Thursday, November 23, 2017
What Other People’s Births Taught Me About My Life
“Claire!” I snapped at her. “You’ve got to pull yourself
together. Put your hands behind your knees, hold your breath, push, and this
will all be over.” This was the last
birth I attended. I wasn’t there as a midwife or as a nurse. I was there as a
sister. My sister, Claire, was giving birth to her second child and her labor
took a quick turn; too quick to get the epidural she was expecting. Like many
women faced with unimaginable, raw pain of birthing a baby, my sister was
disorganized and was using her energy to try to crawl backwards out of her body
and back away from the pain. Let’s just say this technique is common, but ineffective.
So, I got real with her. I went back to my nursing and midwifery mode, turned
my soft voice to a commanding tone, and offered firm and direct instruction.
But, I wasn’t in scrubs, so this surprised those who were. There was a pause,
the doctor, who I didn’t know me, just looked perplexed and said, “Thank you.” The
next push, little Warren was born into the world.
That was nearly four years ago. I have been a maternity
nurse for thirteen years and I graduated with my midwifery degree six years ago.
I have attended hundreds, if not more than a thousand births. But I stopped
attending births at the end of midwifery school, with the exception of Warren’s
birth. Instead, I worked as a midwife in community health doing home visits
with young first-time moms and babies. This eventually led me to clinical and
academic questions that inspired me to pursue my PhD in nursing. Today, I am
privileged to be a full-time student. I am not sure if I am on a hiatus from
birth or if those days are behind me, but I am immensely grateful for my
experience at the bedside of birth. Birth is a unique and raw form of humanity.
Being immersed in its environment has taught me much about life.
Here are a few lessons I have learned from working at the
bedside of birth.
1. Women are amazing. Most people assume I work in maternity
because I love babies. Babies are great (see #3), but what really inspires me
is the women. How privileged are we as women to grow new life? We then get to
nurture and promote the growth of that child. Weathering the countless and
unpredictable storms this involves often requires soul searching and digging
deep to delivery what is needed. I’ve drawn what seems like endless inspiration
from the women I have been privileged to work beside. Women. Are. Amazing.
2. It’s good to have a plan, but you can expect
things not to go accordingly. I encourage the women I work with to create a birth
plan, a written document of their desired labor course. Mostly, I see this
beneficial as an exercise for her to be thoughtful about what she does and does
not want. In addition, it’s a helpful tool to communicate her wishes to her
labor support team, both the medical personnel and her personal support team.
However, I like to think of labor as a stream or river, with each birth having its
own current with unique twists and turns. There are too many unknown variables
to be able to successfully craft and predict its course. So, plan for what you
would like, and when the contractions start coming, hold on tight. You never
know where those currents will take you. So it is with life as well. It’s good
to have a plan, but you can expect things not to go accordingly.
3. Babies are incredible: full of such potential
and endless possibilities. They give us such hope. Enough said.
4. Sometimes the best action is no action at all:
just be present. Patience is key to birth. And as a maternity provider, you can
expect the laboring women and her support team to grow weary and impatient with
this grueling and overwhelming process. It’s powerful being a steady presence
of reassurance and by not taking action indicating to others that all is well.
5. Sometimes the best action is to take action and
take action now: know when to step in. Birth is wild and can sometimes get out
of control. If and when this happens, it is not time for steady patience. It is
time for action, whether that be offering directive instructions or an invasive,
life-saving procedures. As a midwife, you need all kinds of tools in your
toolbox. Know when to use them and use them wisely.
6. There is no such thing as an easy birth. Slow or
fast. Vaginal or C-section. It’s true that some births are tougher than others,
but we all have to pay the price for such radical growth and transition.
Similarly, there is no such thing as an easy life. There are various seasons
and stages, and some are smoother than others, but life requires growth and
growth requires letting go and struggle in some form. We often spend too much
time comparing our difficulties to others’ strengths and end up asking “Why me?”. This is not fair to ourselves or anyone else.
There is no such thing as an easy birth and no such thing as an easy life.
7. Relationships are everything. Research shows
that the best indicator of having positive birth outcomes is the presence of consistent
support team. I like to think this is true of life. So take time to gather good
people around you and nurture those relationships. You reap what you sow in relationships
and in life.
8. Trust the process. You never know what you are
going to get out of life or out of birth, but we are granted the experiences we
need at the times that we need them. Birth is unpredictable, just as life is
unpredictable. Trust in the process.
9. There are different stages of birth and they are
all temporary, just like there are different seasons to life; again, all temporary. Contractions come and they go. There are rest periods amidst the trials. One
stage leads to another until we have arrived at our destination, at least our
destination for now, until the next journey begins. The good stuff and the tough
stuff: it’s all temporary.
And there is immense beauty when
that child is born. In Spanish, they use
the phrase “dar a la luz” to describe birth, which translated literally means “to
give to the light.”
After all the waiting, the tireless
hours of hard work, pain, and sweat and suffering, there is a moment when the
child is born and takes a first breath.
And it is as if time stand
stills.
In that moment, there seems to be
poetic clarity, that somehow, amidst all the taxes and violence and
celebrations and highs and lows of this life swirling around us, it all seems
to make sense in the hope of newborn child.
Birth is beautiful. Life is
beautiful.
Being at the bedside of birth taught me some hard realities
about myself. What are my gifts and
talents? What are my challenges? How can I best put my skills and ability to
work? During midwifery school, I had two
severe episodes of bipolar depression. One of the triggers for these episodes was
erratic sleep. Unfortunately, birthing babies is not a nine to five gig and
sleepless nights are essential to the job description. After being hospitalized
three times, I reached a point where I realized that for the sake of my health
and well being, I literally could not continue to with the hours required to assist
women in labor and birth. So, I retired my baby catching mitt and reconfigured
how I could still use my passion, knowledge, and skills to support moms and
babies. That was six years ago and the only birth I have attended during that
time was my sister’s birth of her son Warren. At times I miss it, kind of like
missing the good times of an old relationship that has run its course. I still
consider myself a midwife as this remains foundational to my research as an
academic. And although it is a thing of my past for now, working at the bedside
of birth has been foundational to my career and shaped me as a person.
“Claire!” I snapped at her. “You’ve got to pull yourself
together. Put your hands behind your knees, hold your breath, push, and this
will all be over.” I actually cringed at
those words. See, I am a midwife, and I
don’t believe that this is the best position for a woman to give birth. But, when push comes to shove, you do what
you’ve gotta do to finish the job.
As I write this, I am 35 weeks and 6 days pregnant,
expecting my first child. It is Thanksgiving morning and there is so much
gratitude brewing in my heart: my past, my present, and my future. Just as I
have learned much from attending to other women’s pregnancies, births, and experiences
of motherhood, being personally pregnant has also taught me so much. Despite
having a healthy obsession with pregnancy and childbirth for nearly 20 years, I
am surprised at how much I still had to learn by moving through the experience
myself. Over the next posts, I will be
writing about what surprised this midwife about being pregnant. But for now, I
am grateful for all my experiences with other women’s birth, from the very
first child I witness enter the world all the way up until Claire and Warren. The
next birth I attend will be the birth of my own child. I am grateful for this
child still safely growing in my own body. And I am grateful for all these
things have taught me about this one wild and wonderful life.
May your life be ripe with blessings. Happy Thanksgiving
2017.
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