Lilias' Labor and Delivery Story

We welcomed our little wildflower into the world almost two months ago! Here's the tale...

When carrying Lilias in the womb I asked God to speak a verse to my heart that we could be praying over her life. I believe I was given John 7:38 ā€œWhoever believes in me as the Scripture has said, ā€˜out of his heart will flow rivers of living water.ā€™ā€

Water.

Water brings refreshmentā€¦cleansingā€¦life.

Upon reflection I recognize how water rippled significantly throughout Liliasā€™ labor and delivery story.

Labor began with water...trickling and gushing just as I was settling in late on a Wednesday night. Though Iā€™d known it was possible I could go into labor two weeks early, Iā€™d truly not expected or prepared for this and had only packed our suitcase that evening. Iā€™d just read that if you go into labor at night it is wise to try to sleep and wait to wake your spouse as to allow yourselves rest for the long hours ahead. So, I followed this advice. At least, I didnā€™t wake Zade

.

No sleep for me. My water continued to trickle in phases over the next five hours. At 4:30am I noticed some bloody discharge (probably just my mucous plug) and nervously phoned the on-call nurse. Incredulously she exclaimed, ā€œYour water broke five hours ago? Come in now!ā€ We had decided beforehand that we wanted to labor as long as possible at home. But, after speaking with the nurse my resolve was waffling so I decided this might be a good time to wake Zade. Groggily he expressed his amazement. We really hadnā€™t imagined sheā€™d arrive early! Zade (who up to this point would not be pinned to declaring our daughterā€™s name though we had never even discussed another and 

knew

weā€™d long ago decided on Lilias) finally granted ā€œher name will be Lilias.ā€ He reminded me of my original intent to stay home as long as possible and we agreed to ā€œgo back to bedā€ and re-evaluate around 8. My contractions grew in intensity around 7 and I officially started to prepare for departure. Around 9 I was groaning. At 10 we threw the car seat (which we had no idea of how to use) into the car and headed to the hospital. I thought ā€œmy contractions seem closeā€¦this baby could come at any moment.ā€ Ha.

The pain in a contraction pulls you in like a waveā€™s undertow. You can do nothing but surrender until it releases its hold. For me this ebb and flow lasted for hours upon hours. A new nurse would arrive for her shift and I would think ā€œI will have the baby with her.ā€ Then, seven hours later she would leave and still no Lilias. I resolved to only exist in my current contraction. I couldnā€™t think of what had passed before or what was ahead. To stay strong and fend off discouragement I would only focus on my current wave.

Because I was having an unmedicated birth, Iā€™d prepared music, massagers, a birthing ball, and Bible verses to set the tone and aid in pain management. Iā€™d imagined weā€™d post a ā€œweā€™re having our babyā€ picture on social media. But that all went out the window. During labor I wanted nothingā€¦nothing but Zade by my side and water. Everything else seemed too overwhelming.

I labored a few hours in the shower allowing the hot water to dim the pain in my abdomen and back. We heard a knock on the door and a whispered exchange. Then my nurse explained calmly to me that she was going to put some sheets and towels on the floor because the water was leakingā€¦.through the bathroom floorā€¦into the office below!

Not too long after that they suggested I move into the birthing tub. Zade held the spigot to my back and stomach and a straw to my mouth so I could sip cold water throughout contractions. Hours passed and I got lost in the wavesā€¦.

During labor I kept repeating ā€œpure joyā€ because I thought we might name our Lilias (which means purity) Lilias Joy. I was reminded of how Christ ā€œā€¦for the joy that was set before him endured the crossā€¦.ā€ (Hebrews 12:2). Iā€™ve never experienced true, raw, all-consuming pain like labor. Enduring this for the joy of Lilias may be the closest I will come to resonating with this verse.

Thursday passed into Friday and Lilias was close. But I was in the dark deep. The nurse would speak my name ā€œBethanyā€ and it would pull me mentally to the surface momentarily. But, I was becoming delirious due to exhaustion. The nurse kept instructing me to not groan when I pushed as this was focusing my energy away from my pushing. I would agree and then again and again do exactly what sheā€™s said not to do. Zade asked me to repeat what the nurse had asked and I did. Then, I again groaned with the next contraction. He came to the realization that though I was repeating what the nurse was telling me I couldnā€™t understand what she meant. Once Zade illumined this I realized he was right. I could repeat the words but what it meant to follow them were lost in a muddle in my mind.

All the while they checked Lilias and confirmed her heart rate was normal and that she was ā€œhappy.ā€ They brought a mirror so I could see the tip of her head and when a contraction came Iā€™d push with all that was in me. But, with all my strength I was getting nowhere. After hours of this the midwife related ā€œBethanyā€¦baby is doing fine but it has been a long time now and we are concerned that baby has not come out yetā€¦what do you think about having the doctor assist with a vacuum?ā€ With that I mustered all the strength in my being and gave it one more PUSH.

Still no baby.

I collapsed again. I realized that I was growing more and more delirious and my body was becoming less and less capable of continuing on without assistance. I agreed to receive the vacuum.

