Could it be possible that you will be the last tiny one I
will hold against my chest, the last one I will feel moving and shifting inside
me? I have realized this beginning with
my second baby, Cecilia, and I know the possibility is there more and more, the
older I get. You are precious to us as a
perfect gift from God, and I feel even more blessed as you are a “rainbow
baby,” one who came following the loss of the fourth baby we had conceived,
Mary Karol, and then many agonizing months of wondering when we’d even be able
to conceive again. That wait was for
you, Frances Philomena, and as I sit typing this with you asleep on my chest, I
marvel at your perfect round soft little head and your gentle breathing. It has been a long time since I’ve had a
newborn – over four a half years now. I
am relearning everything, yet it is all so familiar and natural to me after
having been through this with three babies before.
Your birth was to be a planned home birth, seeing as our
third baby, Lucy, was accidentally born at home. We had seen a homebirth midwife team for one
initial appointment in late 2014 while pregnant with Mary Karol, and I had
initially planned on using them for you.
However, two people I know mentioned another midwife, Ouida Sinclair, who
lives closer to us and comes to pregnant moms’ homes for every prenatal
appointment. This was very appealing to
me, as the other set of midwives, who have a great reputation, were an hour’s
drive from our town. So we set up an
appointment to meet Ouida at our local coffee shop, Swift and Finch, once I was
about ten weeks pregnant and we had already seen your precious little form with
beating heart on ultrasound at about seven weeks. You see, I had been under the care of a
pro-life, NFP-only GYN in Atlanta after many months of inability to get
pregnant again after the miscarriage.
Dr. Raviele had my hormone levels checked and, as I had suspected, my
progesterone was low. Low progesterone
can not only interfere with the ability to conceive, but it can lead to first
trimester miscarriages if you do get pregnant.
So I was on progesterone for the first twelve weeks of my pregnancy with
you, and I am so thankful for the support it likely gave my body in helping to
carry you through those crucial early weeks of pregnancy. So after that ultrasound, I felt good about
securing a homebirth midwife to care for us throughout the pregnancy up until
the birth.
Ouida was very friendly, had been attending homebirths for
35 years, and actually charged $500-600 less than the midwives I would have had
to drive to every month – she was everything we could have wanted in a
midwife! So we set our first appointment
with her for a week later where we got to hear your little heartbeat come up
immediately on the Doppler. Ouida even
came back less than a week later when I was concerned because I had a tiny bit
of spotting and was worried about you – so she came back and found your
heartbeat for me again, even though her next visit wasn’t supposed to be for
three more weeks. She also didn’t
require any payment until I was 38 weeks pregnant! I can’t say enough good things about her
level of care throughout pregnancy. She
was great to have as our support throughout this pregnancy.
My belly began to grow and I insisted on lots of profile
photos… when you have lost a baby, you try to make the most of every chance to
make a memory with future babies. I
began to feel your ever so slight movements around 12-13 weeks, and then began
to feel definite movements around weeks 16-18.
We were so excited to see you and find out that you were a girl at our
20 week ultrasound. Ouida, and pretty
much all the homebirth midwives in North Georgia, uses an OB in Atlanta named
Dr. Bootstaylor as her backup OB. He can
order bloodwork and do ultrasounds and anything else medical during the
pregnancy and is very supportive of homebirth.
We all went to Atlanta - Ouida met us there too, something else that not
every homebirth midwife will do! – and we saw you on ultrasound and learned
that you looked just perfect, growing right on track. The ultrasound tech said she was “over 90% positive”
that you were a girl, and over the next few weeks I began to picture our family
of all girls and how much beauty there would be in the gift of four sisters all
together. We went out to lunch afterwards
at a nearby Jason’s Deli to celebrate!
