Episode 89SN: What her Unexpected C Section Taught her about Life: Anja’s Story, Part I

Welcome to War Stories from the Womb.This is a show that shares true experiences of getting pregnant being pregnant and giving birth to help shift the common cultural narrative away from the glossy depictions of this enormous transition you can find on all kinds of media, to a more realistic one.  It also celebrates the incredible resilience and strength it takes to create another person and release that new person from your body into the world. I’m your host, Paulette Kamenecka. I’m a writer and an economist and the mother of two girls and boy did I struggle with this transition….

In today’s episode you will hear, useful advice about what you can do if the birth you planned is not the birth you experience, a very persuasive case for why trusting your intuition is so important and insights on how much control you have in this transformation from person to parent.

To Check out Anja’s book: Parent from this Place How Yoga Changed the Way I Parent

Nausea & Lethargy in the First Trimester

https://www.mayoclinic.org/healthy-lifestyle/pregnancy-week-by-week/expert-answers/nausea-during-pregnancy/faq-20057917#:~:text=Research%20suggests%20that%20nausea%20and,attaches%20to%20the%20uterine%20lining.

https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/articles/22489-human-chorionic-gonadotropin#:~:text=Your%20placenta%20begins%20producing%20and,to%2010%20weeks%20of%20pregnancy.

https://www.pregnancysicknesssupport.org.uk/documents/HCPconferenceslides/what-causes-nvp.pdf

https://www.stanfordchildrens.org/en/topic/default?id=morning-sickness-1-2080

https://www.healthline.com/health/pregnancy/pregnancy-fatigue#causes

What happens in a C section surgery

https://www.mayoclinic.org/tests-procedures/c-section/about/pac-20393655

https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/treatments/7246-cesarean-birth-c-section

https://americanpregnancy.org/healthy-pregnancy/labor-and-birth/cesarean-procedure/

Audio Transcript

Welcome to War Stories from the Womb.This is a show that shares true experiences of getting pregnant being pregnant and giving birth to help shift the common cultural narrative away from the glossy depictions of this enormous transition you can find on all kinds of media, to a more realistic one.  It also celebrates the incredible resilience and strength it takes to create another person and release that new person from your body into the world. I’m your host, Paulette Kamenecka. I’m a writer and an economist and the mother of two girls and boy did I struggle with this transition….

In today’s episode you will hear, useful advice about what you can do if the birth you planned is not the birth you experience, a  very persuasive case for why trusting your intuition is so important and insights on how much control you have in this transformation from person to parent.

Let’s get to this inspiring story.

Anja Simmons

[00:00:00] Hi. Thanks so much for coming on the show. Could you introduce yourself and tell us where you’re from?

Sure. My name’s Aya Simmons. I am a yogi parenting coach, a speaker, an author and the biggest one, you know, mom of two, and I’m originally from England, but I live now in Toronto, Canada.

Oh, lovely.

Lovely. You said Yogi parenting Coach. Was that the first thing? What’s that? Yeah.

Yeah. , that’s

unusual, right? . What does that mean? What’s that title mean?

Okay, so what it means is From my own journey of , becoming a yoga teacher and my own yoga journey, I realized when I was supporting and, and guiding parents, mostly moms actually that it was the yoga portion that really changed the way I parented.

And that’s then what I bring to the table not necessarily touching your toes, we’re not talking about that. We’re talking about the whole feeling and scope of yoga. In terms of breath work, in terms of how you feel in your [00:01:00] body in terms of being present, that kind of thing.

So that sounds super cool.

I’m a devoted yogi, so , let’s make sure we talk about that at the end, cuz I wanna hear how you’re using it. Perfect.

Yeah, I’d love to. Very

cool. But before we get to the end let’s start back before kids. Did you have siblings? Did you always know you’d want a family?

Yeah. Yeah. So I had I have a brother, a one year older, a sister, one year younger. I come from a divorced family where they both remarried and there were stepbrothers and sisters as well. I always knew I wanted a family because at that point I really loved looking. After I was babysitting and taking care of kids, I went on and became a trained British nanny.

It’s a thing. , so I knew, yes, and I, I really wanted a big family In my head that’s just the head, not body in my head. Oh my gosh, how amazing. Loads of kids, dogs, maybe even a farm. I mean, I was like completely in the dream world of my coping abilities. . [00:02:00] But yes, so I had wanted a huge family.

 I’ve never heard anyone put it this way and it’s so smart to say in my head and not my body because I’m a hundred percent with you.

Yeah. I, kept saying to my husband a team, not a, not a football team, but a basketball team. Five. Yeah.

Perfect. Yeah. Mine was six, I felt six had my son and I went Great. I think we’re done . I do have two, but we did go again. But yeah, it was certainly at the time. Yeah.

But I think for me, and maybe tell me if this is true for you as well, it looks a lot easier than it is.

Oh my gosh. And I, and don’t forget, I had actually nanny, so I had looked after other people’s babies. I had helped moms when they’d had a baby. I had looked after toddlers, twins all of that. But I could clock out at the end of the day and sleep. Yeah. Big difference. . Yeah. I mean, huge difference. ,

the difference between me and you is I had no experience, right.

I had no idea what I [00:03:00] was talking about. And, and had never successfully, you know, nad anyone else. So right. So yeah, I was definitely flying blind, but, so you’ve decided you’re gonna have a family and then do you step into it easily? Is it easy to get pregnant or how does that go?

I was really lucky.

 When we decided Yeah, we’re gonna have kids kind of to start the whole process. I got pregnant right away. It was very easy. I had actually also a pretty easy pregnancy. I had the typical morning sickness stuff for the three months, and then I actually I loved it. I had never felt so connected to my body.

That’s interesting. At that time, yeah. And I didn’t realize how disconnected I was to my body. Yeah. Talking about the head, not the body before. And so I don’t know. I felt like I had magical powers. I mean, I really was in this like, my God, I’m carrying a child, people, I have made this thing in my belly, you know?

And so that part of it was very, Yeah, pretty blissful. I, I also was in a good part of my relationship , so my husband was just as [00:04:00] much in awe and amazed at the whole thing too. So I mean, all of those that don’t have that to be able to even get through the pregnancy, nevermind the birth and everything.

So in that, that point, I was definitely ahead of the game and, and lucky in that, you know, oh, you need a foot. Oh, you do. Oh, you sit down. I, you know, all I had all of that. Yeah. And just as excited about any little flutter in the belly, any appointment we went to, that kind of thing. So it did feel a bit like hours as opposed to just

mine.

So all of that is really interesting. Let’s walk a little more slowly through that. Mm-hmm. , the first thing I wanna focus on is everyone says, oh, it was super easy. It was normal. I was, I was really sick the first three months. I get that it’s common, but it’s not easy. Right? It’s not, it’s, it’s such a shock and it’s such a dramatic way for you to understand that your body is being rented out to some other purpose because, , right?

It doesn’t matter what you ate, you could have had a, you know, a toast for breakfast and you, you’re [00:05:00] still gonna throw up and feel terrible and have this kind of lethargy that is just an enormous weight. Yeah,

yeah. Right. It’s beautifully said. Really, really true. And obviously I’m talking 25 years ago, so at the time now, reflecting back on the pregnancy part, we’re get obviously into the birth later, but I.

I actually didn’t mind the sickness bit because , that part I knew about, I was ready when it ended and I was really lucky that it kind of did do the normal three month. Yeah. With him, with my daughter was very different. But yeah, no, it is a horrible feeling. We won our own business size, going into work, going into the washroom, throwing up, coming back out, trying to be professional, going back in, and then the tired.

Was. You know, I was, I feel I was quite young at the time. I was 30 when I had my son, and I felt pretty fit, pretty, all of those things. So but I, and I remember thinking, oh my gosh, I haven’t even, it’s not much of a baby in there now, and I’m still tired. , you know, his weight is not something I’m carrying at this [00:06:00] time, you know?

Yes. Yeah. I mean, it is. I, I kind of marvel at our younger selves thinking , You know, we’re expected to just fit into normal life and I had a job and I, you know, yeah. I just ran off to the bathroom and threw up and came back to my job. That’s, yeah. . What, why is that normal?

I know. Why, and why is that not really even, you know, something that anyone else has to deal with unless you’re pregnant.

Right? Yeah. . Otherwise you’d be running to the doctor thinking, okay, something’s wrong with me, you know? Yeah. Yeah.

And I, and I take your point that it was consistent with your expectations, so Yeah. You know, that part of it. Wasn’t necessarily hard to manage because you knew that this was, this was part of the deal, I guess.

Yeah. But, but the

 Actually, I do remember, sorry. Something that I, I just remembered now was being my lovely vain self at that point. I had a horrible chin rash across my chin, like really bad. Acne and acne’s. Not really something I’ve. Now more menopause. I’m dealing with them back there.

So I think the morning sickness or all day [00:07:00] sickness, that definitely wasn’t a morning thing only. And the rash, the rash actually bothered me more because that was more visible. Yeah,

I guess, yeah. Yeah, I’m just saying pregnancy is hard no matter what. Right? That’s, oh God. Yeah. . That is a tricky thing and , the felt experience is so different than the description, right?

Mm-hmm. , it’s one thing to say you’ll be sick. It’s another thing to walk around feeling green all day. Right? That’s, yeah. And eating

crackers and thinking, this is just something I would never do. I’m not a bird. . Yes, totally.

Totally. And I Somewhat ashamedly. Admit that I, a vegetarian could only eat hotdogs cuz that was like the only thing that’s vile

And I haven’t, I haven’t touched a hotdog since the pregnancy, but I was craving salt, I guess, probably. And I, yeah, that was what I could eat, but. Well, that’s so

funny. And I had I remember with my son, it was with my daughter was carrots. Go figure. So at least that was healthy. But with my son was salt and vinegar crisps, we call them in England.

Yeah. And I was making my family in England semi because I only wanted those ones. I did not want no, any Canadian [00:08:00] ships. I wanted these particular ones.

Yeah. Yeah. No, you, you have been overtaken by some, by some other force. Yeah. Very powerful force. And I also kind of relate to your awe in the second trimester when you can come up from the toilet seat and lift your head away from the garbage can.

You know, I, I interviewed someone who said, she was talking about sitting on her couch watching tv, and she was saying to her husband , can you go get me some water? I’m making a foot right now. I’m busy. I’m, I’m busy working on feet over here, so I can’t, which I was like, such a funny and great way to describe it, because That’s true.

It’s totally true. Yeah. So before we get to the birth, what were you imagining the birth would be like?

Totally blissful, totally. I can totally manage pain. People don’t die. This was very, very arrogant. I also w in the hospital here at that time, maybe they still do, you had those birthing classes.

So you would go and you did, I don’t know, six weeks or something or other. So I felt very prepared and I wrote a beautiful birthing plan and [00:09:00] I believed, And I was led to believe that my beautiful birthing plan is how my birth would be. That is it. That is what was going to happen. We could bring music in.

Yeah. We could bring in, I think a bouncy ball thing, the things you sit on. And yeah, I felt very ready, very plan prepared. I am the kind of person who I, I didn’t at that point connect to my body. So to me, I hadn’t visualized anything. I just knew beginning, and he’s my beautiful.

Okay. And I’m imagining you’re, you’re thinking of a vaginal birth in a hospital.

Yeah. Is that what

you

were thinking? That’s totally, yeah. Yeah. At that point I had tried for a midwife, a doula. They would, that was pretty rare. Now I think it’s obviously much better, but yes, for me it was definitely that my mom actually had home births with us and so there was a big thought about it, but it didn’t, yeah, I didn’t feel I I, I would be comfortable with

that.

And , did your mother’s view play into your [00:10:00] expectation? Did she say It’s beautiful? It’s a little bit,

yeah. Yeah, it was like start to finish pretty easy. You know, almost the squatting, here’s your baby, and off you go, , it did, it didn’t happen that way. Such a shame, Paulette, because I did love that whole scenario.

But the wake up, right, that actually happened because of it all, and due to it all was, was the learning I really needed. I.

Yeah. So, so we’re gonna go right there. Mm-hmm. , although I will say it’s a beautiful story and who doesn’t fall in love with that? Beautiful. Yeah. Right. The end to this dramatic transformation will be gentle and, easy.

Yeah. And quick. Yeah, very quick, very easy. People said it’ll be a bit painful, and I thought, wow. I can handle pain. What are people talking about? . Right? They, like I said, denial. Big denial, big dream. World. Denial.

Well, also the language does not suffice. Right? We need a different word for, [00:11:00] for contractions and, and labor and Childbirth than, than the word pain, which is applied to a paper cut or, yeah. Absolute. Stubbed your toe. Yep.

Yeah.

Yeah. So we, well, we’ll get cracking on that. That’ll be our next assignment, . So the day your son is born, how do we know today’s the day, what happens?

So my memory is that he was overdue, is my memory.

And I had, was having those. Contraction. You have to remind me of all the words. Cause I, I think it’s Braxton Hicks. Braxton Hicks. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Okay. So I had these contractions and they would build and then stop and build and then stop. And funny enough, my mom, I was so blessed, was waiting in England for the time to come over.

She was ready, wanting to come. She figured she’d miss the birth, but as soon as labor started, she was on her way. So it got quite thought it was ready. Bless my mom. She arrives and I’m sitting on the couch like, oh no, no baby. And so it, I know it went on a few days and fast forward to when it was actually happening.

When the contractions got stronger and bigger I was. To [00:12:00] be honest, really kind of enjoying the process at that point, cuz the pain was obviously very tolerable and my mom and me were sitting, my husband was sick, he’s in bed. My, my mom and me are playing cards at the table and every time there’s a contraction, I would stand up, but I would kind of breathe through it.

My mom would run my back and then we carried on and then it, that kind of increased and my mom then woke my husband up and said, right, we gotta go. Get in the car. The hospital wasn’t sort of that far away. So that sort of was the start that it became. Okay. It’s actually really, I think, happening now.

Okay.

So it’s the timing of contraction’s, not like water breaking or anything that’s sending in the hospital? No. So no water?

Yeah. Yeah. Okay. We were definitely very premature because then we get to the heart of the door and I think, and I know this is my personality now more than I did then I’m all good until.

The moment. So as we are walking through the hospital, . I was thinking, oh fuck. Like it’s actually really gotta come out now. Now I’m in the, now I’m like, Oh, I don’t know [00:13:00] how, how does a baby come out your body? I mean, not physics, but like, oh my God.

And, and I was so surprised. I assumed the contractions were gonna be really right up on my ribs on the top of my belly for some reason, being very unaware of the body. And I thought it was going to be like like a, like a push there and then the baby’s just gonna come on down and slide out. So when the pain was obviously in the right place, lower, much lower I was kind of surprised by that, you know?

