Episode 64SN: Giving Birth to Motherhood: Amie and Katie

Today we hear from two women, one’s an author and generally in the book world and the other is an author, grief counsel and  therapist. Individually, these women encountered challenges with their own pregnancies. They’ve come together to write a book that helps women to process the events of their pregnancies and birth by writing about it.

To see more of Amie’s work, click here

To see more of Katie’s work, click here

To find their book, Giving Birth to Motherhood, click here

HELLP syndrome

https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/21637-hellp-syndrome

https://www.preeclampsia.org/hellp-syndrome

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5015173/#:~:text=The%20HELLP%20(haemolysis%2C%20elevated%20liver,opposed%20to%20pre%2Declampsia%20alone.

Audio Transcript

Paulette: Hi, Welcome to War stories from the womb. I’m your host Paulette Kamenecka. I’m an economist and a writer and the mother of two girls. Today we hear from two women, one’s an author and generally in the book world and the other is an author, grief counsel and  therapist. Individually, these women encountered challenges with their own pregnancies. They’ve come together to write a book that helps women to process the events of their pregnancies and birth by writing about it. Let’s get to their story

So thank you both for coming on the show. Why don’t you introduce yourselves and tell us where you are and a little about your background.

Amie: Yes, so I’m Amie McCracken. I’m originally from Colorado, but I live in Munich, Germany now hence having met Katie. She’s also here. And I’m an editor and author, a book designer. I worked in kind of the book world. But when I had my son, it brought up a whole different topic that I wanted to write about, about birth and all that stuff. So that was how I ended up writing a book on that topic.

Katie: Yeah. And I’m Katie Rossler. I’m a transformative grief guide and licensed counselor and author as well. And this is my second book that we’re coming out with. And I have three kids. The first one was a quite traumatic birth experience and so when Amy and I first met, somewhere along the lines, we started to talk a little bit about birth story somehow it really did come up like quite naturally and we shared our stories and from that, we knew there was a partnership later on. We’ve become great friends, but we knew there was a partnership later on it and writing something to help others.

P: And Katie, what puts you in Germany?

K: I married a man with an accent. You know, they hook you and pull you in and you’re like, Oh, sure. Sounds great. But I grew up in a military family. So moving around, was like, Yeah, I can live in Europe. I had lived here before. Yeah, but now it’s six years here. And I’m like, Oh, we’re staying over here, which I do truly love. I mean, I’ve talked about this. It’s, it’s very hard once you really fall in love with the place and you get used to it to go back. I don’t know.

P: So I’m guessing you’re both fluent. In German.

K: Amie is me, not so much.

P: So you can you can live there easily with mostly English.

K: Yeah, we’re in a major city, so it helps. Awesome. Great. Yeah.

P: So why don’t we start talking about your book project that you get together on birth? Stories. So what’s the name of the book?

A; It’s, let me get the full title. So that I have that. It’s giving birth to motherhood, embrace being a mom through the powerful healing process of writing your birth story.

P: Cool. So we’re all three of us very much aligned here. So would you like to talk about specifically what brought you to this project? And then we’re what the project does for other people? Sure,

A: definitely. Definitely. So initially, I when I had my son, I thought everything went fine. I mean, it didn’t go fine. It was problematic. It was traumatic. It was difficult. But he was healthy. I was healthy. So I was like, everything’s fine. Everybody told me that everybody was like, everything’s fine. But I sat down when he was five months old to write down what happened just for my own memory. And through writing that I started to discover what actually went wrong and that I was actually angry about what went wrong, and that I was very frustrated by the control that I lost.

P: So I asked, let’s go slowly here. So the issue here is the birth itself, the pregnancy is fine

A: sort of so I’m a type one diabetic, so the pregnancy was high risk. Anyways, that’s how I ended up in kind of a more problematic delivery.

P: What is it what does it mean to be a type one diabetic and pregnant? Why is that immediately high risk,

A:  for the same reasons that gestational diabetes has high risk tendencies, basically, the baby will grow larger because my body has harder has a harder time processing insulin.

P: Even if you’re even if you’re like on medication, and it’s controlled.

A: Yep. Yep. But I have to be much, much more controlled during the pregnancy in order for the baby to not grow too big. And so what ended up happening is I was induced at 37 weeks because he was too big. So yeah. And it like that, that brings up its own complications, because then vaginal births are more difficult because the baby’s bigger and all kinds of things but also, when he comes out if my blood sugar was not controlled during delivery, he could have a low blood sugar which ended up happening so he had to go to the NICU and be taken care of right away. Yeah, so it it just presents some problems, which I knew all of that. ahead of time. I was aware of it. I was ready for it. I was prepped for it, which was actually quite different. For Katie’s story. She was not prepped for a traumatic birth. She was prepped for everything to be normal. But for me, it took writing my birth story out to realize that I was angry about what had happened that I was not satisfied with how it went down.

P: What would you have changed?

A: I don’t know that I could have changed anything. And that’s unfortunate about how the system works is that what ended up happening is in the middle of well, near the end of my delivery when they decided to go for a C section because I wasn’t progressing. They took over the control of my blood sugars that I had been controlling them and they took that over they put me on an insulin drip instead of my insulin pump which I had control over. And my blood sugar went up from there, and they didn’t quite deal with it. And so then when he came out, his body produced too much insulin that made his blood sugar low, and I could have prevented that. But it felt like the system didn’t allow me to prevent it.

P: Did they take away your control because they thought you’d be incapacitated by birth or?

A: Yeah, so essentially, when they were prepping for the C section, they were like, you can’t possibly take care of this while you’re on the operating table. So we have to now take care of this. They would do that also for a diabetic who went into a vaginal birth when you get kind of through transition they take over because you just can’t pay attention anymore. So on the one hand, it’s a good thing. I mean, they are they are taking care of it, but I feel they didn’t pay enough attention, but then they also didn’t give me options afterwards. 

There were a lot of things. If he had breastfed right away. There’s a lot of sugar in the colostrum. If he had been left attached to the umbilical cord, there’s a lot of sugar left in that blood if he had been put on my chest that can help regulate blood sugar, but I wasn’t allowed any of that because the system calls for a C section where the baby is kind of whisked away, right away. And so I lost that control. I lost the ability to bring his blood sugar up in ways that naturally my body could have done so in part it was frustration at my body and frustration of the system.

P: Yeah, that sounds like that sounds extremely frustrating especially since you’re used to type one means you were born with it. Is that what type one?

A: No, I’m I wasn’t born with it. I was 11 but I’ve had it

P: for so long that you have for most of your life control your own blood sugar. So to have that whisked away at such a critical time I can imagine it would be would feel really unnerving and not right especially I mean, I guess if he if the care team had taken over and he did not have high blood sugar. Yeah, you’d have been okay with that.

A: I think yeah, I mean, it would have gone different if it had been a vaginal birth. They could have left the cord attached. They could have put him right on me. The C section definitely complicated things. But of course in other countries in Australia, I know specifically in Australia, they do allow skin to skin contact on the C section table. They will put the baby on mom on the operating table while they close mom. And we had even asked if they would let my husband do it because any form of skin to skin will regulate breathing blood sugar, heart rate all those things. And they said yes, so he had his or jacket on backwards so that he could put him on his chest he took his shirt off and had the OR coat on but then they took him away and just didn’t didn’t let my husband do that either. So that was definitely anger the system. They even took him to the NICU and didn’t tell us where he was they my husband had to go searching around the hospital for him

P:  Yeah, that that feels like a dream where you show up to a test with no clothes on or something. Exactly. Where is my baby? I’m sure you know that the placenta develops insulin resistance later in the pregnancy. So it becomes harder to regulate.

A: It’s nuts because actually the hormones in the first trimester make you super insulin. Sensitive. So you’re full of very, very low blood sugar in the first trimester. second trimester is that honeymoon period. And then third trimester you become resistant so then you need more insulin. So it’s just it’s it’s massively frustrating to to control all of it because it’s really even though I’ve dealt with it my whole life. It was very different in a pregnancy, adding on the worry of like what it’s doing to the baby. I’m like, Oh, I gotta get this right.

P: And I can’t imagine it’s made worse by the fact that everyone told you it was fine.

A: Yeah, I mean, he was healthy. He came out of the NICU after a couple of days and everything was okay. We went home. I was okay. We were both healthy. And yeah, but I think I really started to realize it because I would see articles on Facebook, about like skin, skin and how good it is. And I would just be mad. I was so angry. And so when I sat down to write it down, that was when I realized it was about the control that was taken away from me. I was frustrated. I wasn’t happy with my birth. I really needed to process it and heall it and understand what happened. And so then that brought up the idea of like, I need to help other moms do this. I need to write a book that teaches them how to process their birth by writing about it. So that’s where the idea was born was. I processed my own birth by writing it down. And I filled a whole journal. It was like, three days straight, where I was just writing and scribbling and going crazy.

Paulette kamenecka  11:00  

So that’s amazing. And so and so now let’s was hear how Katie comes into the same vein. Why don’t you give us a little like, sense of what your experience was

K: the traumatic the other traumatic birth right? Yeah, so I knew right I had the boring pregnancy, the textbook pregnancy, and then I read about the book but like I never read anything about C section, because everything was progressing normal, flipped, everything was good. This 

P: is this the first birth?

K: this is the first birth. And then it would have been five days before she was due. So she was born on July 6, and fourth July fireworks are wonderful. Then on the sixth, I had a couple of days where I noticed some upper back pain that was just a little off and felt like I assumed I’d done the like moving furniture in the baby’s bedroom. And you’re not supposed to do that. I just pulled something but it was like progressively getting more painful and at night it was really really bad. So I woke up that morning and I just went ahead and called my doctor was like, you know, hey, maybe just muscular like let’s just beach like we don’t come come into the hospital. I’m on call this weekend. And I was like, oh, you know, that’s sort of a dream. Like your doctor is the one who’s on call, like, Okay, sure. Yeah. So we go and they take my blood pressure and they’re like, have you had blood pressure problems during this time? You know, it’s funny here in Germany, you get this mother book, like it’s like a past book that keeps all your blood pressure’s all your all your stuff. And I look at that now I’m like, Man, that would have been amazing to have because I was like, No, it was always normal and like perfect textbook, and I wish I’d been able to show the book like, here’s all the stuff. 

P: Yeah. 

K: So they call the doctor because every time they took it off, like I’m sure I’m just nervous being here and it’s just affecting me and like No, no, it’s that. Like it’s it’s really quite hard. And they call the doctor and she ordered blood work. And that’s when they found that I had HELLP syndrome and showed up really fast. Some people get in their second trimester, some getting the third and then it’s you know, they have a little bit more warning than I did. And yeah, what was happening in my upper back was my liver was struggling. And so I was feeling the basically the spasms or pain of that. And they were prepping, they had to prep me very quickly for a blood transfusion. And they were like, you know, we just don’t know we don’t know if you can clot and My poor husband, he he was just a big shock to both of us. I was still willing like, oh, everything’s great. Everything’s fine. I wasn’t feeling worn down. I wasn’t feeling like something that’s happening. And the doctor she was an amazing doctor, and she truly said like, you know, we don’t have time to even induce you. Like baby really needs to come out because it’s not anything wrong with a baby. It’s basically killing you 

P: Yeah, 

K: so it’s time. It’s just time. And yeah, it was one of those where you don’t have time to think you go into like Project mode and truly was primed for a moment like that. Throughout my whole life has always been, you know, crisis management or helping with you know, in the university helping with different things. I always had training on this I knew exactly call my mother do this do all these things. And it was after she was born. So I got I got to meet a 45 minutes after I was under my husband was in the nursery waiting for her. Nobody got to be in there with us. It was after that that it kind of set in I was on magnesium sulfate.  It was a big shock to the system and then I had the sweet little you know, baby which I attached very quickly to her and my husband for man was like for three days having to just do it himself. Like get her dressed change a diaper quarterback next to me anything I needed, so exhausted, and I had not for a whole year after saying I gave birth, because for me giving birth was vaginall. And it was wasn’t until I did EMDR therapy that it was like okay, I can say I gave for and it wasn’t about control of the system. It was my own body. A feeling like my body had failed me. And that you know, like, how does this happen? Like, everything was textbook and then all of a sudden it goes south really quickly. You know, and it’s kind of like what he did. Like you just learn as much as you can after the fact and you start to better educate yourself on some of the things and my doctor handled everything so wonderfully. But there were parts of the story that did upset me. And I realized, you know, really it was also writing the story. And I actually had two miscarriages in 2019 and was able to reconcile and heal some of the stuff from the first trauma of my daughter being born by the anesthesiologist, at that first birth was talking about the murders that had come through the night before and all the blood and glory all the seven I’m like I’m about to go under and you’re talking about these deaths. So when I had to have a operation for the first miscarriage, I was like Can I speak the anesthesiologist and she came in she’s like, What can I help you with it? I was like, you are only allowed to talk about positive things around me. This like weird, like, only positive thing and I am walking to the OR. You’re not wheeling me on anything. I am walking I can get up I am going like there is nothing where my body feels like I can’t do I can’t take care of it kind of thing. And it was amazing. I had a wonderful team. I was visiting my family in the States when it happened. And it was just an amazing doctor and nurse staff team as well. And we’re like only positive you can you’re in control. You can do this whatever you need. That healed that first trauma fully after that first year with EMDR therapy being able to say for and then being able to heal the I had a voice and I could say hey, stop talking about things that are negative when I’m about to go under and I don’t know if I’m gonna make it that was really really powerful. Really, really helpful.

P: Yeah, that sounds like a lot of good lord. After the three days I’m like he’s gonna sulfate blood pressure’s normal. Everything.

K: You have to stay on blood pressure medicine for I think I stayed on for about four to six weeks mine my blood pressure regulated pretty fast went back to normal so you’re you’re checking it every three to four hours still at home, and you’re taking the medicine. And then there’s a point where as I with my third child, I had blood pressure issues after the birth and there’s a point on that medicine where you’re starting to regulate and then it gets to be too much and you get really lightheaded easily so like, call them you know, like it’s time to get me off with me off this. Yeah, so they had to put me on that to just keep things regulated until my body could just go to more baseline status.

P: And so being a therapist, my sense is you understood the obviously the power of talking about what happened, but there’s something special about writing it down, right?

