As you can tell, I don't leave much detail out! I hate stories without the details.
I got to the part about going back and getting changed into a gown. Nick wasn't allowed to go back with me which I hated because I didn't want to be alone and wanted his support. They basically just want to ensure I definitely was in labor and that my water had truly broken. When that nurse did the exam to determine how dilated I was, I had never felt so much pain in my life. I kept saying over, and over, that if that is what labor felt like, I couldn't do it. I started to cry because I was back there alone and I was in pain. I was sure that baby was going to be coming within the hour as close as my contractions were but I was ONLY 1.5 cm dilated. WHAT?!?! She also said at first that my water had not broken and talk about being scared???? I started to cry again because I thought they were going to send me home after all that. Well, another nurse came and said that my water had broken but warned that it would probably need to be broken again due to how much water I had. The moment she said that, a gush of water came so they hurried me into the delivery room so I could get cleaned up. I got into my delivery room about 7:30pm and met all of my wonderful nurses. Due to the contractions, they started me on a pain medicine via IV and it made me very loopy but I felt great. The plan was to start the pitocin drip around 9pm to increase dilation. By 9pm, I was between 3-4 cm dilated and I couldn't handle any more pain. I was squeezing Nick's hand off and they were 2 minutes apart. Dr. Smith was the on-call doctor and he came in to check on me and estimated Connor to weigh no more than 7lbs 8oz and said no worry for a C-sec. She went ahead and got me an epidural since the pitocin would only increase the contractions and hurt worse. The epidural was AMAZING and I didn't feel anything until about 12:30am, right when everyone was showing up. I was tired, hungry (remember, only that small salad all day). Once you are in labor, you can't eat anything until after birth. The Anesthesiologist came and refueled me with the epidural. They examined me and I was 7cm dilated so she estimated a 6am delivery. I forgot to mention that getting the epidural is scary because you don't want to move. I had the best nurse so she just kept talking to me to help me. Nick couldn't watch when he did it because of the needle size. It didn't hurt per say, but it was odd feeling.
By 1am, I was feeling great but SOO sleepy. Everyone was resting except for my mom and me. We just kept chatting because I couldn't sleep obviously.
By 3:00am, I was fully dilated but his head was still high. I had to get on all 4s and that was the WORSTTTTTTT. It was so much pressure! 3 nurses were pressing down on my back trying to get him down. I finally was in position to push about 3:25am. Only Nick, my mom, and mother-in-law were in the room. At first it wasn't so bad because I only pushed when the contractions occurred which were about every 2 minutes. The nurse would tell me when to push and to keep pushing for 10 seconds without breathing, then inhale and push again. You had to do this 3 times, every contraction. By the third push... I just didn't have any more energy. The 43 minutes I pushed seem like an eternity. I could feel all the pressure and it was so painful. They told me even with epidural, I would feel pressure but this was intense. I know so many women that couldn't even feel their legs to even push so I knew the epidural wore off. I couldn't have done it without Nick by my side holding my hand. He was so sweet. I remember when Connor's head started to crown.. my mom got so worried asking where the doctor was because she thought he was going to fall out..haha! Of course, the doctor comes in at the last minute and gets all the attire on. During this time, they are telling me not to push but it is just natural to PUSH.. I couldn't help it. The nurse told me that he had a head full of hair and I asked what color and couldn't believe it was brown!!! I assumed it was just because it was wet. When I got in the final stages of pushing, the nurse told me I would feel the "ring of fire" and said it would burn really bad. WHY DID SHE TELL ME THIS?? It truly scared me to death. Well, she didn't exaggerate... it was the WORST burning feeling when his head came. By 4am, it was getting closer and the pushing was increased to pushing as hard as I could until I was blue in the face. Before the last push, the doctor had to do an epitosomy which I did not want. Thank God I didn't feel that!
On Friday, May 1st at 4:08am, Nicholas Connor Ferris was introduced to the world by Dr. Smith and the 3 wonderful nurses. He was immediately placed on my stomach and there are NO words that can describe the feeling of meeting our son for the first time. I was so in love with him and couldn't stop staring at him. He was and still is the most beautiful boy! Everyone was full of tears and excitement. I remember the doctor saying how much water came out with that last push; he couldn't believe it. While I held him, the nurses continued to clean him up as best as they could and then took him to be weighed and for his test. The delivery room was quite large so everyone went over to the incubator while he was having his test and being weighed. I was getting stitched up which took a good 15 minutes.
When Connor was weighed for the first time, the doctor and nurses couldn't believe I just delivered almost a 9lb baby since I was 2 weeks early. He was 8lbs 14oz. It definitely isn't uncommon to deliver a 9lb baby but with the potential risk, most doctors will automatically send to C-sec just to be safe.
I think about 5:30-6:00, my parents and in laws went to our house to sleep since we all had been up all night. The nurse that was with me the entire time told my family and me that she rarely sees labor/deliveries that the baby's heart beat doesn't get stressed from the process. His heartbeat stayed a perfect rhythm the entire time. She said I was one of her easy ones. She also couldn't believe as a first time mother, the labor was only 10 hours.
My only disappointment was the doctor didn't ask Nick to cut the cord and he wanted to. It happened so fast there wasn't time for questions.
Once everyone left, I breastfed Connor for the first time and we already had a bond. I have to say it was a magical feeling feeding my son and it was so natural to him.
By 7am, I was STARVING but never even ate until 9:30am because they forgot me. I was also put into the smallest recovery room that wasn't much bigger than a closet. I got settled into my room and just wanted to cuddle Connor and sleep. Needless to say, I honestly didn't sleep until Saturday night. I had to keep Connor at the breast all night so I was scared to fall asleep. I did this because I wanted to make sure he was getting enough. My doctor came in Friday afternoon and released me to leave on Saturday. The pediatrician opposed that of course. He feels it is essential for first time mothers to stay the 48 hours post birth.
Connor couldn't have a bath until his temperature stayed above 98 degrees for at least 6 hours so he didn't even get his bath until Saturday.
When it was time to discard from the hospital, the pediatrician was concerned that Connor had lost 10oz of weight. If he would have lost 16oz (1lb) we would have had to stay at the hospital another day until he gained weight. Due to this, the pediatrician told me to give Connor formula once I got home to increase his weight along with breastfeeding. I was very skeptical of this but did what I was told. They gave me ready-to-feed bottles that had the nipples already attached. I would breastfeed, then top Connor off with the formula. Guess what happened??? He got nipple confused and wanted the faster nipple and rejected ME. No one knows how much this hurt me and how much I blame myself for this. Why didn't I research and use my own slow flow nipples?? I had to pump milk into bottles for Connor which was a lot of work. I breastfed for my entire maternity leave and supplemented with formula because once I got back to work, there was NO TIME to pump at work. The pediatrician constantly reminds me that the most important time to breast feed a baby is at birth for the antibodies that can't be found in formula and that is exactly what I did. He got the breast milk when it was most important so I have learned to come into terms with that. I have learned a big lesson for when I have my second child.
With all that said, Connor was back to birth weight in no time. Since I can't breastfeed, I try to give him the best formula that comes closest to breast milk possible.
I know this was really long but remember, Connor will appreciate reading this one day. I am printing all my blogs to put into a book for him.
Thank you for taking time to read!
Love,
Angie



