Welcome to the June 2012 Carnival of Natural Parenting: Embracing Your Birth Experience
This post was written for inclusion in the monthly Carnival of Natural Parenting hosted by Code Name: Mama and Hobo Mama. This month our participants have written about at least one part of their birth experience that they can hold up and cherish.
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I stumbled around writing this post. This month’s carnival topic is on embracing your birth experience. I didn’t have dramatic births. Both of them went essentially according to plan, even though Liam’s birth was much harder than I had imagined. I wasn’t short on education in the field of birth. I had the best instructor and a wonderful team mate. When labor started, I felt prepared. After all, I had watched many, many births both in reality tv format and Old Western Movie format.
That being said, I didn’t count on how I would feel. I didn’t realize I was going to be in such an unladylike… ah… position for so long. I didn’t count on my personal modesty being such an issue. While in labor I kept apologizing about being so… ugh. Ok, look. Other women I know were freaked out about pain or tearing or vomiting or pooping. I did not care one cent for any of those certain moments. Not at all. The hardest challenge for me above missing my mom, above Liam twisting and turning inside me with each contraction, above the agonizing back labor… my biggest challenge was that I was at my most vulnerable for much longer than I had planned on being vulnerable.
When my friends would talk about their favorite moment of delivery, it always had something to do with the birth itself. I love that first contraction. I love the last contraction. I love even that freakishly wobbly feeling as your child slips out. Honestly, I even loved the moment I tore right before Liam came out because I knew all the pain was over and I was finally getting to hold him. I did not love not wearing my underpants for 16+ hours.
When I was in labor with Sylvi, I was still embarrassed that I wasn’t as modest as I’d like to have been. I tried all sort of ridiculous options to be covered, but as it turned out, they just wound up on the floor and I had to give up. The moment I embraced the whole process of my labor and got over the fact that I was embarrassed that I had asked for help and for Tylenol (again!) and had sat in the bathtub and sobbed, my labor came to a complete lull. For one glorious, peaceful hour, I got to embrace the nearness of birth without fear, without care, without pain. Of course, at 1001am, the wicked contractions kicked in again and 24 minutes later, I was holding Sylvi in my arms.
This isn’t a really cohesive post and for that I apologize. I don’t have one epic moment to embrace in my birth experiences. I have to embrace it all. If I hold on to fear of failure or pain or potential “failure” from my plans, I can’t embrace the method by which my child comes to my arms. If I allow myself to focus solely on the fact that while in labor, I am decidedly unladylike and downright primal, I cannot let go enough to birth my child. I know that if we have another child, I will struggle to accept naked vulnerability once again, but I know how to do it now. I’m grateful for simple birth experiences that are filled with my own personal struggles. I’m grateful I’ve gotten to have my own desires in how these births have played out. And I’m so grateful for healthy, beautiful children. I grateful I have birth experiences to even embrace.
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Visit Code Name: Mama and Hobo Mama to find out how you can participate in the next Carnival of Natural Parenting!
Please take time to read the submissions by the other carnival participants:
(This list will be live and updated by afternoon June 12 with all the carnival links.)
- I Had A C-Section. So What! — Jennifer at Hybrid Rasta Mama rewrites her birth story now that she has worked through the feelings of inadequacy and disappointment of not having the “perfect” birth.
- The Perfect Birth — Kellie at Our Mindful Life reflects on how a birth can be far from what we imagined, but still perfect.
- Own Your Birth: My Hope For All Expectant Moms — Andrea at Tales of Goodness shares how she owned her birth spiritually (while navigating it physically) in order to have a joyous experience.
- Carnival of Natural Parenting: My Birth Experience — It wasn’t what Lily at Witch Mom wanted, but it was everything she needed.
- The Painless Natural Homebirth of BabyE — Shannon at GrowingSlower wants women considering natural birth to know painless births are possible.
- Reflections on Jemma’s Birth … 20 Months Later — It took a second pregnancy for That Mama Gretchen to fully embrace her first birth experience.
- Loving My Unnatural Birth Experience — Erika at Cinco de Mommy cherishes her very first birth experience, in all its unnatural glory!
- Be Careful What you Wish for in Birth — Amber at Strocel.com had two births, and it was the one that went to plan that she struggled with embracing.
- Redeeming an unexpected hospital transfer — Lauren at Hobo Mama looks back at her first, interrupted home-turned-hospital birth, and finds the beauty in what happened.
- All of it — Laura from Pug in the Kitchen had to learn to embrace the whole experience of birth even though it meant being naked . . . with an audience.
- Birthing Dreams & Realities — Momma Jorje never had a “dream birth,” but she wouldn’t change a thing about her births.
- Memories of Birth: Calm Amidst the Storm — While neither of her children’s births had been quite what she expected, Cynthia at The Hippie Housewife cherishes one moment in particular from each of her birth experiences.
- Embracing Our Birth Stories — Luschka from Diary of a First Child shares a sensitive post on her recent birth which both did and didn’t go ‘to plan’, and writes about the journey of coming to terms with the good and the bad.
