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Rank: Advanced Member  Joined: 6/15/2009 Posts: 250
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When I was first pregnant with Connor, the subject of homebirth was an "Absolutely no way hozay" topic. Natural birth was fine, infact fully supported - but the natural birth was meant to happen in hospital. As I got bigger, and learnt more, and insisted he read chapters out of my 'bible' (Well Adjusted Babies) although we didn't change our decision to hospital birth, the temptation was there. Infact the only reason we didn't, was because I didn't know we could *doh* By Olly's pregnancy, I said to Ad "I Want to homebirth" and he said "Cool" that was that. I had his full support, and he was an amazing birth partner :) Now that we're considering trying for a third, not only is homebirth the only option for us, if we had no other choice, we'd freebirth together. The man who was squeamish about blood, didn't bat an eyelid when I suggested we video our next birth.  Mummy to Connor (07/07) birthed in hospital - my "Inspiration" baby, and Oliver (02/09) Birthed Peacefully at home in water - my "Best poo ever"
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Rank: Advanced Member
Joined: 6/28/2009 Posts: 61
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I think that if I'd told Rob I wanted to HB in our first pregnancy he would have supported me 100%. Trystan's delivery traumatised him so much though, that he was terrified of any option, let alone birthing at home. He believed that Hospital was the safest place for us to be... Now he doesn't! After educating him and having my wonderful IM discuss his feelings, fears, and the realities of home birth, he is SO pro-homebirth I think he might just start preaching to all and sundry if we successfully birth this babe at home! He now understands that home is SAFER for me and our baby. He understands the birth process more. He understands how important it is to ME. He's behind me 100%, and I love him to bits :) ETA - he now swears at the telly whenever someone is having a medicalised birth... so funny to watch a man that used to believe once a ceasar always a ceasar. He's come so far (thank God!). Leah - Mumma to T (c-sec) and S (my HBAC!), wife to R. non-vaxxing, cloth nappying, co-sleeping, breastfeeding, baby-wearing, student naturopath.
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Rank: Advanced Member  Joined: 6/16/2009 Posts: 87 Location: Perth, WA
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Our journey to HB was actually kind of complicated.... It began with Ashleigh's labour and a midwife almost jokingly suggesting that we take home birth classes for our next child. At the time we were both horrified. However, that planted a seed for me and with a subsequent labour that was again trouble free and fast it took little convincing to get hubby to go down the home birth path for our third. In fact, I think he would now more than ever support the idea considering he is proud as punch about having delivered his third child So in answer to your actual question - yes, my partner was very supportive of HB after our second pregnancy but freaked out at the prospect when initially suggested to him after our first pregnancy Mumma to 3 girls:
AJ (04) - public hospital GP (07) - private hospital SB (09) - homebirthed
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Rank: Member  Joined: 6/28/2009 Posts: 25
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Craig was 100% supportivre right from the word go!! When I nearly gave up towards the end and wanted to book in for the induction he sternly told me that he wasnt going to let me give up on my dream so easy and that he wanted to see me achieve something I had always wanted. *JAMI*...Wife to Craig, mum to 5 gorgeous ratbags!! Also a DOULA!! Shelby(9/98)natural birth centre birth Tabitha(6/00)Induction(post dates)hospital birth Brayden(3/02)Induction(Gestational diabetes)hospital birth Mikaylee(5/04)Induction(Gestational diabetes)hospital birth Cooper(5/09)Natural Home water birth(Gestational Diabetes AND post dates)
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Rank: Newbie
Joined: 6/28/2009 Posts: 9
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My first birth was in the FBC and our HypnoBirthing practitioner asked us why we weren't homebirthing, as she could see that it was right up my alley. I looked at DP to explain it! For him it was mainly about money and the FBC was free. I think he thought I'd concede the money argument again the next time round, even though I had 'earned' my next HB. He tried to tell me a couple of times "it's free and it's just down the road". Finally I snapped and told him that I was pulling rank on him because I would be the one in labour, in transition not wanting to get into the damn car! I told him that if I had to I would take out a personal loan to pay for it until the baby bonus reimbursed the loan. He knew I wasn't going to roll over this time. That was about this time last year, before I even got my period back from the first birth 2.5 years earlier...so I was serious! Fast forward to January when I intuited that we had had implantation (actually, my pelvis screamed at me all that day and that's how I knew - I have SPD since the first birth but hadn't experienced THAT pain since pregnancy!). I called my midwife of choice a couple of weeks later, before I had even 'confirmed' it with the GP (I'd run out of HPT and it was fire season, thought I'd get the 'official' nod to stay off fire brigade strike teams - or I may have been tempted to keep putting my hand up for them!) to book her in for my homebirth. DP still wishes we didn't have to pay for it, but I'm soooooooo comfy with the idea of this birth with no anxiety about having to state and push my case with hospital staff, about staying home long enough to labour so as to be 'on the clock' for as little time as possible, about getting into a moving vehicle at 'crunch' time, about wanting to get the hell back home to my surroundings, about feeling obliged to let relatives into the suite etc. I get to stay at home the ENTIRE time, light my candles, not be examined, not be timed, retreat to my bedroom with the door closed if I don't feel like seeing visitors (much less handing over my newborn! Though this time I'll have two slings BEFORE the birth, so it's not going to be as easy to ask for a hold, he he!), have my own snacks, food and drinks, look out of my window...I think DP can see why I prefer this option! Particularly as he's not so keen to be my 'personal assistant' in keeping away rellos who 'want a hold' :( I am actually in so much control with a homebirth that even his preferences or 'weaknesses' won't matter. But hopefully he comes on board with the whole lot and realises it's absolutely worth that peace of mind for all of us.
