in the living room and work on my puzzle and eat another banana? That’s number three during the course of my labor if you’re counting! I only managed to sort out the edges and put a few pieces together but it was nice to have something to distract me from the waves of pain that were slowly building. TH presented me with a “push present”, a webcam, and we hooked it up and called my dad and sister so they could be part of the experience all the way from Washington and Utah.
Sunday, April 11th, 8:00 pm
At 8:00 pm I ate my last official meal before baby would arrive, egg salad sandwhiches on sourdough bread I had purchased at the farmer’s market the day before, and saw that my average contraction interval had increased to 47 seconds about every 5 minutes. They were becoming a bit harder to talk through, but when I called Sarah she said I sounded too good to be very far along yet, and urged me to go for another walk to kick start things from what she at the time considered to be prodromal labor. I walked around the parking lot of my apartment complex with my mom, hanging from the poles separating one parking spot from another during contractions. We passed a lady walking her dog and I wanted to say to her “I’m in labor, and soon I’m going to have a baby. Could you tell?” I wondered if my neighbors were looking out their windows questioning why I was walking in circles and dancing with poles every few minutes.
Sunday, April 11th, 10:00 pm
I came back and took a shower, and it was at this point that I found myself wanting to sing. I hummed a bit at first, but that didn’t feel like enough and suddenly with each contraction I found myself belting out the first few lines of Swing Low Sweet Chariot. I started to get tired of singing the same thing over and over but the only other songs I could think of were Johnny Cash, probably because we had watched the movie the night before. My song of choice was Walk the Line, although I now realize that Ring of Fire may have been a better one for the touch of irony it would have added to my laboring experience.
Sunday, April 11th, 11:00 pm
I put my wet hair back in a braid and finally, finally, I felt it was time to get in the birth tub. TH brought the temperature up by pouring in boiling pots of water that we kept heating on the stove throughout my labor. I changed into the closest thing I had to a bikini (wish I would have bought one), wearing a Bella Band on top and a pair of too-small bottoms that are likely stretched out for good. The tub felt wonderful and I remember doing a bit of twisting and turning (dare I say frolicking) in delight at how buoyant and care free I felt all of a sudden. Of course then a contraction came and it didn’t feel quite as nice, but still rather wonderful. I kept singing and humming during contractions, and between them I sent out a tweet asking for song suggestions to sing during labor and scanned my iPhone for songs I already had to create a labor playlist. It was at this point that my mom took over the task of jotting down notes in my labor notebook, “11:30 pm, Fun in tub, ducky joined me. ctx 50 sec/ every 6:00”
Monday, April 12th, 12:30 am
“12:30 am, going to try to sleep.” Sometime after midnight I moved out of the tub and decided to try to get some sleep. I kept my phone next to me with a playlist of songs I could sing along with on repeat. The Sarah Mclachlan cover of River became the most comforting option and I remember apologizing to TH for making him listen to it so many times in a row (you say and do strange things when you are in that much pain while operating on so little sleep) Eventually a pattern developed. I would wake with the surge every 5 minutes or so, mumble/sing along to “and this is how I see you, on a snow white Christmas morning”, then fall asleep exhausted once again after the pain receded. Repeat. Repeat again. Repeat multiplied by what felt like 100,000 at the time. I’m pretty sure That Husband didn’t sleep at all that night. Each time I awoke mumbling/singing he was sitting right there next to me, hand outstretched to give me something to anchor myself to. I was awash in a sea of sleep deprivation and pain, but I made it through with him right there beside me. Bringing this baby into the world wasn’t just my work anymore, it had become ours.
Wow, two nights in a row that I’m the first commenter! What an honor.
I’m loving the humor you are integrating with your birth posts. That is a great encouragement to me as someone who has always feared major physical undertakings. I also love that you said the work was not just yours, but yours and your husband’s. I’m sure that will play out even more as the story continues.
Loving it!
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First, I love the decal on your iPhone. Secondly, I love that your iPhone is in a plastic baggy to keep it safe! Such a smart idea.
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I love love love that you have so many photos of your day. It’s interesting that we hire professional photographers to capture our wedding day like it’s a no-brainer, but so few choose to hire one to document our “birth” day. Thank you so much for sharing these
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LeiLani Reply:
May 5th, 2010 at 5:02 pm
I was just thinking the same thing about a birth photographer! My mom had six kids and I’m the only one who has birth photos (not professional, but I have them nonetheless). I would be so jealous if I didn’t have them, so I know I’m going to hire someone to document my big day for my children!