K: Yeah, completely. That was the big thing that when any came to me and we really started talking about this book, it was like it needs to have a therapeutic side to why writing is going to be so helpful and there is something about seeing it in front of you because when you speak it, it’s not there anymore. Unless you record it and watch it again. When you write it and you have to look at it, you know or type it out and you look at it. There is a you’re more in touch with what happened in a big part of the book, we talk about how you really get to be the observer versus go through the trauma again and that and we guide you on how to do that in the way that you storytel And the way that you write about certain situations that occur. It’s not to dumb anything down or make false positive it’s truly just still see it on the paper but not feel it where you feel like everything’s just been ripped back up again. And that was really important for both of us like we wanted this to be a therapeutic tool not a write it all out and then like then good luck… Hey, even up up you know, we teach a lot of therapeutic tools of how to deal with the emotions, how to deal with the analytical mind that wants to attack, criticize your writing. And then at the very end, we talked about closure practices and what to do with your birth story. Because most of us feel even more empowerment by helping others to not have to go into what we did and that was a big thing that he said like this book is going to be about other women able to save each other from future situations and maybe change the system. By being able to speak out more so many of us forget you can go back and talk to your doctor or your nurses afterwards. And they feel like oh, you know, it’s not my place and things like that. But the reality is is you are paying them to do the service. And they are human. They’re going to make mistakes. That’s like me as a therapist. I am human. I’m going to say the wrong thing. I’m going to ask the wrong question. But I know that people hold me to a certain level just like we do doctors and nurses. So talking with the person and then being able to go like even just saying I’m sorry, or I didn’t realize or you know, you were our fifth C section that day, and I was just exhausted.

P: Yeah, context can be really helpful. Right? 

K; totally

P: Yeah. So I totally agree that conversation is ephemeral and so it’s hard to get the same feeling from it. It’s hard to become the observer that although there is something I think in the back and forth and having people ask questions, and it’s, that’s a little bit like editing, right, where you’re reviewing things that you said, and is this true? And how do I feel about this really, and especially in your case, Amy where There’s there’s a lot of subtlety to it. And there’s a lot of things that go on slightly differently. You might feel totally differently about your birth story.

A: Completely. Yes. But I think that’s why writing it down and understanding what did happen. Was was what helped me is that beforehand, there were a lot of what ifs there were ton of what ifs and so I researched the heck out of it. I knew everything that could possibly happen. But it was the processing afterwards and understanding the path that things did take what reality actually happened and we talked about this a lot in the book we actually start out with looking at what your expectations were; what you hoped was going to happen what you dreamed for. And then you’ve turned that around and you compare it to what really happened and why did that not work for you and why did you feel the way that you felt? Because, again, we don’t have a ton of control over how it plays out?

P: Yeah, I think you’re I think it’s smart. And I’ve spent a lot of time on the podcast talking about what your expectations were because so many of them are so deeply varied that you don’t really know about them until they’re frustrated right until it doesn’t happen. So like Katie and your story where you’re saying, I couldn’t call it a birth because that wasn’t my idea of a birth. That idea came from somewhere, right?

K: Right. And that was something that when we the expectation section is quite thorough on you know your mother women’s voices near life, social media, society, culture, religion, all of these things that really embed messages into your mind. And the beautiful thing is the book is a journal as well. So it has lots of prompting questions. So you’re not just like, okay, read this. Now. I’ve got to figure it out. Even in the writing of the story. There’s so many questions to help you break it down. So you don’t get caught up in the Okay, where do I go now? Or how do I do this? And with the expectation section, I think it really helps you start to put on paper oh my gosh, I I thought this thought this 

P: Yeah, 

K: you know, there are simple things that most of us don’t even realize that we actually think like that good things happen to good people and bad things happen to bad people. That’s why we go why is this day like this thing? What did I do to deserve this? So many women feel that way when their birth doesn’t go, right? What did I do? What did I did and they put the blame on themselves. And when you sit down and write down what expectations you have in life, and of birth and pregnancy, it helps you go like, well, that’s kind of crazy because that’s not how life really goes like okay, so how do I start to rewrite those beliefs because I’m now raising a little being and I don’t necessarily want them to, especially if I’ve three girls, I don’t want them to fall into that same pattern. I want them to know that that scar that mom has is the same way that they email is one of them came out badly to C section. All of it was giving birth. So I talked about that, you know, how do babies come out? Well, you know, there’s there’s a couple of ways here and here. You see this this right here this bar, how to um, you came out. One of your females are here, and it just normalizes it. I didn’t have those conversations growing up. I grew up in a Southern Baptist family. We didn’t talk about things. You know, there was no, it was only on my birth was fast and simple and easy. Or for my mom the birth was difficult. But there were C sections in my family. And there were miscarriages or things like that. So it’s, you know, you just didn’t talk about those things. And that’s something I want different. You know, it’s a generational thing that I’m breaking, really that we can talk about our bodies and how babies come out and how difficult it can be.

P: Yeah, I think it’s unfortunate that feels like culturally there isn’t space for and so like all these birth stories, have things about them that are complicated and hard and frustrating and not what we expected and beautiful and completely miraculous to have a healthy children at the end of them. Right. So it’s just a much more complicated story is kind of the real one, but that’s never what you’re sold, right? You’re sold ice cream and butterflies and that’s all there is it’s

K: Yeah, rainbows and unicorns always turn out that way and we even address you know, those moms who did have there are some moms who have wonderful birth experiences. And then that want to sell you on how they did and how you can follow in their footsteps. Our bodies are all different, like my HELLP syndrome was not anything on my health radar. Whereas with Amy having type one diabetes, she already knew, hey, I have these risks. You can’t then go oh for both of you it would work to do this, like this. Yeah, no birthing and all these things like it’s beautiful that there’s all these resources, but it’s not a one size fits all.

P: Yeah, for sure. I’m guessing Amy and Tom will correct me if I’m wrong here but even preparing for things that might happen. feels different than actually experiencing it

A: very much. Very much so because I knew the clinical terms for things I knew what to, quote, expect, but I didn’t know what emotions would come along with that. I didn’t know how it would feel 

P; Yeah. 

A: To experience all those clinical terms that I understood and I my my dad’s a veterinarian, so I grew up in a somewhat medical family like we do understand how bodies function.I’ve watched Cows and dogs and horses give birth and sheep like I’ve watched a lot of animals give birth but the the internal the mental, the like going through it is just so different than reading in a book or watching someone I took photos of a friend at her birth so I had been out of birth. And it still you can’t know what to what you’re going to feel what you’re going to experience internally. That that mental hurdle that mental marathon that you’re running, when you give birth is just an explanatory like you just you cannot explain it

P: Yeah, the embodied experience like type defies language, right? It’s

A: very much and that we kind of discuss that a little bit in the book as well because we want women to understand that your identity is entirely new from one moment to the next you you go from a pregnant woman to a mother, and it’s just a massive shift that isn’t really mirrored in anything else in life. There. There are other big shifts. There are other big changes in life. But that is one that is so wholly and completely different. And it’s it it takes a little bit of getting to know yourself again, because you are a new person on the other side of it.

P: Yeah, I interviewed someone not that long ago who said like the old you is gone, right? There’s no cross that threshold and then you without children no longer will ever exist. And it’s just a completely different space to occupy, which is which is a giant thing that we don’t talk about at all. You know, we talk about the strollers and the Boppy and the you know, baby clothes but not the really important thing. So it’s so great that you guys are are talking about that.

K: Yeah, I mean, this is this is why there’s so much of the grief work I do because people hit the midlife crisis and they’re just like, this isn’t the life I signed up or I’m like because you weren’t grieving all the shifts and changes up until now. 

P: Yeah, 

K; when really look at that. That career didn’t work out the way you thought or motherhood wasn’t what you thought it would or being married or divorce or you know all of these things. And if you’re not grieving men doesn’t mean like you’re holding on to it and wailing and all that but like, really, truly embodying grief and going through that work. Then you’re going to hit a point in your life where you really feel the identity crisis that makes you kind of go do other things that you regret later on or hurt other people are really implode on yourself. So for us it’s like a good stepping stone of like, okay, we want this experience

Unknown Speaker  0:03  

It takes a little bit of getting to know yourself again, because you are a new person on the other side of it.

P: Yeah, I interviewed someone not that long ago who said like the old view is gone, right? There’s no you’ve crossed that threshold and then you without children no longer will ever exist and it’s just a completely different space to occupy, which is which is a giant thing that we don’t talk about at all. You know, we talk about the strollers and the Boppy and you know, baby clothes but not the really important thing. So it’s so great that you guys are are talking about that.

K: Yeah, I mean, this is this is why there’s so much of the grief for it and I do because people hit the midlife crisis, and they’re just like, this isn’t the life I signed up for. I’m like, because you weren’t grieving all the shifts and changes up until now. Yeah, and really look at that. That career didn’t work out the way he thought or motherhood wasn’t like he thought about it or being married or divorce or you know, all of these things, and you’re not grieving. That doesn’t mean like you’re holding on to it and wailing and all that but like, really truly embodying grief and going through that work. Then you’re gonna hit a point in your life where you really feel the identity crisis that makes you kind of go do other things that you regret later on, or other people are really implode on yourself. So for us, this is like a good stepping stone of like, okay, we want this experience, to not be something you own for so many years that you don’t later on, though you are.

P: So it sounds like what you’re saying is processing the experience in some way once you integrate it into your life to get a better sense of where you are in the moment.

K: Yes, that’s a wonderful Yeah, summary.

P: Okay, good. That sounds that sounds. That sounds amazing. I love that there’s space to journal and that there are prompts because for many people, it is a giant experience where it’s hard necessarily, unlike your experience, Katie where it’s obvious where the extreme elements lie. You know, for some people, it’s all over the place, right? There’s something weird in the first trimester or the whole pregnancy felt weird or something right? It’s just it’s not so cut and dry. So those signposts about like, what are you feeling about this or that seem like they’d be totally useful to help people plot that out?

K: Yeah, a lot of what we were finding already in the market around the story of create your birth story, didn’t guide you enough. Didn’t really walk you through the steps. And because of that, you lose motivation. Yeah. And with each tab or to have a chapter that has so many questions, that kind of keeps the ball rolling, you stay invested, and you start to really see the healing power of what you’re doing.

P: And do you guys have like a repository for those stories once women write them? Like a website? With the book or

A: that’s, that’s in the works? That will be a thing? Yes, definitely.

P: That feels like wailing wall or something. That’s cool.

A: Yeah, I mean, one of the things we want to be careful of is not pushing that, that same trauma onto the next mothers. So we want to make sure that if someone is sharing their story, that they’re doing it in a way that shows that they’ve healed that shows that they are empowered by learning their story and working through their story. Because what we’ve found is that you know, you have grandma who comes in and tells you your baby shower and you’re just like, Okay, I’m terrified now. Thank you. And we don’t want people to be pushing their trauma onto everybody else. So the end of the book really works towards finding ways that you can help others using your story. So either you learn how to tell your story in a way that doesn’t everyone else, or you potentially create an oral version, which is what Katie has done with her girls is created an oral version for your child which helps you understand how to tell the story in a way that it doesn’t get rid of the nasty parts, but it makes them powerful, it makes them mom went through this and she did it. And that’s the good part of this. So yeah, we

P: are able to see the action. And I would say good news. Bad news is that, no matter what, although, I’m sure if it’s your grandmother, you think there’s genetic connection, like maybe I am in the same line or we’re dealing with our mothers, right? How were how were their births to kind of project what will happen with us and mine bear no relationship to my mother’s. So I don’t know how useful it is but but like I can feel the nervousness when you describe like the grandmother saying that to the granddaughter, but I think, you know, this is like a tricky line to walk out. Sharing the trauma, scaring other people. I think it is it is necessary to get really, really out there to get like a true narrative of this is what it could contain. This is how I managed it

A: . Yeah, I think and I think you’re less likely to push the trauma on someone else if you have processed it. The problem is grandma has not actually dealt with the fact that her birth was crazy and insane and scary. And so she’s just kind of pushing the scary onto the next person. Whereas if you actually process it and deal with it and heal from it, you can still share the parts that were not so great, but not in a way that’s going to trigger the trauma.

K: and I think they can sayThings like I wish I had told the nurse I wish I had stopped and asked more questions or that allows that to go okay, let me make a mental note of that or tell my partner we need to ask a lot of questions and write my questions down. It’s how you start to help others by sharing also when you realize looking back wished have been done differently. Or you know what, like you said sometimes, context helps so much so being able to heal that you can say hey, well I realized my doctor is human, and he or she will make decisions on the spot visual variety. That then are out of my control unless I yell stop. Yeah, no, you don’t have the right to do that. But we’re not going to do that because this is a doctor bus. So it allows the next generations of moms coming up to think differently in the moment or to feel empowered to get a doula or someone to be in there with them that can empower them. Because they thought oh, wow, you know, story, and I really need another support person because my husband might almost pass out. Might not be able to handle what comes to me. And that’s a lack of any. Why not? Why not have that extra support? So really, that’s where we think it can start to shift shift how people speak to the system, how they handle things going on around them and how they feel more empowered.

P: That’s awesome. We remind us again what the title is?

K: yes, it’s giving birth to motherhood.

P: that’s a great title. So congratulations on that. Congratulations on the book and where and when can we find it

 

We’re launching it to tember 26th Although around the first week of September, it will be available for pre order. Okay, cool. That’s anywhere, anywhere, anywhere and everywhere and anywhere.

PThat sounds awesome. Thanks so much for coming on and sharing this is such a great idea. 

A&K: Thank you for having us. 

P: Thanks again to Amy and Katie for sharing a little bit about what motivated them to write the book, Giving birth to Motherhood. I love it when someone uses the challenging parts of their own experience to try to pave the way for an easier experience for the people who follow after them. I’ll share links to Amy’s website and Katie’s website in the show notes. You can check that out at war stories from the womb. Com. Thanks for listening. We’ll be back next week with another inspiring story.

Episode 30 SN: This Midwives Tale, A Story of Birth & Surrogacy: Anne

Getting pregnant, being pregnant and giving birth can be challenging in a myriad of different ways. But for some people, this massive transformation is….fairly straightforward. I totally enjoy talking to people who had a relatively smooth experience because it proves that the ideas many of us come to pregnancy with are not mythic, they do in fact live in the world …And sometimes these lucky souls who tread the untroubled path are intent on sharing their superpower through surrogacy. Today’s guest had an interest in fertility as a young adult, and this interest led her into nursing and midwifery. After the birth of her own child, she gave one of the greatest gifts anyone can give: she helped a couple who, for various reasons, couldn’t carry their own pregnancy, by becoming their surrogate.  It’s a beautiful and totally inspiring story.

