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birth story

birth story

The birth of Benedict

February 2, 2020

Been meaning to get around to this for a month or two, and now that we’re enjoying a nontraditional vacation at Children’s hospital NICU, I’ve found the time. (And boooooy did I find the time. If you make it to the end of this novella, good on you mate.)

The good: Benny is over the worst of his RSV-induced bronchiolitis. We brought him to the ER last Wednesday because it seemed like he was struggling to breathe. I felt kind of stupid since we’d been to the pediatrician only that morning, but she cautioned me to look for certain signs that he was working too hard to breathe, and so off we went.

A 6 hour ER stint and one ambulance transfer later, we found ourselves in a cozy private room in the NICU at our wonderful children’s hospital’s sprawling megaplex of a campus, and here we’ve remained for the past 4 days. The first night was a blur of sleeplessness. The second night was scary. His oxygen levels dropped repeatedly, usually correlating with a feeding, and so he earned himself a feeding tube and the highest level of oxygen before intubation would have been required. He pulled through magnificently and is now weaned off the NG tube and on a light flow of O2 which he’ll probably have to go home with.

RSV hospitalizations are a common Colorado thing, or at least a Denver thing, since we’re at higher altitude – I’m assuming that holds true for other high altitude climes – and our babies are already at a natural disadvantage where oxygen saturation is concerned. The air is rare up here! I have friends from all over who’ve never heard of it causing hospitalization. But in the Mile High City, winter-born babies make parents twitch with anxiety at the possibility. According to the nursing staff it has been a banner year for RSV already, with a few long months ahead of us yet.

So there’s your backstory. Now that he’s so much better and we’re waiting to hear about a discharge (fingers crossed for a Superbowl Sunday sendoff) I figured I could bang out a quick birth story for this kiddo who is already bound and determined to craft his own narrative and differentiate from the pack.

You’ll see what I mean.

Let me back up about 11 months or so. I was at a family St. Patrick party and (plug your ears) enjoying a wee nip of Jameson or some other tragically overpowering Irish spirit which I can only be coerced to drink after I’ve had a glass or two of prosecco or some such more civilized libation when my dad looks at me over the rim of his highball glass and asks, “Jenny, are you pregnant?”

My mom overheard and immediately let out a dramatic gasp, clasping her hands together in delight “Oh Jenny ARE YOU??” and as a woman who’d been on a serious eating-keto-intermittant-fasting-dabbling-back-in-eating-disorder kick for the past 6 months or so, I was much affronted.

DADDY THAT IS SO INAPPROPRIATE, ARE YOU CALLING ME FAT WHAT DO YOU MEAN.

Dad backpedaled frantically because Dad is a wise man with 5 daughters and a wife and knows way, way better than to comment on appearances. Ever. He seemed genuinely flustered, while my mom continued cackling with barely suppressed glee and saying she just knew it.

Here’s the thing about my mom though, she always does know it.

She’s more reliable than most early detection pregnancy tests, so now I was alarmed even though I had, of course, already taken one of said tests just a day before and confirmed a big fat negative.

But mom was never wrong before.

And readers? She wasn’t wrong this time, either. A week later I walked into our bedroom with a rueful smile on my face and an Amazon subscribe and save pregnancy test which I waved under Dave’s nose on my way out the door with a casual utterance of “mom was right. She’s always right.”

And that, my friends, is how you announce a 6th pregnancy.

I had a relatively uneventful run of it, despite being grandmultipara and advanced maternal age, and passed my GD screening and all the other high risk markers handily. We declined to discover the gender or any of the advanced screening just because I’m anxious enough without having something specific to worry about for weeks and months at a time.

During this pregnancy I also began working with a wonderful nutritional therapist, a registered dietician who specializes in eating disorder recovery and intuitive eating. I found her through a friend’s Instagram stories where she shared about having found incredible peace with food and with her body. Her words leapt off my phone screen and sent me scrambling to message her demanding to know what – and who – she was talking about, and was she taking on new clients?

That was almost 8 months ago now, and what I thought would be a quick fix ended up being one of the most fruitful, transformational, and important journeys of my adult life. All the shame around body image and all the dysfunction around food. The endless cycles of this diet now that cleanse maybe a detox or a reset or a wellness plan… they were all, for me, endless iterations of an eating disordered mentality I’d been battling for 20 years. 2 decades. My entire adult life. I didn’t know what “normal” was, when it came to food, to exercise, or to self talk. But I did know that the single greatest struggle for me when it came to having kids was the price it extracted from me, the toll it took on my body.

I loved my babies and I loathed my pregnant and postpartum body. It feels so crazy and sad saying it now, but it’s true. The things I said to myself in the mirror, on the scale, at the gym and in the fitting room. I was waging war against the same body that stepped up so magnificently and carried 5 – soon to be 6 – babies to term and brought them safely into this world.

I couldn’t see the forest for the stretch marks.

I had this bizarre split between “I love my babies and our beautiful family” and “I utterly despise myself”.

And gosh, it’s hard to admit it. But I feel like it’s essential in order to highlight in order to explain what came next.

What came next was healing. Release. Freedom. Reconciliation. A mental load hundreds of pounds lightened by no longer being enslaved to obsessing over food, weight, body shape, or size.

It wasn’t overnight, and it hasn’t been a linear progression. But I’ve been radically transformed through the work I’ve done with her, and through discovering Intuitive Eating and spending time in conversation with the Lord about who He sees when he looks at me. I wrote about it a bit back here. And if you grab this year’s Lenten devotional from Blessed is She, you’ll read about it in my chapter.

So that’s the backstory. In some ways in was wonderful to delve into IE while pregnant, since gaining weight was already a given. In other ways it challenged me as I blew through my maternity clothes at an alarming pace and entered into a world of sizes I’d only ever sported at month 9. Gulp. Was this Intuitive Eating, or was it being 36 almost 37? Or was it having 6 kids in 9 years?

It was hard to pinpoint any one thing and pin the “blame”, but boy was it refreshing not to try to actively restrict weight gain or food while baby was on board. And here’s the hilarious punchline: I gained around the same amount of weight as I have with each pregnancy. Maybe give or take 5 lbs. All that angst and self flagellation on the scale swapped for unselfconscious enjoyment of food, of movement, and of a growing body carrying another miracle inside.

I looked (and look) nothing like an Instagram influencer. My kids don’t have matching rust toned outfits or matching socks, even. I couldn’t “justify” our large family’s existence by putting on a beautiful show that proved to the world that openness to life would’t wreck your body or your sense of style.

We pile in and out of a mud-spattered decade-old Toyota Siena in hand me downs from Old Navy, and nobody wants to sponsor any of my posts.

But in stepping out of that irrational pursuit of “this is what having a big family looks like – oh haha excuse our occasional hot mess that I staged in my flawless kitchen – I found a freedom to connect with friends and strangers alike when they spoke of overwhelm and full hands and never being able to do it.

Me too, I nodded in understanding. And yes, so full. Mmm hmm, I also feel like I’m not doing it right.

Instead of being an exotic zoo creature with superpowers, I became a fellow human being to them, these strangers and neighbors whose comments became opportunities to self disclose and connect and swap stories honestly. My new favorite response to “you must be so busy, I only have 2” is “Right? No matter how many kids you have, they take up all your time!” which always, always makes people’s eyes go wide with recognition and relief.

Anyway this is getting to be quite the novella…I’m tempted to stop here and TBC, but I have good wifi and a sleeping baby in the room with me, so what the heck.

By about week 30 of this miraculously freedom-filled pregnancy I was large. I walked like a swaying donkey from about week 34 on. Forget exercise, my SPD was off the chain, my heartburn was off the charts, and I had carpal tunnel in both hands that was bad enough to sleep in a pair of wrist braces. Between that, the support belt, and a constant drip of antacids and PPIs, I was sort of a hot mess. I made multiple incredulous statements to the effect of “I can’t believe celebrities wait until their late thirties on purpose” and “holy bleep, advanced maternal age is no joke” because truly.

But other than that, things were uneventful until the final month. From Halloween on, we entered into a twilight zone of hospital visits and heart rate decelerations and irritable uteri and I am not going to lie, there were dark moments in the month of November when I’d spend upwards of an hour a day sobbing in discomfort and frustration. My uterus was doing this, prodromal labor was kicking into high gear, and I spent hours every night stress-googling “am I in labor?” signs and symptoms and reading every birth book under the sun because, you know, I’d never done this before.

Thanksgiving night after finishing dinner at my sister’s house, I lay on the couch in her front room and wept. Zelie scrambled to the summit of mount mommy and perched there like a baby sea lion, and my sister in law snapped a picture, filling me with hostility in the moment but for which I am now eternally grateful.

Because guys? I was a HOT, HOT MESS. Superheated and squalid. I’ed even gone so far as to shoot a couple tablespoons of castor oil that morning as it was my official due date, and NOTHING HAPPENED.