And so then as we were walking through the hospital, I was so self-conscious that people would see me in pain or crying or not handling, I’m not too sure a hundred percent what, the fear was and. And it was definitely coming out for me as embarrassed, like, oh my God, people are looking at me as I, I had to keep leaning against the wall to go through a contraction till we got to the labor delivery place.

We get to the labor delivery place. And I’m really starting to panic at this point cuz it’s really hit me , I’m having a baby, you know, [00:14:00] and how is that baby coming out? And this is really painful, you know? And at this point, I guess it’s just the beginning contractions. Unfortunately, what happened then was the nurse or somebody came out and said, okay, can you go into the waiting room?

Wait a sec, we’re just getting a room ready. And I was in there and there was a couple I think they were the parents of somebody having a baby, like the waiting room for that. And, it really was an embarrassment that people would, I, I guess it was vulnerable. I think from that, that I burst into tears and I’m really like getting panicked now about this poor baby.

Like it is the first thing I heard of it. And they you know, just realized I’m actually gonna get this baby out. And so, My memory, the nurse then comes out, sees me crying and , and that freaked her out a bit thinking I’m about to have a baby. They took me in. In retrospect, I should have been left to calm down because my contractions actually disappeared.

Then I freaked out , I freaked [00:15:00] out the baby. He wasn’t coming out, and so they take me through all the things. They lie me flat, they hook me up to something, and then it was this pressure. Of hurry up and have your baby. Yes. And I didn’t know how to make that happen. Yeah. He, he, he’d stopped , he’d gone back to sleep, you know, so that was the beginning of quite a traumatic experience.

And I, and I do wanna say for the record, I’m well aware that I’m a white woman having this experience, and I, I’m, I’m way more aware now. Didn’t know that the time of that privilege in itself. Yeah. In that, I, I assumed I was getting the best care. I trusted everybody, and I didn’t for one minute think that I wouldn’t have been treated properly.

Anna, it sounds like they took your pain seriously. Right? That’s their

Yes. Exactly. Exactly. They were like, oh, she’s crying, she’s red in the face, which I heard my cry, and that’s what happens. And push me through, okay, we, you know, she must be serious. She [00:16:00] must mean it. Yes. She must be serious. Yeah.

Yeah. Yeah.

 In your defense I would say the feelings that you’re having about being freaked out about the baby coming out, I had probably when I was five months pregnant, And , it’s better to save them until the end. . It’s be, it’s like the, if you’re gonna have ’em, it’s best to just push ’em to the end, , because in five months I was like, how the fuck is this baby gonna get out of me?

It’s already too big to escape its intended route. So I don’t, yes, and I haven’t thought about C-section that wasn’t on my radar. No, wasn’t my mind. And I was just like, I have gotten myself into something that I cannot get out of. , I, I don’t know how this is gonna work. Yeah,

yeah. , I kind of was saying to my husband, okay, you need to make this go away.

You need to figure this out and get this stopped, . So I, I do not want children. . Yeah. I think

it’s a, a legitimate feeling and if I had a choice, I would’ve done it. Your. Right. Okay. Makes sense. It doesn’t, it doesn’t do you any good to have it, you know, while you’re in the Oh yeah. . [00:17:00]

No, no. It’s, it’s

not, it’s not helpful.

So you’re strapped down and in this room and what happens?

Yeah. And so it was hours and hours of being there and all of our birth plan. And what we had learned was, you know, shouldn’t lay flat, get up and move around. They. Everything sort of that I hadn’t wanted to happen happened in, in simple ones of just being completely out of control.

So I, I lost complete ability. So then everything stopped. So they break my water, , I get an epidural. I think we maybe got there mid-afternoon. He was born the next day kind of idea. So

  1. Wait. When they’re, when they’re doing all these things to you, you’re saying yes, but in your heart you’re feeling like shit, this isn’t what I wanted.

Or How’s that going?

Yes. Yeah, I did. I didn’t want this, but I also felt like, oh my God, I, I, I was just constantly in a panic feeling. And I couldn’t get myself back. I couldn’t bring myself back. Even having the support of my mom and my husband, you know, we [00:18:00] hadn’t done that before. Nobody, you know, it’s the same sort of situation.

And my mom you know, wasn’t my voice there. She was my support and Yeah, I just remember everything stopping and I remember that the doctor kept coming in looking quite pissed off. She was very tired and kind of like, oh, for God’s sake, like we still haven’t had this baby. This isn’t progressing. We need to do this.

And then they’re like, oh, we need to, whatever it is that they put in the baby’s head to monitor him. Yeah. Yeah. And then this isn’t progressing. And funny enough, I actually spoke with my husband this morning cuz I was trying to say, okay, what do you remember about the book? and he remembers something that I totally can’t remember at all.

And I didn’t believe I started pushing at all. They had just said, we need to get you to have a C-section. And I was completely stunned by that point. I was scared the epidural bit that they gave me, we’d heard such awful things about this. So I was like, oh my God, I’m gonna become paralyzed.

 I was just in not a great place. And so my husband remembers that I had actually started to push and my son [00:19:00] started to come out, but his foot actually caught. Something inside. And so he wasn’t coming out and that’s what led us to the C-section, which is really freaky to me because I can’t believe I have only, I feel like I’ve only just found that out today.

It’s totally true. But yeah.

I mean, interestingly, that probably would’ve colored your view for a long time if you’d remembered that bit because Yeah. Then it is some natural thing that. Right. Yeah. Had to of forcing this next decision. Yeah. Yes.

Yeah. And I felt like it was all really based on this poor, really tired doctor.

Yeah. Who was just like, oh my God, you know, this lady’s taking up a room. My shift ends. Let’s get this done. You know? So I end up having a  c-section and I was crying, I think the whole time, just devastated by that fact. And also tired. So probably tired too. Cuz I felt like it had been gone on forever.

A lovely port. Part of it was that when my husband’s a musician, not that that necessarily matters to this pit, but [00:20:00] he, he would sing to the baby when the baby was in my stomach, when my son was in my stomach, and when I felt him being pulled out. He started crying and my husband went straight to him and started humming and singing that song and he totally went quiet.

Oh, I was conscious. Yeah, I was conscious of that part and I thought, oh, okay. You know how lovely that that happened, I I never knew C-section was quite such an invasive surgery. , that was not on my birth plan, . That wasn’t gonna happen to me. You know, that must be for people who have other issues.

Anyway, so he was then birthed into the world by being pulled out. And I remember going to a room being left there a little bit. My mom came in and sat with me eventually, maybe my husband two, and then Very lucky. He just went to the breast and breastfed. And then we, I had to for c-section, stay a couple of nights in the hospital.

And that was yeah, I, I was [00:21:00] remembering that I had like I said before, as a nanny. Been around lots of little babies, helped moms, helped sort of sort that out. And there I am, totally exhausted, tired, left alone. Your spouses can’t stay in the hospital. And my baby’s crying and crying and I didn’t know what to do and I, and I called the nurse.

And the nurse comes in and literally bundles him back up and goes, you know, babies do cry. And kind of roughly handed him back to me and I was devastated. I thought when have a failure, I haven’t been able to birth him. I don’t know what’s happened to my body and I can’t move. Like I’m in a lot of pain.

And that was kind of my hospital experience. Well, it’s

interesting that you say I wasn’t able to birth them since, you know Yeah. You did birth them. I believe that. Yeah, I know. But what, so c-section doesn’t count, or what does that mean? No,

that to me at that point it didn’t. No, no. At that point, it felt like my body and I had a whole grieving process after the fact that my body had let me [00:22:00] down.

Yeah. That I could have, and I should have. and obviously everybody around you wants to tell you, but you’ve got a healthy baby. And , I get that and I get the gratitude for that, but I need to grieve whatever I need to grieve. It’s, yeah, it was there, so I did, I don’t believe it now that it’s not a birth, but I had totally believed that that was something for other.

Yeah. I dunno what other people

that that’s, yeah, that’s super interesting. And I think that’s not uncommon. I, I, for sure when I was panicked about the birth, did not have c-section on my radar. Mm-hmm. and, and I had a C-section tube. Mine was planned and it was a different thing, but Okay. But when I was thinking about the birth, all I thought about was a vaginal delivery.

That was the only kind of thing on the menu for me. The only course. . So I, so I get that idea. So what’s postpartum like with you? Feeling like the birth didn’t go the way you wanted and the

pain now? Yeah, yeah. I’ve been trying to [00:23:00] find this book and I really, I can’t find it, but somehow I had this book given to me .

 And it was about women birthing birth experiences around the world. I remember it as an amazing book, and I happened to have it right after somehow , and it really helped me to give myself permission to grieve and how many people in birth, so-called regular birth view back, but all of those things.

There is a p kind of a grieving PO process after birth that we hadn’t ever, we, I had never knew. I didn’t know. And so I with my daughter, I had stronger postpartum depression and things that I actually tried to seek help for with him, with my son. My first birth, I not so much. I did my c-section did get infected and I remember finding that really traumatic when I went to see my doctor who hadn’t been the one at the hospital when I gave birth.

And she just in. In the reception. Oh, in the room, in her surgery. Her space just kind of sound feels like poked needling or [00:24:00] something to, I know that’s too gross for people listening, but it was really hard that, that really injured me again a little bit, you know,

because, because you felt that was another failure on your body’s part or

no more that it was at No, that was actual pain that she just was like, it wouldn’t be a big deal.

But meanwhile, I still was, had my stitches and everything. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. So that was that kind of thing. So So this particular book and women’s birth experiences I wish I had perhaps read it beforehand. And I, again, don’t know how it appeared in my house, but that really did help with the forgiving myself too.

And I know when we went back to the baby group from the baby planning group, I was the only one who had a C-section. And , there was shame around that. Like God must. Not a good person or I must have. Yeah, it took a lot, it was a lot of stuff to do with that and then not being accepted that, that was allowed to feel that, to grieve that.

Because look you how selfish, you’ve got this lovely, yeah, yous good, healthy [00:25:00] baby boy,

right? Yeah. Yeah. You get it either way coming and going, right? Yeah. Yeah. That, that’s super unfortunate. I’m hoping. Our children, there is more leeway in what a birth looks like. Yes. Right.

Yeah. Yeah.

I’ve, yeah, I hope so too. And I think even the movement being way more obviously with my coaching of mothers, but way more this whole change around, , not society expectation. Finding your voice, trusting your intuition. Yeah. Like my intuition was, stay home. It’s not ready. But Okay. I, I’ll listen to everybody.

My intuition when I got there was, okay, why don’t you just go take a walk . Right. I didn’t listen. Yeah. I didn’t have the knowledge to listen and to check in. Yeah. Or to tell the hospital No. Okay. Nope. I don’t want certain things. Yeah. I didn’t, I know I had that voice.

Yeah. It is a unfortunate juxtaposition of a birth, which can involve so many medical things happening early enough in your [00:26:00] life that maybe you have never had those experiences before.

So you have no idea that you can talk back to to the authority of the doctors or, or, or set your own agenda in any way. And a birth is this kind of intermediate space where it doesn’t necessarily have to be medical. You’re there in case something goes wrong. But since you’re in a hospital, it feels like you’ve seated authority because that’s usually what happens in hospitals

for sure.

And there’s someone else involved. Right. It’s not really just a decision for me and my body. There’s a baby there. You know that What if I make a wrong decision? What if I totally, I

mess it up. Yeah. Making the choice for someone else is such a heavy burden, right? That you’re Yes. That, that you will end up doing a thousand times after that, but, but this one feels pretty dramatic.

I agree.

It does. It does. And the loss of control, I had no idea. That I really did like to control what my life was like and what my expectations and up until birth, I think I was able to control enough of my environment. Yep. You know that this was then a shock to more than just the birthing process.

Well,

it [00:27:00] leaves you with the impression that you have control, which, yeah. Oh yeah, yeah. Total

fallacy, but yes. Yeah, .

So how much space is there between your son and your daughter?

Two and a half years.

Okay, so, so does that mean that you had processed all the trauma before you got pregnant again,

or, I thought I had, yeah.

Yeah. I had really had the space and the support to sort of grief that I did. But I really wanted this vaginal birth, which is so funny to me now. What do you get a pat on your back? Whoa. You did it buzz that way, Ray. But at the time it was super important to me and I had to seek a different doctor and find actually I into, I then took the leader a bit more on interviewed doctors to say, this is what I want.

And I found an amazing doctor who I was surprised even was there at the birth that was seemed so uncommon here that he was like, I will be there. And he He fought for me cuz really he was feeling very strongly that we should, we were very quick to move. He thought it’s gonna have to be another C-section cuz she just did not wanna come out [00:28:00] after hours and hours it feels like.

 So you get pregnant easily again?

Yes.

The decided. Yeah. Is the pregnancy similar? Does it feel the same?

It I think because you then have a toddler, everything felt sort of that I, I the sickness lasted longer in this one and ti tiredness, and I had the swelling, like the ankle, the feet and, and I can’t remember what that’s called, but that kind of thing happening with her, which I didn’t have with my son.

And so that part was different. Slightly, but other than, yeah, it was pretty, it was really, I just remembered that one and I many mums, when you’ve got another before I could rest when I want to rest, and now I had somebody who’s like, let’s go to the park. Yeah, yeah.

Totally different. Yeah. and I so my oldest is 21, so we’re basically had kids around the same time.

Yeah. And I feel like in my experience, so my first one was a C-section v a c I think was less common. I’ll go back and look up the numbers for our, our time period. But I know with my doctors, they had said, you can [00:29:00] do whatever you want. And I decided to do another C-section cuz I was worried about my body had failed in a million ways, way before the C-section, which made the C-section necessary, you know?

Okay. Mm-hmm. months before mm-hmm. . So, so the c-section was like, added to the list, right? Like I wasn’t, I didn’t single that one out in entirely, but, and also maybe because I had these medical issues, I was worried about the very, very small chance of uterine rupture. . But when I told my doctors I was gonna do a C-section again and they, they said, thank God, oh my God, thank God.

Right. They were really kind of relieved. So that’s kind of consistent with your experience where it’s hard to find a doctor who will support this idea Yeah. 20 years ago. Yeah,

absolutely. Absolutely. It yeah, I remember sort of really having to seek out and ask people and try to find out, you know, that I wanted this.

And then I did start to advocate for myself. I, you know, having been through it, at least you have a bit more of a idea. Still there’s no control. We get that, but it was, yeah, [00:30:00] a different sort of setup. But for her , I remember going in, To the hospital. It was a different hospital.

 I had said, oh, I do want epidural. Right from the beginning, no, no fighting. This is time. It’s like, go for it. And my husband was there saying, oh, but she’s just like a small dosage or something, and I nearly smacked him. I went, no, just whatever you give , I want the full fact.