Moxibustion

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2987875/

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3789413/

https://www.hindawi.com/journals/ecam/2019/8950924/

Relationship between fitness and delivery

https://www.ajog.org/article/S0002-9378(21)00604-9/fulltext

Audio Transcript

Paulette: Hi welcome to war stories from the womb

I’m your host Paulette Kamenecka. I’m an economist, a writer, and the mother of two girls. On route to creating this family, I tripped over every possible obstacle–no part of this process was easy for us…that makes sense to me in some ways because

Getting pregnant, being pregnant and giving birth can be challenging in a myriad of different ways. But for some people, this massive transformation is….fairly straightforward. I totally enjoy talking to people who had a relatively smooth experience because it proves that the ideas many of us come to pregnancy with are not mythic, they do in fact live in the world …And sometimes these lucky souls who tread the untroubled path are intent on sharing their superpower through surrogacy. Today’s guest had an interest in fertility as a young adult, and this interest led her into nursing and midwifery. After the birth of her own child, she gave one of the greatest gifts anyone can give: she helped a couple who, for various reasons, couldn’t carry their own pregnancy, by becoming their surrogate.  It’s a beautiful and totally inspiring story.

One thing I should note: this midwife shares a lot of insights about pregnancy and birth, and while you will likely learn something listening to her, as I did, I just want to point out that she’s not giving out medical advice, but speaking both generally and specifically about her own experience. 

Let’s get to the interview. 

Hi, thanks so much for coming on the show; So excited to have a midwife on the show, to share her experience. It’s very cool to hear from the people who know too much. So, 

 

Anne: Thanks for having me, 

 

P: Can you introduce yourself and tell us where you’re from.

 

A: Yes, my name is the Anne Richards. I am a midwife in the Bay area of California. I started my career in Oregon, and have been at my current practice which is a hospital practice for just over five years. 

 

P: That’s very cool. So we’re gonna hear your birth story and then you have a super interesting story because you’re also a surrogate but, but before we get there, I just want to talk a little bit about the midwife career. Are you a midwife before you have your first baby.

 

A: Yes, yes I had been a midwife for five years before I had my son of being practicing as a midwife,

 

P: so I’m guessing in five years you saw a lot of stuff.

 

A: Oh yes, all not probably too much that, yeah, definitely.

 

P: So, How did you walk into birth, did you think, Oh, this will be super easy or what was your feeling about it.

 

A: I started in a birth center up in Oregon, you know we’re, it was just the midwife and the patient until the very end and the nurse would come in, I think knowing what I know now, and I love out of hospital birth, don’t get me wrong, I don’t know if I could go back to a birth center because I was just sort of blissfully naive coming out of, out of midwifery school and hadn’t seen enough births to really see the full spectrum of what can happen. By the time I had my son I’d been in a hospital based practice and a much busier practice for two full years. what I tell my patients is Expect the unexpected was willing and ready to just meet that birth that labor and birth where it was.

 

P: So let’s start from the beginning, yes you start you walk into pregnancy, kind of with open eyes.

 

A: Yes, and kind of low expectations. 

 

P: Ok…Good. And then do you get pregnant easily. 

 

A: Yes…Very we were very lucky. Yes, I just like I tell my patients who are under the age of 35 which I was at the time, be prepared to get pregnant on the first try and be prepared to potentially you know, it takes it takes a year before you’re even eligible in most practices to see a fertility specialist, and we got pregnant on the second try, so I was on the one end of the spectrum like, oh crap, this happened, like I’m there yeah I’m so thankful. But, okay, I was expecting a little bit longer.

 

P: Yeah It takes a minute to sink in, right. So, definitely. I think we all imagine if we’re not educated like you are is the minute you try you’ll get pregnant because that’s kind of the line you’re fed in high school. Yes, and you just kind of travel with that even though it’s not necessarily salutely, and then how was the first trimester. 

 

A: You know I am so lucky with pregnancy and I almost feel guilty saying that now to an audience but again though I had low expectations I knew I could be really nauseous I could be really tired I think the life of the midwife affords you a different perspective on fatigue, you know, working nights, days weekends you know my sleep schedule is already erratic so I was pleasantly surprised. But again, I think that was my, my expectation going into it was like, oh this is gonna be really really hard and it wasn’t easy but it was less hard than I anticipated. 

 

P: Oh good, 

 

A: it was really lucky.



P: If only we could transport that set of expectations to everyone. I think it would be a much nicer ride.

 

A: It’s what I tell everyone, all of my patients, it’s the, you know, the best preparation for parenthood, like set your expectations low going into pregnancy and into parenthood and maybe you’ll be very pleasantly surprised, because, you know, I that’s really what I think has served me so well as both a pregnant mom, a pregnant surrogate and as an in motherhood is just keep those expectations low with you,

 

P:  I’m with you. And the second trimester is fine. You’re, you’re seeing a midwife for your care is that, how you are doing it?

 

A: yes,I just saw my colleagues so I knew I was going to give birth, where I practice, because I adore where I work and feel very comfortable and confident and care. I would just be on labor and delivery and pop over for a prenatal visit and, you know, the beauty of being a midwife is, you know, you kind of know what to expect in terms of prenatal care and I could really do the bare minimum. Still, be safely monitored, and same thing I just knew that I was lucky it was a healthy pregnancy and you know I didn’t need too much and to monitor it safely. 

 

P: That sounds awesome, so it sounds like a smooth ride into birth. 

 

A: Very, very, very, very, um, I again I feel guilty saying this out loud and I feel guilty with patients who are struggling with pregnancy because I am not one of those people.

 

P: I know, but you’re the you’re the ideal it’s fine to be the ideal right.

 

A: I know we’re fair enough and that’s right and when people come in and kind of give me, give me this guilty, you know grin at their prenatal visits and say, I feel really good. I’m like, that’s great, like I own it, that’s okay. It doesn’t mean something horrible is coming, you know you might you might just be someone who is really lucky and also works hard at it, I will say, I do believe that staying very active in pregnancy serves you well for a healthy pregnancy and a more comfortable pregnancy. And so I was very, very active and I think that that really helped get me through it, more comfortably.

 

A: So, let’s be specific about this, what kind of exercise, did you do and what were you comfortable with and how did it change

 

P: when I was in midwifery school, they knew research was coming out saying, you know, we’ve probably been putting far too many physical restrictions on pregnant women, as it comes to exercise and in this country we see way more gestational weight gain than is really recommended, and that has, you know, negative outcomes like your risk of gestational diabetes and hypertension and bigger babies. And so knowing that that we’ve been putting too many restrictions, the new norm kind of is if you safely did it pre pregnancy you can continue it in pregnancy, you know, with some modifications, listen to your body and so that’s what I went with so I was doing, you know, high intensity interval training, like I was doing like orange theory and my water broke out orange theory, 

 

P: oh my god like 

 

A: I yeah I felt great. I mean some definitely pubic bone discomfort towards the end and pelvic discomfort and I would have friends say they didn’t feel sorry for me because I was making it worse, Doing these workouts but I felt really good so I kept doing it and you know I would slow down but I ran the whole way through. I felt really really good. I attribute that to not really changing that routine all that much.

 

P: That’s super interesting to me because I went into it a runner, and I ran until like the third trimester and then it just felt uncomfortable.

 

A: Yeah, that’s what he told me about that I was expecting that, and I didn’t I think I found out later on that he was so low in my pelvis that there was probably nowhere else for him to go so I’ve been carrying him so low that I feel much different in the third trimester, but that’s what I tell people just, you know, one day running might feel great and the next might not for the rest of your pregnancy or maybe it’s just that day, but really just listen to your body, we don’t tell women anymore that you need to wear a heart rate monitor that you need to be able to talk while you’re exercising. The one thing that we really know now is you don’t want women overheating so I do tell people if hot yoga was your jam, it’s not going to be any more, but really I tell people just do what you’ve been doing don’t pick up high intensity interval training in pregnancy if you’ve never done it before, you know, but if you do CrossFit pre pregnancy with, with few modifications you can safely do it in pregnancy if you’re really just paying attention to how you feel,

 

P: that is super interesting and I feel like that story is changing right or has 

 

A:yes oh hugely, hugely enough. That’s again probably in the last within the last 10 years there’s been huge changes in what we can safely advise women regarding pregnancy and exercise

 

P: wait so I want to hear about the water breaking, I was going to take us to the birth like how do you know, today’s the day, This sounds like a dramatic how you found out.

 

A:  Well, so my son was, he was head down, and then we were doing this voting vaginal birth training within the organization for which I work and nurses and doctors and midwives were coming from all these different hospitals within the network to do you know this this training on promoting vaginal birth. And one of the trainings was focused on teaching nurses how to really feel a baby in the abdomen and how to safely monitor with limited intervention, so that we could promote mobility and labor and so I 30 or 31 Weeks was the belly model. So nurses can really put their hands on my belly and try to feel my son’s position. And at the beginning of the day the midwife who first assessed me said oh he’s head down, we didn’t know he was a he, but oh the baby’s head down. Great. And by the end of the day I think so many people have been poking and prodding because it was hard to feel his position at 30 weeks he wasn’t all that big yet. By the end of the day I remember the midwife put her hands on my belly and her eyes got wide, and I looked at her and I said, Who’s breeches me or the baby is breech, she said yeah and I thought well, not a big deal. We know 30% of babies are breech at 30 weeks so we don’t really worry about it. So I was doing, you know, spinning babies exercises every day to try to get him to turn, and he never did. So, we did everything I did all the things I went to acupuncture and moxibustion I did chiropractic care all the things I tell my patients, 

 

P: wait, what’s, what’s moxibustion? 

 

A: moxibustion is through an acupuncturist and it’s I can’t even explain it very well but it’s literally you light this thing you put this thing between the mom’s big toe and her second toe, and you light it and it’s supposed to help turn babies,

 

P: although I could barely pronounce it moments ago, I looked it up and moxibustion is a technique used in traditional Chinese medicine that uses heat generated from a burning herbal preparation to stimulate acupuncture points. It’s supposed to regulate meridian points and visceral organs, and it does this by increasing chi circulation and reducing chi stagnation–chi being the energy that circulates through the body at all times. It looks like this is a procedure that’s been around for 2500 years, has been used to cure all kinds of things, one of which is breech presentation. I found an article on PubMed from 2010 That looked at systematic reviews of moxibustion, and it gave a generally favorable nod to the ability of moxibustion to affect breech presentation, check out the show notes for details. 

 

A: And then we even tried to turn him in the hospital, via a procedure called an external cephalic version, literally, you know, putting an IV in giving a medication to relax the uterus and a physician tries to turn him manually, 

 

P: that doesn’t sound comfortable

 

A: as he wasn’t having it was horrible, it’s the worst of all anything through my labor versus, it’s the most discomfort I’ve ever felt. Because it’s so sudden, there’s no build like in labor, it’s just all of a sudden it’s this massive massive massive discomfort. I really train to be sort of mentally disconnected and be ready for that. And I, I did really well with the relaxation, but he wasn’t having a lot of, you know pressure on the placenta and on their cord, and so we watch to their heart rates very closely during those procedures and he did not like it. And so we had to abandon ship, we almost met him that day, via emergency cesarean because it was, it was 

 

A: Good Lord!

 

A: yeah it was that it was that intense…there is a different level of anxiety I think when you’re caring for a colleague and birth colleague. And I’ll never forget the two physicians were there and one was trying to turn him and the other was monitoring his heart rate and she is a New York provider, former New York provider, calm, cool and collected nothing browses her and I’ve never seen her that frazzle, she was just watching his heart rate and hollering out that that his heart rate had been very low and wasn’t coming back up so I thought we were going to meet him that day. Thankfully we didn’t. We decided then to schedule cesarean at 39 weeks which is, which is the procedure in our hospital and most hospitals when you have a known breech baby as you’re trying to find that sweet spot of scheduling a C section when they’re well beyond 37 weeks and nice and fully cooked, but prior to labor that’s the goal.

 

P: Why can’t we deliver a breech baby vaginally, they get stuck or what 

 

A: yeah so you know some places you can, our practice doesn’t do it, the risk is that the butt is usually smaller than the head. So if the butt comes out of the butt can potentially come out of a cervix that’s not fully dilated say seven or eight centimeters, depending on the size of that baby’s booty. And then the risk is what we call head entrapment, is that the head, the cervix is not dilated enough to let the head come through and the head literally gets stuck in the lower part of the uterus, it’s a true emergency, it’s something that if I’d had a baby before I would have been willing to maybe find a provider somewhere that does vaginal breech births because there are providers who do them, but usually women have to have had a baby before, and there’s lots of criteria like the baby has to be in a specific type of breech position not just butt down but in a position where like the legs are are up and crossed you know they can’t have one leg hanging down, they’ve got to be in a very specific position. So vaginal breech births do happen, but knowing the risk of it, especially as a first time laboring mom I just I was not comfortable with it and we don’t do them at my hospital and I knew I wanted to deliver it my practice,

 

P: if the baby isn’t yet breathing oxygen, what is, what’s the problem with the head being stuck for a minute while the cervix is still opening.

 

A: Good question. The risk is that it sort of like if, if anyone has ever come on and talked about a shoulder dystochia, you know the the head coming out with the shoulders getting stuck. Same thing with eventual breech birth is that, then the cord is getting buried we know the cord gets more compressed as the baby comes down the birth canal. And so you’ve got half of the baby out and so yes the baby is still getting oxygen through the umbilical cord, but it’s usually very limited, and the baby can only handle that for a certain amount of time. 

 

P: Yeah, I’m not sure I would be up for that sport either. Good lord

 

A: Yeah it was I’ve never seen a head entrapment I hope I never do, knock on wood, wherever I, You know where I’m sitting. It was just something where I think of the quotes I use with my patients a lot is like, I respect birth but I don’t trust it. I know that might sound really negative but I just was thinking, there’s a reason that the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists recommends cesarean for breech babies I trust the research I trust the evidence and I knew, you know, this was just the way my kiddo was supposed to enter the world and that was okay. I’ve tried everything and he wanted it this way.

 

P: So we’re headed to a C section, but I don’t usually associate C section with water breaking so I how does that work?

 

A:  Yeah. So again we scheduled the C section in my case was scheduled right around 39 weeks. And this, this shows what a bad patient’s medical providers can be at my very first appointment. When you’re sort of trying to estimate what the due date is oftentimes we go with the due date by the woman class period menstrual period, but if that very first ultrasound in early pregnancy gives a different due date. If the duty difference is greater than a certain number of days, we’re supposed to switch it to the, to the ultrasound, because these all fetuses regardless of genetics, and to measure the exact same from head to booty what we call a crown rump length measurement.

 

P: So am I. Okay, they’re all the same size of 20 weeks.

