Monday, October 25, 2010

Crazy making mommy brain

Being a mom is a little crazy making. Here is what I mean...

One day the baby sleeps all day and I think "Oh no, he is sleeping all day!! This can't be right. What did I eat or do, or not eat or not do that made this so. Oh no!!!"

And then the next day he doesn't sleep all that much and I think "Oh no!!! He is not sleeping like he was yesterday. What did I eat or do, or not eat or not do to make this so. I must have done something to make this so! Oh no!!!"

It's always this way it seems...until I slow down and remember that as much as I would like to believe that I am in control.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Borrowed Baby Time

The softest whisper of hair
Covers a cantaloupe head
Balanced oh so wobbly
On a sack o'potatoes you

And when you turn to nuzzle
That little knobby nose
Into my neck as we are
Torso to shoulder

Your baby smell intoxicates
My senses and I drink it in
This is borrowed time
This mommy moment mine...

(1 month 1 day old Oak)

Monday, October 11, 2010

Affirmations for Birth

These are the affirmations I listened to just about everyday leading up to the birth. I believe that they were effective in bringing my mind back to something positive while in labor. Use them or write your own...whatever you do, remember that if you can do it.

Affirmations
I am deeply connected to my body and am open to the wisdom and blessings this baby is bringing to my life.
I gather strength from my past, my vulnerabilities and wounds to move forward with courage, wisdom and grace.
There is infinite wisdom available to me to guide me through this birth.
I know with my body, mind and heart that I am strong.
With each contraction (wave, rush) my baby is coming to me.
The contractions are the positive force that will bring my baby to me.
I give thanks to the creator for this life within me and mt strong healthy body.
I receive the blessings and guidance of the divine and benevolent ancestors.
My baby knows what to do.
My body knows what to do.
My body & my baby work together to create a harmonious birth.
I am open to the miracle that is each moment.
My body is open.
My pelvis is open to the wisdom my baby is bringing to me.
I am spacious enough to move through anything.
My baby is welcomed with much love and gratitude by the ancestors, spirits and the community.

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Getting the Bun out of the Oven...A Birth Story

I was looking for a specific kind of experience with the birth of my child. That is not to say that I had all of the details mapped out. No, in fact the only birth plan I had was “To have my baby, at home as long as it’s possible.” The specific experience I was seeking, was one of empowerment. A period of time where my mind, body, and spirit worked together towards something I truly wanted for myself, to become a mother. I envisioned, but was not always sure, that birthing my baby could give this to me.

Also in my birth plan was a request for no one to utter the words “Are you sure?” Doubt has been an active participant in my life. Since I knew doubt well on the inside, I certainly didn’t need anyone on the outside adding to it. But I digress…

I began working with Ellen and Kristina, the midwives of Wombservice Midwifery at 13 weeks gestation and thus was able to build a foundation of trust between them, my man and I. In their care I created a relationship to my pregnant body and to my baby that I believe is the basis for the success of our home birth. If you are in search of midwifery care they come highly highly recommended.

On to the story…

It was merely my due date but already I was feeling impatient. I had been told that the baby could come as early as 37 weeks and now I was at week 40…so I pressed my nose against the glass window of the womb store, chanting "open open open." In an effort to “let go” I blogged about this in Due Date Dreaming.

In an added effort to let go, my love and I took the dog to the beach, then we ran a muck in Target, playing with the toys and generally just being a menace. Giggling wildly, we got many a sideways glance from the new parents shopping with sleeping infants in their carts. Then, with our practical purchases of razors, toothbrushes and a squeaky squirrel-shaped dog toy we headed to the grocery store. It was there that I began to realize that it felt like I was wetting my pants very slowly.

A call to Ellen brought us to the conclusion that my water was leaking and I was instructed to take echinacea and vitamin C, eat a good meal and later a snack, sleep as soundly as I could and refrain from putting anything in my vagina. I was also given strict instructions not to do anything to bring on contractions. Most likely labor would start in the morning so it was best to be well rested and fueled for the journey ahead.

So we traded our craved pepperoni pizza dinner for a more healthy and sensible rice and kale dish. By the time I got home, I found blood when I wiped and so it seemed our baby was truly on its way.

