Tuesday, August 25, 2015

Samuel's Birth Story

It’s taken me nearly six weeks to sit down and write Samuel’s birth story, but I figured I would try to carve out a few precious moments this morning to remember his entrance into the world over a cup of much needed coffee.

Samuel was due on July 13th – key word “was.” I had been having very irregular, sporadic contractions and Braxton Hicks throughout the last few weeks of my pregnancy, but to my chagrin nothing was happening on July 13th. I went to work like normal, waddling around as I tried to get everything ready for my pending maternity leave. I went to my prenatal appointment, hoping it would be my last one and I could sweet talk the midwife into stripping my membranes (a method that can induce labor by separating the bag of amniotic fluid from the cervix…about as comfortable as it sounds). Linda, my midwife for the appointment, agreed to check me and strip my membranes if I was dilated enough. I was expecting to be completely closed and nowhere close to going into labor, so I had been hesitant to get checked, but with the chance of inducing labor ahead of me, I agreed. Surprisingly, I was already 3cm, 70% effaced and baby was at a -3 station (low).  In one of the most awkward and hilarious moments of my life, Linda stripped my membranes and told me we would know within 24 hours if it worked. I went back to work, praying to go into labor, and started contracting. I contracted for about 20 hours and called my mom Tuesday morning after my contractions had remained about 7 minutes apart for a few hours. Unsure of whether they should make the drive or not, I didn’t want my parents to miss his birth, so they hopped in the car and headed to Nashville.  I called my supervisor at work and started my maternity leave in case I was in genuine labor. Two hours later, my contractions stopped completely.

Are you kidding? I wanted to cry. I think I did cry a few times.  My parents were on their way, I was off of work and all for a false alarm?! It could be another week – a week of maternity leave that I didn’t get to spend with him as an infant. To say I was discouraged would be a massive understatement. 

Mom and Dad arrived and Mom declared we were going to “walk that baby out.” I laughed, but was happy to have someone join me on my morning walks. Wednesday morning she nearly killed me as she sprinted and I waddled 2 miles – okay, maybe she was walking, but gosh it felt like a sprint! I had a few contractions but nothing promising, and again was feeling so discouraged that my parents had wasted a trip even though they didn’t care, they were happy to be in Nashville with Ray and I. We then got into the car and decided to go walk the mall and run a few errands. Dad decided to join us, and the three of us made a few laps around the Cool Springs mall. At some point in the mall, my contractions became strong and more frequent. As I was driving out of the parking lot, Mom made me pull over and monitor contractions from the passenger seat. We headed to Whole Foods and stocked up on some yummy snacks, and my contractions became more frequent and just as strong. I spent the evening bouncing on my birth ball and twisting into whatever position took pressure off of my back. My sweet husband applied counter pressure periodically, Mom made dinner and I put on what Dad would inevitably call an “inappropriate” sitcom to help distract me.

Around 7pm we called the midwife when my contractions were strong and 5-7 minutes apart, she said we could labor at home and call back when they were about 4 minutes apart. I took a warm shower and headed to bed to try to sleep – keyword “try.” Around 1am my contractions had spaced out a bit and I was hungry, so I decided to eat a snack – which I would regret in a few hours. By 2am, my contractions were strong and waking me up uttering curse words. By 3am, Ray was also up with me as I tried to get into whatever position alleviated my back labor. We (really Ray making me) decided to walk – so we paced in the driveway, stopping often for me to lean on him and sway. What was more bizarre than us walking in our driveway at 3:30am, was a random guy walking down the street talking on the phone at 3:30 am – I’m sure he thought we were crazy.
My contractions went from 6 minutes apart to 3 minutes or less – so much for 4 minutes! We called the midwife and headed to the hospital – my sweet husband driving as “gently” as possible and me yelling at him to screw being gentle and get me to the hospital! We pulled up to the ER entrance to see one valet working his butt off, while his coworker sat in the office bobbing his head to whatever was playing through his head phones. We got his attention and Ray rolled me into the ER, where this poor male nurse had to ask a very cranky, very pregnant me a bunch of questions like “What are the last 4 numbers of your social?” (which by the way, is incredibly hard to remember when your uterus is evicting a child). We were admitted around 4am and only 5cm dilated. Though baby had dropped a good amount since my appointment on Monday, I remember thinking “I’m only halfway?!”