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Rank: Advanced Member  Joined: 6/15/2009 Posts: 250
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Love the baby football game rellies think they can play :) Congratulations on deciding what you want, and moving VERY determinedly to what you want :) All the very best !!!xx  Mummy to Connor (07/07) birthed in hospital - my "Inspiration" baby, and Oliver (02/09) Birthed Peacefully at home in water - my "Best poo ever"
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Rank: Advanced Member
Joined: 6/28/2009 Posts: 57
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I've had a lot of tears over this issue. When I thought he was on board, really he wasn't. But slowly we are getting there. After finding the right midwife and her being ever so good with explaining things to him, he's getting ok with the idea. I don't truly think he will be 100% about it till he sees a healthy baby born in the comfort of our own home. Until that time unfortunately we wont go too deeply into it. As for the relatives passing the baby around, I absolutely can't stand this. The poor child comes away completely over stimulated by all the different hands touching them and cranky they've been pulled away from Mumma for so long. Hugabubs will be my best friend until we are ready to 'share'. I bottle fed after a short breastfeeding stint the first time too, and all the relatives wanted to 'give me a break' when feeding her Amanda Mummy to Sage - 2 years - C-Section Delivery Planning a Home BIRTH - Due in Autumn 2010!
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Rank: Advanced Member
Joined: 6/28/2009 Posts: 77
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This is my al time fav article on dads and homebirth....dads being of the "can't be bothered to read all the tripe" kind of peeps.. Print this off and show it to him... Ven and family!
*The 7 Secrets of Being A Home Birth Dad * By Ven Batista Ven Batista wrote this article after his wife, Bel, had her second daughter at home in London.
All Dads-to-be are nervous, or at least skeptical, when their wife/partner first mentions the idea of having a home birth. This is nothing to be ashamed of – us guys are conditioned by a lifetimes constant bombardment that Doctors know best and that it is our patriarch's duty to always make the safest choices. That's why when my wife Bel first brought up the idea for the birth of our second daughter, my first train of thought was about risk. Images of John Hurt's chest cracking open and a tiny, evil alien being screeching its bloody arrival to the universe ran through my mind. I looked up at the walls of our apartment and wondered whether an arterial spray of blood could ever be washed out of that particular shade of off-white.
Ten minutes' googling dissolved my misconception that home birth is reckless (with Bel peering over my shoulder and directing me to websites she'd already read). In a nutshell, there are studies for and against, but if you listen to your own common sense you will probably agree it's just as safe, if not safer. You can find all that stuff for yourself, what I want to really want to talk about is the second train of though that ran through my head – why?
Why have a home birth? My wife had her reasons and she laid them out for me. Bel had a horrible experience in hospital with our first daughter and that was a big part of it. As Bel explained it to me I nodded and said 'umm' a lot and was happy to go along with it because I knew it was what she wanted. But I never had reasons of my own – from my selfish perspective as a Dad – until after I had experienced it for myself. These reasons are the 7 secrets I want to share with you Dads now so that you can appreciate your home birth the first time round.
*1.In a home birth you are no longer relegated to the bench.* Before the birth itself there is more to think about in a planning and logistics sort of way, ranging from buying equipment to manly jobs like making sure the birth pool hose actually attaches to your taps. On game day you are not just a big hairy thing whose only use is to be squeezed viciously or swore at. You are in charge of the birth pool, maybe even catching the baby (I'm doing that next time). And, aside from the mother, who will be a little preoccupied, you are the only person in the building who knows where all the towels are. If you have ever read *The Hitchhikers Guide*, you'll know how vital that is.