 

A: No at like six weeks, seven weeks at 20 weeks then genetics comes into play and babies have hugely vastly different measurements, but in very, very early pregnancy. That’s why we a lot of practices do a very early ultrasound is like let’s make sure this fetus is measuring, quote unquote, what we expect you know especially based if a woman has a very accurate last menstrual period, so that we can kind of just give them the most accurate and today possible. Okay, so the first appointment, I lied about my period because the, the, he was measuring, not as far along based as far along as I should have been on my period. Now it was still concordance, we should have started with my period due date, but the due date that I was that I could have if I went with my ultrasound was further and I didn’t want to be induced so at six weeks I was already considering I don’t want to be induced which is hilarious now in hindsight, the way everything went. So, my, my due date was like six days later than it really should have been on paper because I lied said oh my periods aren’t regular don’t go with that due date my periods were beautifully regular so I’m the worst patient, so my C section was scheduled at 39 weeks but in reality I was almost 40 weeks.

 

P: Yeah, 

 

A: so I’m went to Orangetheory and at the very end of the workout I did this big squat and my water broke and I knew it. It wasn’t like the movies, it wasn’t the big water balloon popping but I felt it and I was like, oh Gosh. Okay, and again it’s, it was so humbling and such a good lesson for me because I tell my patients like you just got to meet your labor and birth where it is and in my mind, all I’ve had to really forfeit was this optimal birth and I, you know, now it was okay I’m going to have a baby on this day and then lo and behold right things change again. So, I dragged my feet did not want to go in because I thought no no I’m not ready. I’m not ready today. Today’s not the day, any of our patients call, and our breach and their waters broken we tell them to come in right away. Because, again, sort of the risk with the head getting stuck in a cervix that isn’t fully dilated. Bottom sitting in the pelvis there’s more room, pelvis, for a bottom. And so what can happen is the umbilical cord, very rarely, but when there’s so much space that the water breaks the umbilical cord can slip out of the cervix in front of the body in front of the butt, and it’s called an umbilical cord prolapse, and it’s, again, a true emergency because that, that baby’s oxygen supply is getting significantly squeezed. Well, all of that knowledge went out of my head. In that moment, as a soon to be mom and I just thought, no, no, I’m not ready. I’m not ready. So I went home and I showered I called my, my kiddos father and he was at work and I said this happened. Don’t come home yet. I mean, all of the things that I would be mortified if one of my patients did, but I knew it was happening. And very quickly I started to have pretty uncomfortable cramping and still didn’t go in. So the worst patient.

 

P: And you know the cramping is his contractions. 

 

A: Oh yeah, I knew exactly what it was, I knew exactly what it was and I, I just couldn’t wrap my mind around it, I could not wrap my mind around like today’s the day, so I have so much more empathy for patients who have like true preterm births, you know, and thinking, I have another month as another two months, I can’t imagine what that must be like because I was full term, I was 40 weeks about and still it felt like, no, no, this can’t happen. It was, yeah, it was, it was, I was ridiculous. And then finally I get my husband got off the phone at work and told his co workers what was going on and he thought, well, she’s a midwife I’ll trust her and all his co workers asked, you know what’s up. And he told them, and they all said, oh my gosh get home right now, like Don’t listen to her get home, and he came and he could see I was uncomfortable with contractions, and he was like we gotta go. This is crazy. We got to go. 

 

So we went in and I think we got there around noon and my son was born via cesarean and it’s 2:38pm that day. Yeah, so, and But same thing when I got there, they put me on the monitor, you know, to watch his heart rate and watch contractions and the contractions always read differently on people doesn’t mean people feel them I was so people don’t look at the contraction monitor look at your patient Look at mom, you know, what is she, how does she look during contractions because you can see a lot of contractions via the external monitoring mom might not feel them at all or you can have a woman writhing in discomfort and the contractions aren’t picking up well, but the, the physician and the midwife who were on came in to see me and looked at the monitor and said Are you feeling these and I, again, I didn’t want them to rush. I don’t want them to feel panicked. Just like gritting my teeth and I was like no, not really. And they walked out of the room and I was like, Oh, this is terrible. I just…they’d had a busy day I didn’t want to be. I just don’t want them to feel rushed, I want them to have lunch, I wanted them to take their time So, anyways, it was, it was all very humbling, but we met him a couple hours after getting there. 

 

A: So now that he’s How old is he now. He is three, three and a quarter, he was 2018, so he turned three in June of this year. 

 

P: Now when you look back, do you think it was just, you weren’t in the mind space or like you were committed to the date in your head or like what do you think was going on there.

 

A: Yeah, I think I just thought, you know, my ever since I became a midwife I’ve envisioned my, my, perfect, you know, haha, vaginal delivery. My perfect vaginal birth. And so I thought all I had to give up. Is that vaginal birth like okay, I’m dealing well with the scheduled Syrian, that’s my first hiccup, right, that’s, that’s where I have to give up control. And so when this happened when a water broke well before the the scheduled cesarean and I thought, no, no, no, no, I’ve already given something up, I, you know, that date was it I wanted a little bit more maternity leave. You know I just stopped working, I’m not ready, you know, I didn’t have dog care arranged for my dog, you know, my husband was supposed to go up to Oregon to sell a house, he owned up there like the next couple days it was just the timing wasn’t right, which is so ridiculous, but I tell people all the time, you know, sort of, sort of like with when you’re trying to achieve pregnancy, it could take months, it could take up to 12 if you’re under 35 Well, it could, you know your water can break your labor could start anytime, ideally after 37 weeks and until 42 weeks like that’s all full time it’s a huge window and I know that, and yet ready

 

P: I mean it is it is a lot to give up right, there’s a yes, while you’re pregnant, there is kind of a daily push and pull in that you’re feeling new things you don’t feel well is this something, is it nothing… You’re in this kind of constant Flexi space for nine months. It almost seems like too much to ask to say. And guess what,

 

A: absolutely It’s so wild and I think I I still had no idea what it was like to take a baby home but I had an idea I knew my life was going to change in an instant. That day, forever, and I just didn’t feel ready for it now that you’re ever ready but I, you know, the curtains weren’t hung and, you know, like all these silly things that I was like no I was supposed to get that all done. I just didn’t feel ready, I thought, you know, six more days would make me more ready which is hilarious but I just wasn’t ready that day.

 

P: So what was postpartum likes instead arrived early at your doorstep. 

 

A: Yeah, again, I think my expectations for the C section are really low, thinking I’m going to be in a lot of discomfort so again I was really pleasantly surprised. Was it uncomfortable Yes. Was it awful No, I was lucky that I, you know, didn’t labor, I have a lot of empathy for women who do go through, like all of labor and then push for a long time and then have a cesarean, I feel like that is. I can’t imagine that would be like the recovery of both essentially or like women who have twins and one is born vaginally one’s born via cesarean I really can’t imagine. But it was fairly easy, I was really lucky with breastfeeding my son latched in the operating room, which was really great. We do skin to skin in the operating room at my hospital, we got to watch him come out like they dropped to this, you know, dropped a solid drape, there’s a clear drape so I could watch him come out, we didn’t know if he was a boy or girls, his dad could announce what we had, it was great. Again my expectations were really low so I thought, the newborn phase..it’s gonna be terrible and I kind of loved it but I think, again, I can’t preach this enough that my expectations were low and was it hard did. Are you sleep deprived, do your nipples feel like they’re gonna fall off, you know, yes, yes and yes but it was so much better than I expected.

 

P: That’s awesome. That was a smooth story and I kind of, since I know that you were a surrogate. I kind of imagined that it would be pretty smooth because you don’t go into that unless you had a relatively easy experience so yeah, why don’t you tell us about that. How did you walk into the surrogacy and, you know what had that always been your plan or

 

A: Yeah. You know I’m not a religious person, but I do think there are people up there, looking down on us and intervening in, in, in ways and at times that they need to. So, I actually had wanted to be a surrogate in my early 20s Before I met my son’s father before I ever considered children of my own and and quickly found out as you just mentioned that really no agency will take on a surrogate who hasn’t been through birth herself you know you need to prove that you can have a healthy full term pregnancy without major complications and a healthy birth. So I kind of gave it up and thought, Okay, well, I won’t be a surrogate probably, so I actually did egg donation in my early 20s, and there are at least two girls out there now that are have biologically mine that are, you know 10 Plus, it’s anonymous on my end, so I can’t ever ask details about them but I know that at least two baby girls were born, I’ve just always been really fascinated in infertility and, you know, if people really want to have a baby and I can help them do that. I would like to. 

 

So, anyways, I thought well, surrogacy won’t happen you know I met my son’s father had him, and then actually my husband and I decided to separate at the beginning of the pandemic, and it was very amicable we just, we have two jobs that lead us in totally opposite directions timewise, and we always joke that we would be to single parents in reality we were, because we’re ships passing in the night and it just got to be too much and we just weren’t good at being married so literally one day we decided or I mentally decided like okay I think we need to call it like on a Friday, I still remember it was a Friday and in May of 2020, and I have a colleague who I didn’t know that well but I knew that she was she and her husband were looking for a surrogate, and she couldn’t carry for a variety of reasons, and we thought she’d found one through an agency in Southern California, we live in Northern California. And, you know hadn’t heard anything in several months but I knew it could take a long time so I decided on Friday that I thought my husband I should probably, you know, decide to officially separate and divorce, and the next day at work, she and I worked together and midwives we rarely work together, you know, we’re usually passing off to each other so it was even rare that we were on the floor together at the hospital and she asked me how I was doing and I said you know I think I’ve decided to end my marriage and she looked at me eyes wide and I said no, no, it feels good to say it out loud, we’ve been working really hard, it’s just, it’s not working for us and so I think we need to change something up and I said how are you and she burst into tears and said, our surrogate fell through the one in Southern California. I just don’t think this is ever going to happen. And I looked at her and that moment they said, I’ll be your surrogate, and she, you know, rightfully so, looks at me and said you’re crazy. You just told me you’re ending your marriage. 

 

And I said no no I know, but I’ve actually wanted to be a surrogate for 15 years, you know this is not something, this is not me offering to pick up a shift for you right like I do know that, that this is a lot, and I know that I don’t know just how much it is, but this has been on my radar for a big portion of my life before I became a midwife and I could see that she kind of thought, okay, maybe, but still didn’t believe me, rightfully so. So I just said, Well, tell me what I gotta do you know what medical records do I need where do I need to send them so we got the ball rolling and funnily enough and bless my child’s father the following, when we finally decided like got together in person and decided that week that yes you know divorce was the best option for us. I looked at him, I said okay now I need you to pretend like we’re happily married so that I can we can pass psychological screening so I can be a surrogate and he just sort of shook his head and laughed and was like, yep sounds about right. like, didn’t skip a beat, because he also knew this is something I’ve always wanted to do and I’m so grateful to him because we do psychologists would never sign off on someone actively going through divorce to be a surrogate, and that’s one of the first steps is psychological screening, and he and I sat together on a zoom call you know happy couple so that was May of 2020 and then went through it takes a long time just to get all the screenings done, you know, pass the psychological screening the health screening, And so the transfer was not for another five months was in October of 2020 it just takes that long to get everything done, to lead up to that point,

 

P: and then you’re not donating an egg or anything, you’re just surrogate.

 

A: Correct, they already had embryos they had three healthy embryos and so there was not the discussion, you know, their plan was just to just implant one which I was very happy about to put in a singleton, but they still had two healthy embryos if needed. So yeah, none of it, none of this baby was is genetically mine it is their embryo

 

P: and how did that process go, How did the implantation go and how did the pregnancy go 

 

A: Yeah, the worst part about all that was actually just the injecting hormones, I had to give myself you know intramuscular shots every night, when you’re doing a frozen embryo, you have to do those shots for much longer. A lot of people they’re doing IVF themselves so they’re implanting their own embryo it’s usually what they call it fresh transfers, they don’t have to do the hormones as long but I had to do them for like through I think 12 weeks of pregnancy and so your, your sides and your, your butt gets so sore, but you know that’s really all I have to complain about the transfer was easier than like cervical cancer screening or what we used to call a pap smear it was so easy you know they put a speculum in they look at your cervix, they put a little tube through your cervix and it’s done it’s almost comically fast, and the, the intended. Mom, my colleague got to be there for that which we weren’t expecting with the pandemic so it was really awesome that she got to be there for more of it than we anticipated.

 

P: So it’s interesting to me that they give you all those shots, because I feel like the IVF protocol is usually for people who have infertility problems, which you clearly don’t have. So it seems like you have the chemistry to carry out a pregnancy, Why would you need. Why would you need all this other stuff

 

A: Yeah, that’s a great question. It’s because you know there’s so much as you are in the early phases of pregnancy so when they implant. The implant the embryo I forget how far you know, how many days old, that that embryo is, but my body, You know if you were going through a natural pregnancy, there’s so many hormonal shifts that your body’s already doing once it knows the sperm has met the egg that my body had not done so you’re really and they want to increase the odds of a successful viable pregnancy. So they’re basically boosting your uterine lining making it really nice and fluffy for an embryo to implant so lots of things that would have already happened in my body naturally had it known I was a few days pregnant, plus some, you know, to just really increase the odds that, that it was going to be a successful pregnancy because, you know, with, with say an early miscarriage which so many women suffer. It can be that their, their uterine lining wasn’t fluffy enough for their hormones were a little bit off, they didn’t have high enough progesterone, which is a pro pregnancy hormone. So that’s really what you’re taking so that your body is the the best and most ready vessel, it can be for this embryo,

 

P: that makes perfect sense that’s true that yeah, you’re a little bit skipping the line by by implanting an embryo.

 

A: That’s a perfect way to put it exactly so you’re trying to sort of compensate for that skipping the line. 

 

P: So how was that pregnancy

 

A: It was great. Again, you know, it was a little bit more uncomfortable I again I was really dedicated to staying really active because I was hoping for a VBAC or a vaginal birth after cesarean and that was something my, my colleague and her husband were totally on board with thankfully I mean if they’d felt more comfortable with the scheduled cesarean and I still would have done it, but I thought well you know let’s see if my body can do this, if I can do this because, since I had labored fairly quickly after my water broke with my son, I thought, I think I’m a really good candidate for a VBAC pending this baby is not breech and pending you know other other factors that can lead to a scheduled cesarean so I, even more so was super dedicated to staying really active, you know your uterus is a muscle and though there’s no research I kind of think if you have a healthy toned body and toned other muscles I always think maybe your uterus will be more toned, you know, and that’ll it’ll operate, you know, more efficiently in labor so I stayed really active and was really lucky again and felt great. I really, you know, I’m one of those annoying women that that really does enjoy being pregnant.

 

P: That’s awesome, that’s well and like, you’re the perfect person for surrogacy, so that’s awesome too. Yes. So take us through the day of the birth how the battle happened. 