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I’m loving the birth posts! I love the pictures. T1 is a lucky boy!
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I have been refreshing all afternoon hoping for the second installment. This has been amazing so far! You have me convinced that when I have kids, I want a photographer there during birth. M thinks I am a crazy extrovert as a result - something he finds odd given I am generally ridiculously private about my life. Heh.
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I am completely loving this!! Thanks so much for sharing!!!
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What a wonderful account of T1’s birth day! I can’t wait to get to the “good part”!
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Ok, so what you’re saying about walking around and being soothed by the water in the tub is making me actually consider a natural birth when my time comes. But I am a huuuuuge wimp. Like, I get palpitations just thinking about getting my blood drawn. I hope in your coming posts you address just how painful natural birth is. I’ve heard it’s like your nether region is on fire. Gulp.
And again, thanks for sharing this with us, Jenna!
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Ah, the exhaustion! Is it even avoidable?? i don’t know… we’ll see if I can skip that hurdle this time around, but seriously, I think it’s rather exhausting work regardless of how much sleep you have. I love the pictures of you busy doing things! =)
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Love following along on your birth journey!
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I love the picture of you with your iPhone in the bag. You’re a smarty - that’s for sure!
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First I love how natural you show that this process is, and how wanting it or not you slowly surrender to what your body is asking you to. What touched me the most from reading other birth stories is that surrender part I think. It’s like this very very old world part of us, something from the beginning of times, well at least what I read of it.
The I phone in a ziplock made me smile. And TH being there for you, that’s one of my top reasons of wanting a home birth, besides the more natural process.
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“Bringing this baby into the world wasn’t just my work anymore, it had become ours.” - That was particularly lovely and something I hope will be true for us when we journey down that road.
Thank you so much for doing these posts. They are incredible and I love the photos!
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Yay! So glad these have started.
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So amazing to read all this. I love the idea of walks, singing and iphones in baggies.
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Loving the recaps! and loving your decal on your phone. too cute!
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I’m not a mom (yet) so I don’t have any insights or opinions. I just wanted to say I’m enjoying reading your Birth series so far!
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The iphone in the plastic bag is priceless.
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Oh, I am SO getting a birth tub next time! Can’t say I’ll actually deliver in it since those kinds of things can very much change at the last minute, but it seems like being able to labor in it would be so nice. I labored in the tub with G, but the bathtub simply wasn’t big enough or deep enough to give a whale like me that wonderful weightless, floating feeling. I will not labor feeling like a beached whale again.
So glad you have all these awesome pictures to document the entire experience!
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Regina Lynn Reply:
May 5th, 2010 at 2:30 pm
Er, I meant birth POOL. Blah. To distinguish between the regular bathtub and the blow-up birth pool.
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Beautiful birth story. You make it sound so easy. Can’t wait to read more.
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So your comment about the neighbors made me wonder. Did you tell your neighbors (the ones you share walls with) that you were laboring at home?
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The iPhone in the plastic baggie…such a great representation of our technological dependence, haha
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So I am attending this doula workshop this week, and I keep saying, “You have to see That Wife’s birth plan!” or “You should check out That Wife’s website” etc etc etc and now, just in time for these new readers to see an example of a mom who does her research and manages her own birth we have this great birth story! I am loving these photos. Bless you for sharing all this, for being so open. I love how many details you are providing. So many women feel weird or bad or strange for the quirks of labor, and it is good to have examples to point to so we can say, “No, see, it’s normal to listen to a song on repeat and eat three bananas!”
Also love your iPhone case with your logo on it. Where did you find it?!
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Thanks so much for sharing this. Due to many medical issues I wont get to experience any of this firsthand. So having this is great.
Also, I don’t have Flickr but wanted to ask where you got the owl and born yesterday onesies. I have a friend due in a couple weeks and would love to get something like those for her.
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Jenna Reply:
May 7th, 2010 at 4:33 pm
The owl onesie is from honeybearlane.etsy.com. The born yesterday shirt (I assume you are talking about the t-shirt that says “Why Yes As A Matter Of Fact I Was Born Yesterday”, was a gift from Kelli Nicole and I’m not sure where it was from. I also have this onesie and LOVE it: http://www.etsy.com/listing/26204822/nametag-bodysuit?ref=sr_gallery_3&ga_search_query=newborn+tshirt&ga_search_type=&ga_page=4&includes0=tags&includes1=title Actually T1 has it on right this very second!
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