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Our third baby was due to make her appearance on February 13th, 2012. We had lots of comments from people about ‘Valentine’s babies’ but with our last two having both been very overdue (Lilly 11 days over, Isla 12), we weren’t holding out much hope of that!

Sure enough, the due date came and went without any hint of baby wanting out – and this carried on as the days ticked past and despite a sweep at 8 days over.

With Isla, the 10 days after her due date were filled with plenty of false starts and promising contractions which started in the evenings and disappeared as soon as I went to bed. But this time, being overdue was most undramatic. There were no positive signs, no contractions, no particularly hopeful aches and pains. We were pretty resigned to the fact that it would end in induction and we were just keen to get on with things!

I was booked in for induction on Friday, 24th Feb, at 3.30pm, but I was told to ring in the morning to see if they could fit me in any earlier. The consultant who examined me at 8 days over confirmed that they would be able to skip out the pessary stage and go straight to breaking my waters, which I was pleased about.

On Thursday, we knew it was going to be our last day as a family of four, and we had a really lovely trip to the zoo in the glorious sunshine – it was so warm we were even sitting outside eating ice creams! It was one of those days when everything goes right and we put the girls to bed thinking what a brilliant day we’d had and how much we were looking forward to the next chapter in our lives.

The next morning we took the girls round to Tony’s mum and dad’s house. It felt so emotional leaving them, knowing how much their lives were going to change too by the next time we saw them – especially Isla who couldn’t really have any concept of what was going on.

We called the hospital to see if we could go in any earlier – they told us to call back again at 11am. I went back to bed to get some extra sleep and Tony relaxed playing football on the computer. We called at 11am and were told it was busy on labour ward and to call again at 1pm. We started to worry that things might not happen at all that day - with Isla we were in the hospital at 8am waiting to be induced and it was so busy that we didn’t get to go up to labour ward until 1am!

We went for our lunch at McDonalds and then called again at 1pm. Great news – they told us to come in at 2.3opm! We went back home and gathered all our stuff together – suddenly the adrenaline was going and we both felt that strange blend of excitement and anxiety.

We arrived at the hospital at 2.30pm and were shown straight into a delivery room on the labour ward. It felt so strange looking around that room and thinking about everything that was going to unfold in the next few hours. I was worried about how long we might be there for – with Isla, although I was induced, by the time they got around to breaking my waters I was contracting pretty regularly on my own, but this time I hadn’t had a single contraction yet!

We got ourselves comfy and the very nice midwife said she would break the waters then give me an hour to see if the contractions started themselves. But when she tried to do it, she found she couldn’t, and had to ask a consultant to come and try. A female consultant, who also seemed very nice, came and did the job at 4.50pm. She told the midwife to give me two hours to see if things started up on their own, which I was pleased about. Then I was hooked up to the monitor (because of previous c-section I needed continous monitoring) but I was allowed to sit on a birthing ball. (I was so chuffed about this – in both my previous pregnancies I had imagined labour would involve bouncing away on a ball, it seemed such an idyllic vision, and I had never managed to achieve it in either of the previous two labours!)

In a bid to help relax me and therefore make me more likely to go into labour on my own, the midwife mixed me up a blend of essential oils in a footbath for me to try. This too felt extremely strange – essential oils and footbaths certainly weren’t ever on the agenda the last two times!!

After two hours absolutely nothing had happened – except my feet felt nice :-) I asked the midwife for one more hour to see if that might make a difference and she agreed. I sat and bounced on my ball watching TV (until the midwife had to break the news to me that the bouncing was making the monitor lose contact with the baby and then I was told I could stay on the ball as long as I stayed totally still – easier said than done!)

After an hour still nothing had happened, not so much as a twinge. I was a bit fed up by this and just wanted to get on with things, so I agreed to the dreaded drip being hooked up to help speed things along.

A nurse arrived to put in a canula – three painful attempts later, it was in… and at 7.45pm the drip began its evil work!

By about 9pm the contractions had begun. They were painfully sharp from the start – not like the last two times when they began on their own so built gradually in intensity before the drip was introduced to really ratchet things up. Although I was pleased that things were finally happening I started to feel negative about things and was telling Tony that I didn’t think I could do this. Because the contractions had only just started and they were already pretty painful, and because I knew I was only about 2cm dilated at this point, I felt like I had such a long way to go with the pain inevitably only getting worse. I was already on the gas and air, which I seemed to like a bit better this time, although I was still worried about it making me feel sick, as it had done on the last couple of occasions.

Soon afterwards I was examined, and yes, I was still only 2-3cm. The contractions were about every 3 minutes and pretty unpleasant. I started to get the shakes. The lovely midwife was swapped over for a much more business-like one who immediately came in and doubled the dosage in my drip!

At this point it became clear that the monitoring was an issue again. Firstly, the monitor on my belly kept slipping and losing contact with the baby. Also, it was starting to show those all too familar decelerations in heartrate whenever I had a contraction. The midwife tells me she is going to put a clip on the baby’s head so they can monitor her better. At this point Tony and I both start to feel this is heading down a slippery slope… I am thinking that I still have so far to go, the pain is already quite a lot, and we are now on borrowed time trying to deliver the baby before the distress gets worse.