I moved from the tub to the bed and found myself surrounded by women. I donā€™t even know who they all were. The doctor showed me the little vacuum which wasnā€™t nearly as scary looking as it sounded. Ladies in the room were commenting, ā€œsheā€™s so calm.ā€ Amazingly, God had given me peace throughout the entire labor. The doctor placed the vacuum on Lilias' head and I PUSHED in the next contraction and heard a loud POP! I asked ā€œIs she out?!ā€ But, it was just the vacuum popping off her head! It was placed again and on the next contraction I PUUUSHED as the ladies surrounding me cheered and encouraged me through the ā€œring of fire.ā€ A second later Lilias was in my arms. Amazement, joy, gratitude, and relief flooded my being. Twenty eight hours led up to this moment. Lilias laid upon my chest eyes wide and lips pursed, smacking. The nurses were inquiring ā€œsheā€™s not cryingā€¦.why isnā€™t she crying?ā€ But, she never cried her first hours of life. She came into the world in peace. Zade stood beside me enthralled by our little one. He had never left my side once.

Our prayer for her is that John 7:38 would prove true ā€“ that she would believe in Christ, the fountain of living water. That He would be her pure joy as she is His.

Postpartum Postscript:

I went into birth with no fear. I was confident that my body was strong and designed to give life naturally. During labor and delivery I felt at peace and was overwhelmed by the encouragement, care, and kindness of our nurses and midwives. Indianapolis is more beloved in my heart due to Methodist Maternity Hospital. I was on a high the first few days of Lilias' life. But, after getting home I experienced some hormone induced acute stress regarding my labor and Liliasā€™ wellbeing. Nothing had prepared me for the rawness of laborā€¦the enormity of pain. Looking back I kept seeing myself helpless and delirious in the water, unable to push Lilias out and becoming weaker and weaker each passing hour.

I realized that if I were in a different time in history or with a different set of resources or less capable staff Lilias and I could have died. We never came close to that. But, the realization of my complete weakness flooded my heart with fear. When Lilias was almost a week old we discovered that she had a feeding issue and was transferring very little breastmilk. This was causing her to lose weight rapidly. All emotional energy was channeled toward helping her work through the challenges that were keeping her from eating and I felt incapable of taking care of ā€œme.ā€ I was incredibly vulnerable due to the postpartum hormonal imbalance. I felt nauseous and had to force myself to eat, was bleeding profusely, and experienced my first panic attack. Thanks be to God Who surrounded me with family who helped me talk through and recognize my anxiety during those rough two weeks following postpartum. I share this postscript not to create fear for those who have not yet birthed, but to help normalize the postpartum challenges we women can face. All women react in vastly different ways to labor, delivery, and postpartum. My advice is to recognize that this

acute stress will pass and to have people around you who can care for you without reservation. It is true what they say, it takes some time but you forget the pain due to the greater joy of your little one. I am back to my old, even keel self and we continue to seek professional help for Lilias' breastfeeding challenges. Last week she had a tongue and lip tie surgery and we are hopeful for improvement! 

Mamma Mia: Pregnancy Weeks 23-34

Baby is growing!

Week 24: Baby is the size of an eggplant! 

Week 25: We move our belongings from Lafayette to our new home in Indianapolis where Zade will start his rotations with Indiana University School of Medicine. 

I celebrate my first Mother's Day as a mom! 

Week 26: I tie up my time at Big Brothers Big Sisters of Greater Lafayette where I have been on staff, supporting mentoring, for seven years. Zade rocks his exam completing his second year of medical school. We move permanently to Indianapolis. 

Week 27 & 28: We tent camp in Zion, Bryce Canyon, and Grand Canyon National Parks. Cousins avocado and broccoli meet! At 16 weeks my sister Sarah's baby is the size of an avocado and at 28 weeks my baby is the size of a head of broccoli! 

Week 30: I drive two hours one way to pick up a Babyletto crib I spy on Craigslist! 

Week 31 & 32: I meet up with my sister Melody in Georgia and we road trip to visit our sister Rebekah in her sweet Alabaman home by the bay. At 31 weeks baby is the size of a pineapple! I grow in respect for southern pregnant mammas. That humidity. Those mosquitos. 

Week 33: Ultrasounds are my favorite! From her profile, baby looks like she has Zade's lips. I learn that she in the 84th percentile for weight (looks like we may have a chunk on our hands). 

Week 34: Speaking of chunk, I am starting to feel like I don't know my body! I have a lot less drive and everything face to foot is growing rounder. But, I love feeling baby move with gusto! I travel to D.C. for a 4th of July family reunion! At 22 weeks my cousin Clare's baby is the size of a papaya and at 34 weeks my baby is the size of a cantaloupe! 

Baby is due in a little over a month! Stay in there baby...develop and grow strong. Let's see if you can make it to 40 weeks: pumpkin! 

Mamma Mia: Pregnancy Weeks 19-22

Week 19: I feel baby move!

Week 20: baby is the size of a banana! 

We experience our second ultrasound. Baby blows "bubbles." Our technician circles baby's gender on a slip of paper and seals in an envelope for a surprise reveal later! 

I research natural birthing methods. Natalie at Messy Mom generously answers my questions about her water birth in an inspiring, demystifying blog post

Week 21: Zade feels baby move! 

Week 22: baby is the size of a papaya! 

We look inside our envelope and find out we are having a......

Baby Shaw gender reveal to follow soon!