Well, why is he, why is he standing in the way of, he thought,

he thought that I, I would’ve wanted it to still be in the birth.

Okay. Like more of the feeling of it that he, he, he felt that maybe last time having the epidural, it stopped my body working Okay. The same way. Okay. Is what my eye, I, I think I, and so I ended up pushing a long, long time for her and they ended up having to use the vacuum thing on her head, , it’s not called a vacuum to hold her down.

And then yeah, that was funnily enough, recovering from that birth took a lot longer than the C-section one. [00:31:00] And I don’t know why, because I had two people there, but I, I had really bad, I tore really bad and then had to have those stitches and yeah, that was. From my memory,

at, at the time. Did the birth feel like a triumph?

Like now I’ve done it. Vine? Yes. Okay. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Good . Well, it’s nice that I what you focus on, right? I, I know. But it’s nice that you focus on this thing and it worked out and then you felt satisfied, right? Yes. That’s nice.

Yeah. Yeah. Absolutely. That, that was yeah, very much so. And felt very blessed to have a little girl.

And then was very much. We are done. Let’s get a puppy. . .

Totally. So you suggested earlier that that birth was followed by postpartum depression or so Yeah. What, how did that look different and and what did you notice?

A lot of crying. A lot of crying.

Everything felt very overwhelming. I don’t know how in my head I was able to, but I was still working at our business and I was still going backwards [00:32:00] and forwards. And I would go to work, come back in nursing, then go back to work, and my husband would be home with the kids. And I just was, in my head, I cope.

I am one of those women. We just cope. We can manage it all, you know, and as a detriment to myself. Yeah. And so I did eventually go to see. A doctor and I c cannot recall the drug, but she really didn’t particularly listen to me, that I had just had a baby and that I had a toddler at home. And she was quick to prescribe me something.

And I, I didn’t take it. It was some very strong, addictive something or other. And So I, I kind of sorted it out a little bit by myself, if you call it sorting out. Like I just was able to let it as much as possible happen for tears and things. And the change my body was pretty big for that one.

I had gained quite a bit of weight. I felt very like moving, a bit tricky. I also felt, you know, I breastfed both of them and I [00:33:00] definitely felt for my second child that it was, it felt more of a chore because I’ve got things to do now. . Yeah. I couldn’t just sit in a door her lovely face. I was like, oh.

Breastfeeding as you, as any mom. Right. Walking around doing stuff. That kind of thing.

That sounds tricky. . So how, how long would you say the postpartum lasted?

I think a good five, six months. Okay. Yeah. After. And then

Yeah, I be, in my recollection, I was, she was about 3, 2, 3 months old when I went to the doctor, and then it was just yeah. Yes, that’s what

I would say. I, would also say probably, 20 some odd years ago, postpartum depression was so not a a thing we talked about or recognized that I can imagine your doctor not focusing on it because.

Yeah. It just wasn’t a thing for us. Right. It wasn’t That’s very

true. That was very true. And I remember her being a young doctor cuz my, my original doctor wasn’t there or something. And I just, I remember feeling kind of shamed by it a little [00:34:00] too and a little more like, Oh, well, you know, here take this.

And then, and I remember saying to them, but this is pretty addictive , and really, I probably, if she’d had just listened and made me a cup of tea and said, you know, oh God. Yeah. That is a lot. No wonder. Yeah. Yeah. Would’ve, would’ve made a difference.

Yeah. Yeah.

So you get over the postpartum period. Mm-hmm. , you get over mm-hmm. , you get over the depression and everything and you decide no more kids we’re not having sex.

Yeah. Yeah. I, I. Was completely overwhelmed with parenting re incredibly so.

And I, I came pretty cocky into the situation having been a nanny. Yeah. I know what to do and I so was not prepared for the full on. Fear worry. Am I doing this right? Am I doing this wrong? Needs of a child constantly, you know, 24 7 needing you, needing something from you. I found it super, super [00:35:00] overwhelming and I was so thoroughly enmeshed in there with my children which is not a healthy place to be , you know, now, you know, for either of us.

And so yeah, that sort of changed a lot of, of my awareness of myself, I did feel incredibly goddess like , having been able to make. And bring children into the world. There was something felt in myself, my femininity, my confidence in myself, my mother bear. I didn’t know that was gonna come out so strong.

But I really believed only I could. Be the best person for them, , no one else could watch them or be with them. And I, you know, with work and running our own business and all these things, I just, I didn’t think to ask for help. I didn’t know if that was an option. I didn’t wanna be vulnerable enough.

I believed I can do it all.

That’s so interesting given that you were a nanny for someone else. Yeah. Right. Yeah.

Yeah. [00:36:00] Yeah. And a very judgmental nanny. I’m a great nanny. I’m was really good with the kids and fun and playful, that kind of thing. But I really was like, Ooh, Louise, your children are been, this is because I was so hard on the moms.

Dad’s not because in my generation that’s what, you know the focus was all the moms and the martyrdom of mom, motherhood and giving it all up. And for your children, it should all be about the children. And I sit sarcastically now because to me that is one of the biggest misconceptions from birth right through to raising them.

That that’s it. It shouldn’t all be about the children. We, we parenthood motherhood. From, I can’t talk about fatherhood is all about me actually .

So I, this, this feels like a bit of the magic. Why don’t you lay some yogi parenting coach on US and let us know what you would’ve done for younger Anya.

What, what could you have told younger Anya to make this road easier?

Yeah, great question.,[00:37:00] first of all, really. Bring kindness into the picture. Kindness for myself, I would have told myself that it’s okay to ask for help. You do not have to do it all.

And the yogi side would be, you know, how about you just dance still a minute before you respond, before all those emotions that you know, you are like a emotional coach to your child, right? As they’re growing up. And I would take it all on and I’d feel it so much in my body and my body would carry theirs and mine and my husbands and societies and lives and , sometimes just pausing and taking a big breath.

Can really change how you respond to something. You know, how really seeking help and support and asking for it is actually a superpower rather than not. And then the real underlying part is our kids are super, super wise. They do not need us to figure it all out for them.[00:38:00] , we have our wisdom, but they, if we are trusting our intuition, if we’re being present in our body, if we are using that beautiful life force of breath in different ways to bring us to this present moment, you see things differently.

I’m running ahead, busy, busy, busy the whole time, right between work and this. And I can cope and I can do, and my own personal self was completely neglected. I didn’t know who I was anymore. I was so meshed in, or I’m his mom and his, her mom and these kind of things and kind of realizing their wisdom of their own life experiences actually has nothing to do with me.

So lean back. That’s a whole .

Oh, no, that’s, that’s awesome advice. So how did you, how did you get from the enmeshed to the person you are right now who can give that advice.

Right. Well, so when I was pregnant with my daughter, I, started some yoga classes.

I think I had maybe taken some of it before. I wasn’t, I really actually didn’t believe in it. I [00:39:00] didn’t really like it. I didn’t like the idea of touching my toes. I certainly did not like the idea of sitting with myself and being quiet, all things which I now know are vital. And so I had started taking some yoga classes.

I think at that point, maybe they were both in school or preschool. I think my daughter maybe. So three, five, and the transformation for me was super slow, but it started to be all the stuff that I did off the mat using the skills that I learned on the mat, right? So the present where moment awareness, right?

Which obviously as a yogi for yourself, you, you, there are moments on your mat, doesn’t happen the whole time, but there’s moments that you are fully present in the breath. Mind is clear, right? Yeah. So you give yourself a chance. Be still. And so I just started, I was going, I think every Thursday morning for about six years or so, I, I, I would go to this yoga class and it was the feeling afterwards and the feeling of being so much more aware of my own body, [00:40:00] how my natural stance was holding my breath.

Yeah. Yep. Doesn’t serve you. My natural stance was full on anxiety and tension. I never knew that. It’s like that had to peel back the layers of suddenly, you know, you, I’d be like, feel like I’m relaxing. I’m making cup of tea or cutting vegetables and my shoulders are up here. My jaw is tense. And I had no idea.

So like I said, from before, I was really ahead walking around . Yeah. With this body underneath that I had no, no connection to. And I grew through my yoga. On my yoga mat to really like myself again and really kind of love or more in love with myself as imperfectly as I am, as, yeah, you know, all bits of me, where my mind goes, how I am, what I, what matters.

 I didn’t realize I was an empath at all. I, meanwhile, I’ve been soaking up people’s energy since babyhood, of my own, right? Yeah. And so that was all the, the [00:41:00] tie in and then I realized, How simple but difficult it is to be fully present first for me and then for my children. Yeah. And that was a big change around in how I parented.

Yeah. It is a,

it is an amazing transformation. And I came to yoga much later than you did, and I was an athletic person before then. Mm-hmm. . And for me, the most shocking thing was to coordinate breath with movement. Yeah. In that really controlled way, which I had never done before. And I had a really hard time doing, I was really surprised that it was so hard to do that.

Yeah. But it is, you know, the breath work is so powerful and it is this dual connection between mind and body where body can dramatically affect mind. And you, you don’t really think of it. That too. You don’t really think of it as a two-way Yeah, right. What

it’s, yeah, absolutely. And I think going back to sort of the yogi part of things [00:42:00] the more I liked myself, the more I showed up as a kind of mom.

Right. Yeah. The more I could be when I say parenting’s more about me, I bring the energy into the room. I come in as a bitch. Nobody’s really being very nice. Right? Yeah. And, and I’m not talking about ever perfection. I’m so far imperfect, beyond imperfect beyond imperfect.

That realizing that I actually threw my own energy. Can change the whole situation. How I respond to something changes the whole situation. You know? Being caught up in like, kids are really annoying and they’re full on and they trigger you in all kind of ways, all the way from little babies who don’t wanna sleep all the way up to teens, slamming doors, and, you know Their life choices.

It’s a continual learning, but it all starts with me. That was a one of the biggest changes I think of the, that yoga really was the catalyst for me, for that. Yoga was my therapy, I guess, to know myself more, to realize, you [00:43:00] know a certain twist or a certain thing. I, I could just be bursting into tears and crying and I wouldn’t know why, but my body was just like, oh, thank God.

She’s just finally letting this bit go, letting this bit go.

Yeah. That, that’s amazing. And becoming embodied is a, is a huge deal, right? That has a dramatic effect on who you are in the world and how you show up. And I agree with you that it is it’s easy to be overwhelmed as a parent, right? .

There’s lot lots going on. And I don’t know , how universal this characteristic is, but to take on the emotional emotional content of your kids’ moods Hmm. Feels very natural to me. Feels like a, the thing that you would do. Yeah. But that’s a, that’s a tricky thing to do, and then you’re not in your own body and then you.

You know, you’re

reactive. Yeah. You’re absolutely, absolutely. And, and, you know, having the compassion too. I mean the, the yoga I studied was called yoga, and that’s what I eventually went and had my teacher training in. And that’s [00:44:00] really my embodiment is really about self-compassion, compassionate self-acceptance, and.

I would imagine practically everybody, I’ll speak just for myself though. There’s a feeling of unworthiness that comes with us from childhood. Yep. Through divorce. I’m, I’m very aware of that. Just having parents, two people, like nobody, we are all figuring it out. . Yeah. So they’re having compassion from them and compassion for myself and, you know, being able to say, sorry I messed up and being.

Say, okay guys, I’m outta here, I need to time out. You, I just can’t handle the emotions and I f I even to this day, I find that the hardest part to keep myself separate from them. Not detached Yeah. But separate that. Yeah. You know, feel filling my own energy field, working on rooting down. I’m all in my head and I’m stressed and, and I realize I, in honoring of myself, I, I can’t cope with a lot in one time.

Now I’m a pretty strong person now and there’s lots going on in my life and that obviously loads of ups and downs and [00:45:00] huge, big things. But I really, for me, I need to keep coming back to me in order to be able to sort out a problem, deal with the death, deal with, you know, money issues, deal with marriage, you know, and, and for that, it’s the honoring of myself again.

That has to be the change. I can’t change who, who this child is. Yeah, I can do my damnest, but really if I see them in the light of love, just on their own journey and their own experience, I felt for me, a huge weight lifted. Like I don’t actually have to figure it all out.

Very subtle. I don’t have to figure it all out for everybody. You know? Yeah. I, I actually, they, they, they can figure that out for themselves, and the best I can do is lead by example. Yeah. You know, and again, not imperfect ways, like if I don’t, if everybody feels like they’re being really unkind, okay, hey, have a look at yourself, or I just realized I snapped at them and shouted at them and I’m not being [00:46:00] very kind.

Right. It’s that kind of constant self-awareness and reflection.

Yeah, that, that sounds. Like an amazing journey and an amazing thing that you’re giving to other people through your coaching business. Thank you. So how can people find you? You’re on the

web. Yeah. My biggest place that I hang out and offer.

, different solutions and things would be on Instagram as Yogi Parenting coach. Yeah, that’s kind of the main one. I do have a website and things, but I’m just not very active. I need all those things, sourced it out sometime. But I, I like Instagram, so that’s really where you’ll see most of me.

And you can book with me and you can, I wrote a book about parenting from this place, how yoga changed the way I parent and get that on Amazon. So yeah.

Wow. That’s super cool. Congratulations and thank you so much for sharing your story. That’s amazing. Well, thank you

very much. I’m glad we collected This is You too.

I think what you’re doing is an awesome thing because we really need real authentic stories out there so that the [00:47:00] next generation and the next generation just able to speak about it without sugarcoating it.

Right? Yeah, yeah, totally, totally.

Episode 86 SN: Her C Section Recovery led her to Holistic Healing: Kayshaun’s Story, Part II

Today my guest experiences pain in her every day life for years after her pregnancies. And then finally, after an exploratory surgery, gets the diagnosis she’s been waiting for.

In today’s episode you’ll here how Kayshaun, a nurse turned business woman and mother of four, uses the pain and trauma from her four complicated pregnancies to help other people to find their voice and consider natural remedies to things like fibroids and endometriosis.