By now I am starting to go into my own world a bit – I feel a bit out of it even though I am only having gas and air – and trying not to use that too much for fear of being sick. I can’t be bothered talking to the midwife where before we’d been making small talk. I just want silence!

The midwife asks me if I’m ok for pain relief. I say I am for now, but I will want an epidural later. She asks me why I want to wait, and I say because I don’t want to have it too early because it can make a c-section more likely. She tells me that it won’t make any difference to how I progress, because I’m on the drip anyway, and that if I want one, I better get one now because later on they might be busy and I might have to wait a long time. In that case, I say yes… although I am slightly feeling like it is a bit early on and maybe I am a total cop out for wanting to get rid of the pain already.

The anaesthetist arrives quite quickly. Unbelievably, it is the same guy as the last two labours. We have mixed feelings about this. My first epidural was a disaster. It didn’t properly work and, when the labour ended in an emergency section, the epidural couldn’t be topped up, which meant I ended up with a general anaesthetic. The second time, this same man did me a brilliant epidural, which totally took away the pain but left me with just the sensation to push, which was wonderful.

Unfortunately, the brilliant experience wasn’t to be repeated. He puts in the epidural but immediately starts asking me lots of questions about whether or not I am feeling it working, and if so, is it working in both sides or just one side? I like to be positive and think that I can feel it starting to work, but it soon becomes clear that if it is working, it is definitely only working on my left side and not my right. It is about 10pm.

Next thing, the midwife says the baby’s heartrate is still dipping with each contraction, and calls in a doctor to look at the trace. He looks at it, looks a bit concerned but tries to be very reassuring to us and says they will give it a bit longer and have another look. We both feel a c-section is on the cards and I am a bit worried because the epidural is not the best. I do not want another general anaesthetic!

After this point, everything starts happening at once. I am in so much more pain, especially on my right hand side where the epidural obviously isn’t working at all. The midwife tells me to lie on my right to try and see if that moves the epidural over to that side, and if it doesn’t, she will ask the anaesthetist to come and top me up. I lie on my side and it makes things SO much worse, the pain becomes unbearable and it is at this point I start to lose it a little.

The midwife calls the doctor back because the dip in the baby’s heartrate is getting worse. She also calls back the anaesthetist to sort out my epidural. They arrive at the same time.  The doctor examines me at 12.3oam and tells me I am 6cm dilated. At this point, the pain is unbelievable. I am lying on my side telling them over and over: “I don’t want to do this, it hurts so much, please help me!” The doctor and anaesthetist are still there and then it changes and I have this huge pressure in my bottom which is impossible not to push against. Now I am panicking because I’ve just been told I’m only 6cm dilated and I feel like the baby is coming! I am now shouting: “It’s in my bottom – I’m sorry! I can’t help it! It’s in my bottom!!” ;)

At one point I hear Tony say something like “Do you want me to get somebody?” and I panic! What does he mean “get somebody?” I’d assumed they were already here! (I am totally in my own world – later on Tony told me that the doctor and anaesthetist were there, but the midwife had run out of the room (to get somebody, it turns out). The doctor and anaesthetist were basically just standing there looking at me not sure what to do!)

The midwife comes back and tells me “Ok, if you want to push, just go for it”, but I am still so scared because I’ve literally only just been told I’m only 6cm! I keep asking her: “What’s happening? Will it be ok?” but the urge to push is so strong there is no fighting it anyway. The next thing I know the baby’s head is coming. I can’t believe it!! The pain is enormous as I can feel something very hard trying to stretch it’s way out, I push and the head is out… the cord is wrapped round her neck tightly, twice (hence the heartrate decelerations). The midwife tells me to push a little then pant as she wrestles to untangle the cord. I do exactly what I’m told. A few pushes later, at 12.51am, I feel the rest of the baby scrabble out… the relief is enormous… She is put straight onto me, she looks fine but doesn’t cry, they take her and give her a rub and she starts up with a VERY loud piercing cry!! Oh-oh!

Daddy holds her while they deliver the placenta & check me over. I can’t believe it when I’m told there is no tear - I was terrified I was going to be ripped to shreds because of the sudden arrival – but no, it seems I had literally gone from 6cm to fully dilated in a matter of minutes. She is weighed (8lbs 2oz) - then given to me for skin to skin. She is hungry straight away but gets very upset and squeals when we don’t get the latch right (even though she is my third baby I am no breastfeeding expert, having only managed to feed the other two for a little while myself).

Eventually she sucks for over an hour but still wants more so Tony dresses her in her first outfit, which she doesn’t seem to mind, then she has a little formula from daddy. She is totally alert & awake, although she does close her eyes while drinking as if she’s tired but fighting it. Eventually we are taken down to a ward where a midwife swaddles her & she falls asleep in my arms.

The last couple of hours have been so dramatic that it is only really once we are on the ward, baby sleeping so peacefully, that I can really appreciate what has just happened! Eve Daisy has arrived, another totally perfect little being we have created to make our family totally complete.

Tony goes home, exhausted, but neither of us can actually sleep for hours, we’re both far too wired after the dramatic events of the last couple of hours. We send each other lots of text messages about our beautiful new daughter and I send him pictures of her.

I was discharged early the next afternoon, taking our beautiful third baby home to meet her sisters. Our lovely family complete.