 

A: Yeah, so, again, all of these things that I discourage my patients from doing in both birth stories but

 

P: this part got momentarily crunched up by a bad internet connection, but basically what Anne said was that she and her partner both have jobs with unforgiving hours without much flexibility you

 

A: our childcare setup is kind of piecemeal, you know, and we just, it’s, it’s build care needs outside of myself, my husband and mother who gets very kind of lays her out laser up and is very time specific, we actually decided to schedule an elective induction which I am so against an induction just to be induced but it sounds so silly but it, the timing was kind of perfect if we did it during this very specific window, and there are actually calculators that you can do to show what your odds of a successful VBAC are based on how far along you are in the pregnancy how old you are, how much you weigh for your height. And so we knew that if I gave birth before 40 weeks my odds of a VBAC were a little bit higher, so we kind of put it all together and we knew we were like we’re being the worst midwives that were thinking that you can control this but lets try it, and, but we both agreed that if the early phase of the induction if I, my body wasn’t doing anything we were both on board that we would stop it and wait for spontaneous labor, Just because she really wanted to support me with having a vaginal birth both both for having it and also knowing that as a single mom to, you know, the recovery of a cesarean was a little bit daunting, and so I was really hoping to have a vaginal birth, we were in agreement that if things were not progressing, that we wouldn’t do it. But they did. we got really lucky.

 

P: So you went in front of induction, and you had a vaginal birth.

 

A: Yeah so, with a cesearan, there are certain medications you can’t use with an induction so you’re really the early baseman induction if anyone’s had one or looking at one, in terms of knowing they’re going to have one coming up or considering one or being told they might need to undergo one, the cervical ripening phase is what takes the longest you know it’s not actually the painful contractions that are causing dilation that takes a while it’s getting your cervix ready to open, getting it nice and soft and thin, so that it can dilate later on. And when you haven’t had a previous uterine surgery, whether it’s cesarean or another type of uterine surgery, you can take an oral medication that helps your body kind of cramp and do that. That’s how most women experience early spontaneous labor, but when you have had a uterine surgery you’re limited to a mechanical method called a cook balloon or Pitocin through the IV if your body’s ready for Pitocin. And my body was not my cervix was definitely not ready for this induction, but you can put in this mechanical tube catheter called a cook balloon and you inflate one little balloon by the baby’s head and one balloon on the other side of the cervix and for 12 hours that stays in place to put constant pressure on the cervix to help it thin out soften and do early dilation. 

 

And so, again with timing this induction we chose the midwife who is supremely skilled at placing these cook balloons, and God bless her, it was the hardest cook balloon she’s ever done my body was so not ready she was sweating, we were putting her hair off, you know, like she was in a ponytail. It was the end of a busy shift she just she stuck with it and capacity me and I stick with it was very uncomfortable and I used nitric oxide which was awesome we have that at our hospital which is laughing gas they use it  very prominently in Europe but not as much here in the States, and usually could balloon placement I don’t know, three to five minutes and mine took like 45 to 50 minutes. 

 

P: Wow. 

 

A: It was, it was intense, and that was really because my cervix was really tucked way behind the baby’s head, because my body wasn’t ready and we just had to get me in all these different positions to make it work and I cannot sing the praises of my sister midwife my midwife colleague enough who stuck with it and put it in. So she got it in and the plan that can stand for up to 12 hours, and because it was so difficult again the intended. Mom and I agreed. Okay, if this comes out in the morning, and the next step was Pitocin there’s really nothing else to do after the balloon, because I don’t have the option of that oral medication to keep the early phase going, so that if my cervix isn’t ready for Pitocin we’re, we’re going to take the balloon out we’re going to go home, but when they put that in I started cramping a lot overnight and so I was hoping to get some sleep overnight but I was cramping really uncomfortably throughout the night, and I was excited by that but okay, this is triggering something, you know, this is, this is a good sign, and the intended moms was in the room with me she slept with me in case anything happened overnight we needed to meet him, you know urgently via Syrian or something. And I was so nervous about her getting sleep knowing that she was the one heading into the sleepless newborn days that I would just like bury my face in the pillow and like try to moan as quietly as possible so that she could sleep. I really didn’t want to know how uncomfortable I was, and I would like to occasionally get up and walk the halls, I just tried to be so quiet to let her sleep. So the balloon came out in the morning, and it had done perfect work, and you know the cramping and combination my body was totally ready and we were so excited that okay let’s, You know, let’s do this. 

 

So the balloon came out at seven or 730 in the morning on the 14, and they started me on Pitocin and the next step, knowing my birth history with my son how quickly I started you know strongly laboring after my Waterbrook was to break my water at some point. So the balloon came out I was actually pretty comfortable they started me on Pitocin I, you know we had some breakfast and then. It’s so funny I tell people write down their birth stories and I’ve already forgotten the details I’ll have to go back and love. Think they broke my water around 10:30am And the next contraction was a doozy. And then when my eyes just getting wide and like, oh, okay, I remember this, You know it got it got really intense really quickly. And I was thinking I was head on into it thinking I would probably get an epidural because I really wanted to be present for the birth, you know, and not to say if you don’t have an epidural, you can’t be present but having attended many, many births by now, there’s this look of a, if you look at birth photos you know on any blog, or social media, there’s this most unmedicated women who have their, their heads are back in the pillow, there’s a baby and they’re just kind of you can tell they’re just so relieved that it’s done physically so focused that it’s, I think the, the, a lot of women report they don’t really remember the baby necessarily coming out because they were you know so immersed in in the labor, so I knew I really wanted to be very present for that and I also didn’t want my, my friend to be worried about me like focused I don’t want her to be worried, focused on my discomfort I want her to midwife me I wanted her to just be a mom in the room, and focused on that baby coming out and if I was in the throes of unmedicated labor, you know, I knew that she would be more focused on me I didn’t want that for her or her husband, 

 

All of that being said now that I’ve experienced it. Regardless of wanting to be present for that moment when contractions started pretty early. I was like, Oh yeah, I’m going to get that epidural. So I did use laughing gas for quite a while, but it was so interesting that contractions felt so much different than I thought they would. So all of that now I talked to women a lot more like what did contractions feel like for you, because everyone I think feels them differently. My whole rim of my pelvis felt like it was going to explode, you know, It was just it was so filled in my abdomen, I felt like in my bones, it was just wild i i was just so thrown by it, and one of my best friends whose a labor delivery nurse, our sons are three weeks apart, she was my primary labor support and, you know, Just put her hands exactly where I needed them and the intended mom just said all the right things like we just have this seamless birth team it was, it was beautiful. 

 

And so my water broke I think around 1030 I’m so I’m so appalled. I don’t remember the time but I labor for a few hours and then I think I got the epidural around the 2pm, and it didn’t work for about an hour and so now to another level of empathy for patients when you’re just kind of can’t really move in the way that was working for you, but you’re still feeling pain it was so intense. And, and I remember the look on the intended mom’s face– she just felt so horrible, you know, like it was her fault or something and of course it wasn’t I just, I was trying to sort of grin and bear it like, I’m fine, but of course you can tell I was in a lot of discomfort, and I think for a lot of people, they might say the same thing that once you decide to get the epidural you probably actually wanted it like an hour before, so it feels so long until you’ve got that relief. It was finally got the relief. I did have the midwife who was on was busy and so I had my nurse. See how far dilated I was and I was nine and a half, like as soon as, so I had, I had labored quite quickly. And so our plan was I was going to get a nap because I had, you know unexpectedly been up all night, and I was going to send the parents out to get a breather, you know, and, you know, knowing they were going to meet their baby soon. And my friend said, oh, you know, you can start pushing even more not here and I texted her and I said, No, no, we’re not pushing for long. We’re not going to do this forever, We’re getting this baby out. So we started pushing at five o’clock and he was born into his mom’s hands at 545

 

P: Oh my god, that’s awesome….they don’t really know, muscular uterus.

 

A: Oh yes, yes, exactly. Yeah, that’s right I want to say that I was like, Do you remember how hard I’ve been training for this. We’re not doing this for a long, and again, so much empathy for women who do push for hours and hours and hours because I knew it would require everything in my body but again, until you’re in it you just have no idea how much effort it is to push the baby out, and I use the mirror because I was unfortunately very very numb with the epidural so I didn’t have that that rectal pressure that a lot of women experience, which I know is uncomfortable but I was kind of looking forward to that to help guide me. So without that I used, I used a mirror and that was a game changer so I know if women are offered that it can be, you know, it can be unnerving to see your reproductive system for lack of a better phrase or and your vagina, totally on display, but it’s so different when you’re focused you’re focused on that head right you’re not just looking at, oh how swollen are my labia or how bad are my hemorrhoids, it’s, it’s so motivating so something to consider if women are offered that by their nurse or their provider, a mirror really I think helped motivate you in guiding your forces, especially if you don’t have a lot of sensation of where to push.

 

P: So if you’re using the mirror because you can see the muscles tense and then you know the contraction,

 

A: I can see the head. No, I could see the head, like I could see where I was, I was pushing, when I was pushing quote unquote correctly, and when I wasn’t so I could just see his hair and I was like oh okay that’s the spot that’s the spot. And would tell myself like do that again do that again, because without that sensation it is so hard and I knew that for women who do have very dense epidurals, which is sometimes will try to turn them down or get them into other positions so that they can have more spontaneous sensation to push, but without that, you know, I saw I use the mirror and didn’t really need to feel that pressure because I could see him move and I would just remember like okay that’s your spot pushing that spot again.

 

P: So if you see him move then you know you’re doing it effectively. 

 

A: correct. And luckily he was nice and low before we started pushing apparently when I carry babies they hang out my pelvis super super low which is why my breech son would never turn because he was wedged in my pelvis and, and luckily he’s this baby started at a low stations ri My body had really helped to get down to where I can quickly see his head,

 

P: that’s super cool, I’ve never heard of the mirror before and I had awesome, I had two C sections and so I have no kind of experience 

 

A: Oh interesting, yeah, yeah, it’s something that a lot of patients are, they’re either totally for or totally not for, and I never push it on people but like if a woman’s been pushing for, you know, quite a while, the baby isn’t descending I’m like let’s just try it, and it’s crazy how often it can work really really well, because they just get that instantaneous feedback.

 

P: I would think for everyone who here feel very well have gardens, right, this is totally,

 

A: totally. And I, you know, I think people are just like, oh I don’t want to see all of that, staring right at my own vagina

 

P: a brief sidenote not here, I’m ending this conversation after I talked to him and listening to it again. I am a little bit surprised that women have a problem with the just comfort looking at your own anatomy seems like a learned behavior that is not serving us, so kudos to him for helping people with this.

 

A: tell them like it’s different, like you’re going to be focused on your baby, not, not your vagina, and, and it can work really well most women even if they didn’t think they want it, I find it very helpful

 

P: is super cool and so yes Warren and then does he do skin to skin with his mother.

 

A: Yeah so that was one of the first things that we talked about in the psychological screening was, you know, in the the psychologist that we talked with knew that we were both midwives and so she said you know this baby will not be my skin to skin with you, you won’t touch the baby, I said oh I absolutely I know that. And so there’s actually one of the nurses who’s in the room filmed the birth without us knowing, and she filmed it from like right behind my shoulder so you can really just see the intended parents which, you know, I watch it daily for a good cry, Because the Dad’s tearing up oh it’s so beautiful, until I’m getting, you know goosebumps just thinking about it, like knew the baby was not going to go to me, and I knew it was, I had such a different perspective on this pregnancy, you know I really sort of mentally trained like this is not your embryo, this is not your fetus. This is not your baby, and so I didn’t have that connection that I had with my son, you know, I, I knew I wouldn’t be inclined to reach down for him I didn’t feel like my baby ever, but he actually had the umbilical cord wrapped around his neck twice, which we didn’t expect because he didn’t show signs in his heart rate during labor which is usually how we kind of know an umbilical cord might be getting pinched somewhere. And so because of that, his mom needed to put him on my belly to unwrap the cord. You see my hands like fly up towards my head because I didn’t want her to think I was like no, no, no, he’s not supposed to be on me I was like kind of panicked, and she says like we’re just using you as a landing pad like don’t worry I knew that I wasn’t having this like, give me my baby you know I did. I just wanted to make it very clear that I was aware of where he was supposed to be but he went skinless he had a nice long umbilical cord so we could do delayed umbilical cord clamping but he could go skin to skin with his mom and oh it was magic. It was totally magic.

 

P: that sounds Awesome. That’s amazing. Well, I can’t even. I’m like the opposite of you and so in terms of birth and delivery and all that, literally, everything was hard or didn’t go right or whatever. And so I look at, but, but I look at people who are willing to be serious and I think like, I don’t even think you can imagine what you’re giving to someone else.

 

A: Yeah, and it was so enormous. And I think because it’s always been on my radar, I felt selfish like I get to do this you know I really, if anyone else did it, I would be you know is crazy and ever looks at me, the looks I’ve gotten. Okay, but, you know, one of the things when my husband I decided to separate I’m an age right. Don’t think I’ll probably have more children of my own, and I was sad not to be pregnant again I was sad not to try for a VBAC and experience labor and so, you know, selfishly, I was like, I need to do this like yes I know I do know I’m giving this family, this this couple, a huge gift but I felt like I really don’t. I went out to, because I got to experience and then I thought I would not get to again.

 

 

P: And the whole thing is amazing, I just, you know, in our case we had doctors who saved our child’s life, and I think, yeah, I think daily for sure. No idea how you change their lives, right. Yeah, absolutely. And the same is true for you though because it’s not only have you changed your sister midwives live and her husband, and that baby but everyone a baby touches, right, like,

 

A: yeah grandparent Yeah,

 

P: right. It’s just a million people.

 

A: Now that’s a good point that’s probably where I’ve been the most touched is, is there, the parents, families or friends reaching out to me and saying like you have no idea, it’s like, oh yeah you do forget that ripple effect like this little boy is in so many people’s lives. It’s not just them but that’s a great point because that is that is probably where I was most overwhelmed by my love is, is the love I received not from them but from other people around them who, who were so excited as well. 

 

P: That’s amazing. That’s so awesome, thank you so much for sharing both your story with your son and the surrogate story because they’re both amazing.

 

A: Thank you. It was, I feel so lucky and it is um, as a provider to now having been, you know, I say we just the introduction was good for me as a midwife to that I’ve experienced, you know spontaneously when then an injection into a vaginal birth and so it’s really, really ramped up on the view of the provider, just have this perspective that I would never give up and I’m so grateful for and talking to patients. That’s awesome. Yeah,

 

P: thanks so much for coming on and sharing your story

 

 

 

Episode 21 SN: Pregnancy & Birth when the Internet was a baby: Julie’s story

Today’s guest encountered her own set of surprises in pregnancy and birth. Because she gave birth almost two decades ago, she didn’t have easy access to the overwhelming amount of information that’s available now, we had kids before the iPhone was a thing and before the internet was the endless warehouse of information it is today, but she forged her path to parenthood, without immersing herself in the baby and parenting books that we had access to and learned a lot from the process itself. Another thing to know about Julie: she is a radio personality, which means, among other things, that she’s charismatic, she can talk and she’s got a voice like butter.

