How long did you feel sad about birth not going to plan?

I think it does help to talk about it and its good to hear other stories as I sometimes feel I'm being a bit OTT when telling other people what happened.

I think it is worth remembering it isn't a competition and your feelings are just as valid as anyone else's. Pregnancy/birth/motherhood comes with so many expectations and when they turn out massively different to what you expected it is natural to be saddened by it. I know that out of 4 pregnancies (MMC, natural MC, Pre-eclampsia/breach position, and uterine rupture) I was left feeling like my body failed each time. Even when the outcome is positive in the end the journey there can have a huge emotional effect still. :flower:
 
Truthfully about 2.5 years which was when I had the 2nd. I wasn't sad about it not going to plan, but upset that it went a way it didn't have to (there were some medical mistakes with mine). Big hugs :hugs:
 
OmiOme - Wow... that sounds horrific... I thought my labour and delivery was bad until I read your story...

I felt sad for about 1-2 months after birth of my son. He´s now 4 months old, and I´m still recuperating, but getting better every day.

I planned a home birth, in water with hypno-birth pain management.
Not what I got.
I ended up in hospital, with a drip, with a failed epi (paralyzed with pain on my right side, basically desensitized on the left side, while hypersensitive on the right one).
Took 10 hours after I got into the hospital (after 28 hours at home, thereof 8 in severe pain)
We ended up with a ventouse delivery with an episiotomy, I lost a lot of blood, and got a spinal headache for 3 days afterwards. My son ended up in ICU with jaundice as I couldn´t breastfeed him properly at first.

What I´m really worried about is if I ever do get pregnant again, is if I´ll completely and totally panic about the future labour...
 
My midwife told me with my first its best to always go in labour with an open mind as you don't know how its going to go until your doing it, I want a water birth this time but still have the thought in my head when the time comes my labour may decide to take a different turn. I think it's important that we don't get to dead set on giving birth one way and still keep In mind what could happen instead.
 
I feel like I did have an open mind. I knew I might not get a water birth. It's not much that my birth was very different to what I wanted, just how traumatic it was for me. I am jealous when women have wonderful births with no complications and no on-going issues because of serious 3rd and 4the degree tears...

Edit : jealous might not even be the right word. Of course I have some pangs of jealousy but mostly I'm just sad.
 
But a healthy baby isn't all that matters, mothers matter too.

It is jaunt very sad to me that birth seems to have gone full circle, at least in the US, and has now become more dangerous again.

In my situation they kept trying to convince me to have a c-section saying that I wouldn't dial ate. They were using some pretty obvious emotional/psychological manipulation tactics to try to get me to agree to the surgery by scaring me into it but I knew there was nothing wrong. All they talked about was what could go wrong, not that there actually was something wrong. I don't want to go into details. Suffice to say I had forceps delivery after 38 hours of labour. To this day I have intense feelings of hatred toward my midwife, haven't ever disliked anyone so intensely in my adult life before. But her betrayal, the sense of being alone, the total awareness that they were lying to me (telling me there are no risks to a c-section), then afterwards her constantly telling me all that matters is a healthy baby - trying to convince me that they were justifies in what they did, all awful.

Omi your experience sounds truly horrendous, thank God you're okay. I know one other woman who had a ruptured uterus (from c section scar) and ended up with hysterectomy. C-sections are very risky for mothers and babies but hospitals seem to love them since no one can say they didn't do absolutely everything to try to save mom/baby of there's a lawsuit. It's clear that hospitals have their own interest which may be adverse to the interest of women and babies. What's concerning is how little knowledge and awareness there is of these underlying issues
 
2 years later and I'm still quite sad about how my first birth went, I was completely robbed of my experience, and that wasn't the worst part, my newborn baby suffered from it because of the morons working the floor that night. I really wanted an all natural birth, and got anything but.

my problems started with DD being in a bad position during labor, which caused sporadic, unstable contractions, so I broke down and asked for the epi after dealing I stopped dilating, was threatened with pictocin, and dealt with painful contractions every 20 seconds for 2 hrs straight. DD was facing sideways coming down the birth canal, which was never caught, and the doctors never even knew it was going on (actually I never even knew myself until I told my story to my now midwife, and she figured it out without even being there!) and got stuck twice on her way out, first her head, and then her shoulder. I was only pushing for 5 mins before they decided I needed help, not even a fair chance really, so they gave me a 3rd degree cut, pulled DD out with the vacuum and forceps, and broke her collar bone to get her out the rest of the way when she got stuck for the 2nd time :( Just thinking about it now still ticks me off. For some reason they decided a student would be the best person to sew me back up after getting my cut, which took forever to finish, I didn't get to hold her because of that, DH got to hold DD first, actually, I didn't get to hold her until about 3 hrs after she was born because when I was ready to hold her and try to bf her, they decided I needed to get up from off the bed after being done receiving my stitches and go to the bathroom.

