15 Weeks Pregnant: Beginning to Plan for Birth

September 29 – October 5 : 15 Weeks 0 Days – 15 Weeks 6 Days.

Up until this week, I haven’t had the wherewithal to think much about my birth preferences. When I was going through the first trimester, I remember having thoughts like, This is baby had better stick, because I could absolutely not start this process again from scratch, and, We’re going to have to adopt our second child, because I can’t do this again. My nausea has faded so slowly that I didn’t even notice my days getting easier, but I’m not having thoughts like that any more so I must be feeling significantly better. The only times I seem to get nauseous now are when I get hungry and when I overexert, so as long as I adequately snack and laze, I’m golden. Now I can see why people like being pregnant so much.

In the first trimester, I did enough investigation to figure out I wanted to get prenatal care and give birth at a hospital with a low-intervention philosophy, and settled on Saint Luke’s. I also knew I wanted to try for a natural birth. But that was about it. This week I started to explore my options for birth.

Doula or Do not (la)?

My doula friend, Heather Charmatz, has been incredibly helpful in giving me advice and recommending books during my pregnancy, so I was already feeling good about doulas. I want to give birth with as few medical interventions as possible. Hiring a doula increases a woman’s chances of doing so, both via the doula assisting with non-medical comfort measures and advocating for the mother in an intimidating medical setting. I reached out to friends on Facebook asking for thoughts on birth with or without a doula. There was unanimous consent among both the mamas that had had a doula (or doulas) and the ones that hadn’t: definitely hire a doula.

I searched online for suggestions for questions to ask doulas, and made a shortlist of the ones that were most important to me:

  1. What is your training? Are you certified?
  2. Can you tell me about your experience as a doula? Do you have any stories you can share?
  3. Can you give me a snapshot of the care you provide before, during, and after birth?
  4. Do you have experience attending births at my hospital? Do you get along with the staff there?
  5. How will my husband be involved?
  6. How do you feel about the use of pain medication and other interventions?
  7. What is your fee? What does it cover?
  8. If you don’t attend the birth do you have a refund policy?
  9. Do you have anyone else due near the time I’m due?
  10. Do you offer any other special services? (e.g. massage, photography, aromatherapy?)
  11. Do you have references we could talk to?

So far, Richard and I went to a Meet Local Doulas night at Saint Luke’s (the San Francisco Doula Group does a few of these around the city every month) and we also interviewed Heather and her doula partner, Joy. The Meet Local Doulas night helped us establish expectations about a doula’s scope of practice, how much they cost in the Bay Area, and what their packages typically include. We didn’t see ourselves working with any of the doulas at the Meet Local Doulas night, but Heather and Joy were great! Instead of making an automatic decision between a good choice and a bad choice (well, not bad—just not a the right fit for us), I wanted to be able to make a thought-out decision between two good choices. Based on some online research and recommendations from friends and other doulas, Richard and I have one more doula interview lined up in a couple weeks. Then we’ll make our final choice!

How Do I Know My Birth Preferences with No Previous Experience?

Heather lent me a great book called Natural Hospital Birth by Cynthia Gabriel. Even though I’m only halfway through, I’d recommend it to anyone planning a hospital birth. The book outlines some exercises that get the reader to think back to experiences planning big ritual events (like a wedding) and participating in endurance events (like a marathon), which helped me make some concrete decisions about what I want for my birth.

My number one advice for people planning a wedding is, “Get a wedding planner!” That’s what I would have done differently. I enjoyed and took pride in planning my own wedding with the help of friends and family, but on the big day, rather than relishing in the experience of being the bride I felt like I was also playing the wedding planner. As my lips parted from my new husband’s after our first kiss, one of my hands lovingly caressed the back of his neck, while the other discretely gestured to music person to start playing our exit song. When I give birth, I want to have my birth plan written up with plan A’s, B’s, C’s, and have someone else there to coordinate and orchestrate, so I can just focus on bringing my baby into the world. This is where I see a doula fitting in. Richard could be play this role too, but as much as it’s my day to experience becoming a mother, it’s his day to experience becoming a father. Also, when discussing doulas, Richard brought up a past experiences to illustrate his apprehension about supporting me through pain.