You can find Julie’s book, From Conception to Confusion, here

Breech position

https://www.verywellfamily.com/how-to-turn-a-breech-baby-2758443#external-cephalic-version

Breast milk during pregnancy

https://www.romper.com/p/does-your-breast-milk-taste-different-when-youre-pregnant-your-baby-may-notice-a-change-53748

Audio Transcript

Paulette: Hi, welcome to war stories from the Womb. I’m your host Paulette kamenecka. I’m an economist and a writer, and I took the path of most resistance on my way to becoming a mother of two kids.  Like me, today’s guest, Julie encountered her own set of surprises in pregnancy and birth. Julie and I are about the same age. We both have older teenagers, so we didn’t have easy access to the overwhelming amount of information that’s available now, we had kids before the iPhone was a thing and before the internet was the endless warehouse of information it is today, but she forged her path to parenthood, without immersing herself in the baby and parenting books that we had access to and learned a lot from the process itself. Another thing to know about Julie: she is a radio personality, which means, among other things, that she’s charismatic, she can talk and she’s got a voice like butter….Let’s listen to her story. 

Hi, thanks so much for coming on the show, can you introduce yourself and tell us where you’re from.

Julie: I’m really excited to be here, Paulette thank you so much. My name is Julie Davidson and I hail from the Midwest, and we’re talking birth stories today, huh?

P: we certainly are. I’m very excited, before you got pregnant, I think he just mentioned he had two kids so before you got pregnant with either of them. You must have had some idea of what pregnancy would be like, what were you imagining,

J: Don’t we all think we know exactly what it’s gonna be like, right, and I don’t know, I think you and I talked about this briefly in our correspondences, I wrote a book and I am telling you that not so people go by the book, but because I was blindsided. I thought this was going to be like. Easy peasy, and I said no, somebody needs to hip people the fact that it’s not textbook, right, and it’s not what you might think, you know I babysat starting when I was 11 years old. I came from a two parent household I went to college, 

I checked all the boxes that I thought would maybe help me get a leg up, so to speak, you know, when it comes to parenting again babysitting I came from a family of six, I you know 

P: Oh wow

J: I, yeah, I’m the youngest so it’s not like it didn’t need babysitting in my family except maybe for my, my nephews at some point. So I thought, I mean, how hard could it be right I mean there’s books there’s doctors there’s millions, billions of people in the world right, so it just can’t be that bad. I figured it was going to be–it’s not that I thought it’d be easy, I just thought it would be different than it was. And I intentionally also did not read pregnancy books because I didn’t want anyone to spoil it for me. Plus them, I don’t think I’m opinionated, but I wanted to have my own idea of how is this, you know how this is going to go down, but fortunately I actually was pregnant, concurrent with a friend of mine from college. And so she was a couple weeks ahead of me and so she would tell me certain things and I was like okay so I would look for this or look for that but I think it was especially the birth was much different than I had planned, even taking birthing classes was just, you know, I thought it was going to be a riot and it was, I mean, there was like homework I don’t remember exactly what it was but I remember thinking, oh shoot, we didn’t, we didn’t go through this part of that plan, you know, And you know as far as like the education piece, just kind of didn’t even pay attention to the part where they’re talking about, hey, if you have a Cesearan this is how this might go and guess who had a cesarean in the first time around.

P: Yeah. Yeah,

J:  it’s me, so that was that was rather interesting for me. I think if anything, I would want people to know, everybody’s experience is different, and if you feel nauseous and I’ve had friends who felt nauseous their entire pregnancy. That’s not necessarily a bad thing because maybe your sister didn’t feel nauseous and you do. It’s okay, you know, but I think you have this being growing inside of you, you feel like no, I’ve got to get it right. What does that mean, you know, what does that really mean. So,

P: I definitely put that to the test. So, I’m with you. So let’s start with the first one did you get pregnant easily.

J: No Yes, yes and no. I think one of the biggest things that I struggled with were people giving unsolicited advice before you get pregnant, you know when you’re dating somebody. It’s when you get to get engaged as soon as you get engaged when you get married when you get married, then it’s, what are you gonna have kids, when when when. And so the moment you start telling people you’re thinking about it I was getting all kinds of advice and I have not had the best gynecological history, meaning I had periods that were really long and then I would not have periods so I was, I just knew this was going to take years and people said, you’re on birth control, you’ll probably need to be off for you know maybe upwards of, 12 months and I thought, you know, this is this is going to be interesting. So, I include them in my book, is that even getting pregnant, like, obviously there’s a science to it, but it’s not just, hey let’s, let’s be intimate. Let’s make love, and, you know, have a baby but I was pretty intent on. Hey, this ovulation thing which no one, by the way, Paulette no one talks about ovulation, until maybe when you’re trying to get pregnant I didn’t, I didn’t find that out in like middle school and high school biology my girlfriends and I weren’t talking about it, maybe I was just in the wrong girlfriend group, right, but no one talks about ovulation. So when I finally realized what it was, I had it, you know down pat, I was like, Okay, it’s time. You know I really, once I was. And I remember it, we got to a point where my husband said, I might regret this. But I don’t think I can have sex for a really long time. You know, we were doing it that often because I really wanted to I was, I was in a hurry I wanted to get pregnant. I think it went off the pill and within three months, I was pregnant.

P:  Oh good, good so relatively quick. That was quick. 

J: However, we did six weeks in I did have a miscarriage and I was just I was just a deflated and I just thought, What did I do wrong, you know I must have done something wrong, and I knew I didn’t do anything wrong, but I still felt like. But, that being was inside me like how did, how could this have happened. And another thing when I was doing more blogging, that I every time I would write about miscarriage. I would get people messaging me and saying thanks, I had one too. Again, something we’re not talking about I’m not saying we need to go on Facebook Live and say hey I had a miscarriage, did you, but people really feel isolated and they feel bad and you know, maybe some a certain amount of depression. When that happens, and kind of loss, who do you talk to right, get in when you get a puppy. You’ve got a friend to call you know when you graduate from college, you’ve got family there for you, but when you have a miscarriage, it’s kind of like, oh, who can I tell, so you’re part embarrassed part, you know, and then physically you’re also not quite, you know you’re a little bit of a hormonal mess or you can be. So, we were excited, and then we weren’t. And, but we, you know, so to speak, back up on the horse, there’s probably a bad expression to use but 

P: Your husband won’t mind. 

J: No, he won’t thank you very much. And then we kept at it, and I honestly can’t remember exactly how long but I think within a few more months, I was pregnant again. And then we’re pregnant with our first, our first son who is now 18 years old. 

P: That’s awesome. And what was that pregnancy, like,

J: you know, you hear stories from people saying, I’m craving this I’m craving that and that’s a crock Don’t be crazy or anything, you just, You’re just hungry because you’re just because you can be bright or whatever cravings are real, those cravings are so real. Chili Cheese dogs. Those were so good and they’ve never been so good since. Chili Cheese dogs and bacon cheese biscuit. And whatever you call about the cravings were, don’t get me something else like don’t just give me a bagel and cream cheese and tell me it’s bacon egg and cheese biscuit. If I asked for bacon, egg and cheese biscuit, could you please give me a bacon, egg and cheese biscuit, and they weren’t like I didn’t have anything in the middle of night, nothing like that no pickles and ice cream, but my husband was definitely going on some runs and it seemed like that was done after the second trimester.  I’m not a huge fan of vegetables. I forced myself to eat broccoli, I was walking I was intentional, you know that this kid was gonna if they’re gonna have bad eating habits. Okay, minus the beginning of cheese biscuit. They weren’t gonna it wasn’t gonna be my fault, so I tried to walk I tried to eat as much broccoli as I possibly could. I stopped, I have ethnic hair, I’m African American and so I was relaxing my hair up until I got pregnant, so I was putting chemicals in my hair and I talked to my doctor after the miscarriage and I said, Do you think that this could cause a miscarriage and he’s like no I don’t think it would cause a miscarriage, but there are other things that it does to your body so I think if you want to stop now may be a good time. So I stopped and I haven’t gone back and never smoked. I mean I smoked previous to being pregnant like casual and socially and I’m pretty social person so that ended up being more smoking than anybody should ever do, but just completely stopped that no, no soda, while I was pregnant, 

P: Yeah

J: coffee, you know, none of that so I, I followed some rules or things I thought were, you know, helped me be as healthy, you know, for the baby, and just really, I just remember being really tired. Yeah like so tired, thinking wait a minute, we actually have to legally work when we’re pregnant, like, this is how am I going to, how am I going to, how am I going to do this, and my own physician told me when she was in medical school, my OB GYN she said there was no mercy. She said we had to you know go along with the rest of the group pregnant or not and so I now have much more empathy, you know for for pregnant people I’m I’m holding that door I’m getting your groceries I’m doing whatever I can because I just it was good sleep, it was good tired but you said I still had to go to work so that that’s what I remember most mainly about the first trimester. 

I’m a nervous person. And I think through the second trimester, I was, you know, just getting everything in order, and probably on the range of, you know, OCD and I mean that truly, and I wanted everything to match. Cougars are crap with the baby, because when they puke, that you know you. You’re not thinking thank goodness I got a matching swing to the you know the pack in play here 

P: but it’s the it’s the only thing you can control. 

J: You know what, thank you. Thank you for saying that, you’re absolutely right, is only thing I can control. So I remember we had just gotten some cool furniture and I was like, Oh, we’re having a baby and now this cool furniture is gonna be interspersed with all this kid stuff, grateful. I’m grateful. And these are, when I say this, I also understand, I am coming from a place of like, first world, you know,

P:  yeah, yeah, 

J: you know, mentality. But nonetheless, everything was kind of a sage green checkered color the swing the pack can play the baby, the infant carrier and the stroller and I just thought this is, this is great, we’re so set, you know, so it’s constantly getting the house ready, and also the car seat, you know we have Children’s Hospital here in Milwaukee, and actually made a really good friend there who was kind of the head of the safety division there had to make sure that well in advance that car seat was in correctly because I remember hearing a lot of very smart people say, car seats are really, really tricky like it’s not just popping in, like, you can, 

P: yeah, yeah 

J: your kid is rolling around and I know that I rolled around, probably as a kid, but we know that that’s not safe, like that’s not that’s not the way to do it. So you know getting things like that in place the baby’s room, and then you’re gonna have to worry about what if the baby doesn’t like me. What if he comes out. Just 

P: Julie all I can say is I’ve known you for 20 seconds and that seems impossible to go let’s forget where we’re going. 

J: But I remember thinking, what like what is this child is comes out I was like, like I’m not. No, I don’t. And so there were these, you know these anything people have these a lot like your self sabotage and, yeah, that wasn’t long lasting, but it was, it was definitely there and we did decide to find out as much as I think life has so few surprises. Why would you find out the sex of a baby except that you do like to control some things and you might want to know, and I believe it was when we’re having one of the sonogram,

P: yeah the 20 week ultrasound? 

J:  Yeah. and I think the tech was just getting annoyed because my husband was like well we should find out and I was like no, I don’t know. And then he said no we probably shut down like but you know we really don’t want to. And my husband said, Oh, it’s better to girl, I bet it’s a girl. And then the tech said well it’s a good thing you’re not a betting man, and it’s fine if you don’t really I mean, honestly, it’s like come on speed it up I’ve got other patients to see and you’re having a boy and, you know for planning purposes. I don’t get caught up in the pink and blue but I didn’t want to start off, you know, necessarily putting our son in a dress if he wants to later I don’t have a problem with that and I mean that sincerely but it was kind of helpful, like, 

P: Yeah, 

J: who wanted to get things for us. I had some worries and just kind of getting things together and organized through that second trimester third trimester. I don’t know if it’s hormonal what kicks in, but something protects you because I, I’m gonna tell you right now I am a wuss. And I can take care of cuts I can deal with throw up if I absolutely have to like nobody’s around within 20 miles, but I remember, before getting pregnant being really petrified of birth, like this is gonna hurt, I’m going to die, or I’m going to pass out i just i That’s all I could focus on was the pain. Right, and that’s that’s kind of how I am and that’s not good, I realized that come third trimester,and maybe because I was just so physically uncomfortable. Yeah, I was I was okay. Any day now just, just let let this child, you know, so that last trimester, you know, the first trimester, you wonder when you’re going to start showing. 

P: Yeah, 

J: because you kind of want to tell people we’re praying or pregnant and he and I want to also say when we had the miscarriage I wanted wanted to know should I tell people we’re pregnant the first time should we. And I did I have a big mouth surprise and so I ended up having to tell a lot of people that you know that we had a miscarriage and so this time I don’t I still don’t think we waited any longer to tell people, that’s just, that’s just how I spent the first trimester, wanted to be a little bigger. And, you know, showing off and buying maternity clothes because it was fun, you know, you get to go to your special section. 

P: Yeah, yeah 

J: get to register for baby stuff, and that cuteness kind of wore off by, you know, I’d say month seven. 

P: Yeah, yeah, 

J: you know, but what other time of life can you consider being larger than your standard size queue, because right now I’m not my standard size now. I’m also not feeling so cute but still that those last few months, I was just feeling, you know, big, and ready, and not as nervous, just because I think I was more focused on right now, when’s this gonna happen. No, how’s this going down, right at that point I’m adopted. So I don’t have any birth stories to compare like biologically, some people say oh my mom went through this so I’m going to, I didn’t know any of that at that point. So, everything was just kind of like, you know, bring it. And I want to say he was early oh we had some Braxton Hicks, or they like false

 

P: it’s like contractions but you’re not you’re not progressing toward labor.

J: Yeah, though they need to outlaw those, because when you start getting something in they’re like well yeah they’re kind of contractions that I’m packed, I’m ready, like can you just reach up there, just grab him, you know, so I was having some Braxton Hicks and then they said, No, you’re this is you’re not near it. Another thing people don’t really talk about. Maybe I should have read books but I didn’t want to, is that mucus plug. First of all, it’s that sounds disgusting it kind of sounds like what clogs up your drain right like 

P: it definitely needs better marketing for. 