Fibroids

https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fcell.2021.633180/full

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9277653/

Why does it take so long to get a diagnosis of Endometriosis

https://www.yalemedicine.org/conditions/endometriosis#:~:text=On%20average%2C%20women%20in%20the,before%20receiving%20a%20proper%20diagnosis.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/alicebroster/2020/08/27/why-it-takes-so-long-to-be-diagnosed-with-endometriosis-according-to-a-expert/?sh=c6ad0769674a

https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/endometriosis-experiences-the-long-painful-road-to-diagnosis

Audio Transcript

Paulette : Welcome to war stories from the womb. Today my guest experiences pain in her everyday life for years after pregnancy. And then finally, after an exploratory surgery gets a diagnosis

This is to show that shows the true experiences of getting pregnant, being pregnant and giving birth to help shift the common cultural narrative away from the glossy depictions of this enormous transition. You can find on all kinds of media to more realistic one. It also celebrates the incredible resilience and strength it takes to create another person, or at least that new person from your body into the world. I’m your host Paulette Kamenecka. I’m a writer and an economist and a mother of two girls. In today’s episode, you’ll hear how kayshaun a nurse turn a business woman was a mother of four is the pain and trauma from her four complicated pregnancies to help other people. What follows is the second part of our conversation. I also include insights about the latest thinking of preeclampsia, shared by a professor of obstetrics and gynecology. We returned to Kayshaun’s story as she’s describing the consequence of carefully investigating her fibroid situation as she’s trying to avoid a hysterectomy.

 

 

Kayshaun 1:17  

In a way the tumor cancer scare was needed. I wouldn’t have found out what we found out. Oh my gosh, Paulette, he went in there. And found that I have a plate of scar tissue. My uterus is attached to my abdominal wall in the scar tissue was growing through my organs. So he said you Saved your  life. He said if you were to wait and have that hysterectomy, you would have woke up a completely different person. He that doctor wouldn’t have been able to do it. You have adhesions connected to your bladder, from your uterus, to your abdominal wall to your intestines, all my other organs and stuff and I’m like, I got scar tissue. attached to my uterus in my abdominal wall. And I was like, that’s why I was never able to walk past that timeframe all this time. And in the doctors were thinking I was crazy, saying it’s just the fibroids and I’m like no, it’s something else. It’s something else. And I’m relieved to have a diagnosis and to have answers but it took 19 years to get this diagnosis.

 

Paulette  2:31  

Okay, so endometriosis occurs when the lining of the uterus starts to grow outside the uterine wall. It can grow on ovaries or fallopian tubes or anywhere inside the abdominal cavity. Right now, the current estimates suggest that on average, it can take 10 years before receiving a proper diagnosis. That’s the current standard, not the standard that Kayshaun lived under. Why you might ask, does it take a decade to figure this out? It sounds like the most common symptom is pain that can register the pelvic area but also in other areas like lower back. It can happen during a bowel movement or during or after sex. Because it can show up in many different places and circumstances. The pain is often attributed to other diseases like irritable bowel syndrome. It’s also missed because the pain during your period is considered quote unquote normal. I’m guessing another aspect of this disease that makes it hard to diagnose definitively is that the only way to know for sure that you have endometriosis is to conduct a surgical procedure where a doctor puts a small telescope inside of the abdomen through the belly button. 

 

So thank goodness for this doctor to figure it out. Right. We went to look right at your description. I went look for it. And are the tumors benign? Are they just fibroids are

 

Kayshaun  3:48  

okay, no. tumors were benign. Yes, they were very good.

 

Paulette  3:51  

Okay, good. So that’s amazing. Maybe you can clue us in in your holistic practice. What do you do for fibroids? I’m going to preface Keisha this description of her approach to fibroids by just saying that everybody is different or expectation may not work for you and then again it may but this is not medical advice. If you have fibroids, please consult your doctor or whatever health practitioner you see for advice specific to your body. fibroids are super common, affecting roughly 70% of women. They are tours in the uterus but they’re often benign and we don’t know what causes a fiber to grow. What we do know some risk factors that include age they’re more common as you age, obesity, Vitamin D deficiency, hormone irregularities and race. Numerous studies have shown that African American women are more likely than their counterparts to develop fibroids.

 

Kayshaun  4:41  

Oh wow. It’s a whole lifestyle for fibroids. If you want to do a lot of detoxing. Do you want to drink a lot of water you want to do colonics castor oil wraps, oh cast oil wraps or packs. It’s when you take like a wool cloth and you saturate it with castor oil and you put it on your abdomen and wrap it up with saran wrap with the heating pad. Oh that is a godsend for boys drinking like raspberry tea detox tea doing detox baths, eliminating a lot of toxins from out of your body. You know what I learned about is we introduced a lot of toxins into our bodies whether fats the products that we use, what we’re eating the cleaning supplies, so I have to get really holistically clean what my whole lifestyle I have stopped chemically processing perming my hair so I went all natural because those those feed the fibroids I started using clean skincare products. That’s one of the reasons I developed my own skincare line. So I can use all natural products, the cleaning solutions that I use, they have to be cleaned and so it was a an overall of everything. And I had my doctors they were right there with me through this whole journey doing ultrasounds watching them shrink and I remember the last ultrasound that I had did they were like they are all gone. They were all calcified and I’m like I can’t believe I did. This. It was hard. It was expensive. But it took like five or maybe even seven years to do it naturally but they wanted to do surgery and I’m like no, not gonna do that.

 

Paulette  6:29  

Yeah, hysterectomy is a major surgery and nice to avoid if you can get

 

Kayshaun  6:34  

the surgery he was like if I was to ever choose to have a surgery, he was like it’s going to be a risky surgery. He was like we have to have every organ that has this adhesion. We would have no specialists in the operating room with us because he said this has been attached for so long we don’t know what’s gonna happen when we pull everything apart. So me the holistic pain and trauma warrior. I’m not having surgery. I’m taking care of this holistically and naturally it’s a very painful process, but I’m working with a pelvic floor Therapist and I’m using massage therapy to manually break the scar tissue.

 

Paulette  7:14  

Wow, that sounds like a big task. But again, to avoid surgery, it seems like it would be totally worth it.

 

Kayshaun  7:20  

It is I’m glad that I’m able to not act so fast and not be pressured by the medical community in doing this naturally because I don’t want to be like one of those other women having surgery. And it

 

Paulette  7:33  

sounds painful, right? It’s painful for us. Yeah. So it’s,

 

Kayshaun  7:37  

I can’t work a regular job fighting to get disability. I can’t stand for long periods of time. It’s growing through my organs when he didn’t just oh my gosh, having intercourse is extremely painful. And I thought I was crazy and losing my mind and it caused the division in my marriage because I started having sex no more because it was excruciating. And I remember one time I was telling my husband I said I feel like

 

Paulette  8:06  

you’re in tissue. Yeah. As you

 

Kayshaun  8:09  

penetrating, and I’m all like you have to feel that. I know you feel it. I’m not crazy. And he’s crazy, but it was like yeah, I do feel that. I was like, it’s like he’s breaking my virginity each time. No like how can you put me through this? And so when I found out about the endometriosis and as the therapist was breaking, you know, massage therapy. I’m all like, why are you going all the way down there? You know, you should be here. I mean, she was all by the labia all and I’m like I said, and he goes all the way down there. She was like, Yes, I can feel it. She was like this growing all through here. And I was like, Can this go through the vaginal wall? And she was like, yes. And I’m like, Oh my God. That’s what I was going through all these years, you know? So to just be raw and honest and open with everyone on your platform. I haven’t been sexually active in eight years. Yeah, I have a desire to be sexually active because it’s, it’s torturous. So you know, I need to continue my therapy and break this tissue down.

 

Paulette  9:13  

I’m so grateful that they figured out what it is. So that you can stop doubting yourself and appreciate that your body’s right. Right you trust what you’re feeling? Good Lord. That’s such a long journey. That’s such a so many things that you learned along the way is there if you could pick out something that I know that this is a hard question. I got something to tell to younger Hey, Shawn, is there something you would tell her?

 

Kayshaun  9:39  

I would tell younger KayShaun to slow down and not yourself because you know, third pregnancy. I have preeclampsia again.

 

Paulette  9:48  

So the third pregnancy. How do you walk into that? I mean, it’s painful to walk. I guess I thought because you were having all this other pain. That was it. You were like I’m done.

 

Kayshaun  9:58  

I waited three years though to get pregnant again. Okay. It was in I had just had my second miscarriage. I didn’t even know I was pregnant. I had found out we had a car accident. A really, really bad car accident Wisdom went out the window we flipped over. I mean, it was just really crazy. And just through the them checking us up and because I’m bleeding and everything and they find out they was like, Ma’am, did you know you were pregnant? And I’m like, No, I didn’t know and they was like you’ve lost the baby. And now we need to do a DNC. And I’m like, I’m pregnant and I lost the baby. You know, I just had a car accident. My kids went out the window. My husband almost lost his limbs. It was just I’m like, I can’t believe this. You know, so it wasn’t as devastating as the first one but

 

Paulette  10:51  

surrounded surrounded by all the other trauma. Yes, you’re right,

 

Kayshaun 10:55  

right. Yeah, but so I get pregnant the third time and I was ready. Actually. I wanted a girl so I was excited to be pregnant this time because I already have two boys. I have my husband. I’m the only female in the home I’m ready for girl but it was towards the end of the pregnancy. I was at school and almost passed out again. And the instructors they call the ambulance and I get to the hospital and they do the test and they let me know that there’s preeclampsia again and it was like I went to surgery right now. It’s very bad.

 

Paulette  11:32  

So first of all, how far along are we

 

Kayshaun  11:35  

38 weeks, so I had a scheduled C section  date they just didn’t make it to it.

 

Paulette  11:40  

And when you feel the dizziness Do you think oh shit, this is preeclampsia again, or you don’t it doesn’t feel the same.

 

Kayshaun  11:46  

I don’t even think I thought about that because I was trying to get to my class. That’s all that I was worried about. And I was just like, hey, something’s wrong. You know what I did? well, maybe I’m tired. Maybe I just need to sit down but I barely made it into the class and up the stairs and everyone was all over me. But the blood

 

Paulette  12:10  

work that shows you how eclampsia isn’t like liver enzymes or something like what’s telling you okay?

 

Kayshaun 12:17  

And I was scared this time because they was just like, oh my god you gotta go in my husband got there, but we had a little babies. You know, we got a four year old two year old at this time, and there was no one around and they were gonna make me go into surgery by myself. So I’m calling my dad neighbors. I’m crying. I’m like, I can’t go into surgery by myself. And luckily we had the labor in my bed got there at the same time. And my husband was able to come in there and be with

 

Paulette  12:49  

and so they do another emergency C section which now I feel like you’re like oh, this again.

 

Kayshaun  12:54  

Yes, it’s another emergency C section but my bladder wouldn’t cut this time. I was only in the hospital for three days. I actually was able to walk on the first day. So it was just that scary process but it just made me think why is this happening again?

 

Paulette  13:13  

Too experience preeclampsia once is a huge challenge. To experience it twice is hard to wrap your head around. I took this issue to Dr. jellen, the Program Director of maternal fetal medicine fellowship and associate professor of psychology and obstetrics at Johns Hopkins who provide insight about preeclampsia LSVT show other than this underlying cardiovascular issue that you we can’t measure. Are there visible risk factors that we know.

 

Kayshaun  13:40  

So we now have a lot of risk factors we know for certain if somebody has had preeclampsia in a prior pregnancy, they’re at risk. If they have chronic hypertension, they’re at risk and then a lot of other things so carrying multiple gestations increases the risk probably because of the stress to the body is greater, but underlying diseases such as kidney disease, diabetes, autoimmune conditions, all of those things put patients are at risk as well. Then there’s risk factors that maybe are more moderate, and those include having a high body mass index or having a family history of preeclampsia being over 35 and having in vitro fertilization. Know that black race is also a risk as well as low income status.

 

Paulette  14:27  

So race seems like too big a category to be a risk factor. So that must be a stand in for something else we don’t quite understand.

 

Kayshaun  14:36  

So a lot of studies have really tried to approach race and really break it down by other what we call co founders. So we know that arrays can be associated with other things and can we tease it out and say, Oh, is it these other things and not just race? I think that there’s a lot of thought now that even when you remove co founders and try to control for that, there does seem to be a risk for black women. In regards to preeclampsia, and the United States Preventive Services Task Force addresses this and they see that black persons and lower income not either or, but independently, are associated with increased risk due to environmental, social and historical inequities, shaping health exposures, access to health care, and the unequal distribution of resources. That biological propensities so I definitely think some people will argue all kinds of genetic environmental interactions that could be attributed to race. But people have started really talking about this theory of racism as a risk factor.

 

Paulette  15:48  

Yeah, well, that seems like a super important thing to tackle and a big thing to tackle.

 

Kayshaun  15:53  

I think we’re in a world now, where it is being actively addressed in many, many areas of healthcare. And I hope that in years coming we will have better ways to actually treat it and manage it. Yeah, than we do now. Yeah, I just attended the society maternal fetal medicine conference in San Francisco last week, and one of the oral plenaries talked about treating blood pressure and lower blood pressure thresholds, outcomes, and so instead of using the usual 140, systolic over 90, diastolic they were really treating I think, at 130, systolic over diastolic to see if they could improve outcomes and it does seem like using classification systems such as that could be beneficial and definitely have seen improvements. In the management of preeclampsia as you have developed better antihypertensive algorithms for management and I do think they’re amazing drugs that are very helpful in pregnancy.

 

Kayshaun  16:58  

But everything went well after that, and then the fourth pregnancy, so horrific, I wouldn’t be able to have children after that whole pregnancy. And this is the one with my daughter. I was sick the whole time and extremely sick. I couldn’t hold down or food or anything I just kept throwing up to the point where I had to every other day I was in the emergency room, getting fluids and so even the nausea medication Zofran it was barely working. And so and this is why I say I will take a shot and slow down because I was in nursing school at this time. My dad had just paid $25,000 for me to go to nursing school and he was actually upset that I was pregnant again, because I didn’t know I was pregnant when I joined the program. And so when I found out I’m like, I’m gonna do every thing I can I’m not wasting your money. I’m going to finish this program. I should have sat my butt down and but I didn’t my doctor, she’s like you’re in and out of the hospital. We need to put a Acorda cat in your neck. Because we’re gonna have to have a nurse come to the house and give you IV so that you’re not coming to the emergency room every other day. And I’m like, Well, I’m in the nursing program and I can’t have no part in the no CT cap. In my neck. They’re not gonna let me come. So you’re just gonna have to deal with me coming to the emergency room every other day. How old are you at this point? Oh, I’m 30 man. Okay, and so they’re like, Okay, fine, you know, so I’m steadily in and out and then oh my gosh, early third trimester. Now I’m high risk. Because my kidneys and my liver is starting. They don’t know why. Wow. And they’re like, We don’t know what’s going on with you and they was like your high risk. They couldn’t find out why it’s happening. They were like hopefully when you deliver everything will go back to normal so I’m scared the remainder of this pregnancy can you

 

Paulette  19:09  

feel it to feel poorly? Oh, growing up.

