Posted on 04/02/2005 4:36:04 AM PST by gobucks
"Don't you dare guilt your wife into having a natural childbirth!", I am told by a nice woman I know at church. I have known this lady for some time, and we have never talked politics. Suddenly, my wife is hot political topic #1. And though the politics are 'under the radar', my wife is clearly a target in the ongoing cultural war.
Until my wife started to dramatically enlarge during this last trimester, comments like these had been few. Now, it is a torrent. "What hospital? What OB? You are getting an epidural, right? What brand of formula do you plan to use (as if we will collapse immediately into the arms of the Enfamil salesman)? You are not going to breast feed too long, are you? Are you on a waiting list yet for infant day care?"
My wife and I, married over 10 years with all kinds of issues associated with getting pregnant are about to be parents of a boy in a few weeks. We are of course, thrilled and overjoyed.
But the political overtones of how we bring him into the world are just unreal. The unending stream of opinion and advice about it, with over 95 percent of it being something like this: "don't be stupid. Get the epidural." We have yet to have a single woman report to us that having her baby in a fully undrugged state was a good idea.
Why is labor today so terrifying for women? Why is it that husbands are being taught that encouraging a woman to experience a full unmedicated delivery is akin to treating her like a barbarian? Heck, I've told my wife I am not the one having the baby, and thus, I'm not about to dictate to her how it should be done; I simply said I like the idea of natural childbirth and that is it. Why is this so politically incorrect? Why are hordes of women pouring out of the woodwork yelling at us to make sure she gets the drugs, the epidural?
What the heck is going on such that bringing a child into the world has to be so .... upsetting?
And these are women at my church! I can just imagine what a hapless secular woman in some lonely cul-de-sac must endure.
I'm a typical Chistian man with a very pregnant wife. I have an atypical enthusiasm for most things associated with FreeRepublic. I'm looking for reports from any of you husbands (or their wives) out there have experienced the kind of unreal cultural pressure my wife and I have undergone as this last trimester winds down.
I have googled around, looking for articles about this - and it is just about nada. Mostly stuff on teen pregnancy and abortion. Zilch regarding ordinary married folks who are being pressured to have a 'modern' birth experience.
I'm I the only one who is seeing how a pregnant woman is somehow a political lightning rod these days?
#316 LOL...thanks for that laugh! I once saw a cartoon w/the mother sitting in the play pen and the children outside of it!
My opinion is my opinion, period. If you read my replies, you can see that I give full discretion to the woman on which way she chooses to go -- meds, no meds, whatever. Childbirth isn't a contest to see who can suffer more stoically. You OTOH made a blanket statement that "an epidural will affect your baby." Since numerous women on this thread -- and millions off it -- have delivered babies with no ill effects, I would say, yes, you're statment is propaganda and a disservice to a woman going into childbirth for the first time, who has no idea what she will ultimately feel or experience. I think it's wonderful that you had the childbirth that you wanted via Bradley, but that isn't going to be the case for everyone and no one should be made to feel guilty over it.
That's funny.
Too funny, and too true. :)
Ping to post #316
TX--I may have already sent the funny in post #316 to you some time ago. Maybe you will enjoy it again.
My ex wanted a natural, undrugged delivery. It did not work out. The pain was so bad, she asked to be drugged.
Methinks the punk had a better chance at Lotto than figuring out who his own father was.
Never been in a delivery room, have you?
How about six times personally [allowed by the OB guy to catch three of them] and a couple of dozen times professionally.
Don't miss out on squatting as a technique to complete the birth. Whoever thought lying on your back was a great way to push a baby out had no understanding of gravity, and must have been a salesman for epidural kits.
The kids are 14 and almost 18 by now.
Since you've been there, how can you have witnessed what she was going through physically and still say you have a problem with a woman saying something she regrets in that moment? Are you that much of a Nancy boy that you are offended that easily?
Most men I've met seem to have a better sense of humor than you apparently do, and see the funny side of their wives letting off steam during labor.
And, just for the record, when my husband is sick, he's no fun to be around either. I've learned to just let him be until he feels better.
The consideration goes both ways. We can joke about what a grouch he is when he feels bad, and we can joke about how he learned that it's best to keep silence while I'm laboring to bring our child into the world!
I never said that. I said this is one exception that anyone with half a brain would make. You are taking one instance of incredible pain and agony and transferring it to every aspect of human life. You are doing that, not me.
Although I would never engage in a dispute with my wife in those circumstances, what I HAVE done is to reply to her when she would border on abusiveness in times of stress or pain or whatever in the following manner: "it's ok honey. I know you're being abusive and inappropriate only because you're in pain."
ROTFL. You live in one freaked out world. And after reading what you wrote, if you honestly spoke to your wife that way when she was giving birth to your child, you are not only a Nancy boy, you are a first class ass. I never said one harsh word to my husband during either of my deliveries but I can tell you something, he wouldn't have gotten his undies in a bunge or had his sensibilites crushed if I had. One of you two lives in reality and it isn't you.
That is true. But while everyone is affected differently by any substance that goes into their bodies, one fact is clear; A fetus is affected by every chemical introduced into the mother's body. What form those effects take is anybody's guess.
Millions may have delivered children with no ill effects from an epidural. But I have yet to read the results of a single study that states it has no effect on every child. The benefits are always spoken of in terms of the mother. Though there is much evidence that it does have an effect on the newborn...some definitive, some anecdotal to be sure...but hard to ignore. I know anesthesiologists who come down on either side of the question. A prospective parent needs to read the available wealth of information and decide on their own. Even a Bradley Method teacher will not tell an expectant mother that they must not have the epidural. We were presented with the best info available and decided on our own.
My initial statement was not intended to inflame or scare anyone.
As such, perhaps I should have phrased it more carefully.
There is anecdotal evidence that an epidural applied to the mother can have some effects on the child during the birthing process. Whether this effect is temporary or is more lasting is unclear. But I and my wife were unwilling to roll those dice and have never regretted the decision.
I had natural childbirth, no epidural, baby born in under twenty minutes... no bumps in the road.
Whichever path you chose, I pray the baby and mother will both be healthy and strong.
May God bless you and your family.
Huh??? ??
You obviously have if it bothered you so much that your wife wasn't behaving in the manner in which you saw fit while she gave birth to your child. Talk about the world revolving around you.
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