Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Welcome Ira Sinclair


Ira Sinclair was born at 7:05 p.m. on Friday, April 16, 2010. He weighed in at 6 lbs. 3 oz. and was 19" long. You can see that contrary to what the sonogram showed...Ira does have a head full of dark hair. He is absolutely beautiful. God is amazing. We are so grateful.

(This is a picture from my baby shower...I thought it was fitting for the occasion.)



The midwife/birthing center experience was wonderful. We were very pleased. Only having experienced hospital births, we were amazed at how natural you can do things. We never knew there was a way to naturally induce labor...not that it always works right away, but the fact that there was a natural way to stimulate your body to respond was beyond us. By God's grace, natural induction was a quick success for us. We arrived around 9:30 Friday morning and by 10 I had my first dose of antibiotics and the midwife striped my membranes, which is worse than labor pains. Then from there I alternated walking and pumping every half hour for four hours...and repeated the antibiotics, striping the membranes and walking/pumping process. The contractions maintained a consistent pattern of about a minute apart for most of the day increasing in pain and duration of each one. It was thankfully manageable and I transferred to the tub when they began to last longer and became more intense. The total time probably in the tub was about an hour. When I was dialated to 8 and in transition, we decided to move me to the bed to be ready to deliver. Within moments settling into the bed, I pushed maybe three times and Ira was here! It was so quick...so quick that he was still in the sac as he began to come out, but it broke. It made me think of God's protection over him as I gave birth.

Ira was placed on my chest immediately following his arrival. He was covered in this white sticky layer of goop...called vernix. I hesitated in enjoying his arrival right away because I was assuming they would take him from me quicker, but that was not the case. I held him for quite a while before they simply took him long enough to lay him at the end of my bed to wrap him in a receiving blanket and give him right back to me to begin nursing. They didn't suction his nose or goop his eyes up, which I am use to from previous hospital deliveries. After nursing him, I asked them about washing him up...at least his hair...but my midwife told me not to bathe him and just let his skin absorb the vernix. Well, his skin soaked it right up and several hours later he was vernix free and soft as ever. I still haven't bathed him...and he still smells sweet like a newborn baby.

We were on the road home by ten that night....just three hours after giving birth. It had been one long day yet it went so quick too. My birthing assistant said I was the quickest natural induction delivery she has ever seen in the last 13 years of her experience. Thank you Lord for making it quick.

Three days later Ira and I had to go in for a check-up. Everything was good, except for my postpartum problems that hit me quickly. Instead of using the usual depression medicine I've been prescribed in the past that didn't seem to help too much, my midwife called me in a prescription to a compounding pharmacy, a natural progesterone (hormone) cream that I just apply to my wrist and rub into my arms. It has helped tremendously. Unfortunately, at two weeks my hormones shift drastically again, but I just increased the cream to applying it three times a day as opposed to two. I am just blown away by the natural way postpartum depression can be treated. I know though that it isn't always enough for some...but thankfully for me it is working. I'm so thankful. Now if there were only a cream that I could rub on Ira to make him sleep through the night :o) I forgot what a glorious thing sleep is....Lord help me be content and grateful through this season. I am so blessed and have so much to be thankful for.

I think of the pain and discomfort I have been spared through Ira's birthing experience and first weeks adjusting to life and I can't help but be thankful. It is easy to complain about different things during this particular season of adjustment, but I've been quick to remind myself of those things I've been spared. Like not tearing during birth (a first ever for me), healing quickly, not having any cramping or afterbirth contractions, not having any engorgement and being blessed with a baby that can pass gas from both ends very easily...just to name a few :o) But most importantly, I remind myself that I have been blessed with a healthy baby and spared the experience of losing a child like a dear friend of mine. I have no reason to complain, but many reasons to rejoice and be thankful. God is good all the time...whether your in the valley, on a mountaintop or in between....He is good all the time.

Here are a few pictures from our time at the birthing center....

The birthing room...



This is me getting an IV to start my antibiotics...following this I began the routine of alternating walking/pumping every half hour...this is where the fun begins...

Here are a few shots at the TWU campus we walked around...
I love my husband...he's the main source of my laughter in life...don't know what I'd do without him :o)



This must be a shot of me preparing for my first pumping session...not that anyone really wants to know that, but there ya go...at least it's before and not during :o)

Okay, I must explain the purpose of this next picture...
My mother-in-law sent me a pair of her pink flamingo socks to wear during labor so "a part of her was there for the birth". The thing is, they are the socks I got her for Christmas this past year. She doesn't like pink flamingos. So I'm always picking pink flamingo things up for her. She has quite the collection now and as long as I'm alive her collection will continue to grow :o) Oh, one more noteworthy thing, when she visited last October she wore these same socks to the airport...with capris...so they were visible but scrunched down, but when she went through security she had to take her shoes off and the pink flamingos were exposed for all the world to see...gotta love it! So this picture is really for her...to prove I really did wear them.


Here's me swaying as the pain intensifies...

Here I'm getting ready to get in the tub...the pain is serious now...but I'm still smiling :o)

I'm no longer smiling now...don't want to look at anyone...that candle in the picture got moved (smelled good, but I just couldn't handle it)...and no one could talk...or take pictures...so I think this is the last one before I'm actually giving birth.

Ta dah! There is the proud Grandma from Indiana.

And of course the proud daddy...

I'm getting ready to be sent home...

And finally, a picture with my birthing assistant. She was simply wonderful. I'm so glad she was a part of the whole experience. I'm so grateful for the INANNA Birthing Center and my midwives that cared for me throughout the pregnancy and after. I would definitely do it again...not anytime soon though!

I know this post is long overdue and there will be more posts coming that are behind schedule, but my time is spread pretty thin these days...so deal with it :o)

1 comment:

  1. I figured you were "busy". What a neat experience, I would have loved to have used a birthing center, but insurance just doesn't cover it :( What a neat experience! Little Ira is a cutie!!!

    ReplyDelete