 

Kayshaun  19:13  

I feel weak. I feel lethargic and put I’m in nursing school. You know trying to maintain on the honor roll and everything three kids. This was the most stressful ever in my life. But the doctors all they can say was we hope that you get better. Once you deliver it to the end of that to my scheduled C section date. It’s everything is smooth. And it was like and that’s when they said at this time too because all of this was happening. They suggested that I don’t have any more kids after this. Because I was technically waiting. I wanted five kids. That was my goal. And I knew if they didn’t see that film like because they say if you could see through the uterus, they tell you you can’t have kids anymore because it wouldn’t be safe. So I knew I could potentially have one more but they was like what your kidneys and your liver doing this is not safe. It was like you gotta get your tunes tied after this. So I got them tied, put and burned after that. But I didn’t slow down because I was in this time in nursing school. I’m in clinicals so I’m at the end. I can’t miss anything. Yeah. Oh my gosh, I wish I could go back and tell Keisha to sit her butt down and rest and wait to the next semester to finish because my crazy but I told the doctor I got a good report with the doctor letting them know what’s going on. And I’m like I gotta go back to school. So they I had them double staple me. It the little white strips that they put on those. They put them teach double back, wrap me up and seven days later, I was back in clinicals Wow. And it was so hard but I come I come from a real hard life Wow. I’m used to just pushing myself or I want to get to the next level or succeed or I’m going to be continuing the struggle my C section scar ripped open three times.

 

Paulette  21:18  

What does it mean that it came

 

Kayshaun  21:21  

apart? And you know what I did? I my doctor’s office was resolved Hey, I just busted open go back to school

 

Paulette  21:45  

that seems unbelievably painful.

 

Kayshaun  21:51  

But I was under a lot of pressure, you know, primary breadwinner for the family on ice assistance. I got kids that just can’t call his money. He’s not trying to me so I felt like I have to force myself to do this because I’m thinking oh, life is gonna be so much better and all of this but I was tearing down my body in the process not knowing I’m thinking I’m this strong, incredible woman, but I’m paying for it later.

 

Paulette  22:23  

Well, well, it’s a big theory. You are the strong, incredible woman but it’s not for free. Right it’s not for France. Yes. So when your daughter is born, kidneys and liver go back to normal.

 

Kayshaun  22:37  

And then eventually Yes, I was done by squirting breast and as much as all but I heal but I’ll still remain happy bye walked for too long or anything like that, even though they were just like, oh, let’s try but like but I heal. I was happy to not have preeclampsia again. She’s healthy. I think this was the shortest amount of time I stayed in the hospital which was only in three days which I was kind of shocked. I’m all like, I was high risk the whole time.

 

Paulette  23:10  

I was gonna guess. 10 minutes based on location on schedule, right?

 

Kayshaun  23:16  

Yes. Wow.

 

Paulette  23:17  

I mean, that’s amazing. And so how old are the kids now?

 

Kayshaun  23:21  

Now? 21 1915 and 30. Wow.

 

Paulette  23:28  

You’re still in high school? Yes. Yeah. You look amazingly calm and well rested for that. For everything that happened and for kids in this period.

 

Kayshaun  23:40  

I tried really hard, you know, going through all of these different challenges. It has taught me to look more into myself to more self advocacy, because it finding out to have stage three individuals is 19 years later, it could have been found a lot sooner if I was more in tune myself. We tend to let others tell us how we feel like oh, ignore the pain or is not as bad or pray to God and all this stuff. And it’s like if I would have just told those people to shut up and listen to me. It takes what I’m going through seriously. I wouldn’t have suffered as long but that’s part of my mission now to speak on a sea of those and chronic pain or chronic health issues to stop letting others tell you what you feel. I did a post the other day that is you can’t see or feel or understand my pain doesn’t mean that it’s not real.

 

Paulette  24:40  

I totally agree with you. I’m hoping that with more research into women’s health conditions, endometriosis, fibroids, menopause, for example, that it will be less of an uphill climb for our kids and it has been for many women in our generation. So So is that your work? Now? Is that what you’re doing now

 

Kayshaun  24:55  

right now. So I have the skincare line. And I do a lot of educate. I don’t work in the medical field anymore, but I’m so used to educating others and so I’ve made remarketing a lot of people follow my journey I’ve been speaking about it a lot more so I am transitioning to add and to help others with their fibroids. A lot of people want to follow my journey with handling the endometriosis because I’m doing it holistically so they want to follow me on this journey. So I’m shifting over to share that more and to help others and I left the medical field. I kind of like thought like what am I going to do? I spent 20 years in medical field now. I have to really find myself but I’ve been able to see all the trauma all the pain that I have been through learning how to deal with it holistically is because now I can help others. I’ve had people come as I would share, they’d be like, Oh my God. I thought I was the only one biller with myofascial pain syndrome and you’ve been helping me and then I felt guilty like oh my god, I’ve been keeping all this knowledge into myself and just those close to me. So now I have that that urge. It’s my purpose to help others with their pain holistically in naturally and I fell I have both sides of the world. I got the medical knowledge and the holistic knowledge because of my personal experiences. So I feel good to know all of this trauma all of this pain wasn’t for nothing because as I’m getting better now I can help others get better as well. Do you have a website or somewhere people can find you? Yes, I do have a website it is WWW dot renew you body better.com And that is directly to the website to purchase any type of face or bodies in care products and I think I can kind of say I kind of knew I would end up to this because as I was formulating products for the skin, I was still formulating products to help with the issues like my my bath salts is a detox bath salts to help not only with skin but just overall general detoxing for the body. So I’m excited for expanding into this new journey. So just on your platform, and speaking I’ve never done this before. I’ve never spoke about this story is shared on this intimate level before so I’m so grateful you know for you and your platform that I’m able to share my story and help others.

 

Paulette  27:29  

I totally appreciate it and we’ll put a link to your website in the show notes so people can find it. Yes thank you. Thanks so much to Keisha for sharing all the facets of her medical journey through pregnancy and birth. I also appreciate her candid discussion of fibroids and endometriosis. A huge fraction of women develop fibroids at some point in their lives. And their statistics for endometriosis are estimated to be one in 10 but we don’t hear too much about it. We need to talk openly about it so that women feel confident taking these issues and questions about pelvic pain to an expert to get help rather than muscle through which too many women do. Thanks also to Dr. jellen for her insights about preeclampsia. I find it totally inspiring to hear about all the work that’s being done now to figure out exactly why this happens. And hopefully, someday in the not too distant future, a way to dramatically improve outcomes for women and babies. Thank you for listening. If you liked the show, SUBSCRIBE And leave us a review we’ll be back next week with another inspiring story

 

 



Episode 85SN: Her C Section Recovery Led her to Holistic Healing: Kayshaun’s story, Part I

In this episode, you’ll hear how my guest rejected her doctor’s insistance on a hysterectomy and saved her own life. This is a show that shares true experiences of getting pregnant being pregnant and giving birth to help shift the common cultural narrative away from the glossy depictions of this enormous transition you can find on all kinds of media, to a more realistic one.  It also celebrates the incredible resilience and strength it takes to create another person and release that new person from your body into the world. I’m your host, Paulette Kamenecka. I’m a writer and an economist and the mother of two girls.

Today you’ll hear how my guest learns to trust her body and advocate for herself–a critical skill in any medical procedure, maybe even more critical in childbirth; she had four births and each was visited by something unexpected that required her to develop these skills. In this episode I also include the insights of an associate professor of gynecology and obstetrics from Johns Hopkins. What follows is the first part of our conversation.

To find Kayshaun and her skin care products, click here

Odds of Having a Miscarriage with an Amniocentesis

https://www.mayoclinic.org/tests-procedures/amniocentesis/about/pac-20392914#:~:text=Miscarriage

Rate of Uterine Rupture with a VBAC

https://www.mayoclinic.org/healthy-lifestyle/labor-and-delivery/in-depth/vbac/art-20044869

https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/articles/21687-vaginal-birth-after-cesarean-vbac

Injury during C section

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7652199/

https://journals.lww.com/greenjournal/abstract/2016/05001/bladder_injury_during_cesarean_delivery__a.109.aspx#:~:text=The%20incidence%20of%20bladder%20injury,attempted%20vaginal%20birth%20after%20cesarean.

Episode 84SN: Managing the Feelings of an Unexpected Pregnancy: Kekua’s Story, Part II

In this episode, you’ll hear what Kekua did when her experience really shoved her expectations for her second birth off a cliff.

Today you’ll hear how Kekua manages the many surprises that visit the birth of her second child. The number of things that go a bit sideways almost makes her story sound like a sitcom script, but the way she sticks the landing, in the end is what’s truly impressive. We’ll pick up our conversation where Kekua is talking about the slow return of her body, a body she recognizes after the birth of her first child. 

Longterm effects of Breastfeeding

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40168-015-0104-7

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8567139/

https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2021/01/210114111912.htm

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4077166/

https://publications.aap.org/pediatrics/article-abstract/110/2/343/64361/Breastfeeding-and-Infant-Growth-Biology-or-Bias

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0277953617306202

Crash C section

https://www.webmd.com/baby/emergency-c-section

Geographic distribution of maternal health outcomes

https://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/issue-briefs/2022/dec/us-maternal-health-divide-limited-services-worse-outcomes

https://www.npr.org/2022/10/12/1128335563/maternity-care-deserts-march-of-dimes-report

https://www.commonwealthfund.org/publications/issue-briefs/2021/oct/severe-maternal-morbidity-united-states-primer

Audio Transcript

Paulette: Hi, Welcome to War Stories from the Womb: In this episode, you’ll hear what Kekua did when her experience really shoved her expectations for her second birth off a cliff……This is a show that shares true experiences of getting pregnant being pregnant and giving birth to help shift the common cultural narrative away from the glossy depictions of this enormous transition you can find on all kinds of media, to a more realistic one.  It also celebrates the incredible resilience and strength it takes to create another person and release that new person from your body into the world. I’m your host, Paulette Kamenecka. I’m a writer and an economist and the mother of two girls.

Today you’ll hear how Kekua manages the many surprises that visit the birth of her second child. The number of things that go a bit sideways almost makes her story sound like a sitcom script, but the way she sticks the landing, in the end is what’s truly impressive. We’ll pick up our conversation where Kekua is talking about the slow return of her body, a body she recognizes after the birth of her first child. 

Kekua 0:00  

I was definitely none of this. I walked out of the hospital looking great kind of thing. And I stayed. I still look pregnant. She was born December 12. Of course our Christmas pictures December 25. I still look like I was it’s yeah.

 

Paulette kamenecka  0:19  

I remember being shocked that after the birth I still had the belly. I was like, What? What else is in there? go look.

 

Kekua 0:27  

I use Orion huge it was.

 

Paulette kamenecka  0:29  

Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. And did you guys breastfeed or anything? I was sleeping. I was all that.

 

Kekua 0:35  

I did. You know, the La Leche League and lactation consultants come in and ask you if that’s what you want to do. So of course I did. I wanted to do whatever, you know, was the naturalistic most healthy, not to mention

 

Paulette kamenecka  0:51  

the first

 

Kekua 0:57  

engaged learning process, both of you got that she was able to get it, you know, we found our little rhythm. And then after that, it was like, it was like old hat. It was such it’s almost indescribable. Like the, the closeness and the bond that you get to create with your child when you’re a nursing mother is unique. I can’t there’s really nothing that I can compare that to, like when you look down on your baby’s looking right at you and they’re so close. And you’re really skin to skin. And I know a lot of mothers are scared of it because it can be like a strange experience. Once you get over that initial challenge. It’s such a beautiful experience. That was a wonderful wish I had but I didn’t know I didn’t know that I could just not give her formula. So when she was getting older, I got worried that she wasn’t getting enough. Yeah. And so I would supplement with formula. And of course, if you replace some of the meals, that means there’s less physical demand. So then your body produces less so that’s kind of like a cycle. So she ended up weaned off by the time she hit like 11 months, so she didn’t get a full year. I do regret that. I wish I had had her longer. I nursed my son for about a year and a half. His immune system is solid and hers is not so much and there are times when I have you know mother guilt, right? If it goes off in parts of your life, there are times when I’m like, That’s my fault. You get sick because of me. Although not but you know, Mother guilt tells you that everything is

 

Paulette kamenecka  2:53  

your fault. I feel like the good news and the bad news is you feel responsible for everything but you don’t really have control over everything. Once you find the point where those two intersect, it’s a much happier medium because then you don’t feel responsible for her coming home sick in 10th grade. Right? It is more palpable. But so what’s the age difference between the kids?

 

Kekua 3:15  

Almost exactly two years. They’re two years and 13 days apart? Yes, he she so she’s been born on December 12. He was actually born on his due date of Christmas. Oh, wow. Oh

 

Paulette kamenecka  3:29  

my god. Wow. What a holiday season at your house. Good Lord. So you weren’t happy to walk into the first one. Were you were happier for the second one.

 

Kekua 3:37  

I wanted the second one. I loved the her mother’s so much that I wanted. I did not love pregnancy. But like I said from the second she came out. I wanted to repeat that and I wanted wanted a girl because she was so perfect. And just joy is all of those things that I wanted to do that exact I didn’t get. I didn’t get her.

 

Paulette kamenecka  4:04  

We rarely do we really roll the dice you can’t count. So did you get pregnant easily again, the second time?

 

Kekua 4:12  

I think so. I think it was fairly easily when I had made the decision. I I said okay, we’re doing this, like we’re doing this. And he was like okay, and I think he underestimated how much of doing this was going to come along with that because like I meant it when I said I want another baby. Yeah. And I would say it didn’t take but another month maybe it was two months. It was long enough that he started to be like please, please can we stop but you know, we made a deal. We made a deal. This is what we’re doing.

 

Paulette kamenecka  4:50  

That’s the thing trying makes it hard. Right? Once you’re trying that it’s harder in part because you’re watching it so closely and you’re just just harder. So was the second pregnancy easier because you know what to expect or what was that like?

 

Kekua 5:04  

Yes and no so like the first pregnancy, medically speaking, did not really have too many problems. I was not supposed to do as much as I did. But you know, there wasn’t really no choice. Things had to be done and to work and things like that with the second one. It was emotionally much easier. Obviously because they wanted this to happen. I was not supposed to be very active because I had a bit of an amniotic fluid leak. So it wasn’t enough for them to be very, very concerned. But it was pretty consistent. There was I guess a pinhole leak Yeah, so I wasn’t supposed to be up and about it wasn’t supposed to be super active. But again, then I already had a child. You know, the house has to get cleaned. I very, very insistent on everyday had to be vacuumed because we did have dogs. Yeah. My babies to be able to be honest, four dishes of course have to get done you know, have to cook and do all those things. It did not get much assistance from my husband. So you know she should have to get done.

