Category Archives: Doula

Why you might want a doula

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Brow-wiper

It is a hard thing for a doula to admit:

The best births are the ones at which I’m not needed.  Superfluous.  Merely a concierge service.  Standing around twiddling my thumbs or sitting in the corner knitting. 

Because at those births, the birthing couple can say entirely, “We did it all ourselves.” 

I was on my way to a birth recently when the dad called and said they had decided to go on to the hospital.  I arrived at the hospital just before they did.  Maybe 7 contractions from the elevator to the bed, the baby was born.  The doctor barely got a glove on. 

What did I do at this birth?  Hmmmm.  I wiped a brow.  Spoke some words.  Took a couple of pictures.  Made some red raspberry leaf tea for afterbirth pains.  The mom and dad were the only heroes in this birth story–as they should be! 

In this instance, I was just an expensive brow-wiper. 

The trouble with birth is that you can’t predict the path it will take.  And you often can’t predict the caregivers who will attend you.  Will they have patience?  Will they know labor tricks to resolve a complication without resorting to abdominal surgery.  Because I attend births both in-hospital and out-of-hospital, I’ve seen c-sections for things that were resolved with time and technique in other settings.

A doula is an insurance plan.  You hope you won’t need her but you’re glad she’s there!

A great start to the new year

A VBAC homebirth. 

Starring a strong mama and a proud papa. 

The debut of a new soul.

Standing ovation.

Doing it without a doula

In this economy, many of us are doing without.  

Scenario:  You’re planning a hospital birth and all the literature you read suggests that you hire a doula.  The research confirms that using a doula may reduce your interventions, may help you avoid a cesarean, and may increase your satisfaction with your birth.  Even a prominent obstetrics journal rated doula care as “one of the most effective interventions.”  Ok.  You believe it.  But resources are tight.  How will you hire a doula? 

Before taking the suggestion I’m about to make, first talk to every doula you can find.  Ask about sliding scales, payment plans, or bartering.  See if there is a student doula who needs a few free births to complete her certification.  Student doulas can be wonderful assets to a laboring family.  And often, the mere presence of a doula sends a message to caregivers that you are serious about your birth experience.  

If you find yourself in the final countdown without a doula, consider taking my “Doing it without a doula” crash course.  I’ve recently put together a 2 hour crash course for couples who plan to go it alone at the hospital.  I pack in a whole lot of information into 2 hours; though I will customize it to your unique situation.  I’ll talk to you about:

  • Getting your body and your baby favorable for birth
  • Staying low risk and avoiding pitfalls in the final weeks
  • How to labor at home and recognize when to go to the hospital
  • What to expect at the hospital
  • Common interventions
  • And if we have time, postpartum and breastfeeding

Part of me cringes even offering this crash course because my hope is that couples find great resources for doula care and complete childbirth education.  But I also know that time and money are often scarce these days.

So keep this last-ditch option in mind if you find yourself doing it without a doula!

Birth Rule # 1

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The most important thing is do not disturb the birthing woman!
Dr. Michel Odent – Obstetrician

 

The more births I attend, the more I realise how much we disturb the birthing woman.
Gloria Lemay – Midwife

 

 

I’m sorry it is a picture of me.  Sadly, my own birth is the only one I’ve attended that felt truly undisturbed.  Hospital births are never undisturbed.  “Can you sign these 15 consent forms?  Oh, are you having a contraction?  Let me hold the clipboard for you then while you sign here, here, and initial here.”  Some homebirths are undisturbed; I just haven’t been honored to witness one.    

The doula’s role is to guard the woman’s birth space.  To hold the line.  To remind caregivers not to talk loudly.  To shut the door when the nurse leaves it open.  To turn off the lights for the 12th time.  To trust the woman’s body and her intuition.  To give the birthing couple space to be private.  To give the partner room to love on the birthing woman. 

The most important thing is do not disturb the birthing woman!    

 IMG_8633Jude, the doula dog, was an inspiration during my undisturbed birth.

7 weeks

When Norah was 7 weeks old, I returned full time to work. 

Whoa. 

How?? 

My brain did snap a little bit when I returned to work.  Ok, it snapped alot.  If I turn inward and dig a little, I can still feel that sadness.  The awful sadness of leaving her.  And I was blessed to be able to leave her with Scott who was a wonderful stay-at-home daddy.  And I had an incredible co-worker who kept me afloat when I had to cry.  Thanks Laura!  But it was still heart-wrenching.

I cannot imagine going back to work right now.  First, Cedar has not been separated from me for more than an hour.  Second, she is not easy to soothe.  She screams when put down.  She prefers to be worn or nursed and that is about it. 