 

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Well, 34 weeks pregnant today and only a week until I finish work.

I had my midwife appointment today and all was fine – baby is still breech though so I need to get bouncing on my birthing ball, or, as midwife suggests: “going on all fours with your bum in the air”!! I go back at 36 weeks, and if little Madame is still breech I’ll be referred for a scan at Warrington. Hopefully she can “turn it around” before then, anyway.

I’m also thinking about starting on the raspberry leaf tea. Last time I didn’t start drinking it until about a week overdue – then I decided to guzzle it by the gallon load. Don’t know if it helped or not, but labour did start two days later. I’ve read a study which says that if you have one cup a day from 32 weeks it makes the second stage of labour shorter, which can surely be no bad thing. I wasn’t brave enough to try it as early as that, but now I’m 34 weeks I think I might give it a go.

I’ve also made the call to the hospital about seeing a Supervisor of Midwives re my VBAC plans. I spoke to somebody on the labour ward just now, and get the impression that, unless I’m a bit pushy, I might get fobbed off a bit. Being pushy isn’t really in my nature so I need to pull it out of myself a bit, I think.

In order to arm myself with everything I want to know, everything I want so say and what I want them to help me with, I’ve just been looking over my VBAC research, my draft birth plan and also re-reading Lilly’s birth story to work out what it is I do and don’t want this time.

(In a nutshell – last time there was an awful lot of intervention – waters broken without warning, blood taken from baby’s head, numerous attempts to put monitors on baby’s head, continuous monitoring and not much mobility because of suspected fetal distress, failure to progress, need to have c-section, failed epidural, general anaesthetic. Phew)

So, in order to get my head straight for when and if I finally get to talk to somebody who will help me agree a birth plan that I’m comfortable with, one which might actually lead me to have as good a chance as any to achieve a VBAC, here are the outpourings of my mind…

Things I did not like about last time:

  •  Continous monitoring meaning I wasn’t very mobile, leading to failure to progress (which is what they are helpfully proposing for this time too)
  • Waters being broken early, and with no warning that they were going to be broken (scary, unpleasant, no need)
  • Gas & air not helping – perhaps I wasn’t doing it right? (Please god let it help this time!)
  • Monitor being put on baby’s head – three failed attempts!! (painful, awful)
  • All the checks for fetal distress (water’s clear, blood test from baby) came back clear, yet fetal distress was still assumed from the off. Why?
  • Having an epidural put in – didn’t like the big needle – grumpy anaesthetist didn’t help – and he carried on even though I was having a contraction – which made me cry – and might have been one of the reasons why the epidural eventually failed
  • Side effects of epidural – shivering, being sick. Will this happen again? What is the alternative, pain relief wise? Pethedine?
  • Epidural not being able to be topped up when it came to c-section – leading to general anaesthetic instead. What are the alternatives? Spinal block?
  • Being told that, once bloods have been taken from the baby’s head to check for distress, this has to be done every half an hour? (felt like a threat to make me agree to a section)

As a result of all the above, my birth plan so far reads as follows:

Birth plan for Baby No.2

  •  My last labour resulted in an emergency caesarean under general anaesthetic – something I am very keen to avoid this time.

 

  •  I want to be kept informed of what is happening at every stage, and why it is happening

 

  • I understand that labour is unpredictable but I would like as little intervention as possible in order to allow my labour to progress naturally. My aim is to achieve a VBAC and to avoid an emergency caesarean.

 

  • If possible, I would like to wait until at least 7cm dilated before my waters are broken. If it is thought necessary for my waters to be broken, I want to be told about this IN ADVANCE and be told the reasons for it.

 

  • I am open minded about having an epidural, if possible I want to wait until after 5cms dilation so as not to increase the risk of an emergency c-section

 

  • I understand that fetal monitoring will need to be carried out, but I wish to remain as mobile as possible throughout labour, so would like this monitoring to be done intermittently, not continuously. I would like to avoid having a monitor attached to the baby’s head unless this is deemed a necessity for medial reasons.

 

I feel a bit like this birth plan is all negatives – basically DON’T ANYBODY TOUCH ME!!! LEAVE ME ALONE AND I’LL HAVE THIS BABY IF YOU DON’T MIND!!! But that’s the way I feel, a little bit.

My last birth plan reads like a fantasists list to Santa. The only things on there that happened was my request for Lilly to be given vitamin K by mouth (which was hospital policy anyway) and for Tony to be given the baby in the event of my needing a section under general anaesthetic. Whoop de Whoop.

Anyway, all this could be scuppered if Little Miss stays breech. And I know Tony is secretly hoping she does, because he thinks a planned section would be easier and less stressful. He does support me but I know he can’t really understand why I want to put myself through childbirth when I don’t really “have” to.

It feels good to write it all down. I just hope I can be as clear about what I want when this Supervisor of Midwives person calls me back. I don’t really want to be fighting these battles on the day I’m in labour.

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Lilly’s birth story – finally!

This birth story has been a work in progress since Lilly was born, in fact I only recently finished it.

Be warned – it is very, very, very long! And, if you’re just about to give birth yourself, you might want to look away…

So, nearly two years on, here it is… the story of Lilly’s birth…

Lilly was due on December 20, 2007 – but right from the beginning I suspected she might be planning to be fashionably late.

