Free Web Hosting by Netfirms
Web Hosting by Netfirms | Free Domain Names by Netfirms

Birth Stories -My Mother's Cesareans
 
 
   
   
 
 

My Mother's Cesareans

The following is the story of a woman preparing for the birth of her first child, and discovering that her mother's past births, all by cesarean after long labours, were making her fearful of her own ability to give birth. This is how she worked through the fears, and how she feels now after the birth. The intergenerational effects of births by cesareans are real, and becoming aware of them can help us heal.

***************
Hi Claudia, Thanks for the good vibes, I enjoyed talking to you. I would be happy for you to post our email discussion anonymously, but please wait until after I give birth. I have many misgivings about the Internet, but I have to admit it has been great while pregnant, because whenever I have an unexpected concern or complaint, I can always find ten women who have posted the same feelings online. I would be happy to contribute to another woman feeling less alone in her concerns about this issue, but again, it just feels better to wait until after the birth to post it. Thanks. 

**********************
Hello Claudia, It has taken me a while to respond to your email because it was quite a watershed for me and I wanted to take some time to sort out my new feelings.
Although your response was probably pretty standard, your comment that a natural birth might be healing for my mother brought me to tears because I realized it was not true. Instead, I think it would crack my mother's rationalizations for her cesareans, which leave no room for mourning something lost or being angry about something taken. I think it would make her more upset if I had a vaginal birth than if we could bond over some sort of similarity between us which led us both to cesarean birth. I realized my attempts to prepare myself for this birth by focusing on differences between myself and my mother, which always felt false, would never work as well as challenging her rationalizations and instead believing in her birthing abilities and therefore my own, which also means grieving for what was taken from us and struggling to reclaim our ability to birth. I had a long talk about this with one of my midwives and my partner yesterday which has given me further insights and reassurance that they will be there to support me emotionally, physically and spiritually as I go through what I assume will be a journey that I and my little one must ultimately take on our own and find our own way through.
My midwife also suggested that rather than focusing only on my mother's births, I should draw spiritually on all of the other women and women ancestors in my family who have given birth, the majority at home with a midwife. I realized that although I have never called on her before, this is probably the right time to draw on my namesake, my Great-grandmother, who gave birth to eight children at home.
On a less personal note, I'm reading Dr. Odent's book, "The Cesarean". Thank you for your support.  