So I’m incredibly thankful to be able to take her with me to teach Hypnobabies.  And I’m thankful to be able to take a break from doula work for a while. 

Speaking of doula work, I am booking clients for 2010.  Please contact me if you are interested.  I’m limiting my client volume and the calendar is already filling up. 

Random Cedar fact:  She almost always has a cow-lick.  Methinks she has crazy hair!

The Rosie Lane

Mary Kury, a local Bradley childbirth educator, blogs over at The Rosie Lane.  I was honored to be interviewed by her about doulas.  Her blog is a great mix of local resources, interviews with people of all sorts, recipes, birthy things, etc.  Go subscribe. 

Good thing we did the interview before the new baby.

Because right now I can only think about the important questions: 

  • When do I get to take a shower?
  • When was my last shower?
  • When was Norah’s last shower?

Birth Story Part Two: Places Everybody

Where was I?  Oh yes, utterly deflated.  Late Saturday night, we went to Publix to buy groceries.  I had clipped all the coupons already so I had to go.  Right, coupon moms?   Then I stayed up too late.  And went to sleep listening to a Hypnobabies script.  During the night, I felt pressure waves come and go but ignored them.  At 6am, I thought I might time a couple–10 minutes apart.  No big deal then.  I listened to another script.  Around 7:45, Scott brought a warm rice sock and turned on some Fleet Foxes.  What a nice way to wake.

PhotobucketScott singing to meActive Labor

At 9am, it was like someone flipped a switch.  I was making breakfast when the pressure waves went from 10 minutes apart to a very serious 3 minutes apart.  The energy changed and I told Scott I was having a baby today.  I managed to eat my eggs and toast while standing and rocking.  Again, I noticed how much I was thinking like a doula.  What position should I take?  Should Scott sift me?  What about belly-lifting?  Do I need to do the rotisserie?  Argh, the voice in my head!

Then, without thinking, with the next pressure wave, I began reciting T.S. Eliot’s “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock.”  Yes, a poem about a balding man’s mid-life crisis.  Yes, that is the focal point I chose folks.  Not a nice Psalm.  Not a beautiful song.  Not even a poet like Neruda or Rilke.  I could recite to line 22 (“curled once about the house, and fell asleep”) before the wave ended.  I did not feel pain just an intense squeezing sensation.

IMG_8648At 10:35am, Scott wrote in the birth log that I said a horrible curse word.  Friends–brace yourself.  At the end of a pressure wave during which I forgot the words to my poem, I said “Dad-gum.”  Time to get into the birth tub.  Ah, the birth tub.  Bliss.  I could drape over the sides and flip my Hypnobabies light switch to “off.”

Using hypnosis, I totally kicked transition’s butt.  Oh yeah.  Smiling and relaxing, this birth was a piece of cake.  Until at 1pm, I swore again.  Scott notes that I said “Yowzers.”  (Ahem, Kelley are you reading?  I will never pick on you again).

I should interject that Cedar was sounding beautiful.  She was actively involved and had a great heart rate the whole time.  Never gave us a worry.

I began feeling a little pushy.  I was really looking forward to pushing.  My firstborn, Norah, was so easy-breezy to push (although her 32 hour labor was challenging).  I pushed Norah out in 20-something minutes with barely a sound.  Ah, but Cedar.  My first tentative push with Cedar told me something was different.  And I began to fear.  Fear+birth=pain.  What was I afraid of?   Well the doula brain was happy to rush back into high gear and tell me.  I was afraid of a posterior baby.  A nuchal hand.  Tearing.  Having to transport for suturing.  Shut up, thinking brain!

Scott got into the tub at 1:20 and I tried pushing a few times while standing up.  Then squatting.  Both were overwhelming in sensation.  I birthed Norah while squatting and I was barely aware of her descent.  In fact, she took all of us by surprise when she tumbled out in between contractions.  Cedar.  Oh Cedar.  First to present was the bag of waters–yep, still intact.  I felt it with my hand and it was so hard.  Until it broke–nice gush of clear fluid.  Then, I felt Cedar descending like a freight train.  I was on my knees but moved to a knee-crouch kind of position.  Really, I think I was crouched because I was contemplating jumping out of the tub and just running away.  Scott applied counterpressure to my perineum.  I put pressure on my front and around the head.  Wow, the sensations were incredible.  And not incredible like orgasmic birth incredible.  Nope, none of that.  Scott said something later about feeling the energy and power of my uterus.  He said birth should be an olympic sport because of that powerful muscle.