When Richard and I were vacation to Cabo San Lucas. I got stung by a horrid little jellyfish—I think it was a Portuguese man o’ war. In excruciating pain, I insisted that Richard try to suck the venom out with his mouth. In a much more rational state than me, he refused repeatedly. I was horrified to see the blue venom under my skin slowly being absorbed into my body. After enough relentless and desperate pleading, Richard caved and tried to suck the venom out. In less than a second, his whole mouth was in stinging pain from contact with the venom. Whoops. Needless to say, Richard fully supports having a third party present at all times to protect him from the ill-advised demands of a laboring wife.

Second to the man o’ war, my next most painful experience was running a marathon, for which I was sorely under-trained. My running shoes went missing the morning of the race, and I was running in an old pair that were half a size too small and slowly turning my toe nails purple. The funny, encouraging signs people held or posted along the course were wonderful, because they gave me enough of a mental distraction to let my willpower recharge slightly. However, in the last six miles, I just could not run any more and slowed down to a walk. My outer hip muscles immediately went into a spasm that wouldn’t let up unless I started running again. I was determined to finish, and I realized that whether walking or running I was going to be in pain, so laboriously, clumsily, and dejectedly, I started running again. Shortly thereafter I came to an aid station that had more than the standard water, Gatorade, and gel packs—they had RealFruit gummy candies. People emotionally eat for a reason—it works! In the short term anyway, and the short term was all I needed. That handful of corn syrup and gelatin that I savored over the next mile was all that kept me from collapsing into a pile of tears on the side of the road and calling a cab. After I ran across the finish line, I grabbed some more RealFruit gummies and continued jogging over to the massage tent to get that spasm worked out of my glutes. My take-away: I’m going to want some little treats and joys for the most challenging parts of labor to give me the emotional boost to keep going. No need for a massage as a reward at the end though, the baby will be enough!

Should I Dwell in Distraction or Awareness?

Upon the recommendation of many friends, I bought the Hypnobabies Home Study course, and have been enjoying it. The hypnosis recordings I’ve listened to have included visualizations that have helped me connect with the baby—something that’s been hard for me since I can’t yet feel the baby moving and don’t have much of a bump. The course also includes a 30 minute track of positive pregnancy affirmations, which is so up my alley. I mentioned to the doulas I interviewed that I was thinking of using hypnosis techniques, and they advised that some women like hypnosis because it distracts them from the experience of giving birth, some women don’t because they want to be completely present to the experience.

This may be committing yoga blasphemy, but I think that distraction may work by better for me than complete presence and awareness in this case. When I was at the height of my nausea, although it was hard to drag myself out of the house to teach yoga, teaching made me feel better because I was focusing on others’ bodies rather than dwelling on the discomfort of my own. After I got stung by the jellyfish in Cabo San Lucas, Richard and I somehow made it back to our hotel room where he read a book to me. It distracted me enough from the pain that I could sleep the afternoon away until the pain had softened. On my marathon, the only things that kept me going were the yummy and humorous ones that distracted me from the sensation of running. Using distraction can still be meditative—just as we may use the breath as a drishti (focal point) for our meditation, we may similarly use any of these other distractions as a drishti.

I teach yoga and meditation to people who suffer from chronic pain, and one of the most important techniques we master is to halt the pain-tension-pain cycle. When we feel pain, we automatically tense up. That increased tension creates more pain, which causes us to tense up even more, and the cycle continues. If, at that first sensation of pain we can soften instead of hardening, we stay at that base level of pain instead of initiating an ever-escalating cycle. I think little distractions like inspiring or funny affirmations, hypnotic visualizations, or gummy worms will help me do just that.

How Attached Should I Get to My Birth Plan?

Most people have told me not to get too attached to my birth plan because birth is unpredictable, and if it doesn’t go my way I’ll feel like a failure. Natural Hospital Birth gives some alternative advice that I loved. Get attached to your birth plan, the author encourages. Just as with any other goal, the clearer, more insistent, and more determined you are about it, the more likely it is to happen. “Don’t get attached to your birth plan,” is essentially saying that it’s better to never try at all than to try and fail. That’s no way to live! The book acknowledges that the risk in becoming attached to your birth plan is that you may feel disappointment if your birth doesn’t happen exactly the way you wrote it down. The author’s response is a little punch of tough love: disappointment is a part of life. Anyone who is used to setting the types of lofty goals that are worth achieving knows that some of them don’t pan out. That’s disappointing, and feeling disappointment is okay. It doesn’t mean we’re failures, it doesn’t mean we stop setting goals, it’s just a part of the process and of life. Besides, as long as nobody’s stopping by postpartum to rub the discrepancies between my birth plan and what actually happened in my face, certainly any disappointment will be overshadowed by the immense joy of holding a happy, healthy baby in my arms.