- Two Beautiful Births — Sheila at A Gift Universe remembers how her mother brought out the beauty in each of her children’s births, and tries to do the same with her sons’ birth stories.
- Embracing My Supernatural ChildBirth Experiences… — Jenny at I’m a full-time mummy shares her fond memories on both her supernatural childbirth experiences
- Embracing the Hospital Birth Experience — Jenn at Monkey Butt Junction believes that sometimes a medicated, induced hospital birth is the right choice for a natural parent.
- Carnival: Embracing Your Birth Experience — Stephanie at The Other Baby Blog embraces the birth experience from a paleobiologist’s point of view and takes a look at how humans defy their anatomy.
- Reflections on My First Birth and Preparing for a Second — Abbie at Farmer’s Daughter shares the strength she didn’t realize she had until she gave birth to her son.
- becoming a mama – embracing my birth experience — Meegs at A New Day remembers the birth of her daughter Gwenivere, and the empowered feeling it left her with.
- What About Us? A Poem About Birth — Kat at Loving {Almost} Every Moment shares a poem she wrote about healing from an unexpected and emotionally painful birth experience.
- Be a Man: One Father’s View of Birth — Mandy at Living Peacefully with Children shares her husband’s advice to other fathers and partners.
- A Birth Monologue — Kat at MomeeeZen shares a monologue she wrote during the process of healing from her birth experiences.
- Forgiveness: My Birth Journey — Leah at The Crunchy Farm Baby discusses what happens when her planned homebirth doesn’t end up the way she wanted, and explains her journey of forgiving herself for losing that “perfect” birth.
- Patching together a perfect birth — KrissyFair at Think Mama, Think learned that sometimes a perfect birth happens in pieces.
- Celebrating and Sharing the Possibilities of Perfect Birth — Terri from Child of the Nature Isle joyfully shares details of her perfect births and wishes to inspire a more positive cultural expectation about birth.
- Instinct – Embracing Your Birth Experience — Laura at Laura’s Blog reflects on instinctual moments during and after the births of her two daughters.
- I was Foolisn Then — ANonyMous at Radical Ramblings describes how foolish lack of preparation for childbirth led to a feeling of powerlessness and fear, but that in the end she had her baby in her arms, and that’s one thing she can celebrate.
- Sometimes no plan is the best plan — Tat at Mum in search contemplates that maybe she doesn’t need a birth plan for her upcoming birth.
- Disturbing the peace — Kenna at Million Tiny Things thought she would be a calm, quiet baby-haver. Ha!
- Accepting the Unexpected During Birth — Emily at S.A.H.M i AM imagined herself laboring on a birthing ball but she never imagined where she’d really be most comfortable when the time came…
- Sacred This Time, Too — Kimber at The Single Crunch learned enough to know that the way she birthed wasn’t they way she wanted to; but she also knew to enjoy it for what it was.
- The Birth Partner: A Great Natural Labor Companion — Justine at The Lone Home Ranger thinks that the secret to her pleasant natural labors was having a great support system.
- the Best Thing About My Labor Experience — Crunchy Con Mommy realizes that amidst all the things that seemed to go wrong with her labor, the love and support of her husband was the one thing she could always count on!
- Your Birth Was My Favorite — Dulce de leche describes some of the highlights from each of her four births and explains why despite the differences, they are all her favorites.
- Birth Story: Part One – Moon on a Stick! — Gentle Mama Moon tells the first part of her birth story to share some of the delight of labouring at home.
- Embracing My Birth Experience by Sharing My Birth Story — Dionna at Code Name: Mama made peace with her first birth by sharing the story with her son.
- Focusing on the Beauty of Birth — Julia at A Little Bit of All of It shares the beautiful aspects of her birth center water birth.
- A Joyful Induced Delivery — Amy Willa: Me, Mothering, and Making it All Work notes the meditations and perspective that helped her achieve an unmedicated birth despite being induced for medical reasons.
- Finding Joy in an Imperfect Childbirth Experience — Deb Chitwood at Living Montessori Now tells what she learned from her two very different childbirth experiences.
- What’s to like about a c-section? — Jessica at Crunchy-Chewy Mama is glad she her second child at home, but she also cherishes much about the c-section she had four years earlier.
- What Story Will I Tell? — Rachael at The Variegated Life realizes that the way she tells the story of her second child’s birth matters — and could be exhilarating.
- I Quietly Put My Hopes to Rest E — Erica at ChildOrganics shares her emotional ups and downs with the highly intervened birth of her special needs daughter, Bella.
- Tale of Six Births — Jessica at Instead of Institutions appreciates that unique challenges and joys of each of her births.
- Labouring naturally: nature’s gift — Caroline at stoneageparent describes the most beautiful, spiritual aspect of the labour of her son, the first stages along a bumpy road to giving birth.
- All The Woman I Am. — Lindsay at This Woman’s Work shares a poem about letting go and surrendering during the thralls of labor.
- A twin birth story: embracing the unexpected — Megan at The Boho Mama shares her twin birth experience and how she found the silver lining when faced with preterm labor, premature birth, and a two-week NICU stay.