 

Paulette kamenecka  6:11  

So were they telling you to to be active because there was a hope that the the bag of waters would seal itself or they just thought it would leak less if you did

 

Kekua 6:20  

less stuff. So for the amount that it was It wasn’t dangerous, but they were concerned that if I was too active, it would become a larger leak or you know create a rupture or something that then it would require bed rest or hospitalization or something.

 

Paulette kamenecka  6:36  

So that was the only thing you were it sounds like you were watching for your pregnancy and then do you have a different vision of the birth of a second one other than less than 40 hours?

 

Kekua 6:45  

Yes, I knew that I was going to wait until because I knew what it felt like when she was ready. To come out. I remember Surprisingly even though I had an epidural i from the inside I was I okay now now she’s coming down. So I knew that I was going to wait as long as possible because I did not want to lay in the bed. Pretty horrors again. And this time I was having all the false Labor’s the Braxton Hicks and stuff. So I was standing at the table wrapping Christmas presents because it’s Christmas Eve, and I’m having all the Braxton Hicks and I’m like oh man. It’s really it’s close. He’s going to be here pretty soon. But I wrapped up all the presidents and I put him under the tree. And I went to bed. So this was probably along the lines of You know, one or two in the morning because you put the baby to bed first right and then we’ll go find all the things that you’ve been through the house and all of that. So I went and I wrapped them up, put them under the tree went to bed and I woke up around around five something 530 And I woke up because it had gotten enough that I was kind of like oh, man, this false labor. And then I laid there for a little while long and I was like, oh, it’s not false.

 

Paulette kamenecka  8:11  

Because you noticed they were regular or what was the what was

 

Kekua 8:15  

different? It felt not just stronger, but it felt different. And I realized I was like, oh this is not the same that I’ve been having for the last couple weeks. This is actual This is really over and I could feel pressure on my cervix. So not like giving birth pressure but I could feel that as you know everything contracts and pushes down onto the cervix. I can feel that but it was still very early in the morning so my daughter was in bed with myself and my husband so I woke him up. And I said, I’m gonna have mom drive me to the hospital when she wakes up. Then you guys come he’s like, Well, just from now like don’t wake her up. I’m like for what Leah was 40 hours last night. Just just come she’s gonna wake up in a couple hours. So we’re just gonna go ahead and then you guys come in when she gets up. So I went with my mom without their admit me and they do their little pre check. And they’re all you know, is dad involved, you know, all those normal questions and I was like, yeah, he’s you know, baby still sleeping. So they’ll be here when she wakes up. And they said, Well, you know if he wants to be here, he should probably come right now. Wow. Really? So I call him I’m like, Hey, he’s like I was already getting ready. I wasn’t gonna listen to you. So they’re trying to monitor right? So they put the belly band off to kind of monitor contractions. And they don’t like the way his heart rate seems to lessen with each contraction. So they decide they want to you know, after a little while of this they decide they want to put the so there’s a secondary kind of monitor but it’s more invasive where they’ll attach it to the skull and then just kind of focus in they want to monitor him more tightly than what they’re seeing on the van because they don’t like what they’re seeing on the van. So when they broke the water that was it is go time. Oh wow. Water to put that on his. And the moment they broke the water. He was like, Oh, all right. And he wanted to come out. So the nurse had to like hold him in. And because she was doing that. She felt that what was happening was his cord was wrapped around the top of his head, not around his neck, but it went over his head. So each time there was a contraction cord against his skull was being compressed and that was why his heart rate would drop a little bit because the oxygen from the cord would get cut off a little bit. So they couldn’t let him come out because if he comes out with squirt first and that that kind of tangled man who gets stuck somewhere in the birth now most likely that means he’s entangled in it somehow. So they’re holding him in. Literally,

 

Paulette kamenecka  11:10  

this this seems comfortable. Is this how are you?

 

Kekua 11:14  

It was it was yeah, it was something because they had just given me the epidural. Now it’s like look, I don’t like having medication. Who would I remember last time and I would like to collectively have that before it gets bad and it’s hard to give it to me because I don’t want to have any problems with my spine. So they just given like it hadn’t taken effect. Literally this is like moments later. And because she’s holding him in he turned out to be a very tactile sensitive child, because she’s holding him and he does not like that. So he started squirming around so he spins around. And then he is breech. And my God. Oh shit. Well, he can’t come out like this and he’s wrapped up in his cord. So she’s literally holding him in there and the doctor says things are gonna have to really quickly right now.

 

Paulette kamenecka  12:03  

waterworks

 

Kekua 12:04  

because I’m like,

 

Paulette kamenecka  12:05  

oh my god,

 

Kekua 12:06  

this is this is terrible. Something’s going wrong. And they they will move over to the operating room. So this is the crash C section. I didn’t know there was anything called the crash section. And so like I’m terrified the panic because I think I’m going to die and now my baby has been long

 

Paulette kamenecka  12:25  

wait, wait so let’s go slow here. Why does this make you think you’re gonna die as someone miscommunicated to you or have you thought about this

 

Kekua 12:33  

is just my own internal fear like something is going very wrong. Okay. It’s more important for them to move than it is for them to explain to me what’s going on.

 

Paulette kamenecka  12:43  

Okay, yeah, the rapidity is unnerving. I

 

Kekua 12:46  

agree. Yeah. So, so they will be over because I had had the epidural. They didn’t give me any and they also did not have much time to wait so they didn’t give me any anesthesia.

 

Paulette kamenecka  12:57  

Is your mom like holding your hand while you’re flying through the corridor? No,

 

Kekua 13:01  

  1. I cannot remember. Where my mom is at this point of I know she’s she’s somewhere nearby. And I know I remember that. I said things to her but I can’t remember seeing her or I can’t remember what I said.

 

Paulette kamenecka  13:17  

Okay, I’m concerned that cuckoo year is alone in her time of need. This is why I’m

 

Kekua 13:22  

focused on she was she was there about I remember as I went out the door because she couldn’t come in. Yeah, as I went out the door she said I love you. I remember that. Scared me even more. Yes.

 

Paulette kamenecka  13:37  

I’ll never forget you. Thanks.

 

Kekua 13:39  

Yes, that’s what it felt like. Yeah. So so they will be in there and because I didn’t have any other kind of anesthesia. I felt all of it because it happens so very quickly, that it was before the epidural could take effect in my system. Like, like so rapid, everything from the time that they gave me the epidural to the time that they put on his birth certificate was literally like, eight minutes.

 

Paulette kamenecka  14:09  

Oh my god. Yeah. So does that mean you can feel the scalpel? That’s painful. No.

 

Kekua 14:17  

I yeah, I felt I felt I could feel the that you know, like it’s a suturing suturing soldering. Right so that you don’t need all of that.

 

Paulette kamenecka  14:30  

That sounds unbelievably painful.

 

Kekua 14:33  

It was painful, but it was for some reason in the moment, I was able to take my mind away from this because I was running through so many other things. I could feel that it hurt it hurt but I was so terrified of bigger things that the pain did not matter a whole lot.

 

Paulette kamenecka  14:59  

At the moment. Maybe your adrenaline of panic was dampening the effect. I

 

Kekua 15:07  

tend to agree with you. Yeah.

 

Paulette kamenecka  15:11  

So they they take them out and are you communicating? I can feel this or what’s going

 

Kekua 15:15  

on for now. I’m not communicating at all. I’m entirely in my head. I want to say within moments of them, pulling him out, which is the most disgusting feeling I have ever had. It’s weird. Him coming out but then rooting around to get a hold of him. Because you feel all that pressure in your abdominal cavity right so your your guts literally feel like they’re beasts third that was that was the most there was a brief moment where I thought that was gonna make me throw up because

 

Paulette kamenecka  15:47  

is it so I had two C sections and it feels like you’re like a roller coaster. Right like all your all your internal organs are moving around in a way that doesn’t seem right.

 

Kekua 15:59  

Which is funny because they’re not moving at all. But the pressure that you’re feeling really feel like everything is beats. Yep, yep, yep. So they pull him out. And I think at this so around the time that they pull him out, the epidural is starting to take effect. In fact, I think it was probably moments before that because I don’t remember feeling. So like when they put in for c section right? Horizontally, but when they get to the layer of muscle we don’t cut a separate a long villain Niantic nigra. There is I don’t remember feeling that part. So it probably was moments before they pulled him out actually with the epidural starting to take effect. But a few moments after they had full came out, which I did not realize and most people don’t realize they actually pull your uterus help kind of wash it and push it back in. And like make sure that the placenta has detached all the way and stuff. And at the moment that my uterus is out on my belly is when they brought my then husband in. He’s expecting you know, he’s gonna go into the labor room and I’m gonna be halfway through pushing and he’s gonna be like, No, he walked in and, you know, some of my guts are out on my belly in the last birth. He just kind of stands there with his mouth open, but he doesn’t know what to do. So yes, you walked in and I’m looking at him and he’s making that face again. And then he stands there for a moment or two. While they’re cleaning. He hasn’t seen my son yet because he’s off to the side. We went down. So he’s just standing there. He doesn’t. She said he didn’t know if I was dying. Because that’s you know, scary. Is he talking for sure the normal to them because that’s just how it works. But I wasn’t ready for that. So that maybe overdue. So, for me to see, by that point exhaustion had started to take effect and maybe they had given me other things that I was too exhausted to realize, but I could see him I saw that he was healthy. He was you know, normal color and all that stuff. And I just checked out at that moment. Like at that moment I was done. I remember them we need to call the recovery. Room. And all I wanted to know was where my daughter was. They hadn’t seen her so they held her up. Now brought on another wave of tears because that was like ruining Christmas. Morning and you know all of these things and I was like before baby girl. And they were like, here’s the baby you know, here’s baby don’t freak out. I saw him and I checked out again and I feel like I was not feel like I feel like because I was my ex husband told me afterwards I was mostly unconscious for at least a whole day after that just asleep kind of recovering from you know, the medical and emotional trauma of all of that. He was like it was great. I watched TV the whole time and there was football in the room you didn’t even know or care.

 

Paulette kamenecka  19:05  

I can’t imagine you’ve had a day. That’s been a day for sure. Now when they whipped you into surgery, do they have enough time to put up the curtain or you got to see all the surgical stuff.

 

Kekua 19:15  

There was a curtain I had wanted to watch. But generally speaking they don’t allow that because it makes people even more nauseated. I remember thinking it to myself, but I did not ask can I see? I think I was the you know, in hindsight, I was probably in a little bit of shock. Because everything was functioning on the inside, but not necessarily.

 

Paulette kamenecka  19:37  

Yeah. Yeah. Holy crap, man. That’s a that was a whirlwind of birth. Yeah, so do they keep you for like a couple of days in the hospital are

 

Kekua 19:50  

aged. I want to say it was three, three days. Regular birth, it’s like 36 hours, at least at that time. And then I stayed there because it was considered major surgery. You know, they come in and they massage to feel like if your uterus is going back to normal size, and if you are able to get baby to latch on and then also because it was major surgery, they can’t release you until you have passed gas. Which was I was like What do you mean? Because when your cavity is open and air can get inside, they’re concerned that there’s air trapped inside of your body.

 

Paulette kamenecka  20:30  

I only vaguely remember that was through some kind of bathroom task I had to complete and I was like, Oh honey, that’s never happening again. I’m not I’m not in that market anymore. I’m not

 

Kekua 20:42  

I did not want to give birth ever again after that. Oh my gosh, I remember having the the little Peasy out of the bottle. Yeah daughter because there had been a little bit of tear it wasn’t enough that I could feel it. It wasn’t like you know devastating of just a little bit. And so I was very relieved that I did not have to also go through that after major surgery with my son. Yeah, because there’s obviously nobody came out down there. And because they had washed the uterus there was very little so one thing that I absolutely did not know even after reading my what to expect when I’m expecting was that you were going to have you know, when you give vaginal birth. Give a period for about a month after that. Yeah, I did not know that after a C section because they wash your uterus out and basically clean off the lining. There’s not so much like there was I still had a little bit but it was not a whole month of a period afterwards. So that was nice. Yeah, yeah,

 

Paulette kamenecka  21:45  

yeah. Did you feel like you figured out how to move around and all that with the giant.

 

Kekua 21:50  

I was because my muscles were not super strong. Like I certainly did not get back to a bikini body after my daughter. I had plenty of weight and plenty of extra skin to which you know those stitches did not get pulled on picked my daughter up. I wasn’t supposed to but what sitting down, I would you know, because that’s upper body. I put her on my lap and for the most part, I was able to function pretty normally pretty quickly. So the turnout was I would say as optimal as could be hoped for if you had planned it in advance. We just

 

Paulette kamenecka  22:27  

plan it. Yeah, I mean, obviously such a great outcome mom’s okay babies, okay. But good lord, that is so unexpected and so shocking, really. Right. It makes sense that you’re in shock and shocking even here, so I can’t even imagine what it was like to go through. Now looking back at that. Would you have any advice for your younger self like is there anything you would have wished you had known going in? I wish that I had

 

Kekua 22:53  

been a little more active in my first pregnancy. I don’t know if I could have because of the nausea like I I understand now, which I did not understand them. But if you move a little bit more of your body adapts to things better when you’re moving than it does when you’re still but the reason that I was not moving was because I felt so ill. So I would like to think that if I could have moved around a little bit more, it would have been a little bit more of a comfortable pregnancy. My body was so sensitive like even laying in the bed. The bed felt so hard on my body when I was pregnant the first time and had the same bed in the second pregnancy and didn’t feel that so you know the hormonal changes are not the same in every single pregnancy. Yeah, in my second one. I don’t think so. When I was pregnant, I had this, you know, vision of I’m a bit of a hippie. I really wanted to have a home birth. Yeah, I wanted it to be as you know, natural and unpleasant as it could be. And I’m really glad that I did not go through with that because that would not have worked out for the for the deliveries that I had. That would not have worked out. Well for us.

 

Paulette kamenecka  24:07  

What changed you from the home birth to a hospital birth.

 

Kekua 24:11  

They didn’t offer it. It wasn’t covered in my insurance. Okay. So hospital was the only option that we had. Yeah. And that felt safe enough because like I said, my auntie was a labor and delivery nurse. So I knew that it was going to be any kind of like, number you know, people care about me. It was a horrible thing to say that you know, there has to be nepotism. You’ll see

 

Paulette kamenecka  24:42  

you and the numbers don’t lie. It’s a it’s an unfortunate thing to say. But here we are staring at you know, higher maternal mortality rate than any other industry. And although there is like a year there was killed in pregnancy, and some giant fraction of those are preventable. So you’re right, like women just aren’t taken care of well enough

 

Kekua 25:08  

after pregnancy. I think in the entirety of the medical industry, that’s probably yes. Right. But yeah, I would love to have had you know, like a happy to be little homebirth waterbirth whatever. And, you know, maybe that was the universe protecting me because it knew what was in store and that would especially with my second child that could have been disastrous.

