Tears dribbled into my oxygen mask, and that’s what I focused on, more than the dull tugging of surgical tools in my belly or the dry sandpaper in my throat. Just the tears sliding down my face, pooling under the plastic, becoming little clouds underneath the dome of the mask.
This wasn’t how it was supposed to be. I had a birth plan. My baby’s delivery was going to be natural. Drug-free. A blissful hippie love-fest. I wanted the lights to be dim, with faux flickering candles on the bedside table. I had lavender oil for relaxation. I made a special mix of music designed to inspire and encourage.
Everything went awry the day before, during what was supposed to be a routine OB appointment. The doctor hooked a belt to my belly and attached it to a machine, which spit out a long scroll of paper with jagged lines. The doctor ran her finger along the scroll and pointed to the dips in between the tall peaks, where the baby’s heartbeat looked erratic. Labor needed to be induced immediately, she said, and I cried. I desperately wanted my body to start labor the old-fashioned way — on its own — and I already felt like my baby’s birth was spinning out of my control.
At the hospital I was given a dose of Cytotec, a stomach ulcer drug that is also used to ripen the cervix for labor. It’s the same drug that I was given last year during my miscarriage, when my body refused to let go of the non-viable fetus.
Nurses also wanted to give me Pitocin, a synthetic form of a naturally occurring hormone, which induces strong contractions. I’ve read about the some of the adverse effects of Pitocin on newborns, so I wanted to hold off on that medicine unless it was absolutely necessary.
In the movies, a woman in labor walks around and breathes heavily through the contractions. She stretches on a yoga ball or squats in a bathtub. She has the freedom of movement. That’s how I wanted it too.
In reality, I was hooked to machines. There were two belts on my belly — one monitor for the baby’s heartbeat, one to measure my contractions. I had an IV of fluids, and a heartbeat monitor on my fingertip. A blood pressure cuff on my right arm inflated every 15 minutes. At some point, as night stretched into the long, bleary hours of early morning, a nurse strapped an oxygen mask to my face.
As the contractions came, I lay on the hospital bed and took every punch. Whenever I moved, the monitors slipped from my belly and the beeping from the machines grew loud and the nurses ran into the room and shifted my body into awkward positions and told me to be still. So I tried to quiet my body and imagined I was back at the ashram in India. I chanted with every blip on the monitor and pretended I was somewhere beyond the searing pain, even as my vision grew blurry and white along the edges.
I don’t remember what time it was when I asked for the epidural, only that I was too broken to continue.
“I can’t do this anymore,” I told my doula.
“You’re doing it,” she said.
“I’m tired of fighting,” I said.
I originally wanted to avoid the epidural, not so much because of the drug itself, but because I was scared of not feeling. I wanted to know when I was pushing. I wanted to experience my body presenting the baby to the world. And I think in a different situation I could have done without the epidural. But I walked into the hospital 16 hours earlier with an already listless spirit, and I couldn’t summon enough resolve to go on without help. The relief from the shot was almost immediate.
Everything was slow and lonely until it wasn’t anymore. Then everything moved very fast. The waves of contractions crashed quicker now, and the monitor on my belly displayed peaks like the Himalayas. Underneath my contractions, there was a canyon for every mountain — a dramatic dip of the baby’s heartbeat. As my contractions grew more powerful, his heartbeat decelerated for longer and more substantial periods. When his heartbeat slowed for more than two minutes, my doctor stood at the foot of my labor bed and said I needed to have an emergency Cesarean section. They prepared me for surgery.
During pregnancy, I researched a lot of things about birth — but not once did I read anything about C-sections, because I wasn’t going to have one. So I was unprepared for the things that followed: The blue curtain draped a few inches from my face. The tables wheeled to each side of me, my arms stretched out and strapped down in a crucifixion pose. The peculiar feeling of having my belly split open and rearranged, as though I was a fish getting filleted.
My husband was seated next to my head, and he smoothed the hair back from my forehead. My throat was achingly dry, and my nose was stuffy. Tears rolled down my face and pooled inside the rim of my oxygen mask. “You’re doing great,” my husband said. “I’m so proud of you.” And then we heard a baby cry, bold and strong.
I’ve heard a lot of birth stories, and people always talk about the moment they saw their baby for the first time or the first touch of skin on skin. For me, I will always remember the brassy sound of my baby’s first cry, slicing through the cold, white air of the operating room. Robbed of all my other senses — hands strapped down, nose clogged, a curtain blocking my view — that noise was how I first connected with my child, and it was golden and it was perfect.
“It’s a boy!” one of the doctors shouted. “Ten fingers, ten toes!” said another. I cried, my husband cried, and my heart no longer fit inside of me.
