Planned
Unassisted Birth, Unplanned Twins
by Albert Calalan
Mom
is a large-framed woman, about 5'10" in height, with a previous baby being 10
pounds. This pregnancy was almost normal for her, going to 40 weeks. Mom's
belly was a tad elongated (belly button far from spine), but not much. The
belly seemed a tad narrow too. Sometimes the movements were a bit odd, giving
some fear of a breech. Fairly strong and regular false-labor contractions would
often go on for a day or more at a time, for a month or two prior to the birth.
On
the day of the birth, at 2:30 AM, Dad crawls into bed late/early, quite tired
from staying up too long. As Mom moves to sit up, she feels a pop. As she gets
up, it becomes very clear that her water has broken.
Dad
gets orange juice for mom, hoping to get some quick-to-digest energy into her
before reaching the point where it would just come back up again. Dad attempts
to get some sleep, and manages to doze off.
At
about 5 AM, Mom is in the bathroom to poop. Well, it wasn't a poop. Mom calls
Dad, who is now sleeping. Dad continues sleeping. Mom crawls from the bathroom
to the bedroom, then screams for him to wake up. Dad wakes with a start. At
5:13 AM, the baby is born. The head pops out, and Dad takes a picture. The rest
follows rather easily. It's not a very big baby. Uh oh, the penis seems to be
missing! The carefully chosen name would have to be scrapped. Hopefully girls
like getting hand-me-down clothes from older brothers. She can have a crew cut
like the rest of them.
Mom
then tries to nurse and deliver the placenta. The cramped area she birthed in
made it impossible to lie down or really do anything besides be on hands and
knees. This quickly got tiring and very painful. Nursing wouldn't work. After
many complaints, Dad found a twisty (wire and paper bread loaf tie) for the
cord and a scissors to cut it. With the baby freed, Mom is able to move about
enough to sit or squat. Dad takes a picture of her sitting or squatting to
nurse the baby. The baby is an alert little girl, looking around at the world.
Then
Mom heads to a more comfortable spot in the bathroom to birth the placenta.
Oddly, Mom has a rather tough time of it. She mutters something about things
feeling kind of hard and bone-like.
Dad
sees a bulge coming out, and prepares to deliver the placenta. It's looking
awfully big and featureless, like a bag full of icky juices. Hmmm... was that
an ear inside the bag? Maybe this is a hydroform mole or something. Placentas
don't have ears.
That's
a head. No way! Of course, time had been wasting, and this baby needed to come
out ASAP. Mom gives a huge push. Out comes the second baby, with the placentas
right behind.
This
baby is not so alert. This baby is a funny-looking pale color, completely limp,
and not breathing. Dad starts to discuss options, generally involving burial.
Mom insists that Dad try rescue breathing, which he does, though it seems
rather pointless to him. Dad would rather be happy for the one daughter than
worried over a lost cause.
Mom
sends dad to read the Heart & Hands book, while she grabs the lifeless baby
and tries her best. She notices that the cord has a pulse. As instructed, she
holds it face down, rubbing and gently slapping it. She talks to it. She keeps
at the rescue breathing.
After
quite some time, the baby manages to take a few breaths and wiggle her right
arm. It's looking like this is an emergency, not time for funeral planning.
This new family won't fit in the car though, and somebody needs to watch the
kids.
It's
now probably about 6 AM, though nobody is watching the clock anymore. Dad calls
a friend several times in a row, but doesn't get an answer. He tries someone
else, getting a very sleepy answer after the third attempt. The friend will
come over.
By
the time the friend arrives, the baby is looking like a definite survivor. The
baby is not in great shape, but the breathing is fairly regular and a feeble
attempt has been made at nursing. After some discussion, the friend takes the
older kids to her house while Mom and Dad head off toward the hospital.
Plan:
insist that Mom and the first baby are NOT being admitted, and that
preparations have been made to file the necessary affidavits for birth
registration. The hospital gets to observe one possibly ill baby, rather than
acting as if the births were at the hospital.
Dad
misses the turn, the baby is looking pretty good, and a well-trusted
pediatrician is not much farther. That seems like the better option. This
pediatrician - originally from Australia - is known to not freak out too much
over homebirths and even unassisted childbirths.
Around
9 AM the doctor visit starts, with much confusion trying to distinguish "baby
A" from "baby B". Dad can tell though; the second baby is rather sickly looking
to him. The babies both weigh a few ounces over 6 pounds, for a total that is
most likely just under 13 pounds. This is very small for the family, though
supposedly large for twins. The doctor notes that the sickly one responds
differently, being kind of jittery, but probably OK. The doctor expresses more
concern about the poor breastfeeding behavior of the second one, suggesting
that blood sugar might get low.
Mom
and Dad are sent home, to get a call from the doctor later.
Late
in the day, both babies are doing fine.
I am
including a photo of the newborn twins. Fiona (1st twin) is in front with
Melanie (2nd twin) laying behind.
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