March 06, 2009

Our First Birth

I've been wanting to blog about my experience about when my first child was born for awhile now. Though I know I'll never forget it, I still want to get it down in writing.



I should have known when the doctor told the wife to fake contractions to get admitted to the hospital, that was only taking women in actual labor, it wasn't going to be a normal delivery. She was a crazy hormonal pregnant lady by this point. She had push mowed our lawn the day before trying to bring about labor. She walked up to the hospital counter, started moaning and faking labor pains, just as our doctor had told her she would have to do. She was admitted and the doctor started the procedures to induce labor. Only problem was that after nine hours of labor the baby wouldn't move. And, despite two epidurals The Wife was asking me to cut off her right leg because of the pain. Oddly enough she would wait until the doctor had left the room to make this request. As a matter of fact, she almost always waited until we were alone to complain about everything. As soon as the doctor would enter the room the cussing and complaining would stop. She would also deny she said anything when I repeated these complaints to the doctor and nurses.

Also, if your wife is in labor it's a good idea NOT to eat a McFish sandwich from McDonald's then stand beside her breathing, in any direction. Just trust me on this one.

So after nine hours the doctor comes to me and ask if it would be alright with me if The Wife had a c-section. WTF? He then explained that some men frown upon their wife not giving birth naturally. Again, WTF? After the shock of this conversation wore off I said, "well, you're the doctor, I just want what's best for my wife and baby soooooo... we'll just go with what you think." See I don't like seeing my wife in pain and I'M NOT QUALIFIED TO MAKE THAT CALL!

Problem was, the operating room was taken. This turned out to be a blessing, for me, not so much for The Wife, because it pushed us past 12 midnight which meant my son and I now share a birthday. Not much to tell about the c-section. The wife was given some heavy duty drugs at some point and I had to wear a bunch of paper and stuff. I will warn, if a funny doctor ask you to peek over the curtain during a c-section, decline. Seeing your newborn's head hanging out your wife's belly may be hilarious to the doctor but not so much for a soon to be dad who recently had a McFish sandwich.

After the birth they pushed my wife into recovery. Then as I sat down for the first time in hours an older lady, not much bigger than a hobbit, limped in with my newborn son and handed him to me. Her only comment, "you need to feed your baby." Then she limped away. Scared to death I tried to wake my morphine drugged wife so we, she, could breast feed the baby. No luck. I then tried to accomplish this feat by holding my son up to my comatose wife's breast but again, no luck. I was scared to death.

The rest of the stay was a blur. We never slept. The nurses came in the room every three hours to have us feed our son. Our son screamed all night. For some reason, despite being in a maternity ward we felt obligated not to disturb others who's kids were screaming as well. When The Wife was finally cleared for release we were a mess and couldn't wait to be let out of hell.

One of the things that added to our frustrations I still find a bit interesting if not odd. We had always been told the second we saw our baby there would be a special bond. That when a women holds her child for the first time there is a connection like no other. I watched The Wife cry for hours in the hospital because our son wouldn't breast feed and she didn't feel that instant connection. At one point, through tear filled eyes, she said, "I'm not feeling what I'm suppose to, I can't do this." Maybe it was us or maybe it's just a myth but the pressure to feel that feeling instantly was tremendous. Not feeling it right away made us question our abilities to be good parents. It did happen before we left the hospital, just not like we had been led to believe it would. Some insignificant need that The Wife provided for our son triggered it for her. And , as they say, the rest is history.

6 comments:

Jen said...

"I'M NOT QUALIFIED TO MAKE THAT CALL!"

You'd be surprised how many DADS will put their foot down about what we will and won't do to their wife, who are in the room being talked about in the third person.
That's what inspires doctors/nurses to ask silly questions, because the one time they don't ask...

I laughed out loud about you trying to breastfeed the baby while Mom was comatose. Actually, I'm still laughing about it.

As for your last paragraph, I think the "bond" issue is pushed on new parents WAY too much. It's true that as a mother, you did carry this little wrinkly guy/girl in your belly, but it's not like you ever held him/her or any of the other important things.
A bond is definitely something to be grown and nurtured, not something to be pushed out of a vagina (or a hole in the belly for that matter), as you well know!
:)

Great post.
I'd like to see more pictures...

Jen said...

Oh, on that bond issue, I think it can develop at first sight too. The way I remember it, that happened with Mike and me, but I'm pretty sure it was the near death issues that we faced daily that really made us grow together. BUT it DOESN'T have to be instant. And that's the important part - that it doesn't HAVE to.

Time Traveller said...

"Also, if your wife is in labor it's a good idea NOT to eat a McFish sandwich from McDonald's then stand beside her breathing, in any direction. Just trust me on this one."

hahaha! At least you didn't eat it in the same room ... did you?

Thousands of babies are born every day, but hearing about someone's personal experience is always special and different. It rarely seems a nice experience however. All that pain :( how do animals do it so easily?

ooo the pain, I'm scared witless of the day I have to endure that kind of pain.

David said...

Jen: I will look for more pics :)

The nursing staff knew The Wife faked labor to get in and I think they held it against us. We were awake for two straight days. Anytime we did get the baby to sleep they would pop in and throw on the lights and wake us all up.

Our second birth was awesome. When they saw The Wife was tired they offered to take our son for a few hours so she could get some sleep.

I think new parents expect this overwhelming feeling to overcome them and guide them through the parenting process. It didn't work like that for us.

TT: No I didn't eat it in the same room. What kind of fool do you think I am? Of course that was only because they wouldn't let the guy that got it for me come in the room. :D

Our second two were great experiences. I think the only ones you hear about are the hard ones. Of course that's just my opinion. You know, the man who hasn't ever given birth ;)

Daughter of Night said...

That was awesome, RT. Thanks so much for sharing it with us! Every birth has been different and "special," (LOL) but it is always the first that sticks in my head.

I'm laughing with Jen about your attempts to feed the baby. LOL. I wish there were photos!

My first and I also struggled to learn how to breastfeed, and I remember sobbing in utter heartbreak after about two days, realizing that my dreams of being a mother were just a cruel joke and that I was the worst mother possible because my baby was starving despite the hugely painful, leaking mounds of milk-filled flesh jutting from my chest.

We figured it out. Once we did, she never stopped eating, LOL.

Great post. Thank you.

Winter Wren said...

Thanks for sharing. The more I talk to people, the more I understand one can't have too many expectations when it comes to birth or parenting.