Our sweet doula Lindsey arrived around 5am, right after my parents got to the hospital as well. We sent poor Dad to wait in the hallway and got into the labor tub. Surrounded with Ray, my mom, Lindsey and a sweet midwife student named Brittany, I labored in the tub for a good while until the heat of the water caused me to feel dizzy. After laboring in the tub, I was 8 cm and entering transition – the part of labor that scared me the most. I had made a joke about an epidural in the tub, but that epidural started to sound really, really good hitting transition. “This is the shortest part though,” I told myself, “only 30 minutes to 2 hours of this.”  I then apologized to everyone in the room preemptively – “I’m sorry if I lose my shit.” They laughed at me, but I was serious.

2 hours my butt I thought about 3 hours later. I had stalled with a small “lip” of my cervix between me being complete and ready to push. All I wanted to do was lay down and nap – someone asked me what I wanted and I said, “An epidural and a nap!” They laughed saying, “At least she has her sense of humor still.” I was kind of serious though. Lying down was so uncomfortable, but moving seemed impossible. We tried everything though – it was like a circus in that room. They had me pulling on labor bars, but I was too short. They had me sitting on a birth stool, which was the most ungodly, uncomfortable, torturous thing ever invented for back labor. They had me standing over the bed, hugging my birth ball, while Brittany tried to spread my legs apart more. I wanted to kick her, but my leg muscles started cramping so badly. I crawled back into bed and inhaled my nitrous like there was no tomorrow. The nitrous made my reflux ten times worse (if that was possible – remember that 1am snack I mentioned regretting? It threatened to come back up the entire labor), along with making me very nauseated and dizzy, so I couldn’t use it with every contraction. Looking back, I think the nitrous gave me something to focus on – it was a distraction, but it didn’t help much with the pain. I kept asking “How much longer?!” even though I knew the answer was going to be, “Let’s just focus on one contraction at a time.”   I later told my midwife Bethany that answer ticked me off but it was the answer I would’ve given my patients if they were in labor.  I remember hearing whispers and I knew that I had stalled. My water had yet to break, but Samuel had a few variable decelerations in labor and I knew breaking my water wasn’t ideal – he was so low and depending on the position of his umbilical cord, removing that cushion of water could stress him further. I remember the midwife giving me an hour to see if I would progress before breaking my water. I remember opening my eyes to Lindsey sweetly suggesting trying to get out of bed – she phrased it in a way that sounded as though I had a choice, but her look of concern told me to get the hell out of bed.

Of all places, they put me on the toilet with my feet on a stool. After a few contractions I was completely dilated and starting to push involuntarily.  They helped me back to bed and we pushed for about an hour I think, that’s what they told me at least. My elbows rested on the head of the bed as I sat on my knees – each contraction sending me into a deeper squat with a loud moan. I could’ve sworn everyone on L&D could hear me groaning like a cow – I thought I was scaring every woman in labor with my noise but I couldn’t help it – it felt natural and helped me breathe. Ray stayed by my head, swapping out ice cold rags to put on my neck, puke bag in hand in case I needed it, and fingernails embedded in his hands. When my breathing would start to get out of control with the pain, he would breathe with me and I could match his tone. I remember looking over at my nurse asking, “Susan, why did I not get the epidural?!” Again, there was more laughter but I was kind of serious!

