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The Way It Went

(Blogging & Lunch / 5 days old / October 26, 2011)

This is one of those posts that I was talking about when I said I needed a couple of weeks to let my emotions settle so that I’d be able to see straight. I’m not sure that they’re settled entirely quite yet – so forgive me if I ramble, or if things aren’t quite wrapped up with a neat little bow – but this is the best I can do for now. Mostly because man, I’m tired. Happy, but tired.

What I’m writing about today: my labor. It was not what I had expected. I was not what I had expected.

All the books I read, the classes I took, led me to believe that there would be endless hours of pacing, massages, exercise balls, and warm showers. Time to watch episode after episode of The Walking Dead (weird pick, I know; that’s what I’m into lately) and read Star while we waited for things to progress. Time to wrap our minds around what was about to happen, how our lives were about to change. A sleepless night of walking the hallways in the maternity ward – maybe even two.

I also expected certain things of myself. Of course I anticipated that it would all be stressful and difficult and beyond my control and such…but I certainly expected to be able to handle things the way I like things handled. Which is to say, on my own terms. Without needing much in the way of help from anyone else.

As it turns out, that wasn’t exactly the case. There were two moments in particular that, in the week or so following the birth, I felt were moments of “collapse,” of being somehow less than the person I’d hoped to transform into – basically, a superwoman – the second I became a mother, and they were moments that I initially felt pretty ashamed about.

To make a long story short: ten days after my due date had come and gone, my doctors decided to induce labor. I went into the hospital, started the induction process, got an epidural a couple of hours later when the contractions became overwhelming (before they were too overwhelming to permit me to sit still while needles poked around near my spinal cord), took a short nap, and woke up fully dilated and ready to push.

In other words, I more or less skipped the whole labor thing. Which of course was wonderful in many ways, but also made me feel sort of…guilty. Like I didn’t go through it, so somehow I didn’t get that gold star that women who have truly borne the misery of a long labor get – that big red check mark that says that they’re worthy of motherhood, that they’ve proven themselves strong enough to cope with whatever may come. (The pain, by the way, came later; I didn’t get to skip it entirely, in case you were wondering.)

You know, I had this idea in my head of how giving birth would be. I knew it would hurt, sure…but I thought that I’d be all swept away by the spiritual gravitas (or whatever) of it all, and that I’d find a deep reservoir of strength and determination somewhere inside me that would carry me through the pain with grace. But when they said it was time to push, I wasn’t ready. I was groggy – I’d just woken up, I hadn’t in any way experienced the kind of labor I’d expected to have, and I felt that I hadn’t come to terms with what was about to happen yet. I started to panic not because I was scared of the pain, but because I wasn’t in the emotional place I had hoped to be in when I brought our child into the world. I wanted so badly to be in the moment, to really be there when my son’s life began.

And then the epidural wore off, at the very moment that things got really real, if you know what I’m saying. While I had prepared myself for the idea of “pain like you’ve never known”…I don’t think I had prepared myself for the reality. The “finding your center” thing? Bye-bye! Any semblance of zen-ness flew straight out the window, not to return until I finally saw our child’s face, and in the minutes before my son was born I felt very strongly that I could not do this on my own. In between bouts of fainting and sucking on an oxygen mask, I screamed at the doctors to “get it out” (it!), told them they had to do whatever it was that they did when it was an emergency and the person was too weak to continue with the birthing process. I wanted them to treat me like a woman who was incapable of finishing what she’d started, because in that moment my worst fear came true, and I was that woman. I needed help.

But of course, I did it. And later, when I told Kendrick how horrified I’d been at my inability to disregard my own pain in the moment of my child’s birth, he told me that what had felt like an hour of crying out was really only a minute or so. In the moment after I screamed that I was unable to go on, I did go on, and it was in that moment our son came into the world.

In the days following, there was another moment that I’ve needed some time to wrap my mind around.

On the night we came home from the hospital, I was crushed – absolutely crushed into pieces – by my love for my son, and my terror at all the ways in which the world could hurt him. I couldn’t stop crying, and simply didn’t know what to do with all the pain that I felt – both physical and emotional. It wasn’t rational – I knew that – but it was a misery so overwhelming that I turned to Kendrick and told him that I needed help.

I don’t know that I’ve ever said those words so plainly in my life, or meant them so much.

“I need help,” I said…and I did. And he took me seriously, and promised me that we would get me that help. The next morning, my doctor gave me a prescription (safe for breastfeeding women, of course) that took away the overwhelming parts of the anxiety and the pain immediately and completely. I hated that I needed a pill to help me handle those first couple of days…but I did.