Around 4am, I woke with a contraction that felt a lot like menstrual cramps. Thinking they were supposed to hurt much more, I doubted that I was really in labor. At 6:30 am I had another. Not wanting to watch a boiling pot into stopping…I got up and showered and went about my day. At some point I called Ellen to give an update. She advised me to not time the contractions too closely but to keep myself busy. If I felt the urge to time them, then she suggested I do so for 5 or 6 of them, but not to get obsessed with it.

By rough estimate, I was having 2 or 3 contractions an hour (but I was still not convinced I was in labor)…so we went to The Goodwill to find a bowl for the placenta. While shopping, I began to stop what I was doing and focus on the sensation of each contraction. Perhaps I was really in labor? Then we got some Mexican food and went home.

At home, while we played cards and ate Miso Soup, I decided to time a few of the contractions. Turned out they were about 8 minutes apart and about 50 seconds long. Each contraction required me to stop and breath through, though they weren’t extremely intense. Genaro, my love, was super supportive, but as a man I doubted he knew what to do and when, so I called my midwife and she suggested we call Karlon, our birth attendant and friend, and tell her it was time to come.

She arrived at 7pm and once she was in attendance I was able to stop thinking. She is a woman who has given birth naturally and believes in home birth. I was now able to just be in my body. I trusted her to know what might be going on. At this point the contractions began to feel heavy in my back. After a couple of hours they were closer together. Karlon suggested that we call the midwives to come.

Not long after 9pm the ladies showed up. Ellen determined that my waters had not actually been leaking and therefore I could get into the birth tub. A huge relief. As I did, Genaro brought in a beautiful cactus that had a budding flower. He had been closely tracking the bud for a few weeks, waiting for it to open, and as it turned out, it blossomed that night. He brought it in and put it on the baby’s alter. What a beautiful symbol of the balance between the masculine and the feminine; a tall phallic cactus with a huge white soft flower hanging off of it. And it smelled like nothing I had smelled before and it bloomed for only one night...The night I was in labor.

With all parties in attendance and my laboring body in the birthing tub, I left. I entered what they call labor land, because from this point on, the linear nature of the story stops. The rest is written loosely in a way to mimic how I experienced it…I had many more contractions than the ones I document here…

Contraction: Horse lips, moaning, birth tub, Karlon massaging my hips together during to relieve my back pain

Break: Remembering what Jessica taught during Thai Goddess Pose in Prenatal Yoga* Once a contraction is over…let it go.

Contraction: Breathe 2 3 4, breathe 2 3 4. Okay. I can do this.

Break: DOUBT says “But what if you can’t?” I say “No I can!!”

I need water. Genaro provides water.

“I feel like I am going to vomit, but I am not a vomitter…If I feel like I need to vomit, I usually have to make myself vomit”

Labor on the Toilet, pee freely.

Contraction: “Okay I'm going to vomit, I need the bucket” The bucket is disgusting…it’s from the garden and has dirt caked in it…”I can’t use this bucket” Vomit on the bathroom rug instead. 4 times…there goes the miso soup.

Okay I feel better. Labor has shifted now. Much more intense.

Contraction: Rocking on my hands and knees. Or Draped over the ball while it was on the bed and I am standing. Keep moving through the contractions. We won’t get stuck.

Okay contraction….This is hard. Can I do this? I don't think I can do this.

I want to be checked. I am 3 cm…but my cervix is soft and can be opened to 6 cm or so.

Okay back to laboring…On the toilet…then I vomit again…now in the bed. Coconut water. Peeing, Needing to poo…blood on the tissue every time I wipe.

Doubt “YOU MIGHT NOT BE ABLE TO DO THIS. “ THIS IS TAKING TOO LONG. EVERYONE THINKS SO.” But I keep on moving through it…

Contraction...Genaro is playing guitar quietly...kisses me sweetly in between contractions.

Brush doubt aside. Muttering “thank you thank you thank you.” “I do this with ease” “My body and my baby work together to create harmonious birth.” “My body is healthy” “My pelvis is open” Mutter anything, ANYTHING to get through the contractions.

Next contraction I am crying…I can’t do this. “How long will this take?” I ask. “As long as it takes” says Ellen.

Someone suggests I lay on my side and try to sleep between contractions, to my surprise, I am able to. I pass out for however long…a minute? but enough to feel a little bit of rest… and then wake to a contraction and moan or mutter and then go back to resting.