I remembered only too clearly when my mum had been pregnant with my little sister 18 years earlier – when I was eight years old and very impatient to meet my little brother or sister. Diane was due on Boxing Day, 26th December, but didn’t actually put in an appearance until an incredible 13 days later, on January 8. By that point I had given up hope of ever being a big sister, and even accused my mum of “just being fat, not pregnant at all!”. And, although I was born on my due date, it was only because my mum was induced because of high blood pressure. Otherwise, I was quite comfy where I was, thanks very much.

Keen to carry on the family tradition, December 20 came and went without any sign of Lilly whatsoever. On my due date, I had an appointment with the consultant. He examined me and told me I was already 1cm dilated, which I thought was very exciting! He did a sweep – where they sweep away the membranes around the cervix in the hope that it will stir up the hormones that trigger labour. We went home full of hope that perhaps things would kick off in the next 24 hours or so. But nothing.

 After that, I worried that she might decide to make an appearance on Christmas Day, and my main concern was how she’d feel having a Christmas Day birthday for the rest of her life – so much excitement on one day and the rest of the year with nothing! But Christmas came and went without our little girl – and then we really started getting impatient.

 So, we decided to try out some of the old wives tales to see if that could get her shifted. We went for more long walks than we ever had before in our lives. We tried spicy (ish) food – although my spice threshold is painfully low! I did plenty of bouncing on my birth ball. But nothing seemed to work.

 A week after my due date, on the 27th December, we went back to the consultant who announced I was now 2cm dilated and that my cervix seemed a little bit thinner. He also said he could feel the waters, so if it came to induction, they would be easy to break to get things started. He did another sweep and then booked an induction date for me – Tuesday, January 1, 2008, at 8am – when I would be 12 days overdue.

 We left feeling a bit deflated. Although I had dilated another centimetre, I wasn’t very happy about the talk of induction. I really wanted to go into labour by myself and I was sure I could do it, if I was given the time. I could feel that things were happening – my body was preparing itself. My joints felt looser down there and I had on and off achy pains like very mild period pains on occasion. I had plenty of Braxton Hicks (practice contractions), although they were never painful, no matter how much I tried to imagine it! But more days went by and still there was no sign of imminent labour. But it seemed that almost every night after my due date I went to bed thinking “this could be it, I could be waking up with contractions”. But every morning when I woke up feeling fresh as a daisy, my first thought was “oh no, nothing’s happened!”.

 A week or so after my due date, my mum and sister came to visit and my mum told me that the night before Diane was born, she had had four cups of raspberry leaf tea and two glasses of wine. Well, here, at last was a theory that had worked in my family and it had to be worth a try for me. The three of us went out in search of the magical raspberry leaf tea but unfortunately only managed to come back with raspberry and apple Twinnings! I decided it was worth a try anyway and started drinking it with avengeance. But the next day, my mum called me to say she had found some real raspberry leaf tea in a shop near her and she was putting it in the post for me.

 The package arrived the next day and I wasted no time in making my first cup. It didn’t taste as bad as I thought it would, so I decided that I’d try and drink as much as I could. I don’t know if it did anything, but two days later I was in labour!

 Things finally started to happen in the early hours of Sunday, December 30. Ironically, it was one of the first nights in ages that I had an absolutely dreadful night’s sleep. Lying in bed on Saturday night I started to worry about the impending induction, which now looked more and more likely as it was only three days away. It occurred to me how awful it would be if I didn’t get a good nights sleep the day before. Considering that not only would I be really nervous and excited, it would also be New Year’s Eve and the entire neighbourhood would be letting off fireworks all night, the chances of a restful nights sleep would be slim. So, on that Saturday night, I was unable to sleep a wink for fretting about not being able to sleep the day before the induction. And so it was that after being awake all night, my contractions started at 4am.

 It was true, they really do feel just like period pains. Except, where period pains are a constant dull ache all day, these would last 20 – 30 seconds or so and then fade, only to appear again ten minutes later. I lay awake, wondering if this could finally be it, and making a note of how frequently these pains were coming. They were almost exactly ten minutes apart each time, and were completely manageable at this point, strong enough to be noticeable, but probably only when you were really concentrating on it. I decided not to wake Tony as I still wasn’t sure of what I was experiencing and I knew that, even if these were contractions, there was a long way to go. Finally, two and a half hours later, I drifted off to sleep.

 When I woke up, they seemed to have disappeared. I was frustrated. Surely this couldn’t be another false alarm? I told Tony what had happened and we decided to go out for another of our walks to see if it would kick start things again. On the way home, we called in at Tony’s mum and dad’s house and had our Sunday dinner. By now things seemed to have stopped altogether.

 But at 5pm when we got home, the contractions magically appeared again. This time there was no doubting what they were. They were stronger – although still very manageable. We started writing down when they came and how long they lasted to see if there was any kind of pattern. They were more erratic in timing than they had been through the night but they started off roughly every eight minutes, slowly increasing over the next few hours to every four or five minutes by about midnight. At this stage they were also a little bit more painful and Tony connected me up to the Tens machine that we had hired. We decided to call the hospital and get their advice on when we should be thinking about coming in. I spoke to a midwife who advised me that we should try and wait until they were about 2-3 minutes apart and so strong that it was impossible to hold a conversation during one. In the meantime she advised going to bed and getting some sleep.