 

Paulette kamenecka  25:30  

Totally, totally. That is it. That is almost scary to think about only because of the way it turned out right? Because you went to the hospitals featured any sign you imagine 40 hours was really more like two. Yeah, right. So like, nothing kind of went according to your expectation and I feel like based on your daughter, your bar was kind of low. I feel like if you had jibber for less than 40 hours you have thought that anything less victory is mine. Right? So it just it was so off the chart and does does anything about his birth match your son when he was out walking around?

 

Kekua 26:03  

He stayed being tactile sensitive. He did not like being touched. He did not like having his temperature taken. He’s still a little bit like he just he feels you know his sense of touch when he was very small. His comfort item was to like Kleenex is have like the layer of I guess lotion or whatever right to make them soft. His comfort item when he was very small with he would appeal to Kleenex as a part and then he would rub that that was his you know, some kids have a blankies Yeah, that was that was what he liked. He would like to touch that and he stay being sensitive to the touch Middle School. He asked me to stop touching his face because I’m a lifter, so I get calluses on my arms. And he’s like, Oh, it’s so scratchy. Please start touching. He doesn’t like it if I rub his skin you know if I hold his hand I can. I can give a little squeeze, but I can’t rub his.

 

Paulette kamenecka  27:06  

That’s totally interesting. I like it when there’s some aspect of continuity in some of the characteristics of kids that you can see. My second one was a scheduled C section and she came three weeks early. And she is very much on her own time. That’s true to this day.

 

Kekua 27:22  

Oh my gosh, you know, when you phrase it like that, I just thought she got it from me but my daughter is like we are always waiting for her. She is very much when she’s ready then she’s

 

Paulette kamenecka  27:35  

Yeah, yeah. From the very start, right. That’s what she was trying to tell you. This is how it’s gonna be. But we don’t necessarily we don’t always know what information to take from the gym or our children’s shoes to the degree that they can choose it. Well, thanks so much for sharing your amazing story. It is a story of total victory in the end right?

 

Kekua 27:53  

It feels like it somehow I managed to pull it around and raise a couple of wonderful babies and when things are really easy, and then they get hard. It’s kind of it’s way more difficult but when they start out rough, it’s a little it’s a lot easier to deal with all of the other things that come especially when you can just be like you know, you’re alive right now. And I appreciate that and that could have that could have very much not that the case.

 

Paulette kamenecka  28:18  

I totally agree you I appreciate the 3am yelling from the boy who required a crash C section right? You’re like oh, look at that. He’s a lot of singing. Yeah. Yeah, that’s awesome. Man. That’s a useful perspective.

 

Kekua 28:32  

It really is. It definitely informed my style of motherhood, to just be really, really happy that I have them. Yeah. I very much am aware how close both of them could have come to not to be here.

 

Paulette kamenecka  28:49  

Yeah, yeah, that’s totally true. Well, it’s awesome. Thank you so much for sharing your story.

 

Kekua 28:54  

Thank you for having me. I love that you you have this because this is such a beautiful thing to share the truth to women because we, you know, we’re so conditioned to not acknowledge our difficulties and our pains and then when we’re so unprepared for them when they come. But I want to remind people that it is not the vast majority, but it is a possibility like that things won’t go the way that you dream. Not to not to panic and think that you’re dying.

 

Paulette kamenecka  29:23  

Just because well, they’re also but part of the problem is like that dream is based off some false story. Right? The truth of the matter is being pregnant and having a kid is an unbelievably demanding enterprise for everyone no matter what. Right? So. So that doesn’t come with rainbows. And and ice cream and butterflies, right that there are parts of it that are like that, but not all of it and the birth lasts for you know 40 hours and the long in the long stretch of it and then you get to have them for many many years if you’re lucky. Right. So yeah, it’s it’s really hard and you know, things are hard to predict. but it’s a blink of an eye.

 

 




Episode 82SN: Episode 82: A Doula (and Mother of 5) offers Miscarriage Support and Much More: Aliza’s story, Part II

This is a show that shares true experiences of getting pregnant being pregnant and giving birth to help shift the common cultural narrative away from the glossy depictions of this enormous transition you can find on social media, and other media more broadly, to a more realistic one.  It also celebrates the incredible resilience and strength it takes to create another person and deliver them into the world. I’m your host, Paulette Kamenecka. I’m a writer and an economist and the mother of two girls.

In this episode Aliza shares ways to manage contractions…she also talks about some important strategies to help you get a birth closer to the one you want; everyone who has been through birth knows that it’s really the baby who is driving the process, but there are things you can do to potentially impact your experience, and Aliza talks about some of them here, as well as other doula secrets.

You can reach Aliza Said here

C section rates in Brazil and Uruguay

https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2014/04/why-most-brazilian-women-get-c-sections/360589/

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4743929/

C section rates in hospitals in the US, a Resource

https://www.leapfroggroup.org/news-events/first-ever-national-release-cesarean-section-rates-hospital-finds-more-60-percent?gclid=Cj0KCQiA2-2eBhClARIsAGLQ2RnkoaX7v0k-0LjuYYv0QqjRo_wk5UTO-Vcd6-IaZGXFTCVwtczEafkaArknEALw_wcB

Audio Transcript

Paulette Kamenecka: Hi. Welcome to War Stories from the Womb. This is a show that shares true experiences of getting pregnant, being pregnant and giving birth to help shift the common cultural narrative away from the glossy depictions of this enormous transition you can find on social media, and other media more broadly, to a more realistic one.  It also celebrates the incredible resilience and strength it takes to create another person and deliver them into the world. I’m your host, Paulette Kamenecka. I’m a writer and an economist and the mother of two girls.

In this episode Aliza shares ways to manage contractions…she also talks about some important strategies to help you get a birth closer to the one you want; everyone who has been through birth knows that it’s really the baby who is driving the process, but there are things you can do to potentially impact your experience, and Aliza talks about some of them here, as well as other doula secrets

We’ll pick up my conversation with Aliza where we left off last week. She’s been in labor for a long time and very little was happening. The doctor just entered the room and suggested that a C section is imminent. And what follows is Aliza’s response.

Aliza  0:17  

So anyway, the doctor came in, but after six hours of being an eight centimeters, he was like, Okay, we really tried giving you as much time as we could, but that’s it in 10 minutes. There’s nothing new. We’re starting Pitocin and I looked at my Doula, and I’m like, no Pitocin going on. Here. Within 10 minutes my baby was out. Yeah. And I in that moment and she was like, giving me this like guided meditation to really watch my baby coming out and like really imagine it and talk to my baby and, and I really worked on in those moments, those things that were blocking me. And as I blocked as I took away all those things that were blocking me, my baby came out. And yeah, it was a big learning experience. And I remember my Doula telling me then, every baby comes in a completely different way, because they’re coming to teach you something completely different. And they’re gonna live their lives in a completely different way. And each child teaches you something so different. And even now as they grow up, I remember that so much like the fact that I did something with my older, with my older children. One way doesn’t mean that my younger children are going to need the same same kind of thing. Yeah, so that was my second child. 

 

P  1:33  

Wow, that’s also kind of an amazing story because you’re so present for all of it. And so self aware about what’s happening in your body, which I think is a an amazing ability to have and remarkably useful. The thing I can relate to is the resistance. Because I remember the first couple of contractions, took my breath away, but were not painful in part because I didn’t know what was going on. And it didn’t, wasn’t my immediate reaction to resist them. But once I started to resist, because I was worried about it, then became painful, then it’s like a fight.

 

A  2:08  

Right? I see many times with my clients even like, as a doula I see it many times that when they don’t know that it’s the contraction. It’s not painful. Yeah. But when, when all of a sudden oh my gosh, it really it hurts so much. I can’t do it anymore. I don’t think I’d like to really understand that. Even when my Doula told me that in between contractions, nothing’s happening. You’re not in pain. Like there’s nothing that’s causing it. To me that was completely like this epiphany like, Oh, it’s just working with each contraction. And really being present in each moment. And I will say, it’s something that I learned it’s not something that I that I was completely living before I had my babies, but I feel like birth is really something that allowed me to learn all these lessons for my life and it really changed how I could be present with my children. I use the same Hypno birthing techniques with you know, pain and other things actually have to go through like this dental work now that I’m going through and I use the same Hypno birthing techniques to like let go of pain. And it really works. You know, like when we’re able to not be in resistance to what’s going on. around us. We can ride the wave.

 

P  3:19  

I want to try that at my next dental appointment. That’s good advice. So the second one’s back and home and how are things with two little ones now? Now you have two under two, right?

 

A  3:31  

I have two under two and here’s where it starts getting complicated. Now I noticed they that I probably also had postpartum depression that I wasn’t willing to admit at the time. And now that I look back, there are many things that I see that I’m like, oh, okay, that’s probably what it was. It was really difficult also, because my my second child, he was a completely different baby than what I knew, I thought and I had all this haughtiness after my first one, that when you’re a calm parent, then you have come kids, but then I had my second one, and he was the farthest thing from calm, which is funny because today He’s very calm, but as a baby, he probably had some food like allergies and things that were bothering him in his stomach. And he was he was crying constantly, like even from the also he always wanted me like it was something unbelievable that from the minute he got out of my belly, he only wanted to be with me and he like knew to smell me the day after if anybody else would hold him he would cry. Unbelievable. Yeah, like something. I remember my mother in law saying like, I’ve never seen a baby at this age that anybody else takes him and he starts crying and only when I would hold him, he wouldn’t sleep. And he would cry. And I just felt like I was I was home with two two kids under the age of two. My husband wasn’t home most of the time. And it was really difficult, really difficult. I felt like I was crashing. I didn’t know at that time to also say that it was probably a lot of postpartum depression. And I fell into a really big, deep pit, like really bad. Also, at that time, we decided that we were going to go and move for a few years to Uruguay. We went to go work in the community there and it was in the midst of all that when I wasn’t completely aware yet of what was going on with me. He was six months old when we got there. And here I am in a new country, new language so much going on. And I really had to learn how to slowly take myself out of that pit and that was a big, big learning that I had

 

P  5:45  

so much. Yeah, that’s so much transition in a short amount of time. Right. So now in about two years, you have two kids new, you know, moved house which is a big deal to a different country and it sounds like you’re not a native Spanish speaker. And that’s a lot right. And now you’re not with your family or not with your friends. That’s a big move.

 

A  6:09  

Yeah, it was a lot and we were also in a very demanding position that my husband wasn’t home a lot and he was going through his transition of being in this new role and I was doing it was a lot. Also we felt like we have the strongest connection ever. Nothing can break us down. And all of this really like completely like shattered us up so that we could rebuild ourselves in a completely new way. So in those moments, again, it was really difficult and we thought we were gonna come back and we felt that we were just gonna give everything up. And then we were able to really like after completely breaking down to be able to build ourselves back together piece by piece by piece.

 

P  6:50  

So that’s amazing. So a third child is born in Uruguay, right? Yes.

 

A  6:55  

So a third child is born in Uruguay. And in Uruguay, like many South American countries, that the C section rate is very, very high. There’s like a lot of childbirth myths going on there. Like so much misinformation. And the hospital where I was supposed to give birth because that was my insurance. The C section rate was 90% Oh my god scared me. Like, really scared me. I felt like couldn’t even think of what was going to happen. So I started researching and searching for some doctor who was going to be able to be with me and encouraged a natural birth because it was really important to me. And I found the only doctor who was willing to go with me and but the like they know in the hospital that when he comes everybody takes a step back because they know that he does it completely differently. And it was the most beautiful experience ever. So I had a friend who really really wanted to talk to me for a long time and I kept saying, I’m not having the baby until I talked to you. And like I said it as a joke. But then I was ready to have the baby and I was like you know what, maybe because I haven’t talked to her yet. I’m not happy with the baby. So I invited her to my house and we were talking until again. Again another birth that started with late night talks. We were talking until like 130 in the morning. Then she went home and again at four in the morning contractions started and I called my doula. my Doula came we were I was in the bath a little bit and she saw that it looked like I was really moving forward. And she said she thinks I should probably start going to the to the hospital. So we call the doctor and he was on his way as well. And we were just like really in this bubble that we were able to create. Again, I want to say it’s also because we were after this, this period of time of transition and transformation that we like rebuilt ourselves. And we were in and I really feel like we were rebuilt before that and we came to this bird link in a beautiful united and connected way. So we were just like swaying and swinging again and singing and and really just enjoying and we get to the hospital. Now. Uruguay is an atheist country and you can see me your podcast listeners won’t see me but I am an orthodox do. I wear a head covering like I’m kind of odd there they you know I’m like the I mean all my neighbors knew me and they knew that I was the odd one but you know for the when I walked into the hospital they were like, what is this going on? And anyways it was very weird because there they have never seen the the nurses that I was with. They said they have never seen a woman who chose not to get an epidural or not to get a C section like a woman that chose to come and have a natural birth they’ve never saw that before. So And here I was coming with my with my music in my hand. And and but we were just singing and we were singing in Hebrew, also in Uruguay, singing Hebrew songs and bouncing on the ball and just like completely blissful. And when we walked in, I said to my Doula, I was like, How many centimeters Do you think I’m at? Later, she told me she thought I was at four and I said, I’m telling you I’m six centimeters. And the doctor came and he checked me. He was like, okay, the six centimeters was like, Okay, great. Let’s go. So we walk into the into the room, and he asked me if I wanted to be checked anymore. And he said, you know, let’s just go with it. And the whole time I was so connected with what was going on in my body. And he was so enabling to really be in that belief. You know what to do with your body? Like I would ask him Okay, now what? And he’d be like, You know what to do? You tell me like it’s your you know how to birth, which was amazing. It was really, really amazing. I mean, he was there watching me the whole time. It’s not like he was but it was very empowering. And so we were just like, really enjoying there and, and he would ask me like, Okay, how are you feeling? And I, I’d say to him, now I feel like my baby needs a little more time to come down. He’s still not all the way down. And then finally I said to him, Okay, I think I think the baby’s down and he checked me. And he said, Yeah, you’re fully dilated. Do you want to do you want to start putting anything? No, I’m not having a contraction yet. I laid down and I my contraction stopped for a few minutes, which is a beautiful secret that many birthing mothers don’t know that our body naturally gives us this resting time before we push many times. We don’t see it when we’re in a medical environment. But our body gives us that sometimes it’s three minutes. Sometimes it’s not a long time, but it gives us this time to really regroup and give ourselves that energy before we go to the last phase of pushing.