The next day, November 29th, I gave the castor oil another shot and noticed some mild cramping, but nothing that led me to believe the castor oil was doing anything. I cried, cleaned the house, napped, cried some more, and went to bed around 9:45 after another small dose of castor oil.

And then I woke up at midnight in active labor. Tada. We called our neighbor to come over because I wasn’t sure how fast things were going to go and my sister was 20 minutes away. I was also feeling weird and like baby wasn’t moving well. In retrospect I’m guessing my already irritable uterus became a pissed off uterus when I introduced the castor oil into the equation, so I was essentially having these super contractions that lasted for 5 or 7 minutes at time. It was wild.

At this point it should be noted that I’d been scheduled for an induction 5 days earlier that I’d cancelled due to a terrible sinus infection. they were asking me if I wanted to reschedule, and I just couldn’t find peace about it. My mommy instinct told me this baby didn’t want anything to do with Pitocin (foreshadowing) and so I deferred, and deferred again.

Back to the big night. We hustled into the chilly night air, high fiving my sweet neighbor Jess on our way out the door. My water broke in the car on the 3 minute drive to the hospital and I was like, okay, it’s go time. Also, good thing we grabbed that beach towel.

We got to L&D and I uncertainly announced “I’m in labor?” but didn’t look all that uncomfortable because I wasn’t. And that was crazy. I mean I was contracting but they were weird. Non-productive feeling. My water had broken, but other than that I felt, you know, pretty normal.

They plopped me into a delivery room anyway, because when you’re a 6th time mom with ruptured membranes, they know better than to put you in triage. And upon examination, I had already progressed to a 7. 7! I was ecstatic. I’d been at 3 cm for 3 whole weeks, membrane sweeps and stretches aside. I left each of those OB appointments in agony because my uncooperative cervix, though dilated, was still so very high and far back that it practically took an act of God for the provider to reach it. I won’t go into what that felt like, because I want the human race to continue on.

My cervix was still high as a kite, but at least I’d progressed! (Ominous foreshadowing). My favorite midwife was on call and she showed up and checked me again, about an hour after we’d arrived. She frowned as she palpated … something. “I don’t know what I’m touching here,” her forehead wrinkled in confusing as she checked, and checked, and checked…

There’s nothing quite like what followed next, a veritable parade of providers, nurses and on call doctors and another midwife, each of them taking a turn to have a go at my cervix and try to determine what was going on up there.

I can’t tell what this is.

I don’t know what I’m touching.

Is that an…ear? Is it a mouth?

At this point Dave and I are not scared but terribly, terribly confused and also, good thing I had one billion ultrasounds because at least we have visual confirmation that it’s a human baby in there.

Finally an OB from our practice showed up, put her hand into the situation and announced, yep, that’s a mouth and a chin. Baby is trying to come out mouth-first.

Reader, babies don’t come out “mouth first” for a reason. Yipes.

At that point I was exhausted and worried. The possibility of a C section had already been tossed around by various nurses and the hospitalist on call. Our good doctor looked at me and said, you can keep laboring for one hour, then let’s ask this baby to make the call. Let’s see if he or she moves into a better position.”

I was 9 cm at that point, the proud owner of a wonderful epidural, and hadn’t progressed in any measurable sense for more than 4 hours. Dave and I prayed a rosary for the next 40 minutes or so and I asked the Lord over and over again “make it clear, make it so obvious”.

Dr. B checked me again and smiled ruefully, “baby’s chin is angled even further back, it moved the opposite way of how we needed it to in order to continue vaginally. We’re going to the OR.

Things started moving quickly then. Baby’s heart rate, stable for the most part until then, starting dipping into a disturbing pattern of late decelerations. The pace quickened. I was in the OR 3 minutes later and surgery began about 12 minutes after the doctor made the call. I still hadn’t progressed in terms of station at this point, so while I was 9.5 cm dilated, baby was still so high in the birth canal that I hadn’t even pushed.

At around the 15 minute mark I started to feel intense pressure and pulling. I was terrified the anesthesia wasn’t going to work, and I was filling rapidly with anxiety as the numbness crept higher and higher up my torso, obscuring my sensation of breathing. I was still breathing, of course, but I was losing sensation in my chest and diaphragm and so I felt like I was suffocating. I am maybe a tiny bit dramatic under stress, so I interpreted this as proof that I was passing into eternal life and immediately began to cry, wishing I’d made it to confession the weekend before like I’d planned.

I told God I was sorry for my sins, and I started telling baby out loud, “You were worth it. You are worth it. I love you baby. I love you baby.” Dave was at this point becoming more than a little concerned, and began to shed a few tears himself. At the moment they pulled Benedict from my body yelling “pressure, pressure Mom!” I was pretty sure this was it (did I mention I never read the chapter in “What to Expect When You’re Expecting” on c sections? I weakly whispered “this is my body, given up for you” which feels melodramatic and embarrassing to type out, but felt essential and real in the moment. And then he was here.

They lifted all 9 lbs, 14 ounces of glorious, fat baby up over the drape and showed me a lustily crying toddler freshly extracted from my abdomen and I broke into sobs. When he was wrapped they handed him over to Dave who tried to put him in my arms, but I was shaking uncontrollably and so numb I couldn’t grasp him. We ended up compromising with a sort of face to face nuzzle while I wept all over his little cheek and then he was whisked away for suctioning and I encouraged Dave to accompany him. He’d been wrapped tightly in his cord from head to torso, and it was so short and he’d been wrapped in such a way that he wasn’t going anywhere near the traditionally marked exit. The noose around his neck also explained the late decelerations we’d been seeing on the monitor.

The next 40 minutes were the scariest of my life, truly. I was having a bad reaction to the anesthesia and was panting and paranoid, convinced I was dying. I also lost a lot of blood, tiptoeing right up to the line of needing a transfusion. Panicking from the sensation of suffocation, I cried scared and pitiful tears while the no-nonsense anesthesiologist stood at my head and reassured me “you’re fine. You’re okay. this is normal. If you can speak, you can breathe.”

His no nonsense approach was exactly what I needed to get through being suctioned and sutured up. It took almost an hour to stop the bleeding and get things sealed up, and he stayed at the head of my bed reassuring me in a dry and authoritative manner I found immensely comforting.

When I was finally wheeled into recovery to rejoin Dave and baby, we confirmed that his name would be Benedict Reid. Benedict for our beloved Benedict XVI and Reid for my father, Kenneth Reid, who beat cancer last year. It’s also my brother and my late grandfather’s middle name, and means…something in Gaelic.

In recovery, I shook uncontrollably for a solid hour. I was so, so thirsty but could only have ice until I stabilized a little, so I remember just lying there shaking and feeling so out of control with my throat impossibly thick from the anesthesia, savoring each spoonful of ice like it was hundred dollar champagne. Dave tried to make conversation about our cute baby, but I mostly just moaned and mumbled incoherent sentences and felt high.

Eventually I came around, we ended up after our first overnight getting moved to what I affectionally dubbed “The Kardashian Suite” with floor to ceiling mountain views and walk in shower for two, and Benedict Reid or Benny and I settled in for 4 glorious days at hotel hospital while I winced and tiptoed my way through recovery.

C section versus vaginal birth: first off, after the initial pain from the incision subsided a bit (aided by a wise old RN convincing me to quit the hard stuff after only 24 hours, promising it would improve my abdominal pain to cycle tylenol and ibuprofen instead), I felt approximately one million times better than I typically do after delivery. My pelvic floor, still mercifully intact thanks to a non-descending baby who’d taken the emergency exit instead, gave me no troubles whatsoever and in fact felt marvelously better now that baby had been born.

It was a rough week of pain rolling over/going to the bathroom/getting out of bed, but then I woke up on like day 7 and felt almost …fine.

I decided early on not to breastfeed this time around, and that ended up being a godsend. Between the c section recovery and the blood loss, my body was already working pretty hard. I typically have to pump between feedings all day long and still end up needing to supplement, despite working with a great lactation consultant and taking all the things that promise to aid milk production.

Deciding to exclusively bottle feed using formula and some donated breastmilk from a friend was a game changer. No PPD/PPD this time, a cycle that returned bang on 30 days postpartum, and a mom who feels good – no, great – about life with a new baby. That has never, ever happened for me before. All 5 of my other sweet babies’ newborn phases were clawed through with a desperation bordering at times on insanity. I was depressed, angry, exhausted, and utterly spent. This time I’m happy, calm, joyful, and so grateful for a chance to do it differently the half-dozenth time around.

Sweet baby Ben, welcome to the jungle. We love you so.

Past birth stories here, here,here, here, and here.

About Me, birth story, Family Life

The birth of Zelie Grace, part deux

March 22, 2018

(Part 1 here)

Where were we? Oh yes, induction by house cat.