 So we headed off to bed not sure how on earth I would be able to sleep for a) excitement and b) the fact that I was in some fairly significant pain every five minutes. And, in fact, as soon as I lay down they seemed to get even stronger and much more painful. After a particularly big one, Tony jumped out of bed and said “right, we are going to the hospital!”.

So, into the car we got at about 12.30am on Monday, December 31 and headed for hospital. I was having contractions as we drove, which was a strange sensation, but I noticed that they seemed to have slowed back down to every five or even six minutes again… typical!

We got to hospital and went up onto the delivery ward. A midwife came and took us into a little room and said that she wanted to hook me up to the monitor. Now, we had been told at our NCT classes that we could refuse this, as there was a danger that once on the monitor, you will never get off. This would mean you were forced to stay lying down throughout your labour to keep the monitors on, and could slow things down as you would not be using gravity to help things along. Aileen, our teacher, said that the monitors could easily show some small deviation from what is considered the norm, and the staff can be very reluctant to “sign off” the trace and say it is all ok. But, in the heat of the moment, we were just so pleased to be in labour and that things were happening that we went along with the plan and I sat down and was hooked up to the monitor. I was examined and told I was 2-3cm dilated… not as much as I had hoped but progress, surely?

After 30 minutes on the monitor, the midwife looked at the printout and told us that the baby’s heart rate was dipping at the peak of every contraction, but recovering again “nicely”. She said it was normal and nothing to worry about. But she explained that, as I wasn’t in established labour yet – my contractions were still too far apart – they wouldn’t be able to admit me to delivery. I had two choices – either be admitted onto the labour ward downstairs or go home and come back when things had moved on a little. Bearing in mind it was 1.30am by this point, the thought of going onto a dark ward, alone, while having painful contractions and trying not to disturb anyone who was asleep while Tony would be sent home was just horrendous.

The midwife went off to show the heart rate trace to her supervisor to get it signed off so that we could go home. But when she returned, she said: “I’ve showed the print out to my supervisor and she agrees with me that it’s not right”. Oh dear, I could hear Aileen’s words ringing in my ears! But at the time it felt like a godsend as she said I could stay another 30 minutes to be monitored further – it seemed to have bought us some time before making the decision whether to stay or go.

So the 30 minutes came and went and the midwife said the trace was still showing that the baby’s heart rate was still dipping with each contraction. She said that because of that, she would admit us to delivery after all and Tony could stay! The trade off was that I would have to stay on the monitor throughout. At this point it seemed a small price to pay as my biggest concern at that point was being left in hospital without Tony.

So we were shown through to a delivery room and we got as comfortable as possible. The same midwife stayed with us and hooked me up to the monitor. I was still using the TENs machine at this point, although it didn’t seem to be making much difference. The contractions felt less intense than they had when we had been at home, and they were still at least five minutes apart.

After a little while, the consultant registrar who I had seen at my last two appointments came in. He said that, with my medical history, “the most important thing is we avoid a caesarean.” He said he was going to examine me to see how far I was. Shortly before this, I had been given the gas and air, as we didn’t feel that the TENs machine was making any difference anymore and some of the contractions were becoming fairly painful. I hadn’t quite got the hang of the gas and air yet – the art was to breathe it in a few seconds before the contraction hit, so that the gas and air would kick in at the same time. Unfortunately, I didn’t really find the gas and air that good, because it made me feel quite sick. It was like being incredibly drunk and the sensation hitting you all at once – not something I enjoyed, especially after nine months without even being tipsy! And so, as the consultant was examining me, and just as I huge wave of gas and air nausea and confusion hit me, I felt a warm, damp sensation – my waters had gone. It felt horrendous – the gas and air meant I couldn’t quite understand what was happening. The examination was painful – the water was confusing and I just remember looking at poor Tony, who looked probably just as anguished as me and saying “I don’t like it”!

(I assumed that my waters had broken coincidentally as the consultant registrar examined me. It was only a few days later that Tony told me he had done it on purpose – using the big crochet needle type implement. But he did not tell me he was going to do it, which, in hindsight, makes me feel rather cross. It was not a pleasant experience, largely because I didn’t know what was happening. I realise that the intention was to speed up the labour by breaking the waters and also to check for distress by seeing if the waters were clear (they were). But to be warned in advance would have been nice.)

Anyway, now that my waters were broken, they were hopeful that I’d start to make quicker progress. I was still hooked up to the monitor and the computer was constantly printing out a graph showing the strength and duration of my contractions, and the baby’s corresponding heartrate. My contractions were still not regular, though – coming every three, four or five minutes.