I continued to see my belly grow and Ouida came for monthly
appointments, and once I hit that 28 week mark and knew I was in the last
trimester, I began to breathe easier that you would soon be here in a few short
months. Sometimes they dragged by and
sometimes they seemed to fly, but your movements inside became even more precious
and I cherished the feeling of leaning back on our new couch every evening and
feeling you shift and kick. You liked to
have your rear end sticking out on my right side so that I was always slightly
asymmetrical. I could pat gently right
there on my belly and I’d see a foot or a knee jut up on my left side. Your heartbeat was always detected on my
right side lower down after about 20 weeks.
You had your head down early on, as all my babies have done. I loved carrying you, Phronsie, and I glowed
with adoration whenever I looked down and saw my swelling belly. I gladly accepted the backache that came with
the loose joints and added weight of pregnancy, because it meant I was getting
to grow another tiny human life inside me.
I look down at your sweet round head and soft skin now, almost a week
after your birth, and I almost can’t believe that you were in there giving me
all those sensations of movement. I miss
feeling you move inside of me now… however, I get to marvel at your movements
against my skin now, where you will pretty much live until you become mobile,
pressed up close against me nearly round the clock. You have left the inside of my body to now be
attached to the outside, continuing your gestation out here in the world as a
helpless tiny one, dependent on me for everything.
Also during the final trimester, I began to drink red
raspberry leaf tea… hot at first, then iced as the weather got hotter. I loved it and hoped it was helping to tone
my uterus as it supposedly does, helping with a quicker labor. I continued focusing on lots of protein for
strong membranes… cottage cheese with berries and cacao nibs was a favorite. I craved orange juice from pretty early on in
my pregnancy with you.
As I was in the final three weeks, knowing you could come
any time was exciting. My first three
pregnancies had all gone to 40 weeks and Ouida believed this one likely would
too, even as people would say, “Are you sure you’ll go to 40 weeks? You’re really big now; can you get any
bigger?” I got into week 39 and our
family attended an outdoor show of Midsummer Night’s Dream, in downtown Rome,
where we sat on the grass on blankets, and I began to think I couldn’t go much
longer because of how uncomfortable I was getting. I continued through that last week with plans
to stay very close to home. I started to
get a bit antsy halfway through that 39th week, seeing that pretty
much everything on my to-do list was crossed off, and knowing that now I was
simply waiting… waiting for you, waiting to meet you.
full term at 37 weeks, and with my last pre-baby haircut! |
at Midsummer Night's Dream at 39 weeks and feeling like a beached whale trying to get comfortable sitting on the ground! |
Your due date was June 7, a Tuesday. Ouida came for a prenatal appointment the
Thursday before and checked me to find I was dilated to two centimeters. She felt your position and remarked that you
felt right about eight pounds to her.
She also said she’d be in town on Monday checking on another client and
that she’d stop by and see how I was doing then. On Saturday I went out around 10am to run
errands, what I thought would likely be my last marathon errand trip for
awhile! I went to Aldi and bought frozen
pizzas for “emergency meals” post partum to have something to throw in the oven
for lunch quickly. I actually have never
spent as much as I did at Aldi that morning!
Frozen berries, bacon, I can’t even remember what else! I also went to the local coffee shop first
for one last “get a fun drink” trip for awhile and got a decaf java chip
frap. And I did the Krogering. I felt very close to labor just walking around
those stores, moving very slowly. In the
late afternoon we got ready to go to the 5:30 vigil Mass, and I sat through
that feeling exhausted and very, very “full” – that’s the best I can describe
it. We went to Bella Roma for dinner
after Mass… yes, I had eggplant parmesan to see if the old wives’ take would
work! Last family dinner out for awhile,
and it was delicious and we had fun. On
Sunday morning I actually felt better and like labor was not so eminent as it
had felt the day before. We just had an
overall lazy day at home. We did take a
long afternoon walk in the heat, me in my end-of-pregnancy maternity sun dress
from Old Navy, the only thing that fits comfortably at that stage. I was hoping some walking would encourage you
to get ready to come, and I did have a few contractions while walking. Lucy rode her scoot bike, and we walked out
of our neighborhood across Billy Pyle Road, and all the way down the newer
neighborhood road to the cul-de-sac and back.