Someone brought the baby to my head and laid him next to my face. I nuzzled him with my cheek, and I felt like an animal — a cat rubbing her kitten — before he was swept away to a recovery room. It would be another hour before I would touch Everest again.
He came into the world so unexpectedly, the very opposite of my plan. No flickering candles, mood music, soothing smells; all bright lights, big noise, chaos and speed. But it was surprisingly perfect, an entrance that was totally Everest, just the way it was supposed to be.
18 Comments
Well done, Mama! Not exactly the plan, but when is life as we plan? Congratulations!
“It’s a boy!” one of the doctors shouted. “Ten fingers, ten toes!” said another. I cried, my husband cried, and my heart no longer fit inside of me.
So powerful!
Congratulations to you and your family!
Beautiful writing, Maggie. Phrasing, pacing, structure. You are a natural.
DiMaggio…….from your first stories in the Desert Sun, your writing has impressed me. You just got better after your world travels. I was surprised and delighted when up you choose to come back here after that trip. This is beautiful……your writing has matured and blossomed. You are in for something big and important, Maggie…….it’s a talent you cannot keep hidden in the Coachella Valley.
Maggie…….not DiMaggio!
Someone once told me it didn’t matter how your baby comes into the world, as long as he/she is healthy. No, not as you planned it or would have liked it to be, but he is here, safe and sound and in your arms. Some day Everest will know how lucky he is to have you and Jason as parents, for now you are the lucky ones to have him by your side to love and cherish. Blessings to you all. xoxoxoxoxoxoxo
He is perfect. YOU are perfect, too.
It may not be the way that you planned, but you captured it exactly with the words “just the way it was supposed to be.” SO MANY WOMEN grieve because the birth that happened wasn’t the ideal birth that they dreamed of, and then they lose sight of the glorious matter that their child is here! And their child is FINE! I don’t to minimize those feelings, because they are real feelings and deserve to be acknowledged. But it’s okay to say that no, the birth didn’t go the way you really had planned, but it all turned out okay. You are ahead of the game, already, see?
I say this as someone who delivered her second child by emergency c-section, after pushing for more than three hours. I remember yelling or crying something about “Everyone told me that it would be faster than the first time! What is GOING WRONG HERE?” But the baby wasn’t descending the way that he should, and it wasn’t progressing the way that it should have. I didn’t particularly want to be wheeled into the OR that snowy February evening, but well, it happened. But later, when I was holding my newborn son (who was nearly 9.5 pounds), I was like, “Hey, it’s okay. It is.” And it was.
(Get yourself some good granny panties that won’t irritate your scar until it heals.)
I LOVE this:)) your story may not be what you wanted, but it’s yours & it’s beautiful, which is perfect!! Congrats to you & your husband:)
Since I can barely see the computer screen through my tear-blurry eyes, I will simply say…congratulations, for your healthy baby boy and to you for letting go of yourself to bring him into the world.
I am so happy for you and Jason…perfect parents for a perfect little boy!
My dear Maggie. You are doing it all in life. In whatever way it comes to you. You savor life. You take it. You relish it. And now you have birthed it. And like you, (and Jason), Everest will grow iinto a strong, upstanding man who will scale great things. His name says it all. I am so happy for you all to have each other.
Everest came into the world healthy, just as he was meant to. Just in case no one told you after your C-section – you need to drink Smooth Move Tea to keep everything moving and comfortable. Jason can go get it for the grocery store or health food store. I learned about it after a hysterectomy many years ago and it is truly a blessing.
Congrats and good job! Thanks for sharing. Everyone has a story. None are the same, but they are as they should be. Little boys. Gotta love them!
Oh, Maggie — now I wish I HAD told you the story of how Xan was born; I think it might have helped. I am so happy to hear about that amazing, wonderful, LOUD cry — such a gift, a healthy, perfectly beautiful son. Xan, too, was an emergency C-section for the same reason — fetal distress — and there our stories diverge widely, so it will be good to compare notes, eventually. So happy Everest is here. So happy you are both home. So happy for YOU. Hugs and love to all three of you!!!!
Beautiful baby, beautiful parents, beautiful writing. You made me cry. Many many blessings to you, Jason and Everest as you journey on this path of life together. XOXO Jan
All that needs to be said: Proud of you. 🙂 Felt the same way when my wife delivered Jessa. Well one.
Well DONE. Not “one.”
I am so happy right now for so many reasons, Maggie. You are a treasure. The writing is great, as always, but more than that, you have such a wide, penetrating vision of life. Writing it down for us to read is generosity. Thanks for sharing this with everyone. And thanks in advance for letting me monopolize Everest when I meet him. Much love.