Sunday, 25 April 2010

Baby the fourth is born!

For my fourth baby I was planning a home birth having had two previous caesarean sections - one an elective for breech twins and one an 'emergency' caesarean for failure to progress beyond 4cm dilated. I felt very let down by the hospital and staff during my first VBAC attempt and felt planning a home birth was the best way to ensure I got support and continuity of care this time around. I came up against a lot of opposition from practically every midwife, doctor and obstetrician I dealt with which did not make for a happy, stress free pregnancy! At about 36 weeks I attended an appointment for a placental site scan only to be ambushed by the supervisor of midwives and a senior obstetrician who spent a good hour telling me that I was endangering both myself and my baby, that I had had my chance and failed, that I had a 'very, very low chance of successful VBAC' and that I probably just couldn't give birth. Based on information from my previous VBAC attempt they determined that my pelvis was probably inadequate to have birthed my 7lb baby. I left with my confidence decidedly shaken but wrote a follow up letter complaining about their treatment of me and confirming that I was still going ahead with my home birth plans. By 37 weeks everything seemed to be falling into place. The midwives were on call for me and my home birth kit had been delivered.

Until 39 weeks. I had a routine midwife appointment at home where they felt that baby had moved into a transverse position - despite having been cephalic for weeks! I went to the hospital for an urgent scan which confirmed that baby was transverse with it's back against my cervix. This seemed to give real credence to the supervisor of midwives assertion that I was incapable of giving birth naturally. I started to doubt myself and agreed to be admitted to the hospital for observation over the weekend. Twenty four hours and several 'talks' with a remarkably arrogant obstetrician later and baby was once again head down - though now considered to be 'unstable lie'. My own consultant came to visit me to discuss her serious concerns over my home birth plans and to try the usual scare tactics. I refused to be booked in for a caesarean on the Monday and discharged myself.

At 39+5 I attended another appointment with my consultant, the SoM and 3 community midwives to discuss my birth plan. Baby was now oblique. The meeting was long and tedious and probably not particularly helpful to any of the attendees. Over the next week or so baby continued to move between oblique, transverse and cephalic. I spent most of my time upright, on hands and knees or my birth ball. I started to really miss my lovely, comfy sofa! On Friday at 41 weeks I went for a scan to check baby's position etc. All was fine and I agreed to a quick internal. In my notes my cervix was described as being thick, high and 'very, very posterior'. I assumed it would be another couple of days before anything happened. That night I had a few mild tightenings while I was bouncing on my ball but they stopped when I went to bed and I got a decent night's sleep.

Saturday was a beautiful sunny day. I was really hoping that maybe baby would decide to arrive before the weekend was over. At about midday I persuaded Ryan to come out for a walk along the towpath by the river with the children. We took some bread to feed the ducks and walked until I decided not bringing a drink was a mistake and suggested we turn around and head home. We stopped at the shop for drinks on the way back and I bought an ice lolly that I thought was going to be strawberry flavoured but turned out to be cola! Yuck! I'd had a few mild contractions since leaving the house but didn't think too much of them.
It was about 2.30pm when we got home and I made the boys a light lunch. I had a big bowl of melon, banana and grapes which I ate whilst doing some more bouncing on my ball. I had another couple of contractions and told Ryan he might want to let his Mum know that she'd probably need to take the children that evening. Then I took the boys upstairs to watch a film so that Ryan could get some studying done. It was about 4pm when I suddenly started getting what felt like 'proper' contractions as I realised I was starting to want to move onto my hands and knees every time one came. Joseph and Ben were wrestling rather than watching the film and I was finding their boisterous behaviour increasingly difficult to deal with. Ryan heard me snapping at them and came upstairs to see if I was ok. I told him that maybe he should ask his Mum to come down sooner rather than later. He rang her and I packed overnight bags for the boys.
Contractions were very regular - about every 3 minutes - but easy to cope with and I could still talk through them. I went to use the bathroom and noticed that my plug had come away and a bit of blood too. I went back into our bedroom where Ryan was keeping the boys entertained and kneeled on the floor to lean over the bed. Ryan asked me to take the boys downstairs to wait for his mum while he went to the bathroom. I stood up to move and felt a gush of fluid. I thought maybe it was more blood and felt a little worried. I moved again and felt another gush. It slowly dawned on me that my waters must have broken! I grabbed a pad and saw that my waters were full of meconium. I waddled downstairs, grabbed some bed mats from the home birth kit and kneeled over them on the living room floor. The boys were all completely fascinated by the mess I was making and asked if I was doing a poo!
I was feeling a little bit panicked at this point. There seemed to be an awful lot of meconium and I was worried about my unstable lie baby being in the right position. I was desperate to get the boys out of the house and a midwife round so I could hear baby's heart beat and be reassured. When Ryan got down the stairs I insisted that he ring both the on call midwife and his Mother IMMEDIATELY! Contractions were still every 2-3 minutes but easily tolerable. It was now about 5pm. The midwife arrived about 15 minutes later to the rather surreal image of me on my hands and knees leaking amniotic fluid onto an incontinence pad while Ryan played Final Fantasy 13 on the playstation with the children watching! She listened to baby's heart which sounded fine and then asked if she could do an internal. I agreed and hopped onto the sofa. I should add that my children have left the room by now and are being loaded into their Nanny's car! The VE found me to be about 2cm dilated and my cervix about 80% effaced. Baby was thankfully cephalic but the head was still very high and far back. In light of the thick meconium staining and the fact that I wasn't very far progressed my midwife suggested I transfer into hospital. I was still feeling quite panicked about baby's wellbeing and agreed. She called an ambulance for me as Ryan doesn't drive and I resumed my position of choice on the living room floor - hands and knees rocking my pelvis. Shortly afterwards a rapid response vehicle arrived! The second midwife - who had also turned up - went outside (with my underwear in her hand!) to point out that we actually needed an ambulance transfer. Said ambulance eventually turned up and after getting Ryan to throw some things into a bag for me we set off - though not before giving all the nosy neighbours a good bit of excitement.

