Anonymous wrote:My first and second pregnancies were both 18-hour labors. The first was an induction with pitocin and a balloon. I only pushed twice though. I had my membranes stripped with my second. There were water bags over my baby’s head, but once they broke it only took 45 minutes for my daughter to come. It was too quick. I only pushed for 5 minutes with second (I probably pushed 6-8 times), but my second child was higher up when I started pushing (I had to get her out, since she was hitting the umbilical cord on the way out and that was dangerous).
I think they’ll let you go for quite a long time in labor provided there isn’t an infection and the baby’s vitals (and your vitals) are fine. I don’t understand why women who can workout during pregnancy choose not to, since you benefit so much from being in good shape during labor.
Anonymous wrote:How dies hours of pushing happen? You are dilated to 10 but the baby is still high?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was in labor for probably close to 48 hours with my first. About 24 hours of them were really “active” labor (painful contractions) and only 18 of them were at the hospital. Last 4 were the most brutal, 3 hours of pushing and then a forceps delivery because baby was in distress. Other than the assisted delivery/distress, I think this is pretty common for a first timer. Media depicts birth as being really fast and for most women, it’s not.
3 hours is long, even for a first birth. After 2 hours of pushing the chance of complications goes up. Labors are lengthening in general probably because of advanced maternal age, obesity and overall worse health.
Anonymous wrote:I was in labor for probably close to 48 hours with my first. About 24 hours of them were really “active” labor (painful contractions) and only 18 of them were at the hospital. Last 4 were the most brutal, 3 hours of pushing and then a forceps delivery because baby was in distress. Other than the assisted delivery/distress, I think this is pretty common for a first timer. Media depicts birth as being really fast and for most women, it’s not.
Anonymous wrote:Don’t tell anyone when you go I go labor to prevent people from bugging you. I went radio silent in labor and notified everyone (aside from my parents) a few days later.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My active labor was longer than this. C-section was never mentioned. Baby was never in distress. Had waters broken but eventually needed respite epidural to sleep. The hardest part was pushing on exhaustion. I had been up a few days before in prodromal labor (all back labor- mostly standing) In truth I should have tried to labor at home longer and rest more. Extended pushing is no joke. 3+ hours.
Does your friend have a doula?
No, active labor doesn't mean what you think it means.
I was 6cm dilated when water was broken. Significant intense contractions. It was active enough. I was almost entirely on my feet. Awake for 3 days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My active labor was longer than this. C-section was never mentioned. Baby was never in distress. Had waters broken but eventually needed respite epidural to sleep. The hardest part was pushing on exhaustion. I had been up a few days before in prodromal labor (all back labor- mostly standing) In truth I should have tried to labor at home longer and rest more. Extended pushing is no joke. 3+ hours.
Does your friend have a doula?
No, active labor doesn't mean what you think it means.
Anonymous wrote:How dies hours of pushing happen? You are dilated to 10 but the baby is still high?