I would be remiss if I allowed Cesarean Awareness month pass by without reflecting on mine through writing.
I had always wanted to have children.
I did not want a c-section.
I did not want to have a medicated birth.
Heck! I didn't really even want to have my child in a hospital.
But all of that changed the day that I found out I was pregnant and had a bicornuate {heart shaped/double sided/split} uterus.
I hear mamas stories of going into labor and it makes me tear up a bit that I didn't get that opportunity. I hear stories of mamas going back and forth to the hospital with false alarms, and feel I missed out on an experience.
But at 20 weeks due to my condition, my doctor and I had come to the consensus that a c section was going to be the safest manner for baby and mama but it wasn't going to stop my doctor from even checking the babys position the morning of my delivery.
I find that Satan tries his hardest to pull heart strings and make you feel inadequate. People around you get caught in the same comparison traps.
But I remind myself: I am a mama now. My baby was born healthy and happy, and still resembles those remarks. God was and is in control.
I can not complain about my c-section one bit. I can not complain about my recovery one bit.
I definitely send anyone who is in a tough pregnancy to the practice I trusted with my pregnancy ( Northeast OBGYN - SAN ANTONIO , TX), and recommend the recovery mechanism ( prevena wound vac) that my doc hooked me up with :)
Whatever delivery method you have, makes you a mama (and that includes paper pregnancy/adoption). Remember that your health and the babies health are the most important.
I had always wanted to have children.
I did not want a c-section.
I did not want to have a medicated birth.
Heck! I didn't really even want to have my child in a hospital.
But all of that changed the day that I found out I was pregnant and had a bicornuate {heart shaped/double sided/split} uterus.
I hear mamas stories of going into labor and it makes me tear up a bit that I didn't get that opportunity. I hear stories of mamas going back and forth to the hospital with false alarms, and feel I missed out on an experience.
But at 20 weeks due to my condition, my doctor and I had come to the consensus that a c section was going to be the safest manner for baby and mama but it wasn't going to stop my doctor from even checking the babys position the morning of my delivery.
I find that Satan tries his hardest to pull heart strings and make you feel inadequate. People around you get caught in the same comparison traps.
But I remind myself: I am a mama now. My baby was born healthy and happy, and still resembles those remarks. God was and is in control.
I can not complain about my c-section one bit. I can not complain about my recovery one bit.
I definitely send anyone who is in a tough pregnancy to the practice I trusted with my pregnancy ( Northeast OBGYN - SAN ANTONIO , TX), and recommend the recovery mechanism ( prevena wound vac) that my doc hooked me up with :)
Whatever delivery method you have, makes you a mama (and that includes paper pregnancy/adoption). Remember that your health and the babies health are the most important.
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