After an animated 20 minute drive to the hospital, we arrived around 1 am and were swiftly checked in to the natural delivery suite.

Apparently I was so calm the nursing staff assumed I must be in want of the Cadillac of birthing tubs, and was offered that luxury upgrade frequently during my stay in hotel hospital. To which I replied calmly, between contractions: LOLOLOL.

I was so sure when we sidled up to the nurses’ station that I’d be sent home, with my advanced-maternal-age tail tucked between my legs, but lo and behold, I was escorted directly to a delivery room, and the midnight cat calisthenics I’d performed in the street had progressed me to “7, maybe 8 centimeters.”

What the whaaaaat?

Anyone who is familiar with the entrances of the older 4 of the Uebbing crew knows that this is not a normal pattern of labor for me, and since I had thus far only cursed at the cat and was not attempting to strangle anyone with my IV line, I couldn’t imagine that this was “real” labor. I just could not.

In fact, here’s how sure I was that I wasn’t really anywhere near baby time: I SENT THE ANESTHESIOLOGIST AWAY (never never do this) because I wasn’t “sure” what I wanted to do in terms of pain relief. In retrospect this seems foolhardy at best and…I won’t say what, at worst. But I really did need a little time to process what was happening: namely, that I was in active labor (apparently late in the game, too) and I wasn’t in excruciating, universe-ending pain.

That, my dear readers, turns out to be the difference between posterior and “normal” or anterior presentation of le babe. Because, unlike her siblings, this little piggy was facing the right way, mommy wasn’t teetering on the precipice of a psychotic break.

It was a really wonderful and peaceful departure from my previous 4 childbirth experiences, and I am profoundly grateful to have had this particular aspect of my motherhood redeemed.

That alone makes going for an unwieldy number of children “worth it,” on some level.

Once I’d sent away the magic doctor, I spent a few minutes alternating between prayer and repeatedly asking Dave “What is happening? Why is this happening? Is this really happening?” and received a very clear invitation from the Lord to go ahead and get the epidural if I wanted to. I was struggling a bit with feeling like this was a test I was somehow failing: as if by resorting to meds I was forgoing the opportunity to have a beautiful, unmedicated birth experience. And maybe I was. But I spent a few minutes in conversation with Him and here is what He said to me:

“I just wanted you to know it could be like this. I love you. You’re free to choose.”

That’s all.

He wanted to tell me a different story about bringing new life into the world. And I was convicted in these precious moments of labor/prayer that this more peaceful birthing process, cat corralling notwithstanding, was His gift to me. No strings attached. Meaning, I didn’t have to be a hero and try to go au natural.

I am forever mistaking my own efforts and willpower for God’s grace. Imagine my surprise when they give out again and again, and I realize that without Him I am nothing.

He was offering me a beautiful gift: a labor experience saturated with peace and the supernatural grace to remain present, in the moment. It was honestly the best thing I could have asked for, and the last thing I would have thought to ask for. Because I knew how labor “went.” I knew my story: fear, pain, suffering, and trauma. That’s all I believed giving birth could be, and I would have taken that knowledge to my grave before sweet Zelie’s birth.

Now I think of the gift I can give to my younger sisters and, one day, my own daughters, whispering to them an alternative narrative, and I am so overwhelmed by the beauty of it.

At one point during my moderate travail, Dave leaned over and whispered to me: “If it’s a girl, we should use Grace in her name, because there is so much of it here.”

And there was. There was so much grace.

And there was a profound feeling of freedom, too. I really felt invited by the Lord to choose the path of least resistance and to let Him write a new story with this delivery, and so I did.

I took the drugs, no regrets. And in God’s providential design, that anesthesiologist I sent away in a moment of uncertainty was only able to come back once I was teetering on the brink of 9 centimeters, barely before I passed the deadline of the point of no return. Once the drugs were locked and loaded, I rested for a bit and resisted a couple offers of “if you let us break your water, baby will be here in 10 minutes.” Thinking back, the first few offers were made pre-epidural, and the entire nursing staff was very eager to help me achieve a natural birth, which I give them major props for.

Those gals wanted to see a natural birth, gosh darn it, and they’d given me the primo natural birthing suite to prove it – and I was sorry to disappoint those lovely ladies, but having personally experienced the last few centimeters of labor a time or two, I was certainly not about to attempt round 5 in a hot tub.

Anywhoo, the drugs kicked in, my doctor came in with his icon of Our Lady of Guadalupe and propped it opposite the end of my bed, and then we chilled out for a somewhat uneventful 45 minutes, at which point I consented to AROM and felt some serious “pressure” which confirmed me in my drug-seeking decision because either that epidural was on the lighter side, or this baby was huge.

(Spoiler alert: baby was not huge, and I walked from the delivery room to recovery, so epi-lite it was)

Finally it was show time. And after 8(!) excruciating minutes (sure beats 4 hours!), during which I may or may not have vocalized glory to God for pharmaceuticals, little Elizabeth Grace Uebbing was born.

As happens not infrequently in high-altitude deliveries, our beautiful little 7 lb, 11 oz princess was pretty blue and needed some blow-by oxygen assistance to get things rolling. Less typical was her being whisked fairly quickly off my chest and carried over for inspection by the neonatal team. I watched in mounting anxiety as the room filled up with doctors and nurses, a small crowd forming around her bassinet across the room.

I was yelling out to her from my hospital bed “Elizabeth, mommy loves you,” because I’m pretty sure I read in the scary chapter of What to Expect When You’re Expecting that you should do that, and at some point in so doing, I looked over at Dave and said “that’s not her name. I don’t think that’s her name.” He nodded in agreement from his post at her crib side, trying his best to look unconcerned for my sake. As the minutes ticked by and more doctors filled the room – now the respiratory team had been called in, I heard the announcement – I grew more and more concerned.

I began praying aloud while my doctor stitched me up, asking the Holy Spirit to fill her lungs, pleading with her to breathe, breathe, baby girl.

At one point I started praying fervently for the intercession of St. Zelie Martin. “Zelie” was on our short list of names, but I wasn’t sure Dave was fully convinced, and I didn’t want to force a name he didn’t love. I began asking St. Zelie to plead my girl’s case in heaven, begging that her oxygen levels would come up and that she wouldn’t be headed to the NICU. 

Looking back, I don’t recall thinking she was actually going to die, but I was very worried that she was going to be intubated, and that something might be wrong with her lungs, because 20 minutes in, she hadn’t made a sound other than gasping a couple times. I remember specifically choosing to petition St. Zelie because she had lost so many of her own babies, and because she could sympathize with my aching mama heart to have my girl whole and in my arms. I also recall being unbelievably at peace despite the circumstances, which is a miracle in itself considering my temperament.

Finally just before the 30-minute mark we head the most beautiful sound in the world: our baby girl’s cry. Soft and undemanding (as it is still, for the most part) but very much alive and well. I shed a few tears of relief as they wheeled her, not to the NICU, but back to my arms, and we re-named her Zelie Grace Uebbing.

And she has brought nothing but grace to our family since the moment she arrived.

She is the fruition of my motherhood in a powerful way that I wouldn’t have expected from a fifth baby. So few people go this far, as I am reminded on a daily basis when we’re out and about, and honestly, were it not for the Church’s teachings on contraception and openness to life, neither would we have done so. 

Zelie was not in our plan.

But she was in His.

And we are so thankful.

Exhausted, overwhelmed, and occasionally weepy. But so very grateful.

St. Zelie Martin and holy Mother Mary, full of grace, pray for us.

(P.s. a great read for pregnant mamas/birth professionals of every stripe)

About Me, birth story, Family Life

The birth of Zelie Grace

March 21, 2018

It has been almost 3 months since little Z made her debut earth-side, but it feels like a lifetime ago. (And, for the record, I have been writing this post for more than 3 weeks, so that bodes well for the future.) Partly because I have never taken this long of a break from blogging in all the 11(!) years I’ve been tapping away, and partly because kid number 5 has utterly transformed our family – and my motherhood – from “yeah, I guess we do have our hands full but it’s pretty manageable” to “why is my coffee so cold?/I’m in a Jim Gaffigan level of aquatic distress here.”

Don’t get me wrong, she is a good, good baby. (I’d tell you how well she’s sleeping but I don’t want to inflict pain on parents of typical newborns who might be reading this.) But we’ve finally scaled beyond what I can handle under my own power, and I am at last fully dependent upon God’s grace to survive the day by day.

And on the days I don’t tap into that? Hoo boy.

So I’m learning to be more flexible, more resigned to bouts of insanity, and more desperately reliant on regular prayer – not just in-the-moment Hail Marys – including morning Scripture reading and a daily rosary (that nice little 4 am feeding session ensures that I finish any lingering decades). And even though I know how desperately I need prayer in order to function, I’m a miserably slow study and I keep trying to forge ahead under my own unimpressive power. Then something stops me in my tracks and flings the spiritual complacency back into my face like a rejected vegetable side dish, and I am made concretely aware, once again, that I am borderline incompetent apart from God’s grace.

