Anonymous wrote:They might be trying to euphemistically refer to vaginal birth. I don't like saying anything involving "vagina" to people I don't know well, sorry.
Anonymous wrote:
Natural means without any medical intervention at all. That means out of hospital, no blood transfusion, no sutures, nothing. It can mean a birthing pool, or whatever non-medical aids to birth people wish to use.
Unmedicated means no medication. People understand "no pain meds", but occasionally laboring mothers need other medication than pain meds, such as steroids to mature the lungs of premature newborns.
I had two pain med-free births in hospital. As a shorthand, I have said "natural", but that's actually wrong. I was stitched up, given steroid shots for DC1's premature birth, given IV fluids, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, but #mamas gonna #mama so I am over it. I know I'm a better person than the insta-mommies.
Anonymous wrote:This is a made up mommy-war problem that nobody cares/talks about after your kid is a few years old. Just tell your story and hear other women’s stories w/o picking apart and assigning meaning to every word/phrase. We all have stories to share and can find more commonality than difference if we try.
This is different than what the OP asked, and yes this is annoying. It's the intent that's annoying, regardless of what words they use.Anonymous wrote:Some people, like those who use the Bradley method, are REALLY into how they gave birth and proud of themselves and like to shame others. You see the same type of behavior around breastfeeding.
Anonymous wrote:Some people, like those who use the Bradley method, are REALLY into how they gave birth and proud of themselves and like to shame others. You see the same type of behavior around breastfeeding.
Anonymous wrote:Eh. I try not to get caught up on stuff like that. It’s just how it’s always been described. I had two medicated births and couldn’t care less.