- Giving Birth With Eminem — Kerry at City Kids Homeschooling shares how fiery rap music contributed to an empowered homebirth with her third baby.
- Two Different Births — Cassie at There’s a Pickle in My Life shares how she learned from her first birth experience and how to trust yourself and your body.
- Embracing Our Potential: Birth as a Metaphor — Sheila at A Living Family expresses how birth has served as a metaphor to help her through other experiences in life.
- Little Sister’s Birth Story: Our VBAC Adventure — Charise at I Thought I Knew Mama describes the recent birth story of her baby girl, her pride in an epidural-free VBAC, and how her story isn’t exactly the birth experience she had planned for.
- A Journey in Birth Confidence — Shannon at The Artful Mama shares her experiences with labor during both of her sons’ births.

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You know, I think that part of the wonderful experience I had birthing Ailia (#2) was that it was at home, with no one else around for a lot of it – even my husband was busy doing his own thing (blowing up the birth pool I never got to use). I remember apologizing a LOT with Kieran – “sorry for being a pain, sorry for asking for help, sorry for being too loud,” etc. Laboring women should never be sorry!! I hope you can find another way to embrace that primal part of you if you ever have #3 – it’s raw, but it’s nothing to apologize for
Raw couldn’t have been a more accurate description!
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I had a moment with my son, when I arrived at the hospital and they’d filled the tub and I realized that while the three other people in the room (the nurse, my midwife and my husband) would all remain fully clothed, I was about to strip stark naked in front of them. And it was … odd. In my slightly altered state, I couldn’t decide if I cared, and eventually I just ran with it because I really wanted to get in that tub.
Birth is challenging, and often in ways we don’t expect. And I think you’re right – we need to accept it for what it is. It may not be entirely glorious, and we may not love every moment, and that’s all right. It really is all right.
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You know what? Not every birth story has to be an EPIC!BIRTH!STORY! I think your post is awesome. My favorite of all the carnival posts I’ve read (other than mine)!
Thanks! I’m still reading… I am so. slow.
Love the honesty in this post. As I look back on my births, the hardest part about both of them is the sense of lost dignity. I had a very large group of residents and nurses clustered at the end of my bed during my first birth. I didn’t have a stitch of clothing on by that point. With my second, it was my mother-in-law that got to see me completely unclothed, on my knees on my bathroom floor, hollering at the top of my lungs as the baby slid out. Two years later, I still feel a bit squirmy around her, knowing she was witness to me in such an undignified state. To top it all off, I had two male paramedics join me in that bathroom, continually trying to cover me up to preserve some sense of modesty, which didn’t even occur to me until long after they’d gone. It’s just all so embarrassing in hindsight…
I have friends who have invited an audience and I just can’t handle it. My MIL had 3 c-sections and her daughter’s births were medicated hospital births. Oh. And I’m not comfortable enough to even really bf in front of her, soo…
I felt that way too! I’m a modest person in general, and so giving birth in front of my mom and MIL in addition to hubby and medical ppl was a little embarrassing. But the really embarrassing part was when the nurse had to use a catheter to empty my bladder because I got an epidural. I wanted to die!!! I think that memory and the memory of the IV which I hate hate hated will be enough to make me really want to avoid it this time!
I worked in a nursing home and *know* how those catheters work! I was in the ER because I was so sick with Liam and they wanted a urine sample, but I was so dehydrated I couldn’t pee and they wanted to do a cath. I refused. They were all shocked. We left and I informed Matt that I would never give birth in a hospital because they’d want to do that again.
I was so completely opposite!
For my first birth, I was 17yo and birthed in a learning hospital. When asked, I agreed to let a line (literally a line) of students check my cervix. Seriously, years later, I wonder what I was thinking! The staff was so appreciative, though. Most women are too modest to allow for it and these students needed a learning opportunity. How strange to think… I bet they were all older than me, too!
Maybe a home birth (next time) would have you more comfortable with how vulnerable you have to be? Just a thought.
I had my first pelvic exams at a teaching hospital in Tulsa… probably the same one as you? Anyway, didn’t care then, but man I care now! Age? Who knows… but the irony of the whole thing, we did have a homebirth… twice. Somehow, I thought it would help my anxiety. Apparently, no. Gotta work on that, right?
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For me it was the pooping. I guess we all have something. The nakedness didn’t bother me, but the pooping. How embarrassing.
It’s hard to believe that our bodies can do all that – and still our minds hold onto our little insecurities. I remember neurotically asking my doctor to check me for poop multiple times during my first birth. Funny – I hadn’t thought about that in forever.
Great post. Thanks for sharing.
Mmm.. yes. The bowels. I asked constantly, but no one really seemed to care. They must see it so much!
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I love it when you say that you loved the contractions – this something I haven’t heard before and believe me I read A LOT of birthing mothers testimonials! You are such an inspiration, thank you
Oh gosh yes. I’m so much a fan of the pain aspect of a contraction as I am the progress. But, honestly, I welcome the pain because it means there will be a baby soon!