I tried to stay on my hands and knees in the ambulance but quickly realised that wasn't going to be possible. I lay on my left side instead and closed my eyes to relax and block everyone else out. I felt quite detached from everything outside of my own body and what was happening to it if that makes sense. I was aware that we were moving quite quickly and I was in fact being blue lighted to hospital (albeit completely unnecessarily!). I know we arrived at the hospital at 18.14pm as the paramedic needed to know for his records and asked Ryan to read out the time. I stayed on the bed with my eyes closed as they moved me up to a delivery room. I was officially admitted to the delivery suite at 18.35pm.

After vacating the bed and returning it to the paramedics with a cheery thanks for the lift I spent a few contractions leaning over the bed in the delivery suite swaying my hips while the community midwives handed over my care. I was a little disappointed by this as I thought maybe one of them would choose to stay with me. It was fairly obvious that they thought I was going to end up with another caesarean. A midwife introduced herself to me. I asked for water and she said no - 'in case you need to have surgery'. I'd been drinking an isotonic drink in the ambulance! Fortunately I didn't end up with this midwife after all. The ward sister - who was absolutely fantastic - took on my care instead. I sipped water freely throughout labour and she didn't once try to place ridiculous time limits or targets on my labour.
The contractions were a lot more intense now though they had stuck with the every 2 minutes or so pattern. Being on my hands and knees wasn't comfortable any more so I lay on my left hand side on the bed. I agreed to a CTG trace much against my better judgement as they had noted some decelerations during contractions when I was in the ambulance. Ryan questioned the care I was receiving repeatedly and ensured everything was explained in minute detail. I was so glad to have him there. I was coping now by holding onto the side of the bed and rocking myself from side to side which made the CTG trace somewhat unreliable as it kept losing contact. They were very close together now and I was starting to moan through them a little bit. I was given the entonox mouth piece and had a brief suck but it seemed very distracting so I just held it instead. I felt sick and asked for a bowl to throw up into. Breda - our midwife - asked if I was getting any pressure but I said no. A few contractions later and I was feeling some pressure in my bottom! I thought I must be imagining it and it was only towards the very end of a contraction so I didn't say anything. After all, I'd only been 2cm dilated 1.5 hours ago. However it persisted and got stronger so I mentioned it to Breda.
Contractions were almost constant now with very little let up in between. I started to think that an epidural sounded really appealing as I didn't think I could cope with this if it was going to be hours yet! I remember the alarm on Ryan's iphone going off to tell us it was the boys bedtime. The pressure was getting quite intense now and I heard myself starting to make 'bearing down' noises. I was still in denial that I was having a baby though! A Doctor arrived to take blood from me (!) and I heard Breda say 'she's pushing away there'. She asked if she could examine me and I agreed. My baby's head was right there! I was going to have a baby!
Bizarrely at this point the Doctor was taking blood from me and inserting a venflon! I was both incredibly irritated by this and completely oblivious as I was in the middle of giving birth. I was pushing with each contraction now and the pressure was very intense. Suddenly the break between contractions wasn't relief any more and I was desperate for the next one to arrive so I could get on with pushing this baby out! It took about 3 contractions and baby's head was crowning - one of the strangest sensations I have ever felt though I didn't experience the famous 'ring of fire'. I heard Breda telling Ryan to look as his baby's head was born. She commented that it was a big head with lots of dark hair which I found hard to believe! All of our children have been little baldies. One more contraction and the body was born. It was 19.47pm. Ryan looked and told me we had our fourth little boy! Gabriel James. He was held up - absolutely covered in meconium and blood - and he looked just beautiful. And so big! I did it. I had a baby! I felt completely exhausted and couldn't believe how quickly it had happened. The second stage only took 12 minutes which I thought was quite impressive for a first time birth. I think everyone was shocked at how quickly everything progressed.