I do the same thing as I straddle the toilet backwards with a pillow on the back of the tank. This was by far the most comfortable position I was in the whole time.

Doubt again says “no way no way no way. You can’t do this.” I brush him aside and keep moving forward. I imagine getting in the car to go to the hospital…I have hated riding in the car this whole pregnancy. The idea of putting myself in the car does not compute. Sorry Doubt get out.

I move on.

I get angry, I don’t want to do this anymore. I want to give up. I have had enough. My back hurts. My hips hurt. This sucks. I want my baby, but I don't want to work this hard. Ugh.

I want to be checked again…I have not opened any more. I am discouraged. I say so. I get back in the tub. I cry. I can’t do this. My doubt is right and convinces me, for no good reason that I need to go to the hospital. I say this out loud. Karlon says “Vicki, if you go to the hospital you still have to have the baby.”

Now I imagine the flouresent lights of the hallway of the hospital. I realize I can go if I want to. I don’t want to. I want my baby. Right! Okay, back to the laboring then.

Now I mutter through contractions “Oh baby.” “I want my baby” “My baby knows what to do”

I vomit more, I cry more. I moan more. I sleep more. The night is passing, I must be taking too long. I am angry. Then I am calm.

She checks me again. 9 and a half centimeters. I can start pushing. I reach up inside and feel a bubble that is the bag of waters. Now I concentrate on trying to push the baby though and break the bag. 2 hours go by, the back up midwife shows up…bright eyed. Day is coming. This is taking too long. I get back in the tub.

I began to feel my momma. I miss my momma. I realize maybe I judged her too harshly and that she is in the otherworld and I won’t get to be a good momma because it was so hard with her and I think maybe my baby won’t come because of this and I start to cry and for a moment I feel stuck. As ridiculous as it sounded I said some of this out loud and I opened my eyes and there were all these women and the man I love sitting around me holding vigil. Not saying anything. Not being impatient. Just waiting and supporting. There is no more music playing. Just three strong women and my man and no one feels sorry for me. They all believe I can do this even with all the doubt. The water feels cold. I get out.

I want to go outside. I go outside. Contraction…I squat and pee on the ground. I ask the midwives to break my water, she says “Why? So that we can speed it up?” I think “um Obviously."

Some time passes, my contractions slow to a crawl. I can’t break through the bag. The baby is not moving down. The water is not breaking. I am not having any more effective contractions. Ellen says they will break the water, now. I am momentarily scared.

“Will it will hurt more?” I ask. Kristina says the contractions will get more intense and “Are you ready to meet you baby?”

I am.

They break my waters….a gush of warm liquid, a release. Pressure has eased and now…a new kind of pressure. An intense this-is-really-happening kind of pressure. Now I feel I can move the baby down. Now I am really having this baby.

I squat and push and grunt. The ladies say “It’s like having a bowel movement” “Use all your energy to push down” “Don’t make noise” “Use that energy” “Good” You are doing it”

It hurts. "Push through that pain." "Get past it" They say.

I am squatting very low to the ground that Ellen fears the baby will hit the ground. She suggests I use the birth stool. She and Genaro are underneath me, wiping and massaging my perenium. It is at this point that I can connect with my child and I tell my body and the baby that we have only 5 more contractions more. This baby is coming out. There is no time to adjust to a new position…I begin to half squat while holding on to the edge of the bed. And I am getting 3 pushes out of every contraction. And he is at the opening. They put a mirror under me. Do I want to feel his head? NO. I don’t want to feel it, I want to have this baby.

I can feel him with each push, come to the edge of me, opening me and when the contraction passes I can feel him go back in. And it is the strangest sensation, my hips are wide and full and he is not quite out. Later I am told this is good, so that I do not tear. I do not want to tear.

Everytime I push I open just a little more. I can feel the head just a little more and every time he goes back in. There is no pain anymore, only sheer determination and desire for the release I heard comes after birth. I feel only sensation, I know that we are so near to completion.