J: Right, exactly. And I remember hearing about the mucus plug well i When mucus plug came out, I was, I was never so excited to have some bodily fluid exit my body I don’t think ever. And so when that happened, it was kind of, you know go time, and we went to the hospital. And I was so excited cuz I’m having contractions and I’m thinking this isn’t bad. What are people complaining about like this is nothing. And we got there and the reason it was nothing is two centimeters or something and I got a younger nurse, a less experienced that younger but she was not as experienced so she’s doing a thing with her hands and 

P: wait, one second….where are we in your pregnancy…was it 30, did you say is it like 38 weeks?

J: I think it was like two weeks early. Yeah, two weeks or two weeks early, so not super early not not overly concerning, but I was mad because they sent me home. And they said the nurses, you know, she’s a little newer and you’re not dilated enough I’m like, but I’m packed, I’m here I’ve got really good insurance, just you know what, yeah, literally the car seat, all of it. they said, Oh, you need to go home so I’m now mad I’m like, oh, And so now like okay, every I’m hypersensitive to everything can happen now, do I have to wait on you know, immense pain when the I  started bleeding. I thought, oh okay this this is definitely this is definitely not good, not, not heavy bleeding but spotting. 

P: Yeah, 

J: I don’t think this is part of it so this is now I’ve gone in, they’ve sent me home, that next day, responding so I go to my doctor. And I’ve known her now probably for just round up to 30 years, I mean she’s she’s fabulous.  I go in and she’s, you know, got me on the table and she says, When did your water break. And I’m literally thinking to myself, I’ve been pissing on myself for three months, how, what do you want to break like what what is, how would I know like nobody there was no alert to say, you know, water breaking water, I didn’t know what I just said I sometime in the last nine months I really didn’t know how to answer that. And I, you know, I said what what do you think, and she said, Well, he’s breech. And he was, butt first, which isn’t that a way to enter the world, you know, look at me folks as out first. Remember I was afraid this kid wasn’t gonna like me. And so she said very little fluid flinch when I even think about her saying this and she said, I don’t feel comfortable reaching up and turning up, like what do you do that with like a plunger, like, 

P: a little unclear, 

J: you know, like I yeah maybe we shouldn’t be sticking any hands up there right now.

P: Here’s some details about the breech position. It happens when the baby’s feet limbs or butt is basically cervix is further head and breech babies can be delivered vaginally, but it looks like there are risks to the baby associated with this kind of delivery and often a C section is recommended. It’s common for a baby in reach position to flip before delivery, only about three to 4% of babies are in breech position by 37 weeks. Although there are a number of different ways to try to get a baby to flip one that’s been studied is external cephalic version ECV. It involves a doctor trying to manipulate the baby’s position by pressing on the pregnant woman’s abdomen.

J: So she said we need to do a C section and at that point, I just remember her talking and it was kind of like going on I did it in the six o’clock office did it doctor and just, I didn’t, I couldn’t focus. Then I said wait what are we, what’s happening. And she said, you need to do, cesarean. I said, Well, who’s on call. I didn’t want anybody else. 

P: Yeah, 

J: and the perfect thing and she said I’m on call. And this is wonderful. She later told me that she was concerned for my anxiety level because she the due date, she was planning to be out of town. She knew that, You know, I probably follow her, right, like hey, sorry about your Disney plans, 

P: Yeah, knock knock

J: It’s me. So the reason my contractions weren’t the kind where you scream, is because I didn’t get to full on contractions cuz I remember thinking, This is bad. I am really amazing, I am tough I am strong. I could do this all day long, so we spent the better part, I think you the Cesarean was planned for 630. So I think about four o’clock we’re in the hospital and calling people and telling people and, you know, that was really exciting, it really was like I’m gonna have a baby, and you know everybody’s saying I’m gonna pray I’m gonna come up there and just I just feel emotional sorry. Just amazing. 

P: That’s all right. That’s awesome. 

J: Wow, I don’t know where that came from, but it was just it was more beautiful than I ever thought it just, I mean, on one hand it was kind of, it was very scary, because I’m in a room and you know people have their faces covered up, I can see my doctor, but I remember shivering, quite a bit because it was cold in that room. So I’m on my back and they’re prepping me for the series and then. So my knees are up, legs are spread open, and if I’m not mistaken, and this, this, annoyed me is my arms were down, like they kind of had me restrained, I think that what they would do with everybody but I just remember not being able to like move around and you know they’re sharp instruments, I think that’s a good thing. So, I just remember them, kind of, minute by minute telling me what we’re doing, just saying, you know, we’re almost done. Now we’re at the second layer and I’m like layer like 

P: this is getting graphic. 

J: Yeah, it was like yeah layer like this like a seven layer like a salad like what how many, and then you just wish I wish I paid attention to biology or in that pregnancy class maybe a little bit, because I didn’t again I didn’t pay attention to the Cesarean part because, I wasn’t gonna have one right yeah, there was no pain I felt really no pain I was pretty much numb. And I just remember, okay you know we have them and I gonna try not to lose it and they, you know, they held them over me and you know most babies because they come out of the vagina or I believe most babies do right, they have kind of that conehead that kind of, you know. Noooo, perfect, perfect shape perfect color. And I just remember looking at them, and they had to hold them over me and I’m like, oh there’s a baby in the air. They just held it because I could not sit up and just said, he looks healthy. And I just remember, you know, I looked at him and he just great, which of course the beautiful month, but it was, I was scared I was like, Well, you’ve just got here do like you really shouldn’t be upset, and then my thoughts turned to, They said, Well now we need to take in for testing, you know, just honestly, I don’t even know what they do, you know, I think they tested for hearing and heart rate, you know, just, yeah, I don’t know but there’s probably a million like a checklist that they have I’m sure there is. And I really wasn’t privy to that but I remember, like, where’s my kid. What are you doing, where you going, and where’s my husband and he said, I’m right here. I said okay, and I said well you go with a baby so I will and I was just I was so afraid that I can’t get up, I now can’t touch my baby. Where’s my baby. Where’s my baby going I mean that wasn’t fantatical about it like I was fairly calm but at least in my head I remember thinking, Where is he so me back up all those layers, and I get wheeled into what I think would be like a recovery room and a waiting room. I still haven’t seen my kid. My husband comes in. My friends come in. And I think, like, what, there’s just so you know there’s nothing wrong to baby, there was nothing wrong, it was just doing whatever they do with babies when they don’t give them back to mom, because they had to run tests. And so, I’m a little loopy, because they have you on something.

 

And remember saying, so I’m African American adopted by a white family it is important because I said something to one of the nurses about. I was expecting my brother to come see me. And I said, Oh, yeah. My brother’s coming he’s got blond hair, I’m only telling you that and maybe in case you see him and she said well, actually, he’s already held the baby. So I’m like, Okay, folks, is there really a baby, because apparently everybody seen this child. And I want to really make sure there’s a baby, and she said yeah he came in at the right time. I think my husband was with our son, Myles is our son’s name. My husband Charles I believe that the baby and then handed them, handed him to my brother or the nurse to I don’t know if my brother was like, they might need to tighten security you know because he said I got to hold this baby pretty quickly but, you know, and I wish I seen this my brother said, I guess he started crying, immediately we held him he’d never he’d never held such a tiny being his life, 

And now if you put the my brother with my son, my brother would have to look up to my son because my son is about six six, you know, six foot one and then I remember being happy that my friends were there but just some of the things that they give you just not filled out completely, they’re one of my friends said you know what, why don’t we leave so the first time you meet your baby you can be alone. And I was like thank you because I didn’t want to tell anybody that yeah, you know, and then I remember there were some antics with one of my friends with her husband whom they’re, they’re now divorced and he was kind of being as normal and it just goes. It’s funny how life still happens, right, like all this other background noise, and I was like, I just want to see the baby. 

And then they brought him in, and I don’t even honestly remember my first thought I had already seen him but then I got to hold him. And, you know, you’re just like, wow, I’ve been planning for this and it’s like, wow, you’re here, you’re really here. And after that, It quickly turned to how to breastfeed him and I had that was probably the most difficult thing with him is breastfeeding him, which you think are could this be I’ve had boobs all my life this is what they’re for. Come on, let’s go you know it’s not for ladies night anymore now it’s for the baby right, and it was difficult because he would, he was not latching correctly, it wasn’t his fault. The nurses were always around me, trying to get these nipple shields and just getting it right and I was able to give him milk but it was, it was wrong, the way it was happening was wrong because my head hurt intensely from my neck up to the top of my head. And so they tried, you know as best as they could. 

Luckily a few days after I got into the hospital, my sister in law who is a an OB GYN nurse practitioner and lactation consultant. 

P: oh my G-d

J: She left her family and permanently. She, she, my brother had three boys, and she left them and came to take care of us I think for the better part of a week or more, I don’t know it might have even been two weeks it was, it was like a godsend because my husband’s mother’s passed away. My mother is not living and so we’re just we’re going to do it on our own she offered and we’re like, oh this is golden. Yeah, but in the hospital I had problems nursing, and I was kind of freaked out. I mean when I was coming out people in the hospital, it seemed like for ages, and now it’s like, treat them in street em… and I think to maybe day three, I want to say with this this area near a little more, I think there’s three days, and I remember feeling kinda weak being kind of like, Oh, what am I going to do, how do I do this, and I said to the doctor, can I stay another day. I said I’m not ready and usually that wouldn’t be like me I would be really tough and I can do this, I got it, I wasn’t feeling tough. I was feeling really freakin scared, and she said, I don’t, I don’t know if you can usually four days is the max but she said let me check your insurance. My husband has a really really good insurance and so I get to stay another day, 

Our son was born in Friday the 13th think you know superstitious until you have to have a child on Friday the 13th And I thought, Well, isn’t this interesting, not a lot of people up here in the in the, the baby Ward on Friday the 13th as if they’re all closing their legs just wait until the 14th or push it out and let’s well so I thought, I remember hearing him just the nurses would bring him down, he’d be screaming, you know, it’s feeding time, like we’re all the other moms, so where are the other babies, I’m sure there were some I just didn’t pay attention to that so I got an extra day. And, and it was, it was time for me to go. And I’m sweating. I don’t know how much is hormones and how much is, I don’t know. and getting dressed.

and just feeling that sad, just a little bit scared, yeah you know like, I’m supposed like you’re getting give me this baby like, do I need to I need to sign something. Do I have to get a certification, like, should I take another class, 

P: it seems way too easy right when you walk. 

J: Yeah, like, I mean this whole time, this is what, you know, women’s bodies in part, are made for, but all of a sudden I was just, oh no about this and so we went down and my husband was going to go get the car and drive it up and I just remember I couldn’t even get him in the car seat I’m like oh my gosh I can’t you know the straps and I’m already like I’m losing it. So I finally got him in there. And then that unsolicited advice starts, I got enough unsolicited crap. When I was pregnant, and so this older woman, she looked at me and she said well how do you think I felt I was like oh no, no, what do you 

P: what does that mean, right, and she said, 

J: My baby was colicky till he was six months, years, six months old and I was like, Oh, I’m sorry. I just thought, what a nice way to send me off from the hospital, 

P: I totally agree. I totally agree…totally wacky…got any good car accident stories? because we’re about to get the car 

J: and that’s another thing the whole car right that’s another thing. I just, I just realized how bad of a driver everybody in the entire world was. 

P: Yes, totally. 

J: And I kept thinking why is this car so close, and should my husband be breaking right now. Are they did you put the blinker on, is it, did you check me just literally and it’s about a 20 minute drive from one side of town to another, and we made it home made it home, and as you’re putting him in his crib and I’m like, good Lord this crib is huge. He just looked like a little peanut in there, and we waited for my sister in law a lot of come a couple days later because we were very nervous that we weren’t feeding him enough, and so I was, I would talk to my brother and he’s like, maybe you can give them, like, just regular like, you know, formula, and she’s like, don’t tell him that. And he’s like, Are you afraid that you’re not good that he’s not going to gain any weight, and I said yeah, and so we went to the doctor said okay if your sister in law is coming that’s fine I mean we were feeding him, it just wasn’t the amount we wanted to but as soon as she came in, I call her the nipple whisperer.

She came in 

P: that’s some title. 

J: Right. So you went to school and what do you do I’m a nipple whisper,

P:  I hope that title comes with a  sash,

J: it does it does she just doesn’t do remember that. And so she came in, and dropped her bags you know her husband went to the airport, she came in, and you know you have to understand she’s an oldest child and she’s very, very smart, very caring, very giving and very knowledgeable with this this is her knows what she’s doing and she said okay, like what what’s going on. She’s like, shut up. She’s like, get him on this side. He wasn’t rude and we should, but she was like, Okay, we’re not just here to watch you know HGTV, we did do a lot of that but at first we had to get the baby to latch. And then she said, Excellent. And I was like, what, what, she’s never even seen my boobs like how are you. And she said, Okay, let’s take them off, put them on the left side, you know, do whatever she needed to do and, and that was it. I mean and I just I couldn’t, I could not have done it without her. There was absolutely no way because it wasn’t, we weren’t gonna hire anybody and I wasn’t gonna keep running back to the doctor’s office, I would have caved and I thought this is the one time I can really start them out right, I mean, for all the good things that breastfeeding has and I just I cannot thank her enough. 

A few months later, another sister in law came to town and I wanted to be tough, I had to go give the baby, you know, give him his shots. And she said, Do you want me to come with you. No, no I’ll be fine. I’ll be fine. Oh my gosh, those baby shots.

You know they’re trying to kill my baby. I mean obviously they’re not, but it was, you know, so people are always, you know, very happy to help and, you know, reach out as they could, but most of my family doesn’t live here in town, I have one brother and sister in law. So that was that was my first was my first birth story. 

P: That’s awesome and you know it’s a steep learning curve right is it is, it’s a ton of on job training that you like. Luckily the baby doesn’t hold it against you. You don’t know anything right there’s just, there’s no, I remember the exact thing you’re describing leaving the hospital thinking you’re sending me home with this child and you’re imagining I know what I’m doing or that I’m responsible and who could say, right, you know i There’s no proof of that every plant has died under my care. So it does feel like a giant leap of faith to

J: it’s huge. 

P: Yeah, leave the hospital.

P:  It’s so huge, and I didn’t think that going into it, it was just really those final hours and then upon arrival at home. And I think there’s just a mixture of it I think there’s a lot to be said for your biology, right, like, your body has just gone through this in hormonal change, and when you left. Leave. Three people you’re returning your I return three people you know and so that was, you know, and then I was probably not too kind to the dogs was afraid the dog would get too close and it just, it was, it was a little, I was a little bit of a hot mess, and I feel like, each time I had a child, I feel like it took me about six months to really fully engage with the world in a fairly normal way, I think some people jump back in more quickly, but I just took me a little while, I was also the person who didn’t want to get a babysitter, like, ever, ever, ever, ever. 