Gabriel was checked over and was absolutely fine. He had apgars of 9 and 10 and weighed in at an impressive 8lb 5oz. I didn't feel able to hold him so Ryan had cuddles. It turns out that I lost quite a lot of blood as Gabriel was born. I felt weak and dizzy and almost passed out as my blood pressure dipped to 70/39. They stuck some sort of a drip up and put an oxygen mask on and I was gradually 'revived'. I was investigated for damage. I had two large labial tears - one on either side - which were stitched up. I think this was more painful than the entire labour and birth experience and I hit the gas and air hard!
Finally I got to have a cuddle with my gorgeous new son. He breastfed straight away and was alert and content.
Although a lot of Gabriel's birth experience didn't go to plan it was fantastic and I am so incredibly pleased to have given birth naturally. I can't even begin to describe the sense of accomplishment - nor the smug delight at proving all those health professionals wrong after they came so close to making me lose faith in my own body. I would do it again in a heartbeat!



















Wednesday, 7 October 2009

A quick update

Oh how neglectful I've been again! Yadda yadda!

I'm at work at the moment. The person I need to ask for help is away on lunch so I'm being productive and updating my blog instead. Besides which I'm ill yet again which makes concentrating on coding (which I'm not that good at anyway) quite difficult. Only a grotty cold this time but I've also had a headache for 3 days and as a total headache wimp this is bothering me. Pregnancy and my immune system clearly don't get on.

Talking of which I am almost 15 weeks now. It still doesn't feel quite real. In part, I think, because I haven't had a scan yet. And don't get one until 2nd november when I'll be 18+3 weeks! I think I might have started feeling movement though. Just occasional little taps towards my right hip. Looking forward to them being more regular/bigger so that I can confirm it though.
Having gone over and over my birth experience with Ben I'm almost completely decided that I want a homebirth this time. Oh how popular that is going to make me with the health professionals! A home birth? After 2 caesarean sections? Yes, I'll be spending a fun pregnancy fighting that one. I'm going to a homebirth support group that the NCT run on Saturday so hope I can round up some peer support if nothing else.

As far as the boys go everything is grand. I must get some pictures of them in their new uniforms uploaded because they started nursery school (and Ben, daycare) last month! Their teachers are lovely and I'm quite impressed with the place. They seem to be really enjoying it though I'm not enjoying the prospect of paying £100 for school dinners! I absolutely can't afford that and am going to have to talk to the school about it. Ben is doing ok in nursery too but I think he'd rather be at home. I'd rather be at home too. A year on and the dilemma of being a full time working Mum hasn't left me. If nothing else I'd like to be at least part time but as the higher earner I don't get that option. Ryan is working 6.45am to 1pm so he looks after them in the afternoons. I'm sick of being tired and snappy. I feel like a pretty rubbish Mummy at the moment in fact and now the pregnancy sickness has worn off I really need to pick up the slack.

Money is still very tight - to the point that I'm feeling incredibly guilty about the Americano I just treated myself to from Starbucks. Ryan is off to Nottingham this weekend to do his crazy 'survival of the fittest' event but fortunately wrangled some money out of his Mum for spending over there! Ben's 2nd birthday is only 2 weeks away and so far all the poor sausage has is 2 books. I have a few things I'd like to get him but I don't think he'll mind not getting much. We'll maybe go to the zoo or something for the day. He was a tiny newborn wrapped in a sling last time we went. I think he'll appreciate it more this time.