One more contraction…somehow I know this is the last one…no more after this. I get my three good pushes, baby is not out, contraction has past, but I am not taking this baby back into my body. I push one more time with a grunt but without a contraction and his head is out. Then his body slithers out after and he is in my arms. I am sitting on the edge of the bed, sweaty, and exhausted and in awe of life. Genaro is crying. The baby is screaming. All the ladies are making sounds of joy and encouragement and love. I look and see that he is a boy. I knew it.

The release has come. I am elated and tired. The placenta follows with a good deal of blood. I am given an anti-hemorrage medication. Genaro cuts the cord. The baby is still screaming. He had good healthy lungs. I sing in his ear and he quiets immediately. I am so very much in love.

All the time the doubt never truly left completely. It kept popping it's head in like a nosy neighbor who may or may not have some good advice. And as well meaning as it might have been, I was not interested in his advice. I don't think anything would have made birth easier. It is what it is, and birth is a challenging incredible awesome thing. Once you are on the path, you are on the path. I look back now and I am so proud of what we did. That I kept sweeping that doubt away and that I kept myself focused on the release and empowerment I was seeking.

And my baby. I am so proud of my baby.

Friday, September 3, 2010

Due Date Dreaming

Little one you are "due" today. I am so ready to meet you; to see your face; to hold your tiny body close to mine.

I am also ready to have my belly back; to be able to get close enough to the sink to do the dishes comfortably; to reach my shoes so that I can tie them.

I want you here, now. I really do. I want to go into labor like one enters a ballroom, with confidence and power, though not as well dressed.

Alas I am to wait, not on some specific time or date, that I can know. But on a time that is up to you and my body. A request though...pretty please...will you start on your way today?

Saturday, August 28, 2010

Prayer & Altar to Baby's Spirit


Baby Spirit who has so graciously
Chosen me,
to birth thee
We are in this together,
Right now my body your vessel
My belly your home.

The time will come when
Two will be from this one
And when that transpires
with breath and perspire
I pray

For open calm strength
Fierce determination &
Courage of the purest kind.

We will together seek
A moment of primal release
As you come into this world
in your way.

And on that day to see you
and hold you and smell you
will be the very best gift of all.

Friday, August 27, 2010

Pregnant Capoeira

The Momma to be playing one little game
with Mestre Marcelo at 32 weeks pregnant.
I refute my mother's belief that a woman's life is
over once she gets pregnant and
definitely once she has kids.

And here is a link to a YouTube video of myself and another mama to be capoeirista playing a game at 39 weeks. Our due dates were 1 day apart and the babies born about a week apart.
Check it out.

Want to know more about Capoeira Mandinga?
Click here www.mandinga.org

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Mommy as an Explanation


According to this sign, which hung in many of the places I lived with my mom as a child, a mother does not have to have a reason for her actions. She is the Mother, or in this case the "mummy," and therefor has unlimited power to simply state this as fact and justification. Her dear little chickies must then accept this explanation and get over their desire to understand.

Perhaps the idea is that someday the chickies will understand and by then they will have the power to justify in this way.

Stubborn and bratty child that I was, this explanation never really sat with me. It felt forced and lazy when my mother used it. As I enter this world of motherhood, I wonder (as well as commit to observing) just how often I will use it.

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

All the light you bring.


I am not waiting for this baby
like an eager teenager is not waiting
For her sweetheart to call.
That is to say that I am totally waiting
Twiddling my thumbs and saying
Any day now
Any day now
Any day now!

Which is true
and what can I do
but wait?

Here's something we did
My love & I took this bulging belly to receive a blessing at a Gira (or ritual) of the Templo Guaracy Da Terra. Here they practice the Afro-Brazilian Earth Religion of Umbanda, using song and dance to channel entities who bring blessings and light.

During the darkest of my days I would attend their rituals, understanding little, emoting a lot, and always walking away feeling slightly better.
This temple led me to Capoeira (my first love), which blessed me with my man (my other first love), who put this beautiful baby in my belly (my third first love), and now, however many years later it seems the darkest has passed for the most part. Light has come and it is so nice.

As the three of us approached to receive our blessing I was overcome with a weeping sort of joyful hysteria that takes me in moments of bliss. Greeted with hugs the entity told us that we have all that we need and that our light brought a blessing to the Gira. We were given a candle and a flower to put on our altar to represent that light and for it to fill the our home space and our lives.

I AM SO EXCITED TO RAISE THIS BABY AND LOVE THIS BUDDING FAMILY OF MINE!!!