I’m not sure how much time went by but there began to be some discussion by the midwife and consultant registrar about the monitors themselves. They were like little round discs which were laid on your stomach and held in place with straps. It meant that you couldn’t move much, or they’d fall off. So the registrar decided he wanted to put a monitor directly onto the baby’s head. The midwife told me this and I asked her: “Will it hurt the baby?” She assured me it wouldn’t. But what I hadn’t accounted for was that it would hurt me… quite a lot actually! I honestly did not realise what I had let myself in for and before I knew it – the registrar was back – pushing and poking downstairs trying to attach the monitor to the baby’s head. Yes, it hurt. A lot! I still had the gas and air but it didn’t seem to help much because it was still making me feel sick and upset. But that wasn’t the worst of it. Once the monitor was attached to the baby’s head, the registrar tries to hook it up to the machine and finds that it doesn’t work. So he needs to attach a different one! He does this (ouch again!) and find that this one too, doesn’t work and goes back for a third attempt! Unbelievably, this one doesn’t work either!!!!! And he suggests that maybe it might be the machine, and not the leads, which are at fault! (perhaps it would have been a good idea to try out that theory right from the first?!?). But he has already pulled the third lead out. Thankfully, however, he decides not to try for a fourth time just yet to give me a break. He wouldn’t have had much choice in the matter as I was very much ready to put my foot down and say no anyway.

I had a bit more peace from the excruciating examinations and probing for a little while, before the registrar came back and announces that, as the baby’s heart rate is still dipping with every contraction, he wants to take blood samples from the baby’s head. This, of course, means more intervention “down there”. Only this time it is worse, if that were possible. I have to go in stirrups.

The dreaded stirrups. Of all the birth scenarios I could have played out in my head, stirrups were the one thing I never, ever wanted to contemplate. Seeing those things in soap operas makes me shudder. I’ve always vowed that I would never be in that position. The humiliation is just too much… and even now, thinking about this episode, it makes me cringe. Because yes, it IS literally as bad as you think it will be. There you are, legs akimbo, while an assembled group of about four medics stare down there and then start poking around. It is enough to make you cry – and that’s before it starts hurting. After the labour it was weeks before I even remembered that I ended up in stirrups – I think it’s just too embarrassing and horrifying to really want to remember. Hopefully the memory will fade to nothing over time and I’ll be in denial that it ever happened!

Anyway, the blood samples were duly taken. The results came back very quickly – a matter of minutes, or so it seemed to me. All clear. Baby is not distressed. I thought that would be an end to it all and I was relieved.

A little more time went by and it was felt that I still wasn’t making quick enough progress. It was suggested that I should be put on the drip to help things along. The contractions were already painful by this point, and the gas and air wasn’t really helping. I knew from other people’s experiences that the drip would make the contractions more intense and more painful. I had specified on my birth plan that I did not want to be offered an epidural, I would ask for one if I wanted it. But as the talk of the drip began, I began to think that perhaps it was time for the epidural. So I told the nurse that, if I was going to have the drip, I’d like an epidural first.

So, the anaesthetist arrived. I was dreading the epidural because the thought of having a needle in my spine really freaks me out. I knew that I had to be still during the injection and I had no intention of moving a muscle. Trouble was, the anaethatist wasn’t exactly Mr Sunshine. A man of few words, he set up his kit and the midwife told me to tell him if I had a contraction coming. I did – so I told him so. And he just carried on! At this point I was looking at Tony and crying and saying over and over: I’m having a contraction, I’m having a contraction”. It seemed to me like nobody took any notice. I tried to stay still but I found the whole thing very traumatic as I hated the idea of the needle in my back anyway but then was convinced that it would go wrong because he carried on through my contraction. After he had gone, the midwife says: “He’s a man of few words, but he does a good epidural”. Oh, really?

Anyway, the epidural was in. And then the drip was set up. I began to feel that this was it, I could cope now for however long this took. I couldn’t feel anything except my stomach feeling a bit tight every so often when I had a contraction. I felt in really good spirits and that the worst was behind us. I was on the drip and things would soon start moving. I wasn’t in pain and the baby wasn’t in distress. Yes, I can do this…

But, after a little while, the side effects of the epidural began to kick in. I started to shake and shiver violently. I asked the midwife: “Is this normal?” It must have been as she didn’t seem concerned. But I was!

Eventually, the shivering and shaking stopped. Things calmed down a little. However, without really realising it, I had started feeling the contractions again. Looking back, it is obvious that the epidural had worn off. I remember saying to the midwife: It’s a good job I’ve got this epidural in, because they feel quite strong as it is, imagine how strong they’d be if I didn’t have an epidural in!”. Of course, I shouldn’t really have felt anything. And why she didn’t realise that, I don’t know.

But, I was quite happy. Tony took advantage of the lull to go and put another ticket on the car and call his mum and my mum to tell them what was going on.

However. While Tony was outside, the consultant registrar came in again. “I am going to speak with the consultant and decide what to do,” he said. “We need to decide whether to carry on or bail out now.”

“Bail out now? What do you mean?”

“Have a caesarean,” he said, casually.

Oh. Well, I was not expecting this. Wasn’t he the one who said a few hours earlier that the most important thing was to avoid a caesarean?

“It’s just that, when you start intervening at 4cm, sometimes it is inevitable,” he said.

Oh again. I thought the intervention was to avoid the caesarean.

“We could carry on,” he says, “but we’d have to take bloods from the baby’s head ery half an hour. Once we’ve done it, you see, we have to keep doing it.”

Oh no. This feels like a threat. The blood from the head thing means the stirrups and the pain and the humiliation. No, no, no, I can’t have that every half an hour from now until god knows when! And the baby’s head will be cut to shreds!

