Will is a month old today!
I keep thinking of Charles Dickens "It was the best of times, it was
the worst of times.". It seems like some cruel act of fate that
newborns are soooo yummy and cuddly and amazing while moms are
struggling so hard to pull themselves back together. It's one of the
most fleetingly amazing times of your life and you have to spend it
simultaneously with one of the worst times in your life: being post
partum. Ugh.
One of the worst things about being
post partum is the baby brain fog. I think I read it's an actual
chemical thing so you forget how horrible childbirth was? Or maybe it's
so you focus on your baby's survival to the detriment of everything
else? I don't remember (har har). I do know though, that if I don't write down Will's birth story, I won't remember the details and goodness knows every child needs the embarrassing blow-by-blow saga of how he was born.
This
was my fourth c-section and it's hard not to compare them all. Jamie's
c-section was so easy. My 21 year old body bounced back after a few
days like nothing happened (probably spurred forward by a baby in the
NICU...both because I didn't have to take care of him full time, and I
didn't want to miss anything). Charlie was a little harder, but still
pretty smooth sailing...partly because I only had one child to dodge and
protect myself from whenever he came barreling toward me with three
year old exuberance. Robbie's c-section was a definite turn for the
worse. I caught a virus in the hospital, had recurrent mastitis (much
like this time, except antibiotics actually did their job last time),
had an allergic reaction from a spider bite, and was innocently sitting
on the couch when Charlie did a cannonball dive off the back and into my
incision. In retrospect I did a lot of damage to myself internally
with Robbie's recovery, but I didn't know that and wouldn't have cared
anyway because he was our last kid. (ha!)
Which
takes us to Will's birth story. Picking your child's birthday and
knowing their gender and name is so the opposite of how childbearing
happened historically, that it's still jarring to me to do it this way.
Not that I'd prefer birthing in a four poster bed in a Victorian
nightgown while my husband paced the hall...but still, it seems a little
suspiciously manufactured to walk in perfectly healthy and say "oh
doctor, please do count those sponges and grab that scalpel, I'm
scheduled to be sliced like filet mignon in thirty minutes". But the
fates didn't consult me in the whole child producing dept (obviously),
so planned c-section it was. This was my first c-section scheduled in
the morning which was awesome. The worst part of all my other
c-sections was the starving and dehydration section of the day, and then
the continued starvation the next day. Jello is a poor food substitute
when you haven't eaten in two days. We got there early and I talked
over a few things with the anesthesiologist. This was also the first
c-section where I had a woman anesthesiologist which was funny (not
really) because I'd just been joking they were a rare species. I had
very specific opinions about what drugs I wanted and didn't want. I
hate how c-sections are such a one-size-fits-all. I get why emergency
c-sections are done the way they are, but why can't scheduled c-sections
be a completely customizable thing? I asked to do skin to skin right
away in the operating room (versus waiting for the recovery room) and I
really wanted music to sort of take away the clinical feel of the place
(and you know... distract me from the very real awareness I was buck
naked on a table under bright lights with a room full of people). They
were very obliging and honored all my requests, but they didn't know I
really wanted to ask them to skip the whole drape thing. I also wanted
to pull the baby out myself directly on my chest, do delayed chord
clamping, and no scrubbing the vernix off the baby...oh and please save
the placenta. ;-) ...Jim is thankful I kept all those requests to
myself. Cough cough.
The c-section itself went
great. Normally my blood pressure bottoms out once or twice and I
struggle with nausea. My arms weren't tied down this time, and I felt a
lot more relaxed (and I thought I felt relaxed with the other three).
I don't mind getting the spinal at all, and it always shocks me how
fast everything moves in the operating room. Before I knew it I heard
William take his first breath and start to cry...scratch that...it was
more of a furious screaming. That was another new thing. With my
others they always said something like "and here he is!" or "It's a
boy!" and then silence. Time always slowed down as I waited and waited
for that first breath or cry or something that let me know my child was
ok. You feel kinda of sensory deprived behind that curtain and it's
hard to get your bearings on what's happening or not happening. With
William though, he was crying before they even got him out. I thought, oh dear Lord have mercy on me, I don't think I can handle a super spitfire
and then they put him on my chest and he looked at me and I remembered I
already knew this person. He'd been mine for nine months and in that
second I felt like I'd known him forever. He chose that kodak moment to
clamp down his tiny non-fangs on my collar bone in a desperate attempt
to feed on something....anything. He was utterly convinced he was
starving to death (something he is still convinced of a month later). I
couldn't get him down far enough to breastfeed because of the surgery
going on just south of there, so I had to settle on stroking his head
and promising him he would get to eat soon (again, something that still
happens on an almost hourly basis lol).
The rest of the
surgery was uneventful. I went to recovery, Will nursed like a champ. I
got up to my room and settled in with the awesome Foley catheter and
happy pills. It wasn't until that night when I was walking around that
I felt like the medical tape on my left leg was bothering me. I
ignored it (there are a lot of things that bother you after a
surgery...including but not limited to people coming in at 4 am to take
your blood pressure and temperature). The next day my left leg felt
like it had blisters on it, the adhesive tape was burning it so bad. I
thought maybe I was having an allergic reaction to the tape, and since I
couldn't exactly bend down to check it out myself, I asked my wonderful
nurse to check it for me. She obliged and to her confusion (and
mine), there was nothing there. Just perfectly healthy looking skin.
Huh. Ok. Meanwhile the blistering feeling was turning into a full on
"why-are-you-holding-a-frying-pan-on-my-leg" and no one could figure it
out. My nurse was so concerned she called anesthesiology immediately
for a consult. They couldn't figure it out either so she scheduled a
consult with a surgeon. That second night I was sleeping (or trying
to sleep) when the new nurse came in and (not knowing about the leg
thing), she tried to move my left leg for some reason. I came off the
bed. This is where I felt at a serious disadvantage never having done
bradley classes, or hypno birthing or whatever women are doing these
days, because I couldn't get on top of the pain and I had no idea what
it was or how to deal with it. Jim didn't expect to have to actually
do the whole labor coach thing...except this was
super-psychotic-phantom-leg-problem versus actual beautiful
childbirth. My nurse was fluttering around trying to figure out what
the heck she'd done while William of course slept through the whole
thing. Figures.
I
ended up staying an extra day which was two days longer than I normally
stay considering I usually break out a day early, and when they did
discharge me, it was with a walker. I went in a healthy 30 year old and
came out an 80 year old. It was an odd complication to have...normally
you don't injure your leg in a csection. The neurologist jokingly
asked if they'd dropped me off the table or something, but I think I
would have remembered that. I am thankful though that everything seems
to be resolving itself. It was only a few weeks ago I was worried I'd
not be able to walk for months, and now my biggest problems are my
traitorous Benedict Arnold boobs.
But
that aside, my baby is perfect (or rather he smells perfect).
Granted, he's a very awake and alert little dragon baby who gets rather
cantankerous when the boob is taken away from him. He would much prefer
to eat without ceasing, unless of course he's sleeping which he likes
to do for big 5-7 hour chunks at a time. I've always been a
non-scheduler attachment parenter, but I'm having to enact some sort of
schedule otherwise the whole mastitis thing gets out of hand. William
weighs 9lbs even now (he was 6lb 4oz when we left the hospital), so
clearly he's not going to go all failure to thrive on me if I make him
wait three hours between feedings.
We all love him so
much. If anything I have to protect the poor child from the deluge of
kisses he gets from his older brothers.
Hopefully he doesn't mind that despite the kisses, he's currently sleeping in the closet like the poor fourth born he is. :-P
Thursday, October 2, 2014
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