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 What do you say to a mother who's birth is not going as she desires? 
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Junior Member

Joined: Sun Aug 28, 2011 8:43 pm
Posts: 41
Location: Cincinnati, OH
When labor and birth take an unexpected turn, how do you support your client emotionally, through labor, and when processing the birth experience afterwards? Besides listening, how do you help them handle the departure from their birth desires, acknowledging their disappointment, without sounding patronizing or insensitively positive?
Any words of wisdom to share?

Thanks!


Thu May 10, 2012 2:04 pm
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Junior Member

Joined: Mon Oct 04, 2010 11:21 pm
Posts: 16
Location: Seattle area of WA, USA
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I'm not certified yet, but I attended a friend's labor in which things did not end up the way she wanted them to. She was induced and ended up with a c-section.
As far as supporting her through labor, if she asked for advice, I told her what I knew, but let her know that she and her husband would need to make their own decisions and I would support them no matter what. I left them alone for a few minutes when they needed to talk.
After the c-section her husband and OB dismissed her feelings of disappointment with the typical "The baby's healthy and that's all that really matters" stuff. I listened and let her talk her way through her feelings, then let her know that she's going through a grieving process and it is okay to feel disappointed. She was feeling a little guilty for not just being happy with a healthy baby, but felt better when I let her know that her feelings were validated and that it would take time to work through the loss that she felt. The birthing process and the mom's experience DO matter, even though a healthy baby is always the ultimate goal.
Hope that helps... it was my one and only "doula"-type experience.

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Jessica

Aspiring doula and Mommy of four


Thu May 10, 2012 4:36 pm
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Joined: Tue Apr 01, 2008 1:54 pm
Posts: 2488
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Quote:
let her know that she's going through a grieving process and it is okay to feel disappointed. She was feeling a little guilty for not just being happy with a healthy baby, but felt better when I let her know that her feelings were validated and that it would take time to work through the loss that she felt. The birthing process and the mom's experience DO matter, even though a healthy baby is always the ultimate goal.


This is so important and great advice.

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"Women's strongest feeling [in terms of their birthings], positive and negative , focus on the way they were treated by their caregivers" - Annie Kennedy & Penny Simkin


Thu May 10, 2012 4:49 pm
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Joined: Tue Apr 10, 2012 3:29 pm
Posts: 67
Location: Twin Cities, MN
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I had a similar experience as ballroombell. After 44 hours of laboring and one intervention after another, she had a vacuum delivery. She wanted an all natural birth, but instead had literally every intervention short of a c-section.
I allowed her to cry and be angry about it but I reaffirmed her i'm the decisions she made and repeated back the circumstances that led to each decision.
Sometimes in the heat of the moment and exhaustion, clients don't remember why certain options were given and they need to be reminded of the good choices they made even though it was different than the original plan.

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Fri May 11, 2012 9:44 am
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Joined: Sun Jul 11, 2010 11:47 am
Posts: 158
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I let them know that it is okay to not be happy with it, it is a process and being angry that it did not go the way you wanted is normal. I affirm them, telling them they did everything possible to have their baby. For example, if a mom has gone through an entire hard labor and ends up with a c-section, I have found some moms love to hear it was not for nothing. They want to know how it benefited their baby and themselves.

Let them vent. If they seem to be tossing it off as nothing, gently encourage them to journal about the birth, write down the birth story etc.


Fri May 11, 2012 4:02 pm
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Joined: Sun Mar 01, 2009 9:19 pm
Posts: 543
Location: Northern Virginia
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It is always good to have a professional who deals with birth trauma to give as a referral. Sometimes these disappointing outcomes lead to postpartum depression. We can listen and encourage but know when to refer. I like to tell moms who have a traumatic birth that they may need some professional help to process their experience and that is ok.

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Marilyn Alger
[color=DarkSlateBlue] CD(DONA) HCHI, Hypnodoul[color=DarkSlateBlue]a
www.novadoula.com
Proudly serving the Northern Virginia area since 1992
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Sun May 13, 2012 8:44 am
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