One recent morning, for example, my darling 4 year-old threw a tantrum that, as I relayed to my siblings via our group chat, was of “Youtube viral video proportions.” In a Starbucks packed with no fewer than 5 dozen spandex legging-clad high schoolers, she flopped off her barstool, flung a bag of million-dollar organic potato chips on the floor and screamed all the screams that her tiny body was capable of producing because, I guess, someone touched her? Took a salt and vinegar chip without asking? I’m actually still not sure.

I blinked at her in mild annoyance and then proceeded to pack up the other 3 kids (biggest brother was at school) and schlepped our complaining procession out the door, Evie flopping like a wounded tuna on the floor as I gently tugged her along by one arm, which is thankfully still connected at the shoulder socket. Any of the horrified high schoolers who had been on the fence about eventual parenthood will hopefully make good choices and avoid the activity that oftentimes results in parenthood for a good while longer after witnessing our parade of chaos. For some of our adolescent observers, however, I fear the fracas may have pushed them firmly into Camp Dog-Mom, and for that I am truly sorry.

But where was I? Oh yes, the birth story. The longest lapse between “hello, baby” and “here you go, internet” that I’ve ever allowed. Mea culpa. But as you see from the above material, it was unavoidable.

(The fact that I’m almost 500 words into this bad boy tells me two things: first, I have lost neither the ability nor the desire (yay!) to write. Second, this will be at least a two-part saga, so consider yourself warned.)

Zelie’s pregnancy was pretty great. I was sick in the first trimester but only in a vague all-day-motion-sickness sort of way, not actually barfing. Which is great but also probably resulted in my all-time weight gain record (we’ll get to that later on). I stayed pretty active until Thanksgiving and then I think I just sort of gave up on life/ever being not pregnant again. She wasn’t due until New Year’s Eve, by the way, so that’s kind of a long slog of apathy and poor milkshake choices. We had a family wedding, 2 birthdays and Christmas to get through at the end of December, so I had been hoping to go either really early (like my oldest, a 37-weeker) or else maybe on Christmas night, once all the festivities had passed. Once the wedding was safely in the rearview the weekend before Christmas (and having unsuccessfully coaxed her out on the dance floor) I was even resigned to a Christmas baby, and in fact, had to depart from our family’s Christmas Eve festivities post-haste because I was contracting every 6 minutes and an hour from the hospital.

Alas, it was the stomach flu. A horrifying strain that ripped through every adult in our extended family during the week between Christmas and New Year’s (but spared the children, oddly and mercifully). As I was barfing and timing contractions (now 4 minutes apart) late into the night on what was now Christmas morning, I began to doubt that I was going to survive this labor. I’ll spare you greater detail, but it was a rough ride, and the contractions that just would not organize into any kind of pattern turned out to be the result of dehydration. My father-in-law and sister-in-law graciously stayed the night on Christmas Eve and got up with the kids to open stockings while mommy and daddy clung to life upstairs. By about 11 am we were able to open presents and the contractions were gone. Womp womp.

The next 3 days were rough. Really hard emotionally and physically. I almost went into the hospital just to get a bag of fluids but decided (with my doctor’s approval) to drink my weight in vitamin water and get my fluids the old fashioned way. I was exhausted by the prospect of a pre-delivery hospital visit and I didn’t want to be induced, so home we stayed. I was big, I was dehydrated, I was sore from days of constant contractions, and I was mentally exhausted from life itself. On December 28th my little sister came over with chocolate shakes from Chic-fil-a (I swear, I have no idea how I gained as much weight as I did) and we tried to watch a terrible Hallmark movie. I had to keep pausing it to reposition myself because I was so uncomfortable (foreshadowing) and eventually she raised her eyebrows and asked “should I go home and pack a bag?”

I agreed that it probably would be wise, and she ran squealing out into the dark winter night. It was around 8pm, and I lumbered upstairs to add a few finishing touches to ye olde hospital bag (which I barely touched during our 30 hour stay) and attempted to get some sleep. At around 11pm I conceded to Dave that this was probably (at last) real labor, and that I wanted to take a shower before we headed out. Into the shower I jumped and apparently into action he sprang, because when I waddled back into our room 15 minutes later in my towel turban there he stood, fully dressed to the shoes, and holding our suitcase at the ready.

Ladies, the man is a professional labor companion at this stage in the game.

I, however, was not quite ready to actually go to the hospital, so I wept and begged that we try to sleep just a little longer. After about 20 minutes I finally allowed myself to be herded into the car, and this is where the real fun began. We’d driven about 5 minutes down the road when I frantically grasped Dave’s arm and barked to him “turn around!”

“What’s wrong?” he asked with some alarm, thinking we’d forgotten some essential item.

“They’re going to send me hooooooooome,” I wailed melodramatically, traumatized to envision myself as the shamefaced grandmultipara sent packing by L&D on a cold December night because she (snicker) didn’t know what real labor felt like.

So my sweet husband, bless his heart, he turned that car around and we trudged back up the driveway and onto the front porch. My sister threw the door open with some alarm as it was now going on midnight and she heard us bumping in the night, and out from between her legs shot our naughty, non-negotiably-indoor-at-night cat. I uttered a few choice words not suitable for general audiences and sprang off the porch in hot pursuit, cursing a blue streak that not only were the kids going to wake up to mommy and daddy gone (sob. But y so devastating every time?), but also their beloved cat was going to be eaten by the mangy coyotes whose goings-on had been blowing up my NextDoor feed as of late.

Not.on.my.watch. 

That cat was coming back inside, if all one billion contracting pounds of this angry pregnant woman had anything to do about it. Dave tried to coax me back into the house, cold and contracting and frantic as I was, but to no avail. I was beyond reason at this point in the evening (and well into labor, as it would turn out) and he recognized a losing battle when he saw one.

He gently allowed the storm door to swing shut, standing there for the better part of thirty minutes silently observing my late-night gymnastics in the street, watching and laughing (laughing!) as I crouched and tumbled beneath parked cars, darting in and out of our neighbors’ yards and chasing that damn cat from driveway to driveway, beseeching her to surrender herself into my desperate outstretched arms. Oh my gosh, nobody in my family is dramatic.

Tia told me later that she marched right back upstairs and crawled into bed because my bad cat-titude had confirmed for her that I was definitely in labor, and that she’d be safer in the guest room.

Well, she was right. And as soon as the bleeping cat was safely in my arms and in the house I realized that those disorganized contractions were now 3-4 minutes apart and coming on long and strong. Was I the first woman to ever employ a cat doula in the history of the human race? Maybe.

Stay tuned for part two, where my labor transitions from feline to human supervision and we accidentally give our daughter the wrong name for the first 15 minutes of her life.

And hey, guys?

It’s good to be back.

Hi guys! I’m no trouble, but my arrival somehow pushed mom over the precipice of reality so she can’t find her phone/keys/other sock currently in her left hand, etc. Pardon the interruption in service.
About Me, birth story, Family Life

And Zelie makes 7

January 5, 2018

Lovely blog readers, I have a sweet little someone to introduce you to. After 9 long days of prodromal labor spanning Christmas and a multitude of other festivities, Miss Zelie (zay-lee) Grace Uebbing made her debut at 5:10 am on Friday, December 29th. 7 lbs 11 oz and 20.5 inches long, she has ravishing dark hair like Evie did (though notably less of it) and dark, stormy blue eyes.

She takes her name from St. Zelie Martin, mother of St. Therese the little flower, who was canonized in 2015 along with her husband, St. Louis Martin, the first such occasion of a double canonization for a married couple in the Church’s history. Grace is a nod to Our Lady and to the extraordinarily different birth I had the fifth time around.

And speaking of birth stories, you know I can’t wait to write hers, and have been thanking God over and over again for how different her arrival into the world was compared with my previous births. She is sleeping and nursing like a champ (color me vv surprised by the latter) and is the absolute delight of each of her older siblings.

John Paul (5.5) immediately asked “when are we going to have another baby so she can have a younger sibling????” the first moment she was laid in his arms, which was almost impossibly sweet, but also, #toosoon.

We’re adjusting well to life as a family of 7 and I’m trying my hardest to postpartum like a boss, ala Blythe Fike, so I’ll be lying super low for the next few months. I’m posting a little bit on Instagram if you want to pop over and see baby pics, but am also mindful of how crazy fast the newborn phase goes, and am committed to trimming out as much social media as possible so that I can soak her up.

From the eve of the final day of Christmas, wishing you a beautiful finish to the season and the happiest 2018!

About Me, advent, birth story, Catholic Spirituality, pregnancy, Suffering

Am I not she who is your mother?