If you take a birth class, they’ll most likely talk to you about the “ring of fire.” It’s in reference to the incredible burning sensation you get when baby starts to crown…it’s also an understatement. My bag of water presented first, and they said, “Alex, reach down here – feel this? It’s your water.” I yanked my hand back, quite grossed out, and said, “Get him out!” I remember thinking, “I need to change my breathing” – recalling from our birth class the short, shallow breaths that would keep a feather in the air – but it never translated physically for me. I remember hearing Bethany tell me they were about to deliver the head and she may ask me to stop pushing for a bit. Thankfully, she never told me to stop, because there was no stopping. Samuel’s head crowned, bursting my water, and shooting him out. There was an instant relief of pain that flooded my body, and then there was a lot of confusion as they handed this slippery little human to me from in between my legs. They helped me reposition with Samuel on my stomach, where he promptly pooped (thanks buddy).  Mom cut the cord as Ray held my hand and teared up – taking in his little boy. They cleaned him up and started to fix me up. That nitrous was not fun in labor, but it was my best friend in recovery. Ray laughs at me because I was high as a kite. Dad was finally allowed back in the room from his banishment, and I remember looking over and seeing Dad and Ray both tearing up over Samuel. My repair took nearly 45 minutes before I got to hold Sam again and breastfeed. Lindsey had taken lots of pictures and helped with breastfeeding before she headed back home. God bless her, she massaged my back and applied pressure to my hips for the entire 7 ½ hours I was laboring in the hospital. There was no way I could’ve done it without her, Ray, my mom and the rest of our healthcare team. Everyone was so supportive and unified behind our goal to have a healthy and natural labor.

The rest of our stay in the hospital and our first two weeks home felt incredibly surreal. Recovery in the hospital was relatively easy and fast – I walked to the postpartum unit and frequently during my stay to help ward off worsening soreness. Outside of that, I had no time to process the fact that my body had just gone through something incredible, that I had just had a baby. Everyone kept telling me I was a champ – natural childbirth? You go girl! But that’s the last thing I felt like physically. I felt like a grenade had exploded between my legs and every time Sam needed to eat I wanted to cry. I felt weak and broken. I was exhausted, frustrated, and in constant pain. If I’m being honest, there were times when I snapped at Samuel and wanted to shake him – not shaken baby – but like someone would grab you by the shoulders and say, “Get it together man!” Then I would cry in guilt – I don’t want to be a mother or wife who yells, and yet I was snapping at my husband and baby.  I would burst into tears in the middle of the night – Sam would be crying and I would be crying. I just wanted to feed my baby normally and painlessly, and he just wanted to eat but couldn’t do that well. Still, I remember thinking there was incredible grace – my bottom hurt, his bottom hurt too from a circumcision and then diaper rash. I was frustrated and so was he – I didn’t know what I was doing and neither did he. We were in the same boat, the two of us, and that realization helped me care for him with compassion in difficult moments. The only difference was that I was in constant demand and he was (still is) in constant need. I loved him – but in the very deliberate and determined way that comes from meeting his needs the best way I could, even though it meant putting my needs to the side temporarily. It took us learning to exist together when everyone left – when Ray went back to work, when all the family left – for me to really begin to feel strongly bonded and connected to him. And it has not been easy – a persistent, awful diaper rash, two lip tie revisions and a tongue tie revision, oversupply issues, multiple medical appointments and calls to lactation consultants, we are still learning how to do basic things, like how to suck, how to open his mouth wide, how to latch, etc.  In the midst of everything, God has been so faithful and I am so thankful. Where he would be expected to be “failure to thrive,” because of my oversupply of milk, he has continued to gain weight and grow on curve! Ray and I are well aware that many families and couples would gladly trade the late nights, the episodes of inconsolable crying/screaming, the pain and stress for the sweet presence of a little one – the sweet presence that I never want to take for granted. 


