Looking back on Freebirth…

I can’t believe that it has already been a year already.

A year has passed from the day that my baby was born, into our hands, in a pool in the living room of our house. A birth attended only by his father and his brothers.

An experience that was not only exhilarating, empowering but also healing for myself.

My choice to have an unassisted pregnancy and an unassisted birth was first due to the lack of midwifery access. There are no birthing centres in my region and midwifes are not allowed to practise out side of them. The birthing centres that are out of region do not take women out of region because they are too much in demand. It was a decision that was first made for me since there was no way that I would ever go see a doctor for a pregnancy or a birth. The decision did not scare me…. instead I felt relief.

I knew that having a UP/UC was the best choice.

Now… I look back at the pregnancy. There was so much less stress being unassisted. No appointments, no refusing tests and being made to feel guilty when I knew that the tests are not necessary. I was able to experience pregnancy for what it is. I was able to listen to my body and find the answers to my questions. I was able to gain control, something that I lost when I relied on a midwife for advice or answers.

I look back at the birth and realize that it was exactly what I would have hoped that birth could be.
With my other two, I had to deal with posterior babies, with long labours, with back labour, with “failure to progress” beyond 3cm. I truly believe that most of the problems were due to the presense of a midwife, to the presense of other people. The stress of deadlines, of numbers, of the rules that the midwifes have to follow all hindered in birthing process. However, It was a midwife in my second birth that gave me the confidence I needed to give birth.

After she spoke to me I was able to lose myself in my “la-la land”, She gave my the confidence to ignore everyone, to ignore their advice, to ignore their presence, to listen to my body. She gave me the confidence to know that I could birth my baby, that I as a woman I was made to give birth. I was able to do that all well enough that I was able to relax enough to sleep between contractions and essentially sleep through transition and soon after I gave birth to my second son.

I was unimpressed however with the way that the third stage was over managed and mismanaged in my opinion.

This midwife gave me confidence in myself. The others took my confidence away. I knew in my heart that I needed solitude to birth after that. It was that reason that I felt a sense of relief when I choose to go unassisted.

I find it ironic that my confidence to birth alone stemmed from a pep talk from a midwife, but I thank her for that.

So, when I read Khéna’s birth story, when I look back at my freebirth, I feel peace with the way things happened. It is something that I don’t feel reading my other births. I am proud with the way that my children were able to experience birth as being normal. I am proud that they will remember birth as being positive and natural. I feel proud that they were able to see the birth and that their new brother fit into the family so seamlessly in many ways because of the way he made his entrance into the family.

I am proud that I was able to take control of my body and do what I needed to do to have the easiest and healthiest birth that I could have had.

If I have another child there is no hesitation in what choices that I will make.

A year ago…

just born

Khéna... day 3

now…

Snow baby..

khéna


Rainbows, gnome and the moon…

How’s that for a hippie title?

Here are a few pics I took last weekend…

discovering rainbows from the crystal in the kitchen window…

playing with rainbows

playing with rainbows

khéna

Here is a pic of the moon that I got…

Moon

and this is a knot in the tree in our backyard that when it gets hit by a certain light it looks like there is a little gnome hanging out on the branch…

Tree gnome

It's snowing!!

We got a little snow on tuesday and the boys were so excited… it stayed but wasn’t much to play with…

Today however, we got a real snowfall… and it isn’t done yet…

The boys had a lot of fun playing in the snow for about 2 hours!

Colin out in the snow

Colin

snowing!

Xavier in the snow

Not the same street…

Here is an article that appeared recently in the NY times

There is a new DVD out… Sesame Street: Old School… I really have to get my hands on that one!!!

However, the DVD comes with a warning… Adults only…

here is a bit of the article..

Sunny days! The earliest episodes of “Sesame Street” are available on digital video! Break out some Keebler products, fire up the DVD player and prepare for the exquisite pleasure-pain of top-shelf nostalgia.

Just don’t bring the children. According to an earnest warning on Volumes 1 and 2, “Sesame Street: Old School” is adults-only: “These early ‘Sesame Street’ episodes are intended for grown-ups, and may not suit the needs of today’s preschool child.”

Say what? At a recent all-ages home screening, a hush fell over the room. “What did they do to us?” asked one Gen-X mother of two, finally. The show rolled, and the sweet trauma came flooding back. What they did to us was hard-core. Man, was that scene rough. The masonry on the dingy brownstone at 123 Sesame Street, where the closeted Ernie and Bert shared a dismal basement apartment, was deteriorating. Cookie Monster was on a fast track to diabetes. Oscar’s depression was untreated. Prozacky Elmo didn’t exist.

Nothing in the children’s entertainment of today, candy-colored animation hopped up on computer tricks, can prepare young or old for this frightening glimpse of simpler times. Back then — as on the very first episode, which aired on PBS Nov. 10, 1969 — a pretty, lonely girl like Sally might find herself befriended by an older male stranger who held her hand and took her home. Granted, Gordon just wanted Sally to meet his wife and have some milk and cookies, but . . . well, he could have wanted anything. As it was, he fed her milk and cookies. The milk looks dangerously whole.

and the article continues with other scenarios “that just wouldn’t slide with the kids of today”…

This really disturbs me…

What is so different with the kids of today that they can’t or shouldn’t be able to handle innocent situations at face value. Why would a child of today even have those ideas, those fears? Why are children being taught to fear so young that they could not watch the same shows without being traumatized?

I don’t believe that there is more crime than 30 years ago. I do think that it is more publicized and more heard… but I don’t believe that there is more.

I am tired of all of the “happy-happy-joy-joy”, over protect, always be politically correct, don’t talk to kids about death or anything dark, make them scared of strangers etc… that people seem to be teaching their kids.

We show the kids cartoons from our “Disney Treasures” and “Silly Symphonies” DVD’s and no, they are not always politically correct and one day I will talk about the themes to the kids, but for now they don’t see those themes, they just see the cartoon. … The boys like Charlie Brown, Garfield and other older cartoons and to be honest… Xavier enjoys shows that are older and have darker themes and loves Tim Burton etc…

Coming back to Sesame Street, I would really love to get my hands on those DVD’s and I would rather my children see them than the new ones that are so dumbed down, politically correct and cheery that make them a bit scary…

Do I really think that my kids will be traumatized by Cookie Monster eating cookies and smoking a pipe and eating it? Bert and Ernie living together? The count living in a really Cool old Castle…. (ok… I admit… the count scared me a bit as a kid because I used to be scared of thunder)…

but No, I don’t think they will be traumatized…

Oh… and Elmo makes me nauseous.

Eczema…

Colin has been battling with eczema for a while now. Last year his fingers were so dry and cracked he was often crying because of the pain. So, we cut a lot of his dairy intake to see if his fingers would get better and they did! However, I didn’t know if was due to the dairy or the season, so over the summer he started having more dairy again (Ice cream, whipped cream, Birthday cake etc). This time, he started to get eczema around his mouth and on his face and again his fingers became cracked  and he was again in pain. Just look at them!

Colin's fingers

So again, we decided to cut down on dairy. This time we are doing it as a family though, cutting out as much as we can and maybe only keeping it for treats. In the 2 weeks that we have cut “most” dairy out of Colin’s diet his rash has started to fade and his fingers are now getting better. We are now finishing up the stuff in the house and I will not be buying anymore for a while. It will probably show quite a bit in our monthly spending also… Dairy is expensive!

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