Tony gets back and I ask the consultant to explain again what he has just been telling me. We’re both surprised, neither of us knew this was on the cards.

He goes off and Tony and I are left with the midwife again. Things are looking bleak. I’m not progressing fast enough and I don’t want the bloods every half an hour. Tony is worried that there is something wrong with the baby, although I’m adamant that there isn’t, that this is an over-reaction. But, how do I know? If I’m wrong, I’ll never forgive myself.

Luckily, at this stage, we have a fantastic midwife with us. She tells us that she had her baby by caesarean and tells us all about what happens and what to expect. What’ll happen in theatre, how the recovery will be, how long I’ll have to stay in hospital for.

By the time the consultant comes back, we’re beginning to reconcile with the fact that it looks like it’ll be a c-section after all. In a sense, we are relieved, we haven’t had any sleep for a long, long time, and it means an end is in sight. We are going to have a baby today!

The consultant still seems to be debating over whether or not I’ll have a section, and says we can either leave it another hour or we can go for the section. We say we want to go for the section. But there is another lady already in theatre, so we will have to wait.

While we are waiting, I experience another unpleasant side effect of the epidural (the pain relief effects of which, by this point, must have completely worn off as I was having to use the gas and air through contractions again). I am hugely sick. It is not pleasant – I am absolutely covered in it, and so is Tony – and it is green! I feel terrible and I know I’m going to be sick again. This time it’s not as much but I’m feeling really rough.

The decision is made – we’re off to theatre. Tony gets given scrubs to change into. He comes back, complete with hat… he looks hilarious!! I’m given anti-sickness drugs and prepped for theatre.

A different anaesthetist comes in to top up my epidural. A woman this time, and one who actually speaks and is fairly friendly. She injects the anaesthetic into my back and I feel the cold sensation entering my body.

The main thing going through my mind is for Tony to bring the camera – “bring the camera, bring the camera!” I’m telling him. “Never mind the camera, it’s not important” he says. “Bring the camera!!!” I tell him!

Before we go down, the anaesthetist wants to check that the epidural is topped up. “Can you feel your legs?” She says. “Yes,” I say, “I can move them” and I do a demonstration. “But they’re feeling heavy, aren’t they?” She asks. No, they’re not, actually. She’s puzzled and sprays a little bit of cold water on my legs. “Can you feel that?” She asks. “Yes” I say.

She decides to try one more time to top up the epidural, as the last top up clearly didn’t work. She says she’ll check again when we get down to theatre that it’s working.

So off we go, wheeled down to theatre, me still amused at the sight of Tony in his scrubs! I’m so excited and anxious, because I know I’ll be having a baby in a matter of minutes!

We get to theatre and they all start discussing lifting me onto the bed. I say: “I think I could probably get on myself, actually”. “No!” they all say. So, they lift me on and I can feel a contraction coming on. “I can really feel this contraction,” I tell them. “Are you sure?” says one of the doctors? “Er, yes, it really hurts!!”

We go through the “can you feel this” and “can you move your legs” and the water spraying thing once again. I can feel it all. I already know what is coming next, and although I can’t believe it I can, I feel like there’s been something inevitable about this all along.

“You’ll have to have a general anaesthetic, the epidural won’t top up,” the anaesthetist tells me. “Typical” is all I can think. She explains that they can’t keep trying with the top up, because if it does suddenly kick in, I’ll be higher than the sky!

Next thing one of the doctors says: “Right, we need to get on with this, the baby is getting more distressed” and Tony is ushered out (he isn’t allowed to stay when the op is under general anaesthetic). All I can think is “what if it doesn’t work either, and I can feel everything?” and I ask the very nice doctor who is looking after me “how long will I be out for?” He assures me I’ll only be out for half an hour, then they’ll wake me up so I can meet my baby. I’m relieved at that because I imagined I’d be out for hours.

Then I’m given the general, and, thankfully, it does work, and I am out for the count.

The next thing I know, a midwife is in my ear telling me “wake up, wake up. We’ve got a very anxious daddy and a baby wanting to see you”.

“No, no!” I say. This is the first decent sleep I’ve had in a while and I’m exhausted. I want to go back to sleep!

Then the thirstiness kicks in and I’m begging her for a drink of water (which I’m not allowed, only the flannel on the lips thing, grrrr!)

“Can dad and baby come in yet?”

“No, not yet, I don’t want them to see me like this!” I’m preparing for the most momentous occasion of my life, and I just don’t feel ready. I’m exhausted, half out of it and my mouth feels like the Sahara.

Anyway, in they come. Tony carrying this gorgeous little thing with these big, piercingly green eyes (they were actually piercingly blue, but that must’ve been the drugs!) and she is just the most amazing thing I’ve ever seen in my life! And seeing Tony carrying her like the perfect daddy I knew he’d be – it’s just too much. The midwives put her to my breast straight away and she latches on fine. Magic!

We go back to the delivery room, where we have a couple of hours (or so it felt like, not sure how long it was in reality) together. We just stare at our little baby and can’t believe we have her. At some point I think “we haven’t checked if it really is a girl yet!” because neither of us has seen her naked yet! But it’s fine, she is!

After a little while, the midwife tells Tony to dress Lilly in her first outfit – a vest and babygro. He does the little vest and I’m glad it’s him not me, she’s so tiny and precious and it’s such a nerve wracking task!

