This birth story began about 8 years ago with a well-planted seed, when I was witness to my beautiful sister Prairie giving birth to her son Jahsiah at her home in Chico, California. The scene was set perfectly like something out of a hippie storybook; incense lit, Bob Marley playing on the stereo, inflatable baby pool set up in the living room, the midwife working tirelessly, and family all around, anxiously awaiting Jahsiah's arrival. Fiercely powerful and warmly comforting woman that she is, Prairie created and held her space with great balance and intention, lovingly allowing everyone present a slice of her joy, pain, strength, endurance, and faith. It was my first experience with birth, and one profound enough to relay this message to me: When I have children, I want to have them at home-the hospital is just not an option.
Heartbeat at Home |
Settling on the magical landscapes of the Olympic Peninsula in Washington State, with the snow-capped mountains nearly hugging the sea, our path quickly led us to Carol. We all fell in love rather immediately, as Carol was a midwife with vast experience and faith, and we set off on our journey to home-birth together. Everything was right with the world, and our baby boy grew inside of me like a flower in the most fertile soil, his father vigilantly watering and feeding his growth every step of the way. Months of preparations were made as we patiently awaited the harvest, creating our birth cave, the first place our baby would call home. Even our cat was ready, acting as the guardian and keeper of the cave, and a powerful soothing presence during the labor that was to come.
Labor Land of Love Cave |
For the next ten days, we didn't get a single night of sleep. The days were as calm as a serene pond, but the nights yielded uncomfortable contractions which varied from slight to intense, an hour apart to 7 minutes apart. There was no discernible pattern to them, and I knew intuitively that they were not the kind that would bring a baby. This was the most saddening part, because I wanted nothing more than to finally hold my baby in my arms, continually dreaming of that most amazing moment of relief, when after so much hard work I could collapse into the birthing tub, my prize looking me right in the eyes.
When I was one week past my due date, Carol came over to check my progress, and was faced with two emotionally and physically exhausted people. She brought us wonderful news though, that I was dilating well and my cervix was 95% ready to pass our baby. We were so overjoyed to be closer to meeting our little person, and by the time she left, I was again hurled into full-blown labor. Throughout the night, I experienced the most intense contractions yet, with such a pattern as to tell me it was happening. She returned in anticipation of our birth, and after some time realized again that I was not progressing as she would have hoped. She suggested that perhaps I was just too tired from the last 10 days of sleeplessness, and that we should go to the hospital so that I could get some rest there. This meant an epidural. This simple word was already a far cry from my birth plan that, although I agreed to her suggestion, I cried the greatest tears of defeat into my husband's chest because I felt like I was already a failure. If Prairie could do this at home, Jahlelah and Lindsey too, then why couldn't I?
Partial Posse Shot |
The epidural helped for the pain, but the contractions tapered off even more. With the onset of the Pitocin, it seemed like we were moving forward, but after about another 10 hours of labor and no further dilation, examinations yielded the knowledge that in so many words, our baby was stuck. The words I had dreaded since accepting to go the the hospital were finally uttered, and the doctors suggested that we seriously consider a Cesarean before it is an emergency. Around midnight, my husband and I asked for a few minutes alone, the last of our heartfelt pow-wows before we would meet our baby.
Staying in Touch with Each Other |
Father and Son, Sachem Thunder |
It didn't happen the way we hoped/expected/anticipated/planned. There was no collapsing into the birth tub with relief after delivering my baby into my husband's arms. There was no incense or Christmas lights to set the mood of the cave. The guardian cat was not there in the operating room. There WAS Bob Marley though. Dylan said that while I slept and the doctors were putting me back together again, they played Bob Marley's "Three Little Birds," and let him hold the baby to his bare skin for the whole time. For this and countless other things, I am thankful. For being face to face with my greatest fears, for modern medicine, for Washington state, for Sachem Thunder, for the Great Spirit, for Amor Fidelis, I am thankful. For knowing that this was not the time to feel like I was a disappointment, but rather to revel in the empowerment of life and birth, I am thankful.
New Family on the Elwha River |
Sachem means chief or wise man of the North Eastern Algonquin natives, and we have learned that the most dependable wisdom is gained by navigating your way through real hardship and adversity. This may not have been exactly how we wanted it to happen, but it's just what we needed, and hopefully our adaptability, health, and strength are signs of our fortitude as individuals and as a family. After all, a healthy seedling planted by a human hand bares no fewer fruits than one spread by the wind. To know this is to know life, and to accept all of it's mysteries and majesties.
1 comment:
Angel you and your
family are my heroes. When I feel there is little hope for the world I know that there are those I can count as friends who will live and appreciate life in the ways of the ancestors and truly live as we were meant to live. I count Sachem as one that will have the future of one such as Charbonneau, the son born of Sacajawea on the journey west to her home with Lewis and Clark. I have only one regret in my life and most my age cannot make such a statement and I have lived well. There are few I would trade lives with but, you, Dylan and Sachem lead lives that I would envy if I did not have my own.
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