Pre-Labor
We were getting fairly stressed out as it became later and later after the due date. On Thursday, March 24, Jenevra had a "balloon catheter" put in her uterus to attempt to start labor, or at least soften the uterus. It seemed to work at first, as she started having legitimate contractions as evidenced by this photo:
Jenevra's balloon catheter contractions |
Natural Labor
Jenevra's water broke at 2am Tuesday morning, awaking her out of a dead sleep. Unfortunately, it was two hours too late to allow us to give birth at the birth center. We "risked out" of the birth center at midnight Monday night because that was two weeks after the due date. Still, two midwives would accompany us to Providence Hospital to assist us along with the nurses and doctors during the labor.
We arrived at Providence around 4am (two hours after the water broke), after stopping by the Birth Center and doing a quick checkup there. We had been staying the night in town at Jenevra's mom's place so that we didn't have to drive all the way in from Girdwood.
Jenevra early on at the hospital |
After 19 hours, Jenevra was still only about 5cm dilated, but had not changed for several hours. She was getting exhausted, especially considering the labor began in the middle of the night after only three hours of sleep. So, unfortunately, it was time for an epidural to save up some energy for later.
Intervention
Intervention began with an epidural, which we had wanted to avoid at all costs. Along with the epidural came continuous monitoring.
One of our midwives Sara helping with Jenevra's heavy monitoring |
Eventually, things stabilized, and then they introduced pitocin since still no progress was being made. Then we noticed the baby's heart rate dropping after the stronger contractions, so the pitocin was eased. Amnioinfusion was also used to try to get the baby out, but that didn't work either.
About 12 hours after the epidural, Jenevra had the urge to push. Unfortunately, the push came with Zola still not far enough down. This, along with the fact that Zola's heart rate was dropping after each contraction, made them give Jenevra some drugs to get rid of the pushing urge.
Finally, after trying everything, a c-section was the only option left.
Right before the c-section |
Jenevra saying goodbye to Zola in her belly with her hands shaped like a heart |
C-Section
I was allowed to sit by Jenevra's head during the c-section. There was a big blue curtain blocking us from all the doctors/nurses doing the procedure. The first thing we noticed was the burning smell. Yes, that was them cutting through Jenevra's skin. Then, there was a bunch of pulling and tugging. I thought Jenevra was in pain at the time, but afterwards, she said she felt it, but it didn't really hurt. It took longer than it was supposed to to get Zola out, because she was stuck really good! They had to use forceps to yank her out, leading to additional bruising on her head on top of the typical bruising from labor. Zola also had a nice conehead. They carried her over to a table to weigh her...
...and then they took Zola next to Jenevra's head before taking Jenevra away to recovery.
Weighing Zola |
Jenevra saying hi to Zola for the first time |
What Went Wrong that Lead to a C-Section
The doctors, nurses, and midwives did absolutely everything possible to prevent a c-section, but it was meant to be. Zola basically was slightly sideways and ended up getting stuck at the cervix with her head lodged into the side and Jenevra dilated to 9.5cm (fully dilated is 10cm). No matter what we tried, Zola was not budging any further. Also, the cord was wrapped around her shoulder, which explains why Zola's heart rate would drop after most contractions. Also, the doctor mentioned it was possible that Jenevra's pelvis wasn't wide enough. We thought that was just a myth, but he said it could've been a contributing factor. Even if the water had broken two hours earlier and we could've used the birth center, we still would've ended up transferring to the hospital.
A Very Interesting Twist
Zola was more likely a 40-weeker or maybe even 38 weeks, not 42 weeks and two days! This can be discerned by skin quality, the size of the baby (Zola was 7 lb 5 oz), and some other things. But they are almost certain that the due date was off by at least two weeks. Yikes!
Immediately After Birth
For most of the first two hours after birth I just cuddled skin-to-skin with Zola while Jenevra was in recovery. Zola basically slept the whole time. We opted not to give Zola a bath soon after birth because we didn't want to wash off the vernix, a waxy white cheesy substance all over her skin which helps moisturize the skin and improve skin quality.
Finally, after two hours, they brought Jenevra up to a hospital room where we were waiting. Typically, for the first three or so hours after birth, babies are relatively alert, maybe trying out breastfeeding briefly and getting some colostrum, then they take a long nap. However, we were forced to keep Zola awake for about nine hours. This was because it's hospital protocol to check blood sugar for any babies over two weeks overdue. Again, Zola on paper was over two weeks overdue, but it was immediately obvious she wasn't. So, Zola just barely failed the first blood sugar test, so we had to stuff her with colostrum and sugar water for several hours, while all three of us were ready to sleep. Finally, after roughly nine hours, her blood sugar "passed", and we were allowed to doze for the first time in a few days.
For most of the first two hours after birth I just cuddled skin-to-skin with Zola while Jenevra was in recovery. Zola basically slept the whole time. We opted not to give Zola a bath soon after birth because we didn't want to wash off the vernix, a waxy white cheesy substance all over her skin which helps moisturize the skin and improve skin quality.
Me with Zola right after the birth |
The First Few Days (in the Hospital)
We stayed in the hospital after the birth for several days. It was mainly to check on Jenevra's slow healing from the C-section, though there was a lot of testing on the baby too. Zola was doing quite well and was healthy by all signs, though Jenevra needed extensive help just getting up and moving around (she's still pretty sore and will be for a few weeks). We only got a little sleep at the hospital, not necessarily because we had a new beautiful baby, but because the nurses came in all the time to check on us! But it was nice in a way to have the attention, and the room service meals for several days. We also got visited by several friends.
Happy family in the hospital bed |
The hospital room was awfully small, but at least it was away from the loud construction that was present next to our labor room. The nurses were pretty nice, though something really funny/scary happened one morning. The nurse accidentally hit the "code blue" button, which means someone isn't breathing. And then it took her a minute or two to find the "cancel" button. People came running frantically into our room from everywhere! Jenevra started crying because she realized how freaked out most of the nurses/doctors in the building would be hearing something like that from the mother/baby unit. Our doctor who did the c-section came in and talked with us to make sure we were okay, followed by the spiritual advisor who made sure we weren't traumatized! But mostly, we thought it was funny.
Another funny thing happened on our departure day. Apparently, we were released around 11am, but we had not been told we could go. So, six hours later at 5pm, someone finally asks when we would be leaving! We had been twiddling our thumbs assuming that they were putting together paperwork for us to be officially released!
I'll end this post with a video of me teaching Zola about meteorology. Her middle name is "Snow", and interestingly, after a snow drought it finally snowed a few inches right after Zola was born.
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