You know, I thought I’d be strong, unflappable, capable of handling all this motherhood jazz without breaking a sweat. My whole life, I’ve had trouble saying that I can’t just handle things on my own; I like feeling like whatever comes my way, I can deal with it. Do you know, just before I went into the hospital I actually was asked to appear as a guest on the Nate Berkus show a couple of days after I would have given birth, and I very seriously entertained the idea of saying yes? Because I really felt that sure, it’d be tough…but I could do it! It was a big opportunity for me, and the pain? The exhaustion? I’d just…deal.

But what I found out over these last couple of weeks is that I’m not a superwoman. Sometimes I can’t do it all alone: I need help. But as it turned out, I didn’t have to do it alone, and that was a cool thing to discover: that help was right there waiting for me when I asked for it, and even when I didn’t.

Jeez, re-reading this: my account of the experience sounds pretty negative. But like I said, I think that’s because I’m tired and rambly (sorry about the length; my internal editor is taking a nap in my stead). I left out so much of the other stuff, the wonderful stuff, because what I wanted to focus on here was what the experience taught me, and to me those two moments of enormous need were what taught me the most.

And I get it, you know. I get that I did the best that I could, and that not being able to do everything all by yourself is not just OK, it’s necessary. There have been times in my life before when I’ve needed help, and I’ve known that I needed it…but I wasn’t able to ask for it, because I was too scared of seeming weak. Of being weak. But I was wrong about that: there is enormous strength in knowing when you need help, and being willing to ask for it.

“Ask for help when you need it.” Big deal, right? We all know this. But it’s one thing to know it…and another thing to experience it, because when you need help, really need it, it’s scary. Because if you don’t get it, you don’t know what will happen. And when that need coincides with a moment you’ve been scared you wouldn’t live up to in the first place…that just makes it all the harder to admit you can’t go it alone.

But it also makes it even more important to find the strength in yourself to reach out to someone. And that’s something I’m proud to have done.

The truth is, there’s a lot of pride in my memories of the birth, too. I’m proud that when it came down to it, I did what I thought I couldn’t do: I brought our son into the world. And I’m proud that I wasn’t too stubborn to refuse to take medication when I really, really needed it. I’m proud that I’ve figured out how to breastfeed while checking my email, and that I now know how to make a bed with one hand. I’m proud that I got through this week – my first week all alone, without anyone around to help me – and that I’m smiling at the end of it, because I got to see my baby smile for the very first time, and that smile was just for me.

I am proud that I am a mother, because despite all those fears and insecurities, I am a mother, naturally and completely, and with every single part of me.

Mostly, I’m just proud of him.



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  • http://barnardbabyblog.tumblr.com Adrienne

    I’ve felt the guilt too, because I had a c-section.  That it was somehow easier for me, because I didn’t have to push him out, he was just taken out.  But then, I remember how post c-section I could barely walk, and then had to let many people take care of me for 2 weeks after because I had to recover- and that definitely isn’t easier.  So then I’ve also felt the processing of having to let go of what I thought my labor and birthing would be because it so vastly wasn’t.
    There are women who have these magical births, and yeah I’m somewhat jealous of them.  But here’s what I’ve come to terms with, every birth is magical and every woman is magical in giving birth.  I think it is wonderful that you asked for the help you needed.  I think that makes you more of a Mother than you realize right now.  Because, you’re putting him first, and right now that’s what the job is all about. 
    xo

  • Ashley

    Thank you for sharing this!  Reaching out for help is something that I still struggle with, so I completely get where you are coming from.  

  • Lesley

    This was a beautiful, amazing post.  I understand completely where you have been, and how you felt.  Though my challenges were different when having my duaghter in January, they were still obstacles that felt insurmountable at the time – and I’m proud I made it through them, ashamed that they were there (though I have realized, and you will too, that those feelings are NO fault of our own! Between hormones, expectations and the lack of any frame of reference for motherhood, there’s no way you can know they’re coming), and more aware of myself and my feelings than I have ever been.  

    I had to ask for help too, and take a pill to make it better too, and it would have been impossible otherwise.  You’re lucky that you’re in SUCH a better place now, just a week later. But continue to ask for help, and accept help that is offered, even if it makes you feel guilty to even entertain the idea of leaving your son – you will return to him more energized, more relaxed, and a better mom because of it, I promise!

    For more on my challenges, read here: http://dearbex.blogspot.com/2011/09/dark-days.html

  • http://catnipsprettythings.tumblr.com/ Jeanine Marie

    Wow Jordan, I can see why you needed the time to digest what you went through.