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Cedar was born at 2:18.  Scott caught her and brought her to the surface.  She was not posterior.  No nuchal hand.  And I did not tear.  On my chest, I rubbed her and snuggled her.  She looked so healthy.  And she was.  I didn’t want to look to see if she was a girl or boy.  That took some time.

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After the placenta came, Scott clamped and cut the cord.  No one noted the time but I know Cedar was already nursing by then.  We got out of the tub.  I drank some OJ.  We examined Cedar (heart rate, respiration, temp, etc).  Unfortunately, my bleeding was a bit heavy and my uterus was not clamping down as well as it could have.  So I got a shot of pitocin, took some herbs, and had lots of “fun” fundal massage to get my uterus to contract.

Cedar weighed in at 8lbs 10oz and was 21 inches long.

Then we all went to bed.  And I pretty much stayed there for 5 days.  Snuggling and nursing and being visited by lovely family and friends.  The great Cassandra even came the next day to give me an acupuncture treatment!  And sweet midwives-to-be Carey and Crystal picked up my placenta the next day and encapsulated it for me.  I also discovered how wonderful coconut water is for restoring electrolytes.  More about amazing placentas and postpartum time later.

Fini.

Preparing for a Smooth Hospital Birth

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Each hospital birth I attend is a learning experience.  Here are some common characteristics of the most positive hospital births I’ve attended:

Before Your Birthing Time:

Early communication with care provider:  There shouldn’t be any surprises between the couple and the care provider.  Communicate your desires and expectations early in your pregnancy.  I understand that more and more OB groups are now including multiple care providers and each OB may support different practices.  This challenge is even more reason for you to communicate clearly and ask the question, “Will the other OBs in the group also support ______?”   

Hire an independent doula:  You knew that was coming, right?  An independent doula (one who does not work for the hospital) knows the way hospitals work.  I cannot imagine laboring without the continuous support of a woman who is there only for my physical and emotional support.  Especially for a hospital birth.  Please don’t let financial concerns stop you from interviewing a few doulas.  Find a student doula, barter services, or use your flexible spending account.

Take an independent childbirth class:  By independent I mean a childbirth class that is not offered by the hospital.  I don’t think it really matters which class you take.  Pick one and stick with it.  Childbirth classes are as important for the birth partner as for the mom. 

Pack only one bag:  For the initial admission into the hospital, try to condense everything into one bag.  Triage rooms are tiny.  Leave all the postpartum supplies in the car.  Bring only what is needed for the labor and birth.  You don’t want your nurse rolling her eyes at the first-time couple bringing 5 bags into the room. 

During Your Birthing Time:

Stay home:  The couples I work with who report the most satisfaction in their births are the ones spend most of their labor at home.  Even more reason to hire a doula–she can help you feel comfortable about deciding when to go to the hospital.  At home you have privacy, hydrotherapy, familiarity, nourishment, and power.  My recommendation is once you feel it is time to go to the hospital (unless you are arriving very late in the game), take a moment to take a shower/bath or freshen up.  Use this time to gather your focus and repeat your affirmations.  This can also remove you from your birth partner’s fluster of loading the car!

Stay hydrated and nourished:  Your birth partner and doula should be on top of this task.  I’ve noticed that most of the time, if a confident mom is drinking or eating at the hospital, the nurse usually turns her head.  I remember during one birth, I simply blocked the nurse’s view and told her the mom was drinking some water.  The nurse replied, “Yeah, I can’t see that or I’ll lose my job.”  And that was that.  In this case, it is easier to ask forgiveness than permission. 

Stay cooperative and positive during admission:  The admission process is ridiculous.  The number of consent forms keeps growing.  When you have a pressure wave, simply stop signing forms and focus your attention.  Hold your hand up or make a “shhhh” sign if a nurse continues to talk.  You do not have to be hurried.  Some hospitals allow you to come in before your birthing time to sign forms.  Ask if this is possible. 

Be confident and make the first move:  It is important to present a confident demeanor.  This task can fall on the birth partner if it suits his personality.  The birth partner should make the first move when the nurse arrives (once you’re in a room and know who your nurse will be).  He should introduce the birth team–calling mom and baby by name; introducing the doula.  I call this move “disarm by charm.”  The birth partner should also use every opportunity to brag on the mom.  “Isn’t she amazing?” 

Bring goodies:  Nothing like a little surprise to woo your birth team.  Bring at least three gifts for nurses (there could be shift changes or a student nurse).  One nurse told me she loved 5.00 starbucks gift cards since there was a starbucks in the hospital lobby.  This is not bribery.  Oh no, no, no. 

