My C-Section Child Birth Experience
Well, my birthing and labor experience was not what I was planning on, but are they ever? After a healthy and relatively problem free pregnancy, at the age of 41, I prepared for the birth of my son. Using a midwife, and attending conventional HMO care, I took advantage of both systems to ensure that I had a safe birth.
The midwife offered education and information that was lacking in the HMO system, and the Hospital provided the ultra sounds, amnio, and finally the emergency Cesarean. Unfortunately they unsuccessfully attempted to vacuum him out of me three times. I still have post stress shock and guilt over the decisions to do the vacuum at all. Had I done the 2nd level ultra sound I may have been told he was too big, but going to radiology while pregnant was not appealing to me. I don't know if it would have convinced me to not try for a vaginal birth since it was my first birth. I attended a birthing class and snickered when she demonstrated what goes on in the operating room during a c-section. I thought that would never happen to me! Boy, did I recall the whole discussion when I lay there with the blue sheet over my head, and they asked me if I wanted my hands tied down. I declined the tie down, and kept my hands by my side.
Here's what happened two years ago, which has brought me to the place where I have developed this C Section recovery kit, for other mom's. It was decided, not only by the doctor, but the midwife, that my baby was due, in fact one week post delivery date, which is common for first time moms. But I couldn't talk with the doctor about the midwife, because in Hawaii, they will let you go from the coverage, if they know you have a midwife. This seemed rediculous, and detrimental to women but the system is what it is.
So the midwife and I induced my labor by drinking castor oil at 6am, and by 4pm, the water broke. In 5 hours I was completely dialated, and ready to push. It was the most intense experience in concentration I have ever undergone. I pushed, moved around, and tried every position known to womankind, and after 5 hours, it was determined, that I needed to go to the hospital. The whole way over when the contractions came, I was told not to push- that was so hard.
When we arrived at the hospital we got so much flack from the nurses who exclaimed that I never should have been allowed to stay at home. Conflict was present until the doctor came in and communicated with the midwife. All I remember now is the vacuum and me not wanting one, and power struggles between midwifes, nurses and doctors, and me caught in the middle. At this point, it was whatever it takes to save my baby, do it! Have a birth plan written down, with a clear understanding of some basic medical procedures and side effects.
I was wheeled in, and happily leaned over when they came to me for the shot in the spine. Didn’t feel anything except when they were trying to pull my son's head out of my pelvis and I was rocking on the table. Obviously the vacuum wedged him further into my pelvis. Our son was pale, swollen, and ended up with terrible bruising around the eyes for his first weeks of life. His head was all distended from the vacuum, it was awful. He was rushed off to the neonatal unit with his dad, and the midwife came in to be with me. The Nurse told her she wasn't allowed to look at the c section completion, for liability if there were complications. Later in post op, I got a lecture on how an O+ should not be with an AB-, because he was jaundice .
I rested and later woke up in the hospital room, where the nurse told me to get out of bed. "What? um, how am I going to do that? I have been cut open!" She murmured, "use your arms to push yourself up."
My stomach will rip open", I cried. "Use one hand to hold yourself, and the other to pull yourself up. I will give you some vicodin when you’re done" she casually said, as she approached my roomate.
I felt my abdomen tear, panic raced through my body, but I was so exhausted. I held on hand over my incision and used other arm to push myself up- it was a painful joke, and no laughing matter. I didn't want a bunch of drugs, but the pain was terrible. Later, I went into the wheelchair and got my baby as soon as I could, and kept him with me the whole time until I left the hospital. I allowed him to nurse as much as he wanted.
When I got home, I had my partner wrap me in an ace bandage, and was amazed at how much better I felt. But I had to be careful getting in and out of bed, and I would unwrap the belt while I was lying down. I was doing allright but had I known that the aches and pains I felt in my back were not just post labor pain and holding baby. That was until I got a kidney infection. The pain would run into my neck and head and it hurt so much. I got a terrible fever for 3 days and had chills during the night. So I had to get an intravenous dose of antibiotics after I passed out in the bathroom, and my sick mother who was there at the time, found me on the floor. I had a breast pump, so they could feed baby while I went to the hospital.
During the first few months I healed and strength and joy were present. I continued to work on my stomach, and my scar. My abdomen felt like another entity! Lumps, and bulges were what I felt. So I did what felt good. After 20 years of massage and other education, I was doing whatever I knew to help myself out. Because I felt numb, sore and sensitive areas all over. All of this is typical for women after pregnancy, the internal organs displaced and returning and the impact of the c section operation.
I went to Florida for the holidays to visit my mother. We discovered she had been misdiagnosed with ulcerated colitis, but she had advanced ovarian cancer. So I stayed with her for 5 months. I realized how little I needed for baby things, as they were all left in Hawaii.
I continued to massage my lumpy scar while caring for baby and my mom. My stomach went down but I knew that exercise was going to be key to getting the muscles firmer because my abdomen was like jelly, except around the scar. I took note of how gently I had to work the tissue, and how it was turning into a longer process than I thought to have a soft, flat scar, and light in color. My 20 years of massage therapy work, myofascial work, cranial sacral and energy work, came in handy for all of us. I did a lot of gentle work on his head and spine to help him release the trauma of the vacuum and being stuck in my pelvis, I massaged my mom, and I would work on myself in bed.
Two years later, I have a healthy boy, wrote this book and developed the kit to help other women. The initial pain was unbelievable, and the lack of information was incomprehensible. Health and well being for the mom and child are of the utmost importance. That is why I created this C Section Recovery kit.
My mother and I spoke during her last days, and she supported me to follow my heart and follow through with a product, and not just talk about doing it.
So please, enjoy the information offered to you here, and take it day by day, breathing and being gentle with yourself in your recovery. This information is meant to be complementary to your Doctor's advice, so please use it within your own health and specific needs. It is not meant to substitute for your Doctor's advice.
Aloha Christina