December 12, 2017

I will never forget my labor with Genevieve, thus far my only daughter (though that title may be ceded in mere weeks now.) Partly because it was drawn out over 3 agonizingly long days of prodromal labor – not hideously painful, but hugely exhausting – and partly because she was the only baby whose sex we found out ahead of time, so we knew “who” we were waiting on in a more personal way.

I remember feeling very connected to Our Lady being pregnant with Evie during the Advent season, and with an estimated due date of Christmas Day, I allowed my imagination to carry me along on the long journey towards Bethlehem, comforting myself with the notion that even if I were averaging 4 hours of sleep each night with contractions coming almost unrelentingly (but non-productively) around the clock for days on end, at least I wasn’t on a donkey.

The evening of December 12th, 2013, the feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe, found me once again hunched over the bathroom counter in pain, timing contractions that both I and my iPhone app knew were not going to amount to a pattern worthy of hospital admission. Dave knocked on the bathroom door, having returned from a late night grocery run, and handed me a beautiful bouquet of roses.

They were wrapped in cellophane and still bearing the store logo, but there on the crinkly plastic was an image of Our Lady of Guadalupe, the very same image supernaturally imposed on St. Juan Diego’s tilma on the hill at Teypeyac more than 500 years ago.

The roses eventually found their way to water. As I was balling up the wrappings and clippings to toss out, I impulsively grabbed some kitchen scissors and cut the image of Our Lady out of the plastic, fashioning a little 8 inch high icon of crinkly plastic which I taped to the bathroom mirror.

I spent a lot of time looking to Mary over the next 72 hours, bracing my hands on either side of the sink and looking into her delicate brown face. I reminded myself in between the waves of seemingly inefficient and interminable contractions that she too was a mother, that she too had done this. I fixed my eyes on the black sash draped around her waist, whose imagery symbolizes pregnancy.

That’s right, Mary is actually pregnant in the image seared into the fibers of Juan Diego’s tilma.

It was, at turns, comforting and confounding to think of God putting His own Mother through this – though the jury is still out on what, precisely, Mary’s physical experience of childbirth entailed. Various Church Fathers have weighed in on the matter, one the Church allows to exist shrouded in no small amount of mystery. We know that Mary physically carried the Christ child in her womb and that she mysteriously and miraculously maintained even the physical aspects of her virginity upon His birth, but beyond that, God has not chosen to reveal specific details about what birth was “like” for she who was conceived without sin.

Still, as I hunched over that sink and raised my eyes to the filmy plastic icon of the Mother of God, I took comfort in the slight swelling apparent in her midsection, wondering if she had experienced round ligament pain or pubic symphysis dysfunction or sciatica – I doubted you could ride a donkey many miles at any stage of pregnancy and escape unscathed, ergonomically speaking.

I wondered over Mary’s experience of Jesus’ tiny – and then not so tiny – kicks under her ribcage. The in-utero hiccups that rattle the whole belly, the improbable acrobatics that accompany those final few weeks of stretched-outness and can’t do this another day-ness.

When it was finally – finally – time to go to the hospital and stay at the hospital, I ducked into the bathroom and grabbed the piece of plastic off the mirror. I wanted her with me still, epidural or no.

It turns out she wanted to be with me, too. The nurse who checked me upon arrival announced a triumphant “5 cm, you’re staying!” and escorted us from triage to the delivery room, where I could have and might have wept in relief. 3 days of little sleep and contractions 15 minutes apart around the clock; I sank exhausted into the hospital bed, nodding enthusiastically that yes, I did want them to call anesthesia right away.

As I settled into a blissful and exhausted sleep, I remember the nurse commenting that she thought it would be 3 hours, maybe less. She was right, because after a brief and glorious nap, I was complete and ready to push.

Our doctor arrived a little after I’d woken from augmented reality nap time and started setting up his equipment. He paused before he gowned up, reaching into his bag and sliding out a wooden icon, which he propped against the wall opposite the foot of my bed.

I gasped in delight because it was her – a beautiful image of Our Lady of Guadalupe, larger and far more saturated than my grocery store wrapper.

I laughed and told him she’d been following me throughout labor, and he cocked his head and told me “it’s strange, but I lost my usual icon of Our Lady of Lourdes somehow at my last birth, so this is her replacement. And it’s actually the first time I’ve brought this new one along.”

And so mine was to be the first birth attended by this particular image of Our Lady of Guadalupe.

I’ve since delivered one more child under her watchful maternal gaze, and I look forward to her presence in my hospital room this go round, too.

It is comforting to have a God who is not unfamiliar with our human condition. And it reflects such careful attention to detail and such compassion that He would entrust us with a mother who is herself intimately acquainted with the seasons and stages of our lives as women.

There is a beautiful quote from Our Lady of Guadalupe to St. Juan Diego, her “smallest son,” which resonates deeply with me as being applicable to any hardship or physical suffering we might endure in this life, but perhaps most particularly, in facing birth:

“Listen, and let it penetrate your heart … do not fear any illness or vexation, any anxiety or pain. Am I not here who am your Mother?”

Because I am afraid.

I do fear the pain, and the anxiety of past memories and experiences of delivery can wash over me and overwhelm me at a moment’s notice if I allow them to take hold.

In these final few weeks as I prepare mentally, physically and spiritually to bring a tiny new life into the outside world, I find myself wanting to be folded more deeply into Her mantle, begging for the comfort that only a mother can offer to a small, anxious child.

Because it is coming, and it will hurt. And I will not be alone.

Our Lady of Guadalupe, patroness of the unborn, pray for us.

birth story, Catholic Spirituality, Culture of Death, euthanasia, Pope Francis, Pro Life

Is having kids “sustainable?”

May 10, 2016

(Perhaps I could have called this one “does green sex = green babies?” but older, wiser Jenny is actually a little embarrassed to have gotten that term rolling.)

A couple months back a reader messaged me with a good – and weird – question. Like the great blogger and expert time juggler that I am, I promptly never answered her message and lost it in the bowels of Facebook. But! I remembered the inquiry all these months, and I wanted to take a stab at it today.

Her trouble was with a friend of a more progressive stripe who’d been bending her ear on how profoundly “unsustainable” children are, and for this reason, that no one could possibly justify having more than 1 of them.

My reader, troubled though she was by her acquaintance’s apparent disdain for the continuation of the human race, was hard pressed for an appropriate response.

My initial response was to snort laugh through my nose. But then I sobered up, because hadn’t I just driven my gas guzzling mini van to Whole Foods just that past week in search of the cheapest organic formula this side of the internet?

Granted, I had the vehicle filled nearly to capacity and was therefore a candidate for the HOV lane. But I did see her point.

From a purely secular and ecological perspective, things have gotten so crazily out of focus that I suppose it is possible to make the case that HUMAN LIFE ITSELF IS NOT SUSTAINABLE OR RESPONSIBLE.

But what does that mean? Have we come to such a profound depth of self-loathing as a species that we’ve begun to philosophically self destruct over the very meaning and purpose of existence?

Is this the inheritance of relativism and materialistic humanism?

I think (for now) no, to the first, but yes to the second.

I don’t believe that most people are hellbent on human destruction in the name of good stewardship of creation. That rather flies in the face of the essence of creation, at any rate, does it not?

Can’t have a creation without creatures, and creatures gonna imitate their Creator.

But therein lies the bigger problem, a very real fruit of the harvest of a relativistic and materialistic worldview: people are no longer uniquely paramount in the created order, and people are no longer valued based on who they are, but instead are measured increasingly by what they do.

In plainer terms, people only have as much worth as what they can offer back to the world.

Which is why we abort babies with Down Syndrome.

Which is why elderly Canadians are waitlisted for basic medical services in the name of “conservation of resources.”

Which is why babies born out of wedlock to poor, single, black women are targeted more ruthlessly by Planned Parenthood than any other subset of humanity.

If you don’t have something readily apparent to offer in the marketplace, you may excuse yourself from society.

Babies, of course, are about the most useless of all humans. They consume endlessly. Milk, diapers, energy, affection. They produce nothing but waste, quite literally. And so, by the standards outlined above, they are in no way “sustainable.”

Crazy thing is, they’re also who every one of us once was. 

It is a foolish bias for the here and now that drives an adult population to utterly devalue the past and the future for the sake of the almighty present.

If there’s one way to easily sum up most of our cultural woes in the year 2016, selfishness might be it.

My body, my free time, my best life now; my convenience and my prosperity and my mental health and my infinite disposable income and leisure.

Children threaten all of those, sometimes terminally. And so children have become one of the enemies of the hip new economy of self realization and fun.

For fear of missing out, we’ve traded away the one thing that really matters: relationship with the other, and that uniquely human capacity to love exponentially into the future, willing the good for a society that does not yet exist, but which will one day utterly replace your own.

(Presumably, that society will still be comprised of people, not just dogs and iPhones.)