I had extra damage done to my insides after having the forceps shoved up in me that it took over a year after DD's birth to recover from until sex no longer hurt, and even DD suffered. The damage done to her neck from the forceps had ripped her delicate neck muscles, so she couldn't bf properly until my lactation consultant had helped us out for 4 weeks straight. Then DD had to take 5 months of physical therapy. She's alright now, you'd never even know by looking at her what she and I have been through, but really, who the hell wants to deal with all that crap during the first few months of your baby's life? That hospital was complete rubbish! I suffered from really bad post partum depression because of everything that had gone on, which also resulted in difficulty bonding with her for the longest time, and at the time we weren't even living close to family, so I had no one available to offer me some help or relief, I had to deal with everything all on my own.

I can honestly say it was the worst experience of my entire life, and although I am going through a midwife lead clinic that are very well educated on the birth process and have much more experience in labor, delivery and birth, I am still extremely nervous and paranoid about going through the same again, like a fear has been instilled within me, and the paranoia is so bad that I have been doing research non stop, doing exercises and baby positioning techniques daily just to avoid everything I mentioned above. Everyone says try not to worry, it won't happen again, but how can I not when I have only had a very negative experience to go off of? :nope:

I have tried to talk to my family and friends about my experience before, and they always just brush it off with the "don't worry about it, you and Nora survived, that's all that matters," response, and I know there is some truth to that, I am extremely grateful that my baby and I are still alive and well today, but that sort of answer just ticks me off, as if my feelings, fears, and the nightmare I endured doesn't matter.

I've been given a 2nd chance to try and achieve the birth experience I would like, I just pray that all my hard work, and the trust I have in my midwife pays off.

Anyway, sorry for the super long post! It really does feel better to rant about it sometimes
 
But a healthy baby isn't all that matters, mothers matter too.

I agree. It's amazing how many women accept being butchered for 'the sake of a healthy baby' when they could have had BOTH
 
But on the other hand some women are butchered and then lose their babies. I think this is the outcome we all fear during pregnancy and labour and just having a healthy baby is so overwhelmingly the top priority that acceptance in a disfiguration of their own body is easier.
 
LockandKey - Thank you for sharing your experience, and I wish you the best of luck in your second labor and birth. :hugs:
I share your trepidation about ever getting pregnant again.
My LO is 5 months old now, and I´m still recovering from the birth, will probably have many more months in physical therapy.
 
But on the other hand some women are butchered and then lose their babies. I think this is the outcome we all fear during pregnancy and labour and just having a healthy baby is so overwhelmingly the top priority that acceptance in a disfiguration of their own body is easier.

Of course, but it doesn't have to be that way either. Here in North America, the rates of C-sections/episiotomies is downright disgusting because medical staff in general treat it like no big deal. You can have it both ways the majority of the time. There's no need for some poor woman to limp around and piss herself for months afterwards for the "sake of a healthy baby" when the baby's health was never actually an issue.
 
But on the other hand some women are butchered and then lose their babies. I think this is the outcome we all fear during pregnancy and labour and just having a healthy baby is so overwhelmingly the top priority that acceptance in a disfiguration of their own body is easier.

Of course, but it doesn't have to be that way either. Here in North America, the rates of C-sections/episiotomies is downright disgusting because medical staff in general treat it like no big deal. You can have it both ways the majority of the time. There's no need for some poor woman to limp around and piss herself for months afterwards for the "sake of a healthy baby" when the baby's health was never actually an issue.

exactly WSS, like I mentioned, I was only pushing for 5 mins before the nurse just gave up on me and decided "well if you can't get this baby out yourself I am calling in some help." I had been laboring in that hospital for 9 hrs and I guess they were getting pretty sick of me and wanted me to get out already so someone else could use that room for a while. Total BS in my opinion, I didn't even get a fair chance to push really, and even though she was out in 10 mins with the help of intervention, there was so much more damage done to the both of us than there would have been if they just let me push her out myself. But somehow, her not being out in those first 5 mins of me pushing made her life in danger, and I've heard of ladies pushing for an hr or two with their LO's just fine...doesn't make sense really, the system here most often likes to do what is most convenient for them or what will get them the most money.
 

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