Sunday, August 22, 2010

A great big choice....

My mother attempted suicide multiple times. There is no exact count. She began showing off her scars to me when I was maybe 8 years old and continued to find herself in rehab programs long after I was on my own. It was such a repetitive cycle that it seemed less like a "cry for help" and more like a hobby.

Then I found the "Oh just give up" voice in myself. As life tends to do, it pushed me to the brink of myself. Sexual assault sent me into a serious decline and at that point in my life I found myself at a place where ending it seemed like the only solution to the despair. For the record, I never attempted. I did however turn the idea over in my hand like a shiny sharp object that vibrated with a power that scared the hello out of me. Instead I committed myself to as many healing activities as I could find...using everything that came my way as a lifeline to a place of light again.

It was at this time, in the muckiest, muck of myself that my mother made another of her attempts. I brought myself to the conversation begrudgingly. Putting myself in the motherly role I listened to her story once again and an anger bubbled up in me from so deep I thought I was going to vomit into the telephone.

Who the hell was she to try this again? What the hell does she have to be so tragic about? And why the flicking flack is she using me to get herself through this when I could not do the same with her? Irritated, but with a drive to be the good kid, I told her that death is not an option and that if I don't get to end it neither does she. She found inspiration in this, I slept for something like 3 days.

What I learned from this, is probably something many people already know. It is what really really sunk in for me:

Life is a choice. Since I have the cognitive awareness to understand that at some point I will no longer be bouncing along the universe on this firery ball called Earth, and since I understand that certain actions I take could make that end come sooner, then I have a choice. The choice to live or to die, the choice to thrive or to decline, the choice to grow into something more or to wither into something less.

And I realized that my choice was made a long time before my dark night of the soul descended upon me. For that I am grateful. For my mother I am also grateful, from her tragedy and despair came many a great gift, the most of exciting of which currently is my drive to be a balanced beautiful and loving momma.

Thursday, August 19, 2010

A Mother of a Blog; Setting an intention.

My New Baby
As of this posting I am almost 38 weeks pregnant with my first child. We do not know the gender of the baby, thanks for asking. Great mysteries in life should be celebrated and stories told in their time. We chose to wait because we want the opportunity for our little one's story to unfold as it will, as opposed to fantasize ourselves into a place where we can't be present for who our child is. As enlightened as that sounds, we believe deeply that we are having a boy, though the contrary will bring us no less joy and excitement. This blog intends to share that joy and excitement (and the ughs and OMGS) with whatever audience is interested.

For sure, though, I love this little being more than it seems possible to even feel. When the feeling does hit me, you better have a tissue handy cause my face is a flowing faucet and my heart an open hand.

My Late Mother
In January 2007 my mother died, after a short and somewhat tragic life. Much of her tragedy I believe, was self-created; a truth I will explore as this blog unfolds. Her mothering was brilliant, confusing, abusive, neglectful and wrought with many a contradiction. Her favorite thing to say about becoming pregnant with me was that now she "had someone to grow up with." The trouble is I grew up, she did not and when she died I was left with an ominous sense of confusion; the kind that presents itself in dreams as a 10 foot tall faceless beast whose only purpose is to cause dreamers to doubt themselves. Like many mother-daughter relationships it was a complicated one.

The uncomplicated thing about it was that I loved her immensely and she, me. Whether this made the relationship easier or more difficult remains to be seen.

Me
I am the woman in between these two beings. The oldest of my mother's three children, I developed the capacity to care for and rear children while I was still one myself. It is a talent that I have been cultivating and capitalizing on since I began babysitting when I was 11 and continues to this day in various shapes and forms. My way of being with children is both a gift and calling...I believe it comes from something much larger than me. The Divine Mother perhaps?
Becoming a mother is a very exciting time for me. I can think of nothing more I want to do with my life right now then apply all the practice I have had to the bun I got in my oven. That being said, I've got this example in my head that my mother set that can pull me from my center and cause lots of suffering for both myself and those around me. As I enter this next phase of my life I often ask myself "What am I going to do with the mental vestige of my crazy mother and my deep desire to be a loving, connected, and effective one for my child?" I am going to do the very best I can and I am going to blog about it.

Thanks for reading.
V