Do not stay in bed:  A great nurse will examine you or perform procedures in alternate positions.  However, if your nurse is not comfortable with this, use the bed for the duration of an exam/procedure only.  If you are being monitored, sit or stand by the bed, use the birth ball, or request a telemetry unit (if available).  Your partner or doula can volunteer to hold the monitor in place for wiggly babies.  In my experience, once you are in the bed, the monitors and blood pressure cuff stay on.  If you would like to lie down, consider using the couch!   

Stay unhooked:  Each time you are hooked up to a monitor, ask the nurse for a time frame.  She will likely leave.  If she has not returned by the time she gave you, unhook yourself. 

Control the mood:  Keep the lights low.  Keep the door closed.  Have music playing.  Massage mom with some lavender oil.  Use a low tone of voice.  If you create an atmosphere of serenity, your nurses and care providers will usually join in.  At a recent birth, the nurse commented on how much she loved coming into our room because it was so peaceful.  She automatically relaxed and lowered her voice.  If your nurse forgets to turn the lights down or shut the door when she leaves, the birth partner or doula should jump on it. 

No one should talk during pressure waves:  Maybe the hospital staff will join in the silent tribute if the birth partner and doula are quiet during mom’s pressure waves.  I’ve noticed that hospital staff can be quite chatty during labors.  Staying quiet during waves reminds everyone to keep their focus on the mom.  The birth partner may “shhh” someone if needed.

Memorize BRAIN:  What are the Benefits?  What are the Risks?  What are the Alternatives?  What does my Intuition tell me?  And what if we do Nothing?

Order a squat bar:  If your hospital has one (or more), request it.  Sometimes it takes a while to find it (and dust it off). 

Have a SHORT birth plan and/or baby care plan:  I think a birth plan can be a positive tool.  Include the names of everyone on the birth team and include the baby’s name.  Keep it short.  Do not include things that are easy to speak up for in the moment–like freedom of movement or minimal vaginal exams.  I recommend focusing on 2nd stage and 3rd stage birthing practices–birth position, routine 3rd stage pitocin, cord care, pushing, immediate skin-to-skin, etc.  These are the times that mom needs lots of support and focus.  Your nurse can help facilitate your birth plan at this point.  What is a baby care plan?  I’ve noticed that it is tough to communicate with the baby nurse in advance.  She often arrives as “delivery is imminent.”  She doesn’t know you.  Doesn’t know what you want.  You can create a simple baby plan and place it in the newborn warmer for her to find as she sets up.  Include the things that are important to you:  immediate skin-to-skin, procedures that should be delayed at least an hour, procedures you are declining, etc. 

When you feel “pushy,” wait:  This one might be controversial.  Things seem to get a little wild in the hospital when it is “time to push.”  If you’re laboring quietly and you feel some spontaneous pushing sensations, try to ignore them or bear down a little.  It is a great time to hang out in a dark bathroom with the door closed.  There is no need to rush the drama that will come.  Sometimes you begin feeling “pushy” before you are fully dilated and you’ll end up with several vaginal exams, instructions not to push, words tossed around like “anterior lip,” and “you’ll tear your cervix.”  You really don’t need multiple fingers messing with your sphincter when you’re trying to release a baby.  If you’re comfortable, lie low and wait until you have the absolutely-can’t-help-myself-hurling-pushing waves to call in the staff. 

Don’t give up the baby:  Finally, your little one is in your arms.  Barring medical concerns, keep the sweetling in arms.  If the well-meaning baby nurse says “let me just take him for…” understand that it could be 15-30 minutes before you get the babe back.  Delay, delay, delay.  Eye ointment, shots, footprints, tagging–these things can be delayed and they can also be done in mama’s arms.  Keep your newborn skin-to-skin as long as possible.  Just say “no” with a disarming smile, of course.

Team LDR

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Since my last post was so negative…

I had two births this week at Favorite Hospital.  The previous post was not at Favorite Hospital.

The nurses were so wonderful.  And during these births, I must have worked with at least 8 different nurses.  Each spoke to me with respect and as part of the team. 

One OB who was going over some options with my client looked over at me and asked, “Do you have any questions?”  Dumb-founded, I shook my head.  I was so surprised that he asked!  Another OB that I had not worked with before spent a good bit of time just chatting with me.  And she supported some ideas I had that were a bit out of the norm.  I even heard her tell the new nurse that had come on shift that “Julie wants to try [such and such] and I told her that was fine.” 

The birth experience for the couple goes so much more smoothly–no matter the outcome–when they can see their OB/Midwife, nurses, and doula working together and working for them.  

I also want to give a special thanks to Ginny–a super-nurse at Favorite Hospital–for going beyond the call of duty patient care this week.  Hoorah to you, Ginny, for your emotional and physical support of couples!