Relationships are tricky, though. And they’re often costly. They’re unpredictable and the benefits do not, emphatically, always outweigh the costs.

But if new life coming into this sad, old world isn’t the very essence of what we’re doing here…then what else matters?

Yolo, indeed. Emphasis on the “you.”

But if it does matter? If the future is not some faceless wasteland of McDonald’s wrappers and water bottles and overcrowded parking lots with double parked hovercrafts, but a continuation of the human story? Then it matters very much indeed what we’re spending our time and money and yes, our non-renewable resources into.

Investments wisely made yield dividends into the future.

I could go into the myriad ways that children can be “sustainable” and “green” because hand me downs, carpools, shared toy economies and limited carbon footprints from expensive air travel. But those essays already exist, and the more fundamental problem in my mind isn’t demonstrating whether having a small or medium or large family can be super socially conscious, but rather the fact that the question itself is being raised: are human beings themselves, sustainable?

Without an eternal worldview and an end game sunk deep into immortality, I don’t know how one answers that question.

Which is perhaps precisely why we’re asking it in the first place.

Lose sight of the Creator, lose sight of the dignity of the creature. And the rest of creation, along with it. Which is what Pope Francis has been telling us all along.

sustainable

About Me, birth story, breastfeeding, PPD, pregnancy

Why we chiro

September 11, 2015

All four kids are asleep and it’s still 30 minutes till my 8:45 bedtime so…why not blog about it?
I wanted to take a minute to shout out to a very special doctor in my life, and throw a little praise his way for how much his services have impacted our health this past year.

Last September when we were just starting to really worry about Genevieve and her chart-eschewing growth rates and gross motor apathy, a friend recommended that we see everyone’s favorite chiropractor (at least in Denver), Dr. Mario Chavez at Vita Nova Spinal Care, a NUCCA practitioner. I was tempted to file it away with all the other advice we’d been given as “to investigate at a later date,” but something nudged me to make an appointment.

Dave and I have been under regular chiropractic care for years, I as a former high-volume athlete and car accident aficionado and him as a guy who just inherited bad joints, but our former chiropractor was of the “whack ’em and crack ’em” school. I always felt great while he was working on me, but I was also always a little bit afraid he was going to break my neck. Also, my back usually started hurting again about 20 minutes into the drive home, so…not the best use of copay.

Our experience with Vita Nova has been utterly different from any other chiropractic care we’ve ever received. Which is part of what makes me want to write about it.

I’ve definitely had conversations with medical doctors and physical therapists and watched their eyes glaze over or roll ever so slightly at the mention of the c-word, so I know there’s some debate over the legitimacy or efficacy of the discipline, but we’ve seen such encouraging results in our entire family that I wanted to document them here in the event it might be helpful to someone else. And I’m a really big fan of both/and: we use both western medicine and alternative care, because if it works, it works! (And sometimes it takes both antibiotics and essential oils to kick an ear infection, you know?)

The two most dramatic stories in our family’s chiro experience are probably mine and Evie’s, so I’ll go with those.

Evie started seeing Dr. Chavez every week or two last September, and within the first two months we started to see tangible results. She’d been in physical therapy concurrent with chiropractic care, but most of her PT sessions involved lots of stiffened, panicked screaming and resistance to any sort of movement she wasn’t familiar with. This included hands and knees, kneeling, tummy time, rolling from front to back and back to front, and last but not least, standing/bearing weight on her legs.

After her first few chiropractic adjustments we started to see her visibly relax. Her little legs had been drawn up tightly most of the time, but gradually she started to relax them. Her hip joints, so tight that we’d had X-rays done (per the recommendation of the orthopedics team at Children’s Hospital) to rule out hip dysplasia, started to rotate more freely and she achieved almost a full range of motion. And then, best of all, about 5 months into her treatment, she finally started to crawl and to bear weight on her legs.

She was 17 months before she dropped her butt-scoot entirely, and 18 months before she walked, but she did it.

And now she runs.

And she’s very, very hard to catch.

I’m not saying she never would have gotten here otherwise, but it sure helped things along.

Once I started seeing Evie make progress under chiropractic care I was confidant that I wanted to sign up for the whole family plan, so we crunched the numbers and decided to make the investment by paying up front for a year of care at a substantial discount. I promptly got pregnant a month or so into our plan, and I believe that chiropractic was one of the best things I could have done for my 32-year old multiparous body.

Throughout Luke’s pregnancy I gained ridiculous amounts of weight (as always) and managed to keep a fairly impressive level of activity up (per usual), but I did not experience the usual back problems that generally come with trimesters 2 and 3.

I slept better, I kept up my workouts until the very day I went into labor, and I didn’t experience the excruciating low-back pain that had accompanied all my previous pregnancies.

Most impressive, though, has been the postpartum period. I was absolutely exhausted from a demanding and unpredictable labor and a somewhat traumatic delivery, and to top it off I was experiencing some of the worst-case-scneario side effects from the (two!) epidural(s) that you read about on Baby Center at 4 am and shudder while swearing silently.

When I would lie down or rise too quickly from sitting, an electric zap would run the length of my spinal cord, beginning at the area of the epidural catheter insertion and zinging its way up to the base of my skull. It felt like someone was shocking the inside of my spine with a cattle prod, and the reverb was traveling up to my brain.

I googled it (of course I did) and as I read other women’s stories, I concluded that I was, of course, doomed to suffer these aftereffects well into my 50’s because I was stupid enough to put narcotics into my spinal fluid (again), and that my number had finally been called. I’m not dramatic. At all.

About a week and a half after Luke was born I had my first adjustment (and he had his second, much-needed after his shoulder dystocia tussle en route to the outside world) and guess what? I felt one final mighty zing during the appointment and then…nothing.

I have had zero pain or side effects from those stupid misplaced meds since.

Also worth mentioning, though I can’t prove the connection with hard data:

  • I’ve never had as much milk or had as much success breastfeeding. And Luke is the first baby to “get it” so soon after birth. Within 8 days or so we were chugging along like old pros.
  • He sleeps beautifully with minimal fussing or gas.
  • He is super alert and has the head control of a grown man.
  • His Apgars were off the hook despite having a distressing birth with some minor oxygen deprivation
  • I don’t have postpartum depression (this one’s a stretch because yes I’m also doing progesterone shots and yes, both sets of grandparents are semi local now and yes, I have wonderful sisters and friends around me to help carry the load. But I’m sure that there’s a tiny correlation all the same.)

In short? My body is healing properly because it’s properly aligned and able to do its thing. And I feel good. Tired, yes. Overwhelmed? Frequently. But hopeful, too, because I can observe the healing and the progress that’s being made.

If you’re local to Colorado I highly recommend you make an appointment with Dr. Chavez and see about getting your own “justment,” as Joey calls them, because life is short, and a healthy body can do a lot of good in this world.

IMG_7480

birth story, motherhood, pregnancy

Luke Maximilian’s birth story, part 2 (finale)

September 2, 2015

Now, where were we? (Part 1 here, btw)

Oh, yes, driving to the hospital on day 14 of labor.

We pulled up and I had the sickening sensation that we were once again too early, and that I was going to be shamefully discharged back home to a house full of temporarily sleeping preschoolers for another week or month of nightly contraction parties.

Dave asked if I wanted to be dropped off at the emergency door.

No. No I did not.

(Note: your wife does not want to be “dropped off” anywhere while she is laboring. Just a little cheat sheet for the menfolk out there in blogland.)

We park and I lean my head against the passenger side window and start whimpering about how we’re too early and they’re going to send us home. Dave convinces me to get out of the car and start what I’m sure will be the walk of shame to LDR. I carry my own purse. This is not looking good in terms of getting admitted.

I breathe calmly through a contraction as the ER (greeter? bouncer?) waves us on up to the birthing center. Hmmm, thought I, she must have thought I was in actual labor. Maybe, just maybe? 

No sooner do we arrive at the nurses’ station then I have another decent contraction. Once again, breathing calmly (uncharacteristically so for my birthing style.) I fill out the requisite paperwork and am escorted to an actual delivery room. Not triage.

Holy crap, they believe me. What’s going to happen when they check and find out I’m only a 2?

I’m having less than positive thoughts about the birthing process and my body at this point, but feeling very kindly indeed toward the nursing staff. So kindly, in fact, that I invite the first person who enters the room to check my progress.

Um, let me grab a nurse, mom.

Oh, I’m sorry, laundry tech. I don’t usually solicit cervical exams from the hospitality staff, promise.

The past fortnight of falsies had all but destroyed my sense of common decency, let alone modesty. First-time-mom Jenny had explicit “do not offer to check me or give me pain medication” instructions in her 2 page birth plan. Old fourth-timer was hitting up strangers off the street for medical care.

The next person to enter the room was, happily, a trained and licensed RN who did, happily, discover my meager 2 centimeters from that morning’s prenatal appointment had magically become 5.