There are times I grieve my pre-baby life – my pre-baby body, productivity, and social/married life – which I think is normal and healthy, but I wouldn’t exchange this season for a thing. Motherhood has been the most challenging experience of my life. My body has been broken, and yet I feel stronger and more beautiful than ever. My spirit has been tested and I have felt so discouraged, but because of God’s faithfulness my family is not defeated. I have learned the depths of my stubbornness, selfishness, lack of control and pride – along with the depth of my need of the Lord, the love and sacrifice in the Gospel, and grace so ever sufficient for my every weakness. My heart, in all of its fullness, is now outside of my body and it rests on a chunky little man named Samuel Grey Shaw. 




Sunday, August 16, 2015

Letters to Little: Quiet Moments

My goodness! You are one month old! This time a month ago I was in transition with you – it was the longest and hardest part of labor – praise Jesus you came out when you did!

Right now you are sleeping in your monkey sleeper – which you spend a lot of time in because I can take it from room to room while I’m doing chores. You also make the greatest facial expressions, love eating, swinging on the porch swing and being outside in general. You’ve been more alert lately, letting Daddy and I see your big blue eyes. We love playing with you, but you would rather eat and sleep. Daddy is on a long run, Moe went back to sleep, and I am sitting at our table, coveted coffee mug in hand, really thankful for our little family and this quiet moment.

One thing I struggle with is being still and quiet before the Lord. In truth, I talk way too much and am a poor listener. I’m always fearful of being alone and quiet with Jesus. What if He doesn’t show up? What if He tells me things I don’t want to, or am not ready to hear? What if I’m exposed? These are irrational fears rooted in unbelief. These are irrational fears rooted in unbelief. The truth is that God is always present. He already knows and sees all of me, and His words bring life. I know this, but I still struggle with pride and doubting God’s character…and I avoid Him. I avoid quiet moments and connecting with Him.

In John 15 & 16, Jesus tells His disciples quite a bit of hard stuff…and He tells them why:

(16:1) “I have said these things to you to keep you from falling away.”

(16:4) “But I have said these things to you, that when their hour comes you may remember that I told them to you.”

(16:33) “I have said these things to you so that in me you may have peace…”

Jesus also tells his disciples in John 16:12, “I still have many things to say to you, but you cannot bear them now.”

He only tells them what they can bear to hear in that moment. While He said some difficult things that they didn’t fully understand, His heart was never to overwhelm them but to prepare, equip and encourage them.

Jesus really put His finger on my fearful and prideful heart as I read these last few chapters in John. Jesus calls me to “abide” – to remain with and in Him, to spend time with Him, to know Him, to ask of Him, to be one with Him and the Father. When I avoid Him, when I refuse to still myself before Him and listen, I do the opposite. I am more anxious, more stressed, and more foolish. I return to things that I know; things that are natural, easy and familiar. I make decisions out of fear and my own human wisdom, which isn’t wisdom at all. Like Peter did in John 21, I go back to “fishing” when Jesus has called me to follow Him (John 21:3; 19).

The reality is that I cannot follow Jesus unless I know Him – and I cannot get to know Him unless I engage and spend time with Him. God’s heart is not to overwhelm me with things I cannot bear to hear. He knows my limits better than I do, so when He does bring a challenging or convicting word to me, I have to trust His character, timing and purpose. When He comes with correction or conviction, I need to ask for the humility to receive it, the grace to repent and the faith to follow. His heart is for me – like it is for you – and my prayer is that you would know God’s voice and follow Him all the days of your life…and that you would see that modeled by your Daddy and me.

We love you so much buddy.

-mom


PS: you are officially a chunky monkey :)

Friday, August 7, 2015

Letters to Little - The Way It Ends

John 11:4 – But when Jesus heard it he said, ‘This illness does not lead to death. It is for the glory of God, so that the Son of God may be glorified through it.’”

Happy three weeks my little munchkin! You are getting sooo big! You gained almost a pound in your first two weeks and continue to fill out your skin. I am loving your baby rolls but missing how tiny you were already. Last night you slept for 4-4 ½ hours at a time – which means I got to sleep, too! You have the best facial expressions and you love to make noises. You also love your pacifier and the porch swing – still not a fan of the car seat though!