Anyway this is really turning into disconnected ramblings. It's almost 1pm and I'm about to take my lunch break and meet R for a while before he heads on home. Whereas I'm stuck in here 'til 5.45pm. Sigh.

Friday, 28 August 2009

Summer holidays


Boats!


Tall ships Belfast


The Family at the Belfast Tall Ships event


Me and my sweetie in Spain


Grandma and the boys


Snorkelling


Me and Ben


Our holiday Villa


The Family Quinn


Covering Mummy in sand


Run!


My littlest cutie



Theme of the blog

Once again it has been months since I updated. Four in fact.

Plenty has happened. We went on a lovely holiday to Moraira, Spain with my Mum and co. The weather was glorious, the villa was beautiful, the pool was fantastic. We had no money but we had a wonderful time.

Then we got back and straight away the boys and Ryan had the chicken pox. In a way this was a blessing in disguise as we got to take some time off work. Which really helped with the next big thing: the house move.

We are now safely moved into our new house in Belfast. However it cost us a small fortune. The van hiring, the constant trips up and down the motorway - Lurgan to Belfast, Belfast to Lurgan. On and on and on. Plus we rather naughtily treated ourselves to a lot of new furniture and - more necessarily - new flooring for the downstairs rooms. I thought it would be strange moving. I loved our house at The Grange. It was our first home as a family. It was a nice house in a nice area with a nice garden. We moved into it when the twins were tiny 6 weeks olds and brought our third son home to that house after his birth. But in the furore of moving I just...haven't had time to even think about it. I was the last one at the 'old' house. Emptying out the last bits and cleaning up as best I could. And it was odd to walk around the empty rooms and hear my echoing footsteps. But we've settled into our new home quickly. It feels like home already. The boys love it and spend a lot of time out in the decent sized garden. It's a lovely quiet area of Stranmillis and our elderly neighbours have already been around to bring a tent and play tunnel, lego bricks and some garden toys for the boys.
I hope we'll be here for a few years yet. We have a lot of money issues to sort out and honestly, moving is so stressful I couldn't bear to do it again so soon. Not to mention the expense.

Which brings me to the final installment in our brave new world. We're expecting baby number four. Due at the start of April, I'm 9 weeks today. Not at all what we had planned. We were hoping to have our final sproglet after the wedding next May. The wedding has now been postponed until August 2011. I'm a bit gutted that I don't have my 'special date' wedding any more but this is more convenient for a lot of people and it will give us some time to save. Or at least get our finances back on track.

It was a very surprise sprog, conceived as a result of a rather unfortunate incident in Spain. I'm slowly getting used to the idea. It still doesn't feel quite real though. I just want this early bit out of the way. I feel sick and tired and quite, quite useless as both a Mummy and a partner at the moment. It doesn't help that I also have the 'flu at the moment and am holed up in bed. Ryan is being an absolute star and I don't know what I'd do without him. He has so much to do and he works so hard.
I don't have a midwife appointment until I'm almost 13 weeks so I've no idea when my scan date will come through. I hate the constant worrying and uncertainty of early pregnancy. And I know I'll have a fight on my hands to try and get the birth that I want this time around. I doubt I'll find many supportive health care providers for a VBA2C. I'm considering hiring a doula but I'm not sure we can justify the expense.

Anyway, I'm losing track of my thoughts so I'll leave it there and upload some photos instead.

Tuesday, 28 April 2009

Perceptions of sleep and whirlwinds

I wonder how much sleep we actually need? Sometimes I think I might be talking myself into being tired because I perceive it as how I SHOULD be feeling following a night or more of broken sleep.

Perhaps it's a false memory but I don't recall being so frustrated with it when Ben was a small baby. I think maybe I accepted it more because I saw it as being more acceptable. Now he's 18 months old and I'm going through a very difficult spell with his behaviour and his sleeping. He is demanding (I wouldn't have called him that as a baby, would I?). He gets so angry and frustrated when he things aren't going precisely the way he wants them to. He screams shrilly with a temper as mighty and unalterable as the ocean. He clings to my legs if I'm standing and climbs all over me if I'm sitting down. He's difficult to get to sleep in the evenings and has started waking a lot at night again. He's never "slept through" but I'd started getting a good few hours uninterrupted.