For every minute your are angry you lose sixty seconds of happiness -Ralph Waldo Emerson

How do anger, jealousy, and resentment feel in your body? For most of us, they feel uncomfortable. They demand resolution and action, even if there is no possible solution and no act that makes sense. They can cause us to develop painful tension in the jaw, shoulders, and hips. They are all associated with circulation of stress hormones, such as cortisol, that wreak havoc on the immune system and the body at large. It is okay and important to feel all of these feelings. For example, many of us must experience anger in order to fully process loss. Trying to use your yoga practices to skip over anger, jealousy, and resentment entirely isn’t healthy (it’s called spiritual bypass). However, these particular emotions are addictive, and once we’ve started feeling them we tend to hold onto them for much longer than they serve us. If we indulge them over time and fuel them, they can even start to consume us. We become so attached to feeling angry, jealous, and resentful that there’s no room left for joy, friendship, and love.

For every minute your are angry you lose sixty seconds of happiness -Ralph Waldo Emerson

For every minute your are angry you lose sixty seconds of happiness -Ralph Waldo Emerson

Meditation & Release:

  1. Come into a comfortable sitting position. Close your eyes and notice your breath. Take at least ten breaths here to center.
  2. Once you feel settled, turn your attention to your emotions. Notice your emotions without judging them as good, bad, right, or wrong—judgement clouds your perception. Notice the effects of each emotional experience on your body. Where is there tension? Where is there ease? How do the emotions affect the breath? How do the emotions affect chatter in the mind? Are there any recurring thoughts around these emotions?
  3. Now, take a deep inhale through the nose. Hold the breath at the top for a few moments and notice the swirling of emotions or thoughts around emotions. As you sigh through the mouth, allow anything physical, mental, or emotional that has already served its purpose leave your body with your breath. Don’t force, don’t push, just let anything that is ready to leave go. Do this three to five times.
  4. Take ten or more breaths to notice the physical, emotional, and mental effects of this practice.
  5. Repeat this practice when you’re experiencing different emotions.

Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. -Marianne Williamson

I think I found this quote by Marianne Williamson on the internet when I was fifteen, and I never get tired of it no matter how many times I read it.

Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. -Marianne Williamson

Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. -Marianne Williamson

Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our darkness that most frightens us. We ask ourselves, Who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented, fabulous? Actually, who are you not to be? You are a child of God. Your playing small does not serve the world. There is nothing enlightened about shrinking so that other people won’t feel insecure around you. We are all meant to shine, as children do. We were born to make manifest the glory of God that is within us. It’s not just in some of us; it’s in everyone. And as we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same. As we are liberated from our own fear, our presence automatically liberates others. –Marianne Williamson

In Defense of Moving Quickly

One of my favorite teachers to practice with, Sean Haleen, shared the zen saying, “Nothing in nature is rushed, yet everything is accomplished,” which, as a vinyasa yoga teacher, is thought provoking. I don’t teach a ton of superfast flow and in my classes and I often say, “slow yoga is advanced yoga;” however I wouldn’t go so far as to say nothing is ever gained from moving quickly. While I don’t think your whole yoga practice should be fast flow (there often isn’t enough focus on integrity), I think playing with speed can be an amazing tool. Here are some reasons why, drawing from my own experience in yoga and fitness:

1. Going fast primes us psychologically for life: Five years ago, I visited San Francisco for two months and practiced yoga nearly every single day with teachers known for fast flow. I worked as a lifeguard back home, and a few months after my stint in SF, I responded to an extremely harrowing emergency at the pool–the type where you have to move quickly. The next week, my supervisor told me she was impressed by my ability to stay calm and take leadership in that situation. I told her it was because of yoga. Although vinyasa yoga sequencing can be crazy, hectic, up-regulating, and even stressful, the idea is to stay present, to maintain equanimity, to sustain even breath. Many people’s jobs, volunteer work, or family lives involve regular emergency situations, that require the body to be in a sympathetic (fight-or-flight) state. Although stress hormones can be damaging in the long run, activating our sympathetic nervous system isn’t a bad thing; it drastically improves our ability to respond physically. Teaching people to maintain focus in a body pumped full of adrenaline is invaluable. Of course, this should be balanced with down-regulating practices.