5!

With my first two labors, I recall 5cm was around the point I started whimpering drug-seeking code words. (I couldn’t remember Evie’s labor in that moment, because God causes me to magically black out the previous birth experience by the time the next one rolls around, 20 months later. An evolutionary defense mechanism, I believe.)

Dave and I high-fived each other after the nurse told me “of course you’re staying, you’re in labor, honey” and I settled into my handsomely-appointed costume and … waited.

For 2 hours I submitted to continuous monitoring and IV antibiotic-drippage and  multiple stab wounds because “rolling veins, lol” … some lucky lab tech even went ahead and blew a vein in my right arm which was many lol’s and much fun. And I was like, oh crap I’m in trouble because the IV stabbing and the burning penicillin (Strep B positive, baybee) hurts more than my contractions do…so when they do start for real, I’m in big trouble.

I just could not wrap my brain around the possibility that perhaps this labor was going to be a bit easier because perhaps my body had gotten a decent-ish head start over the past 2 weeks, or perhaps I had the uterine tone of a birth warrior, or perhaps, perhaps, perhaps….I just couldn’t even.

Oh, and p.s. my water had broken, but not all the way. So there was some kind of water balloon situation keeping baby high and “insufficiently applied,” hence the stupid contractions without pattern.

Well, at least I’d had time to shower and blow dry.

Around 5 am anesthesia came by and casually mentioned his shift was ending and would I like an epidural yet? I’d already sent him away once (WHAT??? See, this is why I was still not convinced of the reality of labor.) and I figured I’d better cowboy up and start the drugs since now I was 8 hours into my broken water situation and they were like, hey, ever tried Pitocin, little girl? We can hook you up and because I was crazed from lack of sleep and continual contractions I was like IF YOU WANT TO GIVE ME HEROIN BC YOU THINK IT WILL SPEED THINGS UP, GO RIGHT AHEAD LUMIERE.

And I figured (rightly so) that Pitocin contractions were going to be muy difficult than the generic human version, and guess what? Yes, yes they were.

This is the really fun part though, because even though the nurse anesthesiologist was super nice and super chill and wearing a head wrap and had his ear pierced and probably liked rock climbing…it didn’t work.

The epidural he performed on me did.not.work.

The Pitocin, however, was beginning to work. And I was at long last a hard-won 6 cm. But with feeling.

The nurses were kind but were probably like lady you need some sleep and just relax and watch Mean Girls (which I’d really lobbied for but soon lost interest in on the teeny hospital tv) but then when I almost donkey kicked the sweetheart administering my catheter (sorry/notsorry casual male readers) she was like “oh, you definitely should not be feeling that.”

I concurred.

Dave Matthews came back to the room literally on his way off the clock (there’s a lesson here, people) and gave me a “booster?” “ballast?” “bolus?” of extra meds and patted me on the back and said sorry that should do the trick.

But it did not.

At this point I was of two minds. On the one hand, that midnight purchase of “Hypnobabies” on ye olde Kindle a few weeks back was serving me moderately well during some of the contractions, but on ye other hand, I was only slightly over halfway there.

Another 20 minutes or so of “where in all of Arendale are those narcotics going if not to numb my pain?” and I was ringing the nurses’ station and considering my options. Happily for all parties involved, a lovely older woman named Barbara who’d been practicing anesthesia for 25 years came and pulled that epidural right out and started over. And this time? Like a charm.

The moral of this story is that there’s no harm in keeping an open mind about labor and birth even if you’ve delivered once or seven times before, because they’re all just a leeeetle bit different.

Now that I was become comfortably numb, the real business of being born could commence.

Except that for the next 5 hours or so, all that really happened was some halfhearted attempts at napping and, at one point, I actually sent my doctor to the cafeteria to get some lunch because he was talking to me about large game bow hunting (we’d already moved on from how to perfect the “Bic” method of hair care and also abortion, so we really had run out of things to discuss) and I was started to feel like a proverbial watched pot.

Not long after I’d sent away the best supporting actor, a nurse wheeled the delivery cart into the room and some nurses came in to start setting up the warmer. This part of labor (at least my labors) always seems so crazy to me because yes there’s pressure and yes, I realize a baby is going to be the eventual punchline of all this activity, but they’re just setting up as if one is actually coming along now, any time.

I always make sure to astutely vocalize this to any and all who will hear me.

Oh my gosh, I’m going to have a baby. A baby is coming!

Yes, crazy lady. Hence the copay.

This is a good point to interject that my nurse had slipped a paper into my hands a few minutes earlier with my graduation year, high school, and a classmate’s name written on it, and when I stared at her wondering if this was some kind of “is she drugged up enough to push?” litmus she smiled and asked if I remembered so-and-so, and did I know she was on staff and at the nurses’ station right now?

I did not attend my 10 year class reunion, but nothing says “how’ve you been?” like having your former classmate bring you a peanut ball while you’re in active labor. I was really happy to see her though. And that peanut ball got the job done. Last centimeter be gone.

Now the super special part of a medicated birth (mine, at least) where the whole room fills up with expectant faces and your doctor asks you if you’re ready to push.

I guess?

The elusive “urge to push” is still not something I’m familiar with, but I guess my urge to not be pregnant any longer took over, because the eviction process commenced. My younger sister Lizzie had also joined us in the delivery room at this point, because when you’re on your millionth or so kid, you no longer care who is there, and honestly, I would have invited in the FedEx man at that point.

It was really cool to have my sister with me though. And more emotional than I expected. She very sweetly held a damp washcloth to my head and told me what a good job I was doing and pulled my hair back for me. In other words, she was an indentured doula.

I’d been pushing for about 20 minutes when I sighed in exasperation? confusion? and asked the entire room to “ballpark this for me.” Blank stares as they wondered why the pushing woman was polling the audience for an ETA.

I can’t explain it, just that between the epidural(s) and the Pit and the sleeplessness, I was kind of losing my edge and really wasn’t convinced a baby was coming out of this all and did it look like I was going to be done any time soon?

That’s kind of up to you, Jenny, was my good doctor’s gentle response.

So I summoned my reserves of strength and focus, looked at the clock and narrowed my eyes: this baby will be here by 2:20.

It was 2:14 pm.

And then, wonder of wonders, some short minutes later with a final push and a sudden flurry of activity when my doctor quietly and urgently announced a single word, shoulder, 6 nurses pounced on me simultaneously while doc got very, very involved in the birthing process himself and then oh my gosh, there’s a baby on my chest.

I blinked away tears and Dave said “a boy, another boy!” in wonder, his voice thick with emotion. I looked at my sweet little son, a little on the purple side but blinking and turning his head from side to side. His color pinked up right away but he did not utter many verbal confirmations of his arrival, much to the nurses’ continuing anxiety, but as they suctioned him while he lay on my chest, he made a few obligatory squeaks and they were satisfied. I’m so glad they didn’t cut his cord and whisk him away immediately, though I’d have understood if they had. He wasn’t distressed though, just quiet. Apgar of 8/9. Sweet little blue eyes open and wondering, looking all around the room.

Luke. Luke Maximilian, because thank you Jesus and thank you, St. Maximilian Kolbe, whose feast day it was and who had come through with a delivery in exchange for which I promised middle naming rights. Also, he arrived at 2:19 on the dot. Which everyone in the room was kind of delighted by, not least of which his mother.

He was so darling, and he is so darling. He had some shoulder dystocia on the way out (hence the dreaded s-word, which apparently makes labor nurses very nervous indeed) and a double nuchal cord, but despite all that he came out healthy and has been the happiest, most perfectly lovable newborn in the world. All 8 lbs, 15.5 oz and 21 inches of him. And now at 2.5 weeks old and 9.5 lbs, he’s sleeping at least well enough to let mommy write his birth story.

The force is strong with this one, indeed.

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About Me, birth story, Family Life, Marriage, motherhood, pregnancy

Luke Maximilian: a birth story with naming rights (episode 1)

August 31, 2015

It’s been 16 days since Luke the duke arrived, and I know that’s not terribly long, and I know I’m entitled to more than a couple weeks of maternity leave, if you will… but after months of the almost (almost, key word) daily discipline of spilling e words onto a screen my brain is starting to feel cluttered and crazy and stuck in neutral. So a blogging we will go. A triple nap + legos are the official sponsor of today’s post.

Where shall we begin?

What about the wee hours of July 30th, which was, if memory serves correctly, the first night I woke up with “real” contractions which were time-able, increasingly intense, and caused me to pack my hospital bag?

Yes, we’ll start there.

After 2 hours of sitting on ye olde exercise ball and glaring at my contraction timer app, things started to space out a little. I reached back into my Bradley-method trained brain and recalled that real contractions cannot be stopped or slowed by a change in position, and as it was now 3 am, it couldn’t hurt to lie down for a few minutes before calling in grandma.