*2. You'll lose less hair and gain less wrinkles.* Having a baby is always frightening on some level, if you're not scared out your wits you must be medicated or dead inside. With a home birth though there are less things that stress you out and feed the ugly fear monster within. Think of it: No traffic. No worry of getting lost. No worry of the car not starting. No worry that you've forgotten something. No worry about what's happening. No corridors to pace. No smug doctors. You'll still be worried, but it won't consume you. Besides – in a home birth, you have too many jobs to do to have time to let your fear monster run free.
*3. Home is where the heart is – not to mention cds, dvds, the playstation...* All your comforts. Your music, your TV, your favourite mug, your fridge, your magazines, your books even your beer I guess. You'll be more relaxed, the mum will be more relaxed and the baby will be more relaxed too when he/she pops out. I'll be honest, despite the stimulus of worry and excitement, births are pretty boring. Maybe I have a short attention span, but it's not, you know, entertainment. And we all know they can go on a bit. With a home birth you will be a thousand times less bored as you can take a break and read a magazine or flip on the idiot box for a bit. Hell, it's probably less boring for the midwives.
*4. Say goodbye to the little things that kill * Me? I hate hospitals for a million and one small and big reasons. Looking back now I can't believe I didn't jump for joy when Bel mentioned having a home birth simply because I wouldn't have to go to one. My main problem with hospitals is this - the idea of being surrounded by sick people sounds like a bad strategy if you want to stay healthy. Plus the small things: it smells bad, the foods nasty, it's demeaning to find your way by following coloured lines on the floor and specific to delivery rooms - when your newborn arrives he/she won't be woken up by someone else's screaming child. Hospitals suck, home rules!
*5. You don't have to live the delivery room cliché of the hapless and scorned father* You know the one - where the woman in labor hates her husband and screams blue murder into his face, punches him etc. Either that or she is so medicated and spaced out she doesn't even know what a father *is *let alone who you are. With a home birth her labor is undisturbed. She does not have to be picked up halfway through and rushed to the hospital. I cannot state enough how much a difference this makes.
*6. You are He-man of the home, you have the power! * That's right. It's not the power of grayskull, it's the power of being the master of your environment. It's a subtle difference, but one you will notice. Your home is your place. You pay for it. The midwives and guests are the fish out of water. If they want something, tea, coffee, whatever, they ask you. There's a funny thing about evolution, it has created the subconscious trait that whoever gives out the food and drink is the dominant player in any situation. That's why in a home birth you will find it feels a lot more natural to ask more questions about what's going on, to make sure that the birth plan is stuck to and to generally be more involved and have more say over the whole thing.
*7. You won't have your surprised, fragile heart ripped out.* If you only remember one of these secrets, make sure it's this one. At the end of a home birth, *the midwives leave. Not you.* This is the way it should be. In a hospital, you will be torn away from you newborn child and your exhausted wife at the very peak of your emotional vulnerability. Let me paint the picture of my experience of this real quick: two weeks before my eldest daughter was born my Dad had died, we were not financially safe and I didn't have a job. In short, it was tough. But being an alpha male, I wasn't showing it and being the rock solid guy I like to think I am. But the instant I saw my new daughters face I discovered a vein of happiness and a depth of feeling that washed away my ego and my fears and even helped me come to terms with my Dad's recent death and made me, a mainly scientific sort of thinker, almost see a thread of symmetry within life. If that's all a bit too Lion King for you I apologize, my main point is this – at that moment the most unnatural thing in the world for me to do was leave my daughter, drive home and lay on my couch for eight hours and wait for the sun to rise. To make me do that was probably the cruelest thing that has ever been done to me. In retrospect I wish I had stayed and made them try and have me arrested for refusing to go. I have forever lost that first night with my first born.
These are my reasons why home birth was better for me. I've called them secrets, because the Dad's viewpoint is not talked about that much, even within the world of home birth programs and message groups etc. It's not all good you know – you will have to clean up afterwards. That's not anyone's idea of fun. But hey, that's a small price to pay in my opinion.
After experiencing both hospital and home birth my wife and I wouldn't even consider going to a hospital again unless there was a very compelling medical reason why we should do so. That's compelling, by *our standards* of reason and common sense. Not what any medical professional says. It's a no-brainer for us. As a Dad there is really no comparison to be made. You are a key part of a home birth. The mother needs you and is relying on you. In a way it's a shame when it's all over because you revert back to being a useless man again before the midwives' leftover tea goes cold.
Ven Batista
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Rank: Advanced Member
Joined: 6/28/2009 Posts: 57
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I love that Lisa Does it come on a CD?  I will print it out, but will probably have to read it out to him...sigh. Wish I could put on a burly man voice without laughing. Amanda Mummy to Sage - 2 years - C-Section Delivery Planning a Home BIRTH - Due in Autumn 2010!
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