2.Going fast can refine our technique: Back when I was training half-marathons, I used to do one sprint-training session per week when I’d try to improve my time running distances shorter than a mile. Exploring my maximum power output at shorter distances taught me so much about technique and pushed me to recruit muscles I wasn’t fully taking advantage of. That training made my long-distance running much more efficient. Yoga is a different beast and more dangerous to do quickly, but in the case of a seasoned practitioner using speed with the intention of refining technique (which granted, often isn’t the case when people are blasting through practice), moving fast can spotlight detrimental habits. You can’t find the alignment for Warrior I in one breath? Why is your habit to come into the pose out of alignment and then fix it? You can’t make it from Warrior I to Chattarunga in one exhale? What’s holding you back from breathing more deeply? Moving quickly is another lens for svadyaya, self study.

3. Going fast is part of a balanced physical regimen: The body grows, develops, builds strength, and builds flexibility in response to stress (and loses all of that in the absence of stress). For example, the bones respond to high impact exercise (like jumping) by becoming more dense, which can prevent or delay the onset of osteoporosis. When I was a runner, my sprint training didn’t only improve my technique, it increased my muscle strength and power output. One of the reasons yoga is so great is that it stresses the body in many different ways and directions. I don’t usually recommend that people get their cardiovascular exercise solely from an asana practice–I think there are more functional ways to stress the aerobic energy system–but if someone insists on only doing yoga as their physical activity, I would recommend they have some fast movement in there. Life can move quickly and I want you to be able to meet it without getting physcially overwhelmed. Obviously there are innumerable factors we cannot control, but there are many we can; if my child ran out into traffic and got hit by a car, I would hate for it to be because I had to stop running after them to catch my breath.

None of this is in disagreement with the zen saying above, because moving quickly and rushing are different things. Moving quickly is a physical process whereas rushing is a psychological process. The art of moving quickly is to do so without rushing. In my sprint training, I was moving nearly as quickly as I could, but without the mental chatter associated with rushing. I was focusing to intently on minimizing wasted energy that I didn’t have the mental space to feel rushed. I’m effective in emergencies because I make fast decisions and move quickly without rushing, without panicking. If you incorporate fast movement into your yoga practice to get the physical benefits of moving quickly, it shouldn’t feel rushed. If it does, you’re moving too fast for your awareness to keep up with. That could mean that you need to move slower, it could mean you need to refine your awareness. Experience and a great yoga teacher can help you explore this.

If you want to be somebody else, change your mind -Sister Hazel

I’m a sucker inspiration, and I think positive affirmations are incredibly powerful. However, in yoga we have the foundational principles of isvara pranydana, which means surrender of control, and santosa, which means contentment. The statements “You can be whoever you want to be” and “You can accomplish anything you set your mind to” sound great on paper, but they aren’t always true. Sometimes the only way to accomplish them is to change your mind.

If you want to be somebody else, change your mind -Sister Hazel

If you want to be somebody else, change your mind -Sister Hazel

In my early teens I suffered from epilepsy. By suffered, I don’t mean I was having grand mal seizures left, right, and center—my epilepsy turned out to be relatively controllable—I was suffering from the loss of my sense of invincibility, from fear of losing control, and from adding the label “disordered” to my identity. I didn’t want to take ownership of any of that yuckiness, and that developed into a sense of dissociation with my body. I guess I thought I’d just hold out and stay in denial until I successfully willed myself to grow out of it. I never did grow out of it.

When I was fifteen, as a first step toward self-acceptance, contentment, and surrender of control I printed out the lyrics to this “Change Your Mind” by Sister Hazel and glued them into my agenda book. Somehow I realized that the only way to stop being a slave to my epilepsy was to start to accept it.

I still have epilepsy, and it does affect my life, but I’m no longer constantly suffering from it mentally and emotionally like I used to be.

Have you ever danced in the rain
Or thanked the sun
Just for shining- just for shining
Over the sea?
Oh no- take it all in
The world’s a show
And yeah, you look much better,
Look much better when you glow

If you want to be somebody else,
If you’re tired of fighting battles with yourself
If you want to be somebody else
Change your mind…

Hey hey-
what ya say

We both go and seize the day
’cause what’s your hurry
what’s your hurry anyway

 

-Sister Hazel