I woke up Monday at 5:00 AM thinking maybe early labor was
beginning because I had a few contractions that felt slightly stronger than the
ones I’d been having randomly over the previous weeks. I didn’t wake Chris up, and they subsided
somewhere between 6-7:00. I slept a bit
more and then got up, thinking maybe this would be the day and if I moved
around some then they’d kick in again.
Over the morning I hardly had any contractions – maybe one
every hour and a half. I felt like I was
just waiting all day, in limbo. Around
11 am I had some “bloody show” but no increase in contractions. I had put my mom on alert after the early
morning contractions. Ouida came over
about 1pm, and I was surprised to see she had Teresa with her, who is her
partner – they back each other up at births so there are two sets of hands and
eyes to assist during labor and birth.
Teresa lives in Tennessee and will drive down here to attend Ouida’s
births, and Ouida will drive up there to assist at Teresa’s births. Teresa had come down on Sunday to be ready –
which is great because I didn’t know how quickly things would pick up! So I mentioned the bloody show to them but
that I wasn’t feeling contractions with any regularity, but they got excited
and said I’d likely be having the baby tonight or maybe the next morning. I still couldn’t believe it myself, but they
knew what they were talking about! They
checked baby’s heartbeat and Ouida mentioned I should take a nap if I could. They said they would stick close by, even
though at that point I felt like it wasn’t necessary… but I am very glad they
didn’t leave Rome! They went and walked
around at a few stores in the area.
At 4, I put on a movie for the kids and laid down. At 4:30 I woke up partway, noticed I was
having a contraction, and dozed off and on through three or four of them until
5. When I got up, they continued. Ouida had texted at 4:30 asking how things were
going… she knew somehow; it’s amazing to me!
I told her I’d had several contractions over a half hour while trying to
nap. She said they’d be there in five
minutes! I texted Chris and told him it
looked like contractions were picking up now, and was he about to leave
work? He said yes, as it was just after
5:00. Talk about perfect timing for him
to get in a full work day! Ouida and
Teresa arrived, bringing in all their supplies, and I finally realized maybe
this was really it! She checked me and I
was a little disappointed to only be at 3 cm, but I soon realized that didn’t
mean anything because of how rapidly my labor progressed. I called my mom and she asked if she should
leave right away or not, seeing as leaving Atlanta at 5:15 PM on a weekday
means you’ll be sitting in rush hour standstill traffic heading north on I-75 out
of town. I told her I’d call her back
shortly… Chris got home by 5:40 and things were continuing with frequent
contractions that I had to pause slightly through but not yet requiring full
concentration. I called my mom back just
a few minutes before 6 and said she should probably leave soon, and she said,
“I’m in the car leaving the neighborhood right now.” So all my support people were there or moving
into place, and things started to pick up rapidly and get intense.
I went to the bathroom and changed into my bathrobe. Ouida and Teresa had the waterproof mattress
cover and the old fitted sheet on the bed before I came back out. After sitting on the exercise ball a few
minutes and then standing and leaning on Chris through a few contractions,
they’d gotten strong enough that I wanted to lie down and really be able to
relax through them. I resumed my
favorite intense labor position, on my side with one arm behind me, and laid
still and tried to release all tension as each contraction came. Chris was kneeling by the bed near my head,
and he was timing the contractions and writing them down… we said before they
got intense that he really didn’t need to do that this time – the midwives were
there, we didn’t need to decide when to leave to go anywhere… but I said I
wanted a record just to see how they played out this time and because all my
other births have a contraction log that Chris made! So he kept track once they began getting more
intense at 6:00 and continued for an hour until the point when they became too
intense and he could focus better on me.
