My original due date for my little guy was June 4, 2011. For one reason or another - most likely my antsiness towards the end of my pregnancies - I was scheduled to go to the hospital at 3:00 p.m. on May 27th to be induced. I would have preferred an earlier time, but my doctor had two other deliveries that day and wouldn't be available until then. I knew that the time from when I woke up that morning until it was finally time to make the drive to the hospital would last a life-time. I am aware of my low-level patience. So I wanted to make sure that I kept busy to fill up the time. I planned on packing my hospital bag that morning and wanted to make one last run to Target with only one child in my arms. This was my plan!
7:00 a.m. on May 27th, I woke up with low abdominal pains. I didn't think too much about it and started my day. Showering, feeding and dressing Lily, doing my hair (I wanted to make sure that I felt as cute as I could rockin' a hospital gown because of the amount of pictures that were bound to be taken). And all this time, I was contracting and probably in the first stages of labor. I decided to start timing them and sure enough, they came on every 5 - 7 minutes. By mid-morning I tried to start packing. I say "tried" because it was so difficult!! My mind was in a fritz, I couldn't think straight. Plus, I had to make a bathroom visit every 2 minutes! All I wanted to do was just lay in bed and watch some mindless t.v. show because that was all my mind was capable of in that moment. But I willed through it and finally got all packed with a small hospital bag for me and the new babe; it only took about 2 hours to do so! After this whole ordeal at home, I still needed to make my Target run. I was determined to get my list of items that I am sure Paul would have been very capable of getting himself. So I packed up Lily and off we went to Target, all the while still contracting every 5 minutes. As I aimlessly walked around, trying so hard to stay focused and surgical in my shopping, I would clutch the shopping cart handles to brace myself each time a contraction would come. I still remember so vividly being in a hunched over position, trying to breath through a contraction when a teenage employee walked by looking frightened at what he was witnessing. As the pain subsided I just laughed to myself, realizing how ridiculous it was that I was basically in labor...shopping at Target with my little two-year old as company.
After feeling so accomplished at Target, I made my way to the Salt's warehouse to sit in on a meeting that Paul was having for the employees. Trying so hard to keep my contractions to myself and not stir up any attention, was impossible. They were getting harder and much more uncomfortable. Finally, it felt like a really long meeting, I told Paul I was in labor. It was around lunch time at this point, to which he explains that he wanted to go to his parents to get some food. That was a huge bummer for me because my doctor had told me not eat anything that day. And that is one of the worst thing you can tell me..."don't eat." So I sat on the Heslop's bar stool, watching Paul enjoy a delish-looking lunch. Joan walked in as I was having a contraction, all bent over and pain-faced. She asked what was going on and I told her I had been contracting all day. To which she quickly replied, "Go to the hospital!" We agreed that it was finally time to go. We got to the hospital around 2:00 p.m. They admitted me and checked me and I was shocked to find out I was dilated to a SEVEN! That was when it finally clicked how crazy I had been to hang around, doing whatever, while in labor. I immediately asked for the epidural, and by this time the contractions were hitting me really hard. The nurse explained to me that they had strategically put me in a room directly across from the Operating Room, just in case. With my doctor's guidance, I had decided to try a VBAC. It can have some complications associated with it, and as my doctor said, "If something goes wrong, it's bad." So not feeling totally at ease about that, I was at least out of pain for the moment with those blessed juices of epiduraliness running through my body.
Soon after, my parents came up. I was really excited to have them here. To be honest, that was really the only reason that I was bummed that Lily was c-section. I wanted both of my parents to be in the room when I gave birth. That may be weird to some people, but when I was about 14, I saw two live births (that is a whole other story). Aside from the initial shock I had as a young girl at what I was seeing, it was the most amazing thing that I had ever witnessed. So because I know what a sacred, special, experience that is, I wanted to share that with my parents.
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