**************
Hi Claudia, I've been thinking a lot about how my birth changed my feelings about my mother's births and my own birthing abilities and the answer has surprised me. Surprisingly, during my labour, I didn't really have any fears that I would need a cesarean, I knew things were going slowly and painfully, and I was having trouble relaxing because the pain was never-ending, but I was confident that I would birth my baby. Even when I got stuck at 8 with all the nausea, double peaked pain of transition, and tried yelling out all my fears to let them go, I still didn't take seriously the possibility of a cesarean. And then when I decided to go to the hospital, I remained sure that I could go in and get what I needed without a cesarean happening (I think I had this confidence from attending births in hospital as a labour assistant). My partner on the other hand, did not have this confidence and was really scared that going into the hospital would lead to a cascade of interventions. I didn't know that was why he was so upset at the time (I thought he just really wanted a home birth) but his strong support at that time kept me home a little longer as the midwives tried their last attempts to turn the baby, relieve some of my pain and/or make some progress. When none of these worked, I felt even more comfortable going into the hospital knowing we had tried everything we could. Once at the hospital, even when the OB started talking about a cesarean if I didn't finish dilating or forceps if he stayed OT (he didn't actually turn OP until right at the end, and then while I was pushing he turned lateral and emerged that way), I remember being completely confident that he would turn and I would finish dilating (luckily my partner was in the washroom for that conversation because he would have freaked out - and I didn't tell him what the OB said - he was totally panicked at this point I later found out and that conversation would have put him over the edge). Again, I have no idea where this confidence came from but I was SURE, absolutely confident, that I could do it. And after I birthed my baby I felt on top of the world for pushing him out despite the psychological, physical and then medical barriers to a vaginal birth that were in my way.
I do think though, that my fears from my mother's birth initiated a fear-tension-pain cycle that affected my labour. I think partly my fear about cesareans and my ability and my mother's ability to birth made me more tense, which made it harder for him to turn, which increased the pain and slowed the labour, making me more fearful since labour was not progressing well and on and on. While it would have been nice to break this cycle at the fear point, by breaking it at the pain point with an epidural, I was finally able to relax enough for him to turn, and drift into 'labourland' myself during the second stage, focusing only on pushing when I felt the urge and drifting off in between. Since I had been given the message that I might be too 'cerebral' to relax with birth, it was very powerful for me to enter that place where time and everything else but the birth disappears, since the pain had stopped me from doing that before. I now knew I could tap into that inner place of focus and strength to birth like any other woman.
When my parents came to visit, unsurprisingly my baby's birth brought up their memories of my birth and my brother's. Mostly, my parents seemed to think the labours were similar and that my brother and I were in difficult positions, but as my parents put it; I 'stuck it out' where they did not (as if having a cesarean is somehow giving up and taking the easier path – I don't think so!). When I got stuck at 8 I was pretty confident that I must have been past where my mother got to and therefore felt sure I would reach the end. Luckily I didn't know then that she had her cesarean with only a swollen anterior lip left or it would have been much harder for me, I think. But my own birth has led me to find peace with my mother's cesareans. I came to realize how important it is to feel that interventions have only taken place after everything else has been tried first, and for them to be your own informed decision, as they were in my mother's case. I also know now how powerful she must have felt after her birth because she had created a new life even if she had not pushed the baby out herself. I can now accept that because she had these things she truly is at peace with her cesareans, and thus I can be at peace with them. I do mourn that she missed that triumphant moment of birthing, but accept that for her this loss is not monumental. My birth has also further strengthened my belief in my mother's own ability to birth. My birth as led me to understand that each of a woman's birthings follow their own trajectory, and that while the two she had may have ended in cesareans for whatever reason, this does not mean that she could not have had five other vaginal births.
I don't think my mother's feelings about her births really changed with my birth, but for myself, I feel that I was able to reclaim the birth power of my family through my birth: not only my own, but also that of my mother's, and now my own children as they can go on to have their own children with the confidence that our family CAN birth.
Please feel free to make a posting out of this so that other people can understand and respect the intergenerational effects of cesareans. Thanks for all your help through this incredible process. Take care.

 

Return to Birth Stories

Previous    Next


ICAN of Edmonton and The International Cesarean Awareness Network, Inc. ("ICAN") maintain this website as an online information and communications service. Use of this website is at your own risk. The information contained on or provided through this website is intended for general consumer understanding and education only, is not intended to be, and is not provided as a substitute for professional medical advice. Nothing contained on or provided through the website is intended to be or is to be used for medical diagnosis or treatment. The website is presented by ICAN of Edmonton for the sole purpose of disseminating general health information for public benefit. Always seek the advice of your midwife, physician, nurse or other qualified health care provider before you undergo any treatment or for answers to any questions you may have regarding a medical condition. The website and any information provided on the website are not intended to constitute the practice of or furnishing of medical, nursing, or professional health care advice, diagnosis, consultation or treatment or services in any jurisdiction.

Except for information, products, services or merchandise clearly identified as being supplied by ICAN of Edmonton, ICAN of Edmonton does not operate, control, supply, endorse, warrant or guarantee any information, products, services or merchandise available on the website or through the Internet generally in any way. You understand and agree that ICAN of Edmonton does not make any express or implied warranties, representations or endorsements of any kind whatsoever (including without limitation, warranties of title or noninfringement, or any warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose) with regard to the website, or with respect to any information, products, services, merchandise or other material provided on or through the website. ICAN of Edmonton does not warrant or guarantee the accuracy, completeness, correctness, timeliness, or usefulness of any information, products, services, merchandise or other material provided through the website. ICAN of Edmonton makes no warranty or guarantee that the website will be uninterrupted, timely, secure, or error free.

In no event will ICAN of Edmonton or ICAN, Inc. be liable to you or anyone else for any decision made or action taken by you or anyone else in reliance upon the information contained on or provided through the website.