    I was brought up to believe there is shame is asking for help.  I went well over ten years without it.  When I realized there was no shame in it, my life changed for the better.  

    From what I have observed, you are a person who who sets outs goals and meets them. Motherhood is a learning process. I do not think anyone is born a perfect mom. A lot of trial and errors. 

    Never be hard on yourself for not having all the answers.  Your little boy is happy, healthy and smiling.  That is a job well done mama.

     

  • http://www.facebook.com/KarenWissClark Karen Clark

    Oh Jordan! Honey, this makes me remember how hard it is. Yes yes, it’s also beautiful, wonderful, amazing… but I remember coming out of some various appointment, some days after the birth of my daughter… and I just… cried and cried and cried. There in my car. Just me, with Tatum in the carseat behind me. Oh it is hard! I know.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=747618979 Jessica Wright Baldenhofer

    This is a very courageous post. Thank you.

  • dslbklyn

    jesus. it’s weird – as someone who is terrified about losing control, terrified about the pain of childbirth, this is exactly what i needed to read/hear. it confirmed all my fears about motherhood and childbirth. it made me accept that there are limits to my strength, and that what’s more important than strength might be resilience and maybe a willingness to simply accept that you’re not indestructible. (bear in mind, i haven’t actually accepted any of that – but it’s nice to know it will probably happen when i’m ready for it.)

    shit sounds hard, jordan. thanks for telling it like it is.

  • http://www.guidetomenhattan.com Rachel

    I’m proud of you for sharing this! And as cute as Nate is, your son is a million times more so. 

  • http://www.blendedsosplendid.blogspot.com Hesper Leigh

    Jordan, the really, really strong people? They recognize and then ask for help when they need it.

    First time commenter… just felt the need to tell you that, though I’m sure you already know in the back of your head.

    Hesper

  • http://twitter.com/ohthatlaura Laura

    What an absolutely beautiful post. Wow. Your honestly and openness continues to leave a lasting impression. Thanks for sharing — we, the readers, are better for it :)

  • Etrevallion

    it’s funny how as mothers we only want to paint a picture of butterflies and rainbows for those that are about to walk in our footsteps. we don’t share the reality. and the reality is that most of us feel overwhelmed. overwhelmed with labor, overwhelmed with the new responsibility and just generally overwhelmed about our new life. add some raging hormones and it’s a recipe for disaster.

    no one had told me about the “baby blues” or that i might not feel like a “mom” right away. so, when i spent the first two weeks of my son’s life balling my eyes out for no apparent reason and feeling so much anxiety, i immediately thought it must be me. but, as i was more open about it with friends and family, i realized it is SO COMMON. my mom felt the same way when she brought me home from the hospital.

    so, thank you for being honest and sharing with your readers your experience. i’m pregnant with baby #2 and feel so much more prepared for all that is to come this time around. maybe there is a mama-to-be reading this that will be ready for when that rollercoaster of emotion hits. you’re doing great. just always trust your instincts – you know him best – and take it one day at a time. much love!

  • Sara

    I’m so happy you posted this, because it’s REAL. It’s the truth. It’s what so many women actually go through but never say it. I haven’t had kids yet, but I appreciate these kinds of posts so much, because it makes us all realize we can ask for help when we need it. Thank you. And congrats, your little boy is precious.

  • Kristin

    Jordan… thank you so much for this post.  While I don’t have children yet, I am also 30 and slowly but surely, my girlfriends have started having children.  One of the really special things about women our age today is that I think we’re largely a lot more honest and open about our experiences– with our friends and family, and with those people we cross paths with online on blogs, message boards, etc.  I think this extends to all aspects of our lives, including the motherhood odyssey.  I suppose magical perfect birthing experiences might exist somewhere – but the more I speak candidly with girlfriends, and read pieces like what you’ve written today, there’s a lot more vulnerability, pain, and the unexpected than perhaps we grew up expecting to encounter as future moms.  Being open, honest, and willing to admit you’re not perfect IS beautiful, IS perfect.  

  • Ebrs929

    I can relate so much to your experiences!!! I gave birth just a few weeks before you (sept 7) and I am still totally overwhelmed with certain areas of life settling into the new normal. We will get there… eventually!

  • http://blog.dianeshipley.com diane shipley

    You write about this beautifully Jordan (I teared up). Even though I don’t know what it’s like to give birth, I related. I think we all tend to be much harder on ourselves than on others, and from my perspective, what you felt sounds totally understandable (and anything you scream in the heat of labour should always be forgiven). Yay to asking for help!