Ouida rubbed my feet with lotion through some of the contractions and
Teresa rubbed my back and shoulders, commenting on how soft my bathrobe was and
that she wanted one, and Ouida said she’d get her one, ha ha. Chris was feeding me ice chips made of tea
between contractions… I’d brewed a very strong batch of red raspberry leaf tea
and frozen it in ice cube trays a few weeks before, and he went and crushed
some up and spoon fed it to me from a bowl.
He also got crackers from my snack basket I’d prepared… Go Raw pizza
flavor sprouted seed crackers. I also
had dried papaya spears (I found them at our natural foods store and am
addicted!), mini peanut butter sandwich crackers (Horizon brand), and some
cacao almond crunch stuff that I made a week prior (recipe found on Food Babe
website; she calls it “candy” but it is not!).
Labor was so quick that all I ate was the pizza flavor sprouted
crackers, but the others would come in handy afterward.
the contraction log... there is just one more on the back, only about an hour's worth because she was born 45 minutes later! |
At some point I thought maybe I was close to pushing – I had
to be, I thought, because I knew I couldn’t take much more of the intensity and
said so, recognizing transition this time… and having that sensation in my
outer thighs, like I was splitting apart, and remembering that as coming soon
before I had to push with Lucy. I got on
my hands and knees and realized after a few contractions that I wasn’t quite to
pushing yet and decided to lay back flat into the bed, where I could better relax
through these last powerful contractions that would get me to the end. Ouida checked me again at this point and
found I was dilated to 8 but had a cervical lip – this is where the edge of the
cervix is over the baby’s head slightly, and sometimes it can delay labor, or sometimes
it can move on its own pretty quickly.
So Ouida pulled it back through a couple contractions – which was
horribly uncomfortable! – and then said it seemed to be stretching over your
head at that point, so she left it alone after that and I was very soon ready
to push. I had gotten quite loud at this
point, higher-pitched than I’d ever been in labor, Chris told me later. I had wanted to push on hands and knees but
also didn’t have the energy or motivation to get back onto hands and knees… it
doesn’t seem like it would be difficult to go from side-lying to hands and
knees, especially when at that same point in a previous labor you have gotten
up from a seated position, taken a couple steps, and gotten down on hands and
knees… but at that moment it seemed a monumental task. In retrospect I wish I’d made myself do it
anyway because gravity would have helped me push easier. Nonetheless, it only took five or so minutes
of pushing to get you out. I had that
urge, that feeling of something heavy suddenly there, and gave my first push
cautiously. After that, the body starts
to take over. When they realized I was
pushing on my side, Chris held my top leg up (and out of Ouida’s face, ha) and
I could feel your head coming close to crowning. I felt that burning sensation as you crowned
and remember thinking I hadn’t felt it with Lucy because she’d come out in just
two pushes with membranes still intact. You
entered more slowly, but still came out after about five minutes. No tearing, and hardly any swelling or
discomfort afterwards either. For
comparison, I’d pushed for an hour and a half with Caroline, breaking the water
in the process, and for 15 minutes with Cecilia, with water already
broken. So Chris used one hand to hold
my leg and another to put under you as you emerged, while Ouida guided you out
with her hands. As your head came out,
they could see that the membrane was still over your head. I remember hearing Teresa and Ouida comment right
before you crowned that it felt like the membrane was still there and that they
didn’t think the sack had broken. Your
body came out completely, and the membrane was tearing around your chin and you
were making some gurgling sounds, so they decided to pull it off right away due
to that… so I again missed seeing my baby still in the sack, just like with
Lucy! I did have a view of you right
after that, and reached down to feel you, and I felt that the membrane was
rolling down around your middle. Ouida
put you on my belly and I pulled you up on me.