I woke up at 7:15 later that morning and the contractions were gone, and while I was a little bit deflated, I figured it would be within 24 hours or so, given my past history. CACKLE.

I would love to take you through the step by step of what the next 2 solid weeks entailed, but for everyone’s sake, let’s do Cliff’s notes:

August 1-13, schedule of events:

10:30 pm – go to bed with an aching back after scrubbing something fiercely.

1:00 am – wake up with contractions too painful to sleep through. Yay! Start timing. Eat cereal. Realize 2 hours have passed and they’re still 8 minutes apart. Lie down to get some rest and awaken to the harsh light of another day.

7:04 am – wake up for good. Still pregnant. Start sobbing into the pillow and hyperventilate at the thought of another day home alone with the kids on less than 5 hours of sleep.

Repeat x 10, plus 3 prenatal appointments and multiple occasions of stripped membranes and 2 or 3 centimeters of not enough progress to even crack my smile. Also, I’m now measuring 41 weeks, but only dating 38. I’m a glowing goddess, in other words, and prodromal labor is a nightmare from the netherworld.

It was bad, y’all. I’m not a patient pregnant lady to begin with, and my previous early birds had made me cocky. Sure, my second born came at 40 weeks and 3 days, but he was definitely the outlier. I had my heart set on another 37 week arrival or, at the very least, a 38 weeker.

So this birth was either intended to 1. teach me something or 2. help me grow in virtue or 3. break my spirit completely. The jury is still out, but I’m leaning towards 4. all of the above.

On August 13th I went to bed with painful contractions after fatting out on the couch with Dave, Christina, my visiting college-aged sister, and her friend, watching Leap Year and eating Chunky Monkey straight from the cardboard. Which I’d never had before, but which was well worth the 16 grams of fat per serving. I went to bed around 10 pm once the heartburn overcame my burning desire to see Amy Adams put on increasingly horrible outfits as the rom com progressed.

I joked to my sister and her friend that we’d be waking them up at 2 to go to the hospital and they got very excited, and then I got very excited, because hormones are contagious. Then I started crying. Bed.

11 pm. Is all the ice cream gone? The contractions are painful but irregular still. I get online and troll between Spinning Babies and Facebook, working that exercise ball and wondering how a 4th-time mom can still not for sure cry “labor.”

Midnight: Did my water break? Maybe I just have really, really limited storage capacity. I go to the bathroom 20 times or so and decide that probably it did break, but that it’s probably a high leak and baby is keeping it from cascading out in Hollywood proportions. I’m strep B positive yet again, so I do the math and realize if we don’t head to the hospital soonish, I’m going to be close on my antibiotics window/epidural administration time. The contractions are definitely real, but they’re crazy: 4 min, 17 min, 6 min, 3 min, 9 min…there was no rhyme or reason.

1 am: we’re leaving. Wake the college girls and muffle their squeals with the stern admonition to let the preschoolers sleep, for the love. Do you want a motherless 3 year old in bed with you at 2 am? No, no you do not. Shhh, go back to bed, we’ll call you when the fun starts.

We drag our cartel of luggage + laptops to the car and we’re on the road. It’s perfect from a traffic-flow perspective, but I’m nervous, because I only have 1 “real” contraction in the car on the 22 minute drive.

Crap, I’m going to get sent home, is all I can think as Fleetwood Mac’s “Gypsy” blares on the radio. I fret to Dave, worrying that we jumped the gun.

What kind of a multiparous mother has a false alarm on baby #4?

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To be continued…

birth story, guest post, motherhood, pregnancy

No “one way” to be a mom

August 27, 2015

Today I’m delighted to have the always effervescent and entertaining Ana Hahn of Time Flies When You’re Having Babies fame occupying this space while I continue to “recover” (HAHAHAHA) with my four little darlings. Who are being preeeeetty good today so I can’t complain, but I also can’t type “recovery” without employing sarcasm right now. 

Ana is the lovely wife of Mike and mom to 4 little people herself (actually, our numbers are almost perfectly aligned for arranged marriages, so I’ll just put that out there…) and hails from the land of the Irish and the eternal winters. Actually she hails further back from the Ohio River Valley where we did some college time together at good old FUS, though I missed my golden opportunity to personally befriend her then because I was too old and too grad student-y. C’est la vie. At least we have the internet to bind us together now.

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When I was pregnant with my first I was unsure how to go about preparing for the labor and delivery part of birth. As one of 6 girls in a family of 8 children and the 4th to marry and have kids, I had a lot of other experiences to look at and learn from, and those other experiences served to both scare the heck out of me and help me to form my own opinions with regards to my own pending birth.

I say that they scared me because by the time I married my husband, I had already heard horror stories from both ends of the spectrum of birthing- from the heavily medicated birth and c-sections to the all natural, totally non-medicated birth experience. My sisters who had gotten epidurals had bad reactions to them which caused them to throw up during birth, which sounded awful, but then my sister who did all of her births naturally talked about the level of pain in childbirth in such a way that I was picturing war veterans getting their limbs blown off and it still wasn’t really rivaling her descriptions of the pain she felt.

So how would I do it? Both ways were coming up short in terms of giving me much peace. I ended up signing myself and my husband up for a Bradley birthing class and reading the book “Husband Coached Child Birth” and came out on the “all natural non-medicated” side of things.

I birthed my first born baby girl successfully without any medication and in a large birthing tub, it was pretty much as natural as it could get, except for the fact that it was in a hospital. I had a midwife who advocated for me to have no IV and to be left alone and not asked about receiving an epidural or any other medication. She stayed by my side for the entire 2 hours of pushing and helped in a huge way in order for things to go as smoothly as possible. The pain truly did exceed any of what I could have dreamed up and my screaming got so loud that nurses were coming in from down the hall and asking me to quiet down. Goodbye Dignity!

I felt pretty amazing after the natural birth, something akin to Xena the Warrior Princess, but while the recovery was a cinch, I definitely came out a little traumatized by the whole thing. Yes, I was very proud of myself for doing it non-medicated, but I could not imagine ever doing that again. However, I had been so thoroughly schooled in the all natural Bradley birthing method (and the evil that is medication in a birth setting) that this was pretty much the way I was resigned to doing it for the rest of our births for subsequent children, terrified or not. 

But then 18 months later our second baby had different plans for us. Daughter number 2 was as breech as breech could be and after weeks of trying every natural “way to flip a breech baby” and even after attempting an external cephalic version (when they try to flip the baby from the outside of your belly) it became clear that a c-section was inevitable.

Next to myself or my baby dying in child birth, the idea of a c-section was the most terrifying thing I could have thought of. I cried rivers of highly emotional, overly hormonal pregnant tears but eventually I had to accept it- it was the only way to ensure that this baby would come into the world as safely as possible. The doctors advising me were looking out for my baby’s health and my health first and foremost and this was the safest way to go about birthing this baby, even though it was not what I had in mind and certainly not what my “all-natural-or-nothing” mindset had anticipated. We went forward with the c-section and it all went off without a hitch. I had no abnormal side effects from the spinal block and other than the longer recovery from the surgery, it was fine and I had another healthy baby girl.

Cue pregnancy number 3 and I was finally completely indifferent to the way I would birth my next baby. All I really knew is that I preferred to birth this one naturally (meaning, no c-section) so as to not have to recover from another major abdominal surgery while caring for 3 kids 3 and under.

Whether the birth was medicated or natural did not matter one bit as long as the baby came out healthy and had a healthy, happy mama to care for them. I had so many drugs coursing through my veins for that second birth that all of my judgmental tendencies instilled in me in the Bradley class were out the window. I was able to be with a doctor who was very supportive of Vaginal Birth After Cesarian (VBAC) and very much fine with me having an epidural if I decided I wanted one. Whenever my mind went back to the first all natural birthing experience, my anxiety levels went through the roof, so I was veering more and more towards the epidural route.

Maybe it was the fact that I was chasing toddlers around until the end of the pregnancy, or maybe it was the 2 weeks of intense early labor that I went through with baby #3, but by the time my water broke I could not fathom pushing the baby out with no medication. She was very much “head-down” and we went forward with the vaginal delivery, but this time with an epidural, and everything went swimmingly. I think I pushed 3 whole times before little Lucy made her grand entrance and I felt nothing but some “pressure” through the whole thing. And the best part? Yet another healthy baby girl!

At the outset of preparing for labor and delivery, I never would have imagined that I would get to experience so many different ways of birthing babies, I figured that I would chose a way and that would be it. But the health and well being of the baby became priority number one in my newly maternal heart and I learned that there is no one-way to give birth, as long as you are focused on what is best for baby and mom, you’re doing just fine.

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*I have since been blessed with a small male who made it safely into the world through another epidural birth, if God decides to bless us even more, who knows what I’ll chose!