  • Cynthia Campos

    This was a great post for so many reasons! It was very authentic and you caught a lot of the feelings us “new” mom’s had/have to deal with.

    When I think about my daughter, it’s hard not to paint this “feeling” without all the rainbows. It is hard to be a mom, but oh so worth it!

    Many blessings on your journey!

  • Courtney

    What an amazing post. 

    I have been following your blog for over a year and also your pregnancy, as I was pregnant at the same time. I gave birth to a baby boy on October 22, even though I was not due until November 1. My experiences were very similar to yours. I had originally planned on a natural childbirth, but after 12 hours of hard labor, decided to get an epidural. I slept and when I awoke it was time to push and they turned off my epidural. I pushed for 78 minutes and felt everything. It was pain like nothing I could have imagined. I remember screaming – screaming like a crazy lady. I too turned to my husband and said that I could not do it. The pain was too intense. But, like you, I did do it. I was disappointed in myself that I could not do it naturally and even with the epidural, I screamed like banshee and doubted my ability to deliver my baby boy. The days after birth were miserable for me too. Not only was I in extreme physical pain for the delivery (I had third degree tearing), but I felt overwhelmed by how much I loved my new son and how I wanted to protect him from all the pain in the world. As you said in a previous post, I loved him so much it hurt. I cried day and night. I was so happy but so sad and anxious at the same time. Luckily, I have a wonderful husband and an amazing OB/GYN who helped me through things. But I, like you, had to ask for help and that was a hard pill to swallow. I had imagined myself as supermom – being able to do everything for my baby and not needing the help of anyone. I am feeling better these days, but still have to ask for help on a daily basis in order to keep my emotions from getting out of control again. Sometimes, I need my husband to just hold the baby for 10 minutes so that I can eat/nap/brush my teeth/spend time with dogs/do the dishes/read a trashy gossip magazine/etc. And I need to to accept that that is okay.

    Thanks again for the post. It was so personal and genuine. I commend your honesty and bravery. You are an amazing woman and mother. 

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  • L.L.

    I have a friend who is the most incredible school social worker ever and this story sounds a bit familiar.  After she had her baby, it was like she fell off of the face of the earth.  Not only did not not encourage visitors or communication after the baby was born, she wasn’t returning phone calls or answering her phone at all.  She has always been, and still is, one of the most grounded, level-headed, totally together people I have ever met.  After about a month or two she started to reach out and reconnect, but never went into too many details about what was going on in her world.  Now that I read your story, I suspect she was going through something similar.  Thanks for sharing.  

  • LD

    Oh girl! I feel you and just want to say two things: you are not alone in this feeling and hang in there!!  It’s a total transformation of your life that happens in an instant even though you think you have nine months to prepare.  Also, I thought that I was going to have a short labor and push that baby out natural-style and instead it took me 26 hours and about ten hours in I begged for the guy with the drugs.  You can’t know how you’ll react in that moment until you’re in it.  I’m all for having some idea of what you want in a birth, but then being prepared for that plan to be thrown out the window.  You did great!!  Congratulations and be gentle with yourself in this time of huge change.  Also, I highly recommend the book “Babyproofing Your Marriage” as a helpful bit of reading for  new parents.   I’m sure some of it should seem obvious, but it wasn’t to me and my husband and we struggled in those first few months of parenting together.

  • LD

    Also, do not discount the crazy hormone spiral after you give birth!! Give that some time to settle down, too!!!

  • Francine

    I shrieked over and over again when I was in labor with my first: I CAN’T DO THIS! I CAN”T DO THIS! And GET IT OUT OF ME NOW!! I also yelled JESUS FUCKING CHRIST a lot, until the nurse told me: “Honey, he ain’t gonna help you now.”

    The second labor came on so fast that I vomited through most of it and was unable to shriek. I was a vomity, sweaty mess.

    So please don’t beat yourself up about anything to do with the birth. You might feel bad about it now, but you will laugh hard about it at some point, and so will your boy when you tell him the story.

    Same too with the insane mood swings in the days right after. It is totally hormonal and until you’ve had a kid, no one would ever understand it.

    You did great and you have a beautiful baby boy! Never, ever beat yourself up for what is all perfectly normal.