I would be lying if I told you that these past three weeks have been easy and perfectly wonderful. They have been wonderful, but also painful, challenging, and disheartening for all of us at times. You won’t remember, but you’ve been frustrated, too.

At one point, when I was feeling so very discouraged, Jesus reminded me of his friend Lazarus. In John 11, Lazarus’ sisters (Mary and Martha) send word to Jesus that his good buddy (whom Jesus loved) is very sick and needs Jesus. What does Jesus do? You would think that He would rush to His friend’s side and heal him right away – that would be the most loving thing to do, right? But Jesus doesn’t do that. Jesus says, “This doesn’t end in death; God’s going to get the glory” and He stays put. He doesn’t go. And Lazarus dies…and then Jesus decides to go to him….
….What the heck Jesus?
But that’s not the end of the story. Jesus ends up raising Lazarus from the dead!
Time out.
Wouldn’t it have been easier for everyone if Jesus had just gone first thing and healed Lazarus? Or better yet, if He had never allowed Lazarus to get sick to begin with?

You see, God’s ways are not our ways. His thoughts are not our thoughts. He is so much smarter and greater than we are. The reality is that Jesus could have healed Lazarus or prevented his illness entirely, but because He didn’t a few things happened:

1.       Lazarus encountered Jesus in a way that he never would have otherwise. He was given a powerful testimony.
2.       Jesus demonstrated His authority over death – not just to Lazarus and His disciples, but to the Jews who were present and to us as well. They encountered Jesus in a way they never would have otherwise and left with a powerful testimony. Much like them, we get to encounter Jesus in that same way when we read this story.
3.       God got the glory – and where God is glorified, therein lies our good. God’s glory=our good…even (especially) when it doesn’t look like what we would have thought.

So could Jesus miraculously fix all of our breastfeeding struggles – heal your tongue and lip ties, take away my pain, regulate my milk supply to meet your needs? Could He balance out your clotting factors so you don’t bleed so easily? Heal that pesky, persistent diaper rash? Yes, yes He could. He could in an instant. Has He? No. But has He been gracious, and faithful, and present, and healing? Yes, yes He has. In fact, you would be expected to be “failure to thrive” and yet you are gaining weight because of an oversupply of milk! God is so faithful to us and what seems hopeless – what appears will end in death – Jesus says, “I got this. God will get the glory.”

Because of the Gospel we can confidently claim, “This will not end in death. God will be glorified.” Even physical death is not our end. We have the hope of life forever with Jesus – whole, complete, perfectly restored life.

Satan would love for us to wallow in despair – to allow confusion, grief, frustration and anger to prevent us from seeking God and pressing into Him during difficult seasons. He loves to whisper lies to us, like “God doesn’t care.” “This is hopeless.” “Change or healing isn’t possible.” “Just give up.” Etc.
BUT
Jesus had declared, “This does not end in death.” He has won the victory by rising from the dead. He has the authority, the power, the final say over death and everything else. Where Satan can only steal, kill, destroy, and lie, Jesus always gives and brings full and abundant life (John 10:10).

There will be times in your life when Jesus will “wait” or “stay” like He did in Lazarus’ case. Other times when He will ask you to surrender to Him in trust, even when it seems like that is the death of a dream or promise – He did this with Abraham when He asked Abraham to sacrifice his promised son Isaac – but I promise He knows best and He is faithful to His promises. If He asks you to lay something down on the altar (which He will at some point), know that there is life abundant on the other side of surrender.

My prayer for you – as you squirm on my chest right now – is that you always trust Jesus and walk in obedience to Him, especially in tough seasons. That you would declare, as Jesus did, “This – whatever it might be- does not end in death. Jesus, get the glory.”
I love you my bug – always.

-          Mom