And then finally we got a babysitter. I made it. I made it the first I think it was six months old, she was awesome. She went to the University of Marquette University here in Milwaukee, she’s a nursing student and happened to date one of my nephew’s at one time it was awesome, but I was sweating bullets. 

P: Yeah, Yeah, 

J: everybody, everybody, everybody’s enjoying their dinner, and I’m getting up from the table to make a call to see, you know, the baby, the baby fart, you know, did he is he sleeping what foot what’s he doing, you know, is he going and I probably should have, you know, trusted other people similar to that but I just, I didn’t. So, 

P: that is, oh I think an experiential thing, right, it’s hard to know ahead of time and I think it’s probably best to be consistent with your feeling so it sounds like he did have a right 

J: I did, for sure, for sure. 

P: So the second one comes pretty quickly. What is that planned or 

J: yeah you know it’s funny and some people might not appreciate this, people would look at our boys because they’re so close in age and there’s, they would say, Irish twins. And I would say no African American twins and that never really goes over very well because they’re like well what is that. 

P: Oh my god. That’s so funny.

J: It just makes people feel really awkward and it wasn’t intended to I was just trying to, you know, I was Irish twins to under 12 months. Yeah, yeah, that’s a, that’s a really special vagina right there’s all I can tell people, I just I can’t even imagine their data how that happens, but I know how it happens. So our boys are 16 and a half months apart. Every month counts, I mean literally like I think 16 and a half would have been easier than 15 and a half would have been easier than 14 and a half. It really was planned. You know, we knew we wanted to expand the family, and I think it was 34, the 3436 34 I don’t, I don’t know how long it was, but we thought why not like we’re already down on sleep. 

P: Yeah, yeah

J: we’ve got everything we need. And let’s do it and I remember. We weren’t trying all the time we just knew that we weren’t going to, you know, start up a bet on birth control. One of the signs was our oldest when he was nursing he pulled himself off one day, and he just kind of poked my breast and he was like, oh, like, This doesn’t taste right so I have a feeling that when you get pregnant, you know, something may have made the milk taste a little differently.

P: So, technically speaking, I don’t know how this question has been answered, but according to numerous sites on the Internet, the flavor of breast milk does change when you get pregnant because of hormonal shifts, and it may become less sweet and a bit saltier. 

J: We got pregnant very easily I should say, I again kind of had those thoughts. What if, you know now what if our oldest son who now completely bonded with right. What if our oldest son, mad at me. And I like really lady, you live in a lot of what ifs and what about, but I was concerned because he was going everywhere with me, I was hanging out with him during the day, you know my husband would come home and he would you know take over, but during the day he was going with me we owned a rental property he was going over there if I had to clean him out or show a property, do the grocery shopping, I didn’t even my friends had their own kids, so I really didn’t have backup it’s not a boohoo, it’s just you know what, you know, It is what it is. And so I was really concerned about that, which never, it didn’t manifest everything was fine. And that birth was so you know when you have a C section, it’s risky to have a vaginal really know that at that time, I didn’t, and I’m glad I didn’t because I would have freaked out. Yeah, but the one thing that should have, you know, been a nod to that is the doctor said okay we need to have him delivered at a hospital. Your first son because if something happened to I think it’s like your uterus can collapse or something, you know, we have to be somewhere else, like, things can happen with a vaginal after cesarean, and you need to be prepared. It’s weird to go to a different hospital and we knew that in advance, it wasn’t like we switched during, you know, the birth. That was real birth.

That was the one that was the one 

P: more respect for contractions coming from that experience

J: our oldest was always an early riser, so it was like okay, who’s gonna put five on Saturday morning. Okay, I’m praying that you when he got up, either Saturday morning, you know, five, I think, and he screamed really loudly we both remember he wasn’t feeling great and he screamed. And after that, husband just said, I’m gonna take you mommy’s looking pretty intense here and said, I think he needs to just just go downstairs and watch cartoons, and then all of a sudden, I let out a scream moves on, it was very, it was almost like I couldn’t control it, it wasn’t the pain. It was my water broke. It really breaks.

It’s, it’s, it, it was like, Oh, that’s…I’m glad I was at home because it was you know, a substantial amount amount, and I immediately started having contractions I think they started after the water broke.

And those suckers hurt, and we’re remember I’m the one who couldn’t, you know, people are like no could focus on mountains or an ocean, or listen to your breath. We don’t live by mountains, we don’t have an ocean. Yeah, and I don’t even know if I’m breathing, so like I all I could think of was the pain. And again, it’s the same side of town, we have to go on for this delivery, and my brother lives on that side and was going to come watch our older son, and I just said, Call, call my brother Jack. If he can’t make it here by X amount of time we’re taking our kid with us. 

P: Yeah, 

J: and Jack is a filmmaker, and so he directs commercials and all kinds of things I don’t even know all the things he does. But I say that because he will be on a shoot. Yeah, to what you know 11-12 At night when when places close and I think he had just gotten home at midnight, and maybe slept, you know, went to sleep at two and here we call him. He made in record time and this is February, you know, it’s to be careful on the roads in Wisconsin in February, and he made it, and I just remember being really relieved and just kind of like here’s the kid stuff just, you know, not my normal like over I’m sure I’ve written like I probably had three notes throughout the house on what to do and where to find stuff but I knew he was capable. 

And I remember the pain was so intense kicking a cabinet at home like I was thinking it was like a nightmare, you know, I remember my brother saying to our son. Oh and mommy’s kicking things let’s go over here. I mean, I wasn’t hitting anybody, but I was just like, I was I needed an outlet, and it’s difficult because, as you can tell I’m fairly comfortable talking and these, these nearly stopped me from talking, and I thought well, this can’t be this. This world can’t have me not talking. So, we get to the hospital, and I’m just in so much pain and I’m petrified because I had not been through this before this is birth but this is birth, you know, with pain. And I remember my mouth was dry there’s a bottle of water in the van, and I’m watching it roll from one end to the other and I just wanted to open it but I was so afraid if I, I felt like any movement hurt more so I just tried to be really still and I was like, all the bumps on the road, this is just horrible. You know, fill these potholes already, we roll up to the hospital. It’s kinda like a movie, you actually get to drive up where it says emergency. 

P: Yeah. 

J: At least, that’s, that’s what we did, and the registration, and I’m like, I need something, I need something for the pain. I’m like, Can I get something like a beer or anything and my husband’s like, Oh my God, he’s like, this is the registration desk for everybody, like this woman can’t give you anything. And I’m like, but she needs to know I need help. And there weren’t a lot of people in the in the waiting room at that hour I think there’s a cleaning person who probably was really like oh my gosh, so we get rolled into a room and I’m basically like in so much pain that I’m just not an ideal patient, and I do recall one of the nurses saying we don’t scratch here, like she was trying to help me get my clothes off and somehow I scratched her. Oh my gosh this is such a mess, so they’re getting more and more intense. I mean these were like we were supposed to be where we were so that’s good. 

And then they’re even discussing was there going to be time to give me an epidural, I said oh there’s going to be time. Give me, 

P: We’ll make time

J: Give me the time, you can do. Give it to me. Just tell me what just tell me the general vicinity where I gotta poke myself. And as soon as that happened, I was right with the world. I will never pretend to be somebody who can withstand pain or have a natural birth and I really give kudos to people who, It’s possible I know people who did it, I’m not one. And I was, then all of a sudden just almost talking smack with people, it was, it was really it was very comfortable. And then I remember the anesthesiologist was there talking, and He said I’m going to leave. He said so and so was going to finish up and I said, oh, and I was really kidding I just said. So do you guys like split the proceeds then since they’re finishing and you started and he, he literally went into this explanation of how they get paid, I was like no I don’t, I don’t, I don’t really care like I was just being, this is how I am comfortable now, you know, so I’m sure he was happy to be off the job, I just remember hearing as a doctor here the doctors here okay doctors here and then just all of a sudden, boom, it was go time and it was, you know, telling you to push. I remember thinking, but I can’t feel anything like I don’t, I don’t think they’re like push towards your bottom but I’m like I think you took it away because I don’t feel my, my, but, and they’re saying push, and I’m trying to push and get sick once, and then, you know, some other things happen.

And I think he was out literally, like it was a dream like literally I think within a half hour 45 minutes like this was just, and there he was. And you know the phone’s ringing in people are talking and then the doctor had set aside the placenta,

P: yeah 

J: and she knows my husband, and she knows he’s a science teacher, directly has taught science, and she said oh good you’re here want to show you the placenta so like they’ve got this field trip already there, and his phone’s ringing and it’s his best friend and I answer and he said Julie I said yeah. He said when you don’t answer the phone is what are you doing calling.

So, it was just much more different than the first one, and he, I nursed him right away. 

P: Oh wow

J:like he, he went to different kids though I mean and I also was different mom to an extent now having that experience, and a few hours later that coincidentally my sister in law, she came back with this baby too. She didn’t know what they were going to have the baby, and my husband goes to pick her up and she sees he’s got a hospital band and she said, The baby came in, he said yeah today. So the timing couldn’t have been better. So they go and they pick up our son, or older son and bring him around just petrified that he is going to hate me…he didn’t hate me, even maybe at all. What do you know mom, he was more kind of curious about the you know the things in the hospital room and did anything have wheels can I push it around and that he looked at the baby, you know, is our younger son Max and that was it, you know, but much different birth, and two is more than one I can say that so that was more difficult but I had my self confidence was back and I physically felt better. 

Even, you know, even though this is vaginal birth I mean I didn’t have any issues after having, you know, the cesarean, the first time around so, so all was good, and now they’re healthy and thriving. Through the pandemic chaos 17 You know 17 and 18 year olds and it’s funny, our oldest is working on a psychology project for high school for senior project, and he’s ta almost cried when he sent it to me he sent me this picture, it was a professional, you know you get professional shots with this, the first one, the poor second one, he didn’t get any but we’ll work on that. He sent a picture and he said, he said, look at this and I just said oh my goodness, and then he asked how he wanted to know more about like his births and how old he, you know, wasn’t that picture and it was just, it was very you know, it was very, very sweet to see him kind of taking an interest, you know, in that. That was really good about keeping bait photo albums until they were like five and six. And then, I don’t ever reason just nothing. So, 

P: I’m impressed that you did that because it sounds like our kids are about the same age and like we didn’t have an iPhone. 

J: I know, 

P: I don’t know how you got those pictures right i Aren’t my kids don’t have like three pictures of their infancy and then like once the iPhone comes around this is Tuesday, right?.

J: That was supposed to be a project I thought before all this is at will now he’s 18. The struggle is, I literally everyone used to laugh I would have disposable cameras and then I had a digital one, but I would immediately get like two copies. Two or three I would either get like three or two, and one book for him, one book for his baby brother, and then a family album, so there wouldn’t have to be fighting and I just put them together and it was easy and that was sort of easy, but actually it got harder I think with the digital camera to now I’ve got to find out the smart cards or whatever the sims or whatever in there.

And then how many phones do I have I had census I probably had easily six phones. Yeah, there’s I did the photo album so what do I do dig up the phones in the car, like, how do you know, put those together so I’ve got to do some backtracking and I’ve just had to show myself some grace and do the best that I can but I really want each boy to have, you know something through their 18th year, and it’s not looking good at this point, you know, 

P: I’ll keep fingers crossed for that for that a resuscitation of the old phones.

That sounds amazing, and, and you so clearly learned a lot from the first one, right, like the second one was different in a lot of way.  If you could go back and give advice to your younger self, what do you think you would tell her.

J: Calm the f down….you know, which people would love to people tell me that now, it’s part of my nature is calm down, trust the people in the process.

Think I can trust the people, because you can kind of up who your people are, but the process was like, you know, scary, and maybe enjoy it more. I don’t think I dislike being pregnant I don’t remember thinking, Oh, I hate this and I was why I was mindful that there are people who cannot have cannot bear children. 

P: Yeah, 

J: right. I am very, I try to be very mindful that there was a point when, before I met my husband I bought real estate thinking, Okay, well I’m going to adopt babies because I’m clearly not meeting someone to have children with. So I It’s okay I will be a single mom, but I want to make sure to adopt. And we kind of joked about that now i i have commented about we’ve had babies everywhere except adoption one through the vagina one through the you know cesarean… adoptions, the only way left. But I think, to also enjoy that time right if I feel like with her first. When I was pregnant I remember thinking, you know, there’s a lot of laughs like it’s not going to be just my husband and I anymore so there was a lot of that but maybe to enjoy it more, I was home, ish. Both boys when they were little, I worked, I was able to work around having them with me at home during the day and then I would do radio at night. So, I appreciate that because there’s just, you don’t get those years back and those are some tough times being with them though too, and maybe ask people for help. Yeah.

You know, I don’t think it’s so much pride is I don’t want to be an inconvenience and I want to be a good friend. And I know if I ask for help. This is kind of horrible somebody else might ask and I might not be able to help them so it’s this weird mindset but don’t be afraid to ask. But I was because most of my friends were in the exact same spot, there are a couple of friends who, who chose not to have children and maybe I could have, you know, involved them a little more ask them for help, but I didn’t know what I didn’t know. 

P: Yeah, 

J: I know. And now and now I do, but I survived and I just I cannot believe people tell you that the time goes by so quickly. I know yes for one thing, but you’re going to get through it, whatever that moment is because, you know those nights where they’re sick.

And maybe you’re sick at the same time, or, you know, you find out maybe they, they have some special need of some sort, or, you know, you don’t know if you should stay home should you quit your job, all of that stuff. Those are, those are just their moments, their moments in time, and you’re going to get through it, but I just remember thinking, I’m going to be rocking a kid on my chest for the rest of my life and this is, this is really hard, and yeah, not at all. Ask for help, I think, 

P: yeah, that’s a good message, and, and tell us about your book since it sounds like it’s about childhood and pregnancy and this, this process 

J: from conception to confusion, it came from a succession of blogs I was blogging for my publisher, mimosa publishing, and they had put out books, it was a series called mommy, MD guides. These were books that were written by doctors like Who better to give advice than doctors, And they said, Well, we’ve never had anybody humorous…like you could be our first non US writer and I thought well this be great. That sounds very cool. And I will put a link to your book in the show notes so people can find it. Thank you so much for sharing your story. Perfect, thank you I appreciate that. I appreciate that.

P: thanks Again, Julie for sharing her story, I’ll put a link to her book from conception to confusion in the show notes. If you liked this episode, feel free to like and subscribe, and if you get a chance to leave a review, we totally appreciate reviews because it helps other people find the show. We’ll be back soon with another inspiring story about braving the many challenges this transition can hold.