  • http://takethedayoff.net Jennifer (take the day off)

    Thank you for your honesty and vulnerability in this post.  I am newly pregnant and I appreciate hearing the real stuff, not just the glowing post-labor accounts of “a joy and depth of love that you have never experienced before.”  YES, I know that love is the overriding emotion, but there is also EVERYTHING ELSE, from the deliveries that dont go exactly as planned to the crazy hormones afterward.  You are smart to know to ask for help when you need it.  I respect that and you should be proud of yourself for everything your body has done, the ease in which you picked up the whole nursing thing (while multi-tasking, no less!) and your decisions thus far as a mother.  

  • Kristen

    I think it’s really brave for you to post this.  That said, I also think you should give yourself a little more credit and take your own advice:  there is no right way to do pregnancy–and that goes for birth, too.

    http://ramshackleglam.com/blog/baby/pregnancy-advice-i-fears-insecurities/

    See?  You said that.  =)

    I’ve never had children and never even considered having children, but one thing I do know is that  if there’s ever a situation where it’s okay to lose yourself, it’s while having a baby.  I’m sure you did absolutely fine.  You brought little Indy here, that’s the only thing that really matters.

    Be proud of yourself, be kind to yourself.  We’re all (your readers, I mean) so proud of you and think you’re absolutely awesome.  We can’t all be wrong!

    Just keep taking care of yourself.  And be proud. =)

  • Lauren

    I don’t have any older sisters, so I love reading your blog for bits of advice and candid stories.  Jordan, you are a constant inspiration.  You definitely are superwoman if you can be this honest about your experience.  You have one very lucky child!  

  • xolaura

    this is so beautiful.  thanks for sharing.

  • Kate F

    Jordan, this is beautiful.  This is what women need to read. And you were so STRONG to get help immediately after leaving the hospital. Many women cannot or don’t have access to care or people to support them.  I am so thankful that you shared this and I’d love to direct my first time mom friends to this blog.

  • ages2andupplease

    Thanks for sharing. My labor experience was very similar. No one prepares you for the “come down” after birth. It is overwhelming. Actually, the first year is overwhelming. I learned that I am not a baby person, but love kids. So wrong to say that. ha! My daughter is 4-yrs-old now. This is the age I’ve been waiting for. :)

  • Katiegeha

    Thanks for being so honest about your experience. If you had told me it was all spiritual and lovely and you enjoyed the pain because it meant you were a strong women, I wouldn’t have believed you for a second. This account rings much much more true. 

  • Dave

    I was fine, until…

    “and that smile was just for me.”
    Then somebody started chopping onions nearby.

  • Anonymous

    Jordan, thank you so much for sharing this! I have been a reader for a while but this is my first comment. This post was very honest and real, and as someone who does not have children yet but is planning on having them some day, it was helpful to read this account.

    The part where you say “I screamed at the doctors to “get it out”, told them they had to do whatever it was that they did when it was an emergency and the person was too weak to continue with the birthing process” made me smile because when I picture myself eventually giving birth, that is exactly what I imagine that I will be saying.Thank you again for this post, and congratulations! Your son is so cute.

  • Eddyband

    I was incredibly moved by this post. As a 50ish childless married man, your experiences are way out of my area of understanding. But each word you wrote was authentic and powerful, and I really am glad you shared all of that with your readers.

    Best to your whole family…canine, too, please…haha.

  • Moira

    Jordan,

    Congratulations on your new baby, he’s beautiful!

    I think you are incredibly brave for being so honest about labor and new motherhood.  There is an unfair standard placed on mothers and it will not dissipate until we women honestly share our experiences and feelings.  

    Sincerely,

    A frequent reader

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  • fullcredit

    This is beautiful, and so refreshing and honest. Thank you.

    (And congratulations!!!) 

  • Alix

    Thank you for sharing your experience with us Jordan! I just found your blog and I am captivated – you voice the same concerns and fears that run through my head. I can’t wait to see all the beauty you capture here. <3 fellow gemini

  • http://wanderlustonpaper.wordpress.com/ Heather

    I have been reading your blog consistently since just after your little guy was born, and have many a time smiled to myself over one of your posts. just thought I’d actually stop and comment after re-reading this one and say thanks. it’s really, REALLY refreshing to read a blog that doesn’t gloss over the gut-punch that reality can sometimes deal you, and I so appreciate your willingness to share it. because I do hope to have my own kiddos someday soon, and it’s nice to know that if it doesn’t all go ‘to plan’, that that’s very much okay

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  • http://marthalilian.blogspot.com/ Just Me, Martha Lilian

    As always, your honest and insightful accounts of such things are a breath of fresh air. Far too often people like to gloss over these less-than-ideal parts of life, particularly in the blogosphere, and paint a perfect picture that readers are easily discouraged by. You don’t do that and for that, I thank you.