 

P  11:39  

So when you say many people don’t feel is that because if you had an epidural, you wouldn’t feel it. Right? You

 

A  11:45  

don’t know when you’re having your contract when you’re having contractions or not. And also many women at this at this stage, they’re already if they’re in hysterics, they’re in hysterics in between contractions as well and some some women you know, feel like they’re losing control, which is also another way to birth, which is a beautiful way to birth as well but complete lot to lose your control. And then you won’t feel it either. So but if you’re connected and you’re, then you’ll be able to end it doesn’t always happen but many times usually I see with my clients as well. That there is this kind of resting time. So I said to my to my doctor, I he’s not ready to come out just yet. And I lay down and we sing like another two songs. And then I got up and I was like Okay, I’m ready. And I actually have a video that my my husband said to me, how are you doing? And I was like I’m so great. He was like have what stage or yet was like I’m fully dilated. He’s like, Yeah, you like you like having a baby. It was like, Oh, I highly recommend it. It’s so beautiful. Like I was again completely drugged endorphins. And then I squatted and within two pushes he was out. Wow. And when when he came out, he was like complete. He had these huge eyes. And he was like looking at me and I said to the doctor, he’s not crying. So the doctor said to me if you had a birth like that, would you cry? And it was really just beautiful even a week after that. A friend of mine had a baby also in the same hospital and they found out that she was Jewish. So they’re like, Wait, do you know that Jewish woman that had the baby last week, and she was seeing the whole birth? We’ve never seen anything like

 

P  13:24  

that. So funny. A lot of Jews in Uruguay is what I’m hearing.

 

A  13:29  

No, there’s actually not so many. So when they find them, it’s kind of a novelty.

 

P  13:33  

It’s so funny to me, like do you know the other one?

 

A  13:36  

Well, I have, you know, clearly do it. They seem that

 

P  13:40  

that is super funny. So that’s another fabulous birth and what’s the what’s the age difference? What’s the gap between number two and number three? Two and a half years? Okay. Okay, so now you have three under four. Yeah.

 

A  13:56  

All right. My oldest was four.

 

P  13:57  

Yeah. So that seems like a lot or we’re all good.

 

A  14:02  

You know, going from two to three was so great. I mean, I think after after having my second baby who taught me like you don’t have control and you don’t really know what’s going on, and you know, have some more humility in your parenting. I think I was ready for whatever. And again, I was blessed with a really calm baby. And he was so easy and just really helped us in the transition, I guess. And it was just a really fun transition. We really enjoyed having another baby and watching the sibling dynamic is so emotional. I like even like until today all the time. I like see the dynamics between them. And I feel like there’s no bigger gift that I could give them then than this. You know each other. Yeah, that’s yeah, so yeah, so that was really special as well.

 

P  14:54  

Now, the first two babies you had an Israel Yeah. So there are there dramatic differences between other than the high C section rate between Israel and Uruguay that you were like, Oh, this is so different. Well, the

 

A  15:07  

hospital stay was actually very nice nearby because every gets their own room which in Israel is like not heard of. That’s one hospital that you would like pay extra. But there’s no such thing. I guess it’s also because of the high birth rates here in Israel compared to your right. There are many more birthing moms here. And also it was just like, kind of like a hotel but I don’t know there was like something very, very nice about the hospital there and the stay there. And also the duck because it was a private doctor and the whole system works very differently. But because it’s a private doctor, so you get to choose like, he said to me, tell me when you want to leave if you want to leave today if you want on tomorrow. Tell me when you went outside you like it was just very, that was very nice. It was very different than I wasn’t with my family. We were far away from family and that’s very different. We were very, very fortunate and lucky that a lot of our family did come a week after the birth but yeah, but going through all of that without family is also different. Yeah, yeah,

 

P  16:07  

that’s a little hard. Okay, so then or do we leave you’re away for the fourth.

 

A  16:12  

So I got pregnant, you’re going with the fourth. And that was also like when my when my third was about a year and a little bit and then when we came back to Israel, we were a few months after we came back I had my fourth and that was a homebirth a waterbirth a homebirth which was also really really beautiful. It was a Why do you

 

P  16:36  

that you’ve had so much success with the doula midwife Doctor model? Why are we changing it to home births, so the fourth one,

 

A  16:44  

okay, so I did have success and I didn’t have bad experiences. But for example, the second birth I felt that if I were at home for longer, I wouldn’t have gone so long. And I would have felt more comfortable and more oxytocin. You know, able, in my own home in my own environment without feeling threatened without feeling like I needed to always be like on the watch of what somebody was going to do to my natural birth, you know, which I want to say before I say anything about home birth. I believe that a woman births from herself, so it doesn’t matter where you’re at. You could be at a hospital, you could be at your home, wherever you are. You can have a beautiful birthing experience and I think that every woman has to make her own decision. Not because of some kind of societal, whatever. Every woman should do her own research and every woman should make her own decision. I don’t judge anyone for their own decision, and we shouldn’t judge anyone for their own decision. And it should just be something that you know, each woman is empowered to make that choice. So the fact that I had a home birth is not dissing the beautiful hospital births that I had. Well, I did I decide I did I did feel like I was at a place where I needed that privacy where I felt like that was I felt confident enough in myself that I was able to have a beautiful home birth and also I did more research. And I I wasn’t afraid like I was I grew up very afraid of home births. I always thought that it was women putting their own personal experience over the health of their babies. And I learned that it’s not about that at all. It’s about paying attention to the health of the mother and the baby. And it’s not about the experience. So I just like learned a lot about it. And it felt very right. My husband was Argentinian. All of his family were were born via C section he like for him this whole thing was very new. And for him it was a very scary thought. So I said to him, Look, let’s go to a midwife. We’ll talk to her. Ask her all the questions you have and then we’ll make a decision. Like I wasn’t. I wasn’t like completely. That’s it. Let’s do it. So we went and we went to speak to this midwife, and I chose a midwife who I knew she had a lot of experience. I think she was 20 years in the hospital and 12 years out of the hospital. Okay, so we went to go visit her just to like, go talk and ask her some questions. And my husband asked her all these questions, and he was very nervous about the whole thing. And after we left, I said to him, so what do you want to do? He was like, Yeah, let’s do it. Like, this is what we’re gonna do. So yeah, there’s a lot of prep that there isn’t when you have a hospital birth also, I I love hosting people. And I love people feeling comfortable in my house and I felt like if I’m having my doula and my midwife and I don’t know who’s gonna come after, I want there to always be like, really good, cooked nourishing food in the house. So like I felt like this. This pressure to always have like food in the freezer, and lots of like different options. So I always was like, packing the house with the food. And the kids were very much a part of the process because the midwife was coming to her house, and they would help her find the heartbeat which was super emotional and super exciting. And that was a really fun part. I didn’t want them to be a part of the birthing experience because I was afraid that I wasn’t going to be able to be in my bubble if I was being worried also about them like if I was thinking about you know, their needs, if it’s okay for them to be be at every point like if I was thinking about them. And caring for their needs, I wasn’t going to be able to completely go into my birthing bubble. So I didn’t want them to be at the birth they were also pretty little at that time. I did my

 

P  20:26  

totally fair and like if they don’t understand it, it could be scary. And I yeah, that all that makes sense. Right? So I decided

 

A  20:33  

that I didn’t want them to be with us and my parents who lived pretty close to where we were living at that time. They were going to come and take them. So it was actually a weekend, the second weekend that they went to my parents, and we were but we were like on a honeymoon vacation. We felt like it was really nice to be just the two of us without any kids. Since I don’t know when and we were just we lived in a place that was like in the middle of of the forest and it was like kind of raining the whole day and we went out walking the whole day and I started feeling a little bit of contractions in the morning and then played started coming on and then towards the afternoon. A little bit more. And then towards the evening. I felt like okay, this is really real now. We started tracking my contractions, which is the first time in my life I can track contraction because I needed to tell the midwife when she should come out to us. So we started tracking, tracking the contractions and I sent like the screenshot to my to my midwife, and she said look, it doesn’t look like it’s real labor yet because you have like every seven minutes and then every format, and then every five and then three and like it’s not so consistent. But here’s a really good thing that every woman should know every woman is different and like we said it doesn’t all go according to the books. And I knew that my body never was consistent, I guess kind of consistent with my personality. I’m not such a consistent person. I like to think to go with the flow. And I knew that with all my groups it’s it never goes consistent. So I said to my midwife, you know with all my books, it’s it’s like that and I feel like I’m in real birth. So she’s like, okay, you know your body the best. So she came out to us. And when she came she checked me and I was seven centimeters. Wow. Yeah. And again, music. It was actually the festival of Hanukkah of Hanukkah. Wow. So we had the lights burning and like it was like this beautiful, kind of divine kind of environment, feeling and ambiance and it was just

 

P  22:30  

this sounds cinematic for sure. It was it really was

 

A  22:33  

like we dim the light. We also had like the life that you could like dim in all different levels. And so my husband like played around with the lights to make it beautiful. We had music playing and it was it was really beautiful. We we blew up the pool in the middle of the house. And my husband was in charge of the hot water the whole time. And he and he was in charge of that as I as the contractions kept coming out. I said I’m ready to go into the pool. I got into the pool kept on breathing a little more. And it was just really fast and kind of I think it was like in total three and a half hours. I like touched she my midwife said to me, you you test like you tell me when you’re ready and you can you can feel which was so cool for me because I never really felt like it was my third birth. My doctor said here put your hand and try and feel his head and I couldn’t because of the way I was squatting or I don’t know what I couldn’t feel him. But this time I like really felt him coming out. So I like was able to feel his hair in the water. Wow. And as I was in that moment, my husband was filming me it was important for me to send a video to the kids like during the birth or whatever. So he was filming me in and I’m like telling them the baby’s coming you coming? Really really soon you’re gonna meet your brother soon. And then and he sent that to the kids and like he wrote to my mother we we feel the head or whatever. And then within like 10 minutes the baby was out, which was amazing. It was it was really beautiful, like so blissful.

 

P  24:09  

Like that birth was physically easier in the water and at your house.

 

A  24:14  

I think so. Yeah. I definitely think there was something very I don’t know the word enabling is coming up again like just enabling and given making space for be vulnerable in whatever way you want. And there was something very, very calming in that that allowed me to birth in a very calming and beautiful way. Like I wasn’t afraid of anything around me. I don’t know, I don’t know how to explain it. So that was really really amazing. And the water was great. It was really great. Also it was freezing cold at that time also so being in warm water it was amazing. And then having a baby and crawling into your own bed is like unbelievable. That sounds like comfortable and

 

P  24:57  

especially when

 

A  25:01  

your other choice is to be

 

P  25:02  

share a room with someone else. Right? Right.

 

A  25:05  

Right. So it was unbelievable and my midwife also she did all my laundry at when I was like nursing the baby she’s like started cleaning the whole house and she did all my laundry and she like left the house with with like all different she left me all these different herbal tinctures and all these different like aromas in the house that I should have. And it was just like, I felt like I was in a spa like in my own home. So it was beautiful. That sounds awesome.

 

P  25:29  

That sounds totally amazing. And now why the fifth one is not in your house. Right? Right. So the fifth one was not in my house. We had

 

A  25:37  

moved and for technical reasons only. I couldn’t have my fifth one in at home. But this is the proof that it doesn’t matter where you are if you are in your body you can be empowered in your connection with your body and with what’s going on. Because the fifth birth I decided that I was going to choose a hospital according to which hospital would allow me to have a waterbirth so I chose which hospital I was going to go to we needed to drive a little further to we came it was actually in the middle of a crazy rainstorm here that it was like kind of a hurricane but not exactly a hurricane. And it was pouring rain. And the contraction started at night I called my mother the teacher come and be with the kids. She came and she was with the kids and contractions were already coming like every two minutes, but I felt that they weren’t so strong yet and that they were I was like still in the beginning and I said to her Don’t worry, we’re still in the beginning. She was like no, you’re gonna have the baby in the parking lot. And I was like, no, no, I’m telling you. I still have to I’m still in the beginning. So we go into the car and it’s pouring rain like crazy, crazy rain. And then we park the car and there was like a little bit of a walk until the entrance to the hospital and until today my husband laughs at me about this. Because we started walking to the hospital and a contraction starts and I’m like, Okay, come here. Let’s start swaying. Like pouring rain. There’s thunder lightning and here we are dancing in the rain and holding a wall, holding the pool to blow up when we walk in. So here we are in the rain holding was local. And we walk in and I was like, Okay, I think I’m like in labor. And they check me and they’re like put your four centimeters, which I thought was important for me to come earlier because I wanted us to have enough time to blow up the pool and fill up the pool and everything for that and they were they said that we needed to have a perfect monitor if we wanted to be able to be in the pool. So I said okay, let’s do a monitor. Meanwhile, my Doula came and she was unbelievable. didn’t keep her hands off of me at all for one second. She was like massaging me the whole time and she was amazing. And I would pull on the ball, just singing waiting waiting for them to open up a room for us to go in. And we were again singing having a really great time. I was like dedicating songs to our family and sending messages look here we are having the baby and I’m singing this song for you. And then after like an hour and something they said to us, okay, the room is ready, you can go into the room, but there’s a little bit of a dip in the monitor. So you’re not going to be able to go into the pool yet. You have to have another perfect monitor. When you get into the room. We walk into the birthing room and I feel like things are getting much more serious. And I looked at my doula and I was like okay, like things are coming here. And I walked kind of barely to the to the room. And when I came in, they’re like, Okay, let’s check you again. And they checked me. And they said five centimeters. And I looked at my doula and I was like, huh I had these, like two voices inside of me. I had one voice, okay, it might take longer than I expected and I’m gonna let go of the control and that’s okay. And it’s okay if things are going to look completely different and I’m okay with that. And I had this other voice telling me my body is not at five centimeters. I am totally so much farther ahead than the doctor left after he checked me and I stood up to like try and get the pool started. I said to my husband, don’t blow up the pool. We’re not gonna have time for it. Because I stood up and I felt like I was already pushing and I said to my doula and my husband, I said, I’m going to break my waters right now and the next contraction and she’s going to come right out. And they’re like, Okay, like the midwife that heard me she was like, Okay, I don’t want your expectations to be so high. And I hear the monitor now. I’m a doula already. So I already have eyes on other things in the birthing rooms. And I hear that the monitor is beeping that the monitors that her heart rate was going down. And the next contraction I pushed because I was feeling a need to push already and I see that my water broke and I looked down and I saw that the water was a little yellow. And that’s why her heart rate was going down. And the doctor started coming in not just one doctor a few doctors because they see that the heart rate is going so much is going with with the so the yellow is meconium