Then Tony goes home and I make him promise to come back as soon as he can.

Lilly and I are in the delivery room for a little longer, and then we are prepared to be taken down to the ward.

On the trolley ride down, they let me hold Lilly, and she is laid next to me while I hold on tight to her. It is an amazing feeling – I am in charge of making sure this little person is ok – this is it, I’m really a mummy, and we are really doing this. This is moment it all sinks in – and I love my little girl more than the world. 

On the ward that night, after our visitors have been and gone, we settle down for lights out. I have just dozed off when I hear a cannon go off outside, followed by fireworks. I realise for the first time what day it is – New Year’s Eve.

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Well, I’ve reached six weeks pregnant today and had my first appointment with a midwife.

This appointment was the booking in appointment with the midwife who visits my local GPs. It is a little bit complicated because the midwives who visit my local GPs serve Wigan hospital, not Warrington, where I am having my baby. So, basically, the midwife I see at my GP can’t really tell me anything specific about what really will happen – because procedures are different at the two hospitals. My actual booking-in appointment will take place at Warrington – more of that later.

Up here, we don’t necessarily see the same midwife each time, it’s just pot luck who you get. Today’s midwife was one who I saw while pregnant and in the weeks after having Lilly. She’s a bit brash, but I like her, she’s quite to-the-point and down to earth.

She wrote out a few notes and gave me some leaflets. Then she asked me about my last pregnancy. I told her – very straightforward, uncomplicated pregnancy and a birth that was anything but. 10 days overdue, over enthusiastic intervention by consultant, failed epidural, emergency c-section under general anaesthetic. I said I was keen to avoid that scenario again if at all possible!

Most of what she told me I already knew. That they’ll go back over my birth notes and see what the reasons for the c-section were, and if it was a straight forward failure to progress (rather than breech or other complication that is likely to recur) then they’ll be ok for me to go for a VBAC – vaginal birth after caesarian. That’s what I really want.

She asked me how far i’d manage to progress last time. I guessed about 5cm. She said this time I’d probably get to 5cm quite quickly, then after that it’d slow down and I’d labour like a first timer, which I knew.

She also said that the consultants would probably be a bit reluctant to induce me if I went over 14 days (which is the maximum time they’ll let you go overdue before an induction at Warrington, at Wigan it is 10 days apparently). This is because the induction process puts more intense pressure on the scar on your uterus. She said if it came to induction they might agree to a “half hearted” induction – one pessary to see if it worked on its own, otherwise they’d advise a section.

It’s a subject I need to do plenty or research on, and if anyone out there can tell me where I begin, that’d be brilliant!

I also asked the midwife today about some of the other things that i’ve been thinking about. One was will I do any harm to the baby by lifting and carrying Lilly, who weighs nearly 2 stone! She said it was just like exercise – if you’re a regular jogger before you got pregnant, you can usually just carry on. So that’s reassured me a bit. Besides, a friend of mine has just had a second baby (her first is a little younger than Lilly) and her partner was away in the Navy for most of her pregnancy, and she survived.

The other thing I asked her about was the swine flu jab. It gets rolled out to pregnant women next week and the Government are very keen to stress that pregnant women should have it. I’ve really already made up my mind about it – I want to have it - and I was only really wanting to ask her whether I had to book an appointment, or they’ll write to me. However, she thought I was asking her opinion and launched into a big rant about how she isn’t going to have it, it hasn’t been researched enough and she doesn’t care what management say! Something she did say though, which I suppose makes sense, is that by 12 weeks the baby is fully developed, and it might be best to wait until then. I checked with the receptionist on the way out and she said the jab is only being offered to pregnant women who are at least 13 weeks pregnant (so in second trimester) anyway.

So, there we have it, first midwife appointment. My next one is not until November 16, which is at Warrington. My 12 week scan is booked for 2 December, which can’t come soon enough. I’ve looked at the cost of private scans, and at Take A Peek in St Helens, where we had our 3d scan with Lilly, you can have a reassurance scan for £65. I think we’ll try and hold out though, it seems silly to pay for something which we’re going to get anyway a few weeks later. But we’ll see.

On another note – I am already showing!!! To me, it looks pretty obvious. If nobody has guessed at work yet, I’ll be insulted! Not sure how I can keep it under wraps til 12 weeks…. last time I kept it secret until five and half months!

And symptoms wise, I’m still the same. Nothing much to report. I get really tired around 2pm at work and just can’t find the energy or motivation to do anything. I think this might be a combination of pregnancy and caffeine withdrawral!

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It has taken me a few days to get on here to announce this news, but….. Lilly Joyce was born on New Year’s Eve at 11.12am, weighing 7lbs 14 oz!

She is absolutely gorgeous and we have spent an amazing week getting to know our little girl and finding the whole world changing, with her at the centre of it.

Daddy and I are extremely proud parents who are both completely in love with their little girl.

Unfortunately the birth didn’t quite go as planned – i ended up having an emergency c-section, and under general anaesthetic to boot!

But the main thing is our amazing, wonderful and gorgeous little girl is here safe and sound.
When i get round to it, I will post the birth story.

But for now, here are some pictures of our little angel.

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