I know a lot of people would say I've 'spoiled' him (which is a ridiculous term!). His Daddy included, probably. I get the impression he thinks he's old enough to…you know, I'm not even sure. I'm just not sure how to handle it in a way that is fair to all of us. I don't want to be permissive with behaviour that is clearly unacceptable (and some of it certainly is) but I don't want to deny him his needs and comforts either.

Part of it is probably me being stubborn. I think I'm unwilling to accept this apparent regression in behaviour from him. I've enjoyed having my bed baby free for a couple of months while still getting the benefit of cuddles from about 5am onwards. So I get angry and withdraw from him when he's awake at 2am and nothing will settle him; when he's fighting sleep and will jump up from apparent slumber and want to play peek-a-boo in his cupboard when I try to extricate myself from him and return to my own bed. When he screams with anger until he is blue in the face when I decide I need to go to the bathroom before attending his needs.

How do you help an 18 month old to display emotions in an acceptable manner? Should I be trying? He's such an intense little whirlwind. He's bright and entertaining and wonderfully cheeky. He has a throaty little chuckle that you can't help but join in with. He's adventurous and physical. He loves to emulate his brothers. He loves to have me all to himself. He can understand very complex directions and while his speech is coming along wonderfully - he can say far more than his brothers could even a year down the line - it certainly doesn't match his ability to comprehend what is being said to him. I wonder if his outbursts are in part frustration from being unable to make himself adequately understood?

I think I need to take a step back, to reconnect with him a little more so I can understand where he is coming from. And to stop treating him like an adversary.

Sunday, 26 April 2009

A-wandering (and a-wondering) we must go

I'm not sure what he's pondering but it must be something important.



Note to self: This post also serves as a reminder to come back and make a weeks worth of updates.

Saturday, 18 April 2009

The eternal housework dilemma

What a gloriously sunny day it was today. We lay in bed for as long as the children would allow (they came and bounced all over us, full of idle, happy chatter at about 7.30am and we all got up for breakfast an hour later). Ben was awake a lot of the night so he was in with us for most of it. He's gone from full time co-sleeping to spending probably 80% of the night in his own bed, though he still nurses to sleep.
I think he's feeling a little under the weather. I took him, finally, for his MMR on Thursday afternoon. A large part of me wishes I hadn't bothered. I'd cancelled it four times previously and finally decided to do it. I had many misgivings but it's too late now. He's been utterly miserable all day. Clingy, short tempered and crying constantly though he enjoyed some one on one Mummy time with a trip to the shops after lunch. I hope he perks up soon, poor little sausage.

Anyway I took a cleaning notion today. It's true. It doesn't happen often but it did today. I decided to tackle the kitchen. The full day I worked on it. Not exclusively of course. There were trips to the shop, time spent playing in the garden, time spent cooking meals and hanging out washing with my little helpers. But I always came back to the cleaning. All the little, time consuming things that never get done. Wiping down all the white appliances - fridge, washer, drier - that were covered in felt pen (and still are to a degree) and bits of splattered food. Cleaning the tiles, reorganising shelves and the cutlery draw, cleaning the window frames while shouting constant 'Hello's' to the sproglets playing in the garden. They were all wearing wellington boots for some reason. It was their 'thing' today.

So by 8.30pm tonight the kitchen was spotless. By my standards at least. There is still some unnecessary clutter but I'm pleased with how it looks. I felt a sad sense of accomplishment. But of course, it's only one room. The rest are still a mess, some considerably more so than others! By the time I get the chance to move on to the next room, chances are all my hard work sprucing up the kitchen will have been undone. And thus it continues.

I'm not hugely houseproud but I don't like to live in utter chaos. It demotivates me. I feel noticeably more stressed out and I am more likely to snap unreasonably if the house is a complete tip. But I only really do house work once a week, on a Sunday evening. It almost seems pointless as I go back to work the next day and the little wrecking machines are back on task (play hard, make lots of mess!).

And yet I can't NOT do it. Sometimes I even enjoy it; I did today. It was relaxing and pleasant. No lost tempers, children coming and going. The occasional fight to break up up and some tears but generally it was a lovely family day even though we did nothing special. Sometimes those days are the best ones.

Still, cleaning your house when you have three small children must rate amongst one of the more thankless tasks!