You were crying loudly and nice and pink. You didn’t want to nurse right away but were
nice and active. I got my sports bra
that I’d been wearing off so you could nurse soon. I’d thrown off my bathrobe at some point
earlier, maybe when I had tried getting on my hands and knees. You sounded a bit gurgly in the throat so
Ouida suctioned your mouth once with a bulb syringe, and after that and I got you
calmed down a bit, you began to look for the breast. We left the cord intact and called the other
kids in.
My mom had arrived about 7:40 and had come in and found the
kids in the backyard (they had gone out there when I’d gotten loud at the end),
so she stayed out there talking to them a few minutes and must’ve come back in
the house right at or after 7:50, because she went back out and told the girls
that she heard a baby crying! So they
came in to see her and they all felt the cord, which we had not yet cut but had
stopped pulsing at that point. Chris cut
it a few minutes later and then Ouida felt that my uterus was still very high
up, so they wanted me to try to push the placenta out. I did, and they pushed on my belly on the
outside to help get it out as they encouraged me to keep pushing. I later realized that they were concerned
with it still being up so high that it might have bleeding up behind that they
wouldn’t see until it came out. The
uterus usually gets lower more quickly than that, apparently. So I nursed to help it along and pushed it
out and they examined it closely under the flashlight from Teresa’s cell
phone. In the ultrasound I’d had an
extra little lobe visible on the placenta, but it appeared that it had fused
together with the rest of the placenta.
Right after you were born and before the placenta was out, Chris helped
me dig into my snacks a little more – I was hungry! He opened the peanut butter crackers and
between me, him, Ouida, and Teresa, we finished off the whole box quickly. They were good!
You nursed awhile and then Ouida put you on the scale – you
were 8 lbs. 3 oz. and 21 inches long, and your head was 14 cm. We took some family photos on the bed and
Ouida got your footprints on a certificate with your full name, Frances
Philomena Lewis, and your measurements on it.
I ate dinner, which had been prepared in my manic nesting cooking frenzy
on Saturday – I’d put a dish of chicken tetrazzini in the fridge, intending it
for dinner on Sunday and then deciding to switch it to Monday, as Chris was
home Sunday to help prep another meal we’d planned for the week, not knowing
which day labor would hit! He had put
the tetrazzini in the oven after getting home so my mom and the kids would have
dinner all ready for them – that truly worked out perfectly. And it was a big enough dish that the
midwives could eat some too, so everyone was fed! After the hard work of labor, it tasted so
warm and wonderful to me!
After a bit, I got up to go to the bathtub. When they’d arrived, Ouida had asked if I
wanted to start steeping my postpartum bath herbs so I could soak in the bath
afterwards, and I wasn’t sure if I would want to bathe right away or not… but after
the birth, I thought that sounded nice, so Chris got the herbs steeping and the
tub filled. I soaked in the tub with you
nursing on my chest for awhile, then my mom and Chris took you and dried you
off and Ouida pulled out a onesie to put on you. My mom held you awhile and Ouida helped me
out of the tub and to dry off… then it was back into the comfy bathrobe and
into bed to rest and nurse more. The
midwives had cleaned up everything while I was in the bath, towels and the
sheet had been thrown in the wash and the bed was remade, and everything was
nice and comfy. Ouida asked Chris to
lead a prayer of Thanksgiving for your birth before they left and said she’d be
back within 24 hours to check on us.
You were here at last, four hours before your due date! I’ve been swelling with love for you over the
past week and falling totally in love with your perfect round head and soft
hair and precious sweet skin! We love
you, Phronsie, so very much!!
Ouida with Phronsie a week after the birth.... we forgot to get any photos with her at the birth! |
Ouida and me |
1 comment:
I'm not sure how I stumbled upon your blog but our baby girl was also born at home just before yours on May 22, 2016. I love your story and can relate to so much, including progesterone issues and losses. My birth did not go as planned and I was very depressed. I am fine now and love our little Angelica Rose dearly. I'll be 45 this year and feel the same way about this probably being our last (we have five). I'd so love another. Where has the year gone?! God bless you and thank you for sharing!
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