Awkward at the State Fair

Two months into my pregnancy, I realized the state fair would be happening soon after Bennett arrived. I had my heart set through my entire pregnancy to attend the state fair with Bennett, wear him, walk around and eat nasty fried fair food. Closer to my due date, I started to wonder if he would arrive in time to make my “dream” come true. Thankfully, Bennett arrived on time and we started to plan our first major outing to the state fair.

I nursed B at home, we changed his diaper, put him in the car, stopped at food lion for cash and cans (yay for can day at the fair!), found $10 parking and by that time, it was time to nurse again. I live my life in 2 to 2.5 hour increments. As I stated in my last post, I wanted to gain confidence to nurse away from home so this was the perfect opportunity. I jumped in the back of our Ford Flex, grabbed Mr. B, put my cover on and started to nurse. So far so good…. and then a car pulled up next to us.

This late 20’s guy gets out of the passenger side and leans up on his car (facing me) to wait for his girlfriend. The awkward part was that he literally was a foot away from me, facing me. If I rolled down the window, I could reach out and touch him. I start to panic slightly which is completely irrational…. and then Patrick reminds me that our windows are double tinted. Unless you have your face pressed against the glass, you can’t see in. For a good 5 minutes, this guy stood facing me, a foot away and blankly stared. I knew he couldn’t see me but it was so awkward!

BUT then he left, the awkward feeling subsided and I was proud of myself for successfully nursing away from home. Some of yall might be rolling your eyes but for me, it’s a big deal. 🙂 Our date at the fair was perfect. The weather was gorgeous and B did amazing. My heart was full. We can’t wait to take B back next year and ride all the kiddy rides. Life is good yall.

Hope you can make it to the State Fair! We loved it! 🙂 20141023_170722

The first month

Brittany Pelegrino Photography

We are celebrating 1 month of life in 3 short days. Bennett has been here for 22 days. 22 wonderful days have flown by and I can’t help but feel a little sad at the fact that we only have 11 more months until 1 year. Oh the weird thoughts of a first time mom.

How has my first month as a mom been? Wonderful. Hard. Challenging. Beautiful. Full of love. Learning curves. Tiring. Emotional.

The first week was without a doubt the hardest for me. After 30 hours of labor, there was no recovery period. You are handed a newborn who wants to constantly eat (at least mine did), you’re in pain from the delivery (at least I was), and you only get to sleep for a couple of hours at a time. Not necessarily from your baby waking you up, but the nurses come in to check in on you constantly. I remember that first night in the hospital with Bennett, I was scolded by a nurse after I fell asleep with him in my arms. Whoops! Unfortunately, I fell asleep sitting up multiple times during the first week.  I physically couldn’t stay awake.

The first couple of nights home were rough for us. It was a learning process for both Mr. B and us. We found out quickly that he didn’t like to be swaddled. He loves to have his hands free. He sweats. He talks the entire night. He is hard to wake up when he really is asleep. The second night home, we couldn’t figure out why he wasn’t sleeping so after the millionth time of getting up to soothe him, in sheer desperation, I took a shallow tub that slides under a bed and lined it with sheets and blankets and placed it in the crib. Sleeping in the tub was enough to comfort Bennett whenever his moro reflex startled him. We quickly learned that the crib was just too big for him just yet but we were determined to have him sleep in it from the start. Sorry sweet Bennett but mama needs her bed to herself. SO for two weeks he slept in a miniature crib made out of a tub and blankets that sat inside of his actual crib. All that expensive furniture we bought him and he slept in a tub. Patrick kindly referred to it as his kitty litter box. Hey, whatever works. After two weeks he outgrew the tub and we placed a twisted sheet in the shape of an oval under his crib sheet which has the same effect that the tub did. Oh I also found out at 2 weeks that he can roll onto his side. Scared the crap out of me the first time I went in to nurse him at night and I found him on his side!

After we figured out the sleeping stuff, everything else seemed to slowly get better. Those post postpartum hormones are no joke though. Remember that I didn’t cry during my pregnancy? Yea, totally made up for it after he came out. I cried everyday for like 2 weeks. Poor Patrick would get home and I would just unload all of my hormonal mess onto him. I remember reading a blog about “If your child marries mine” that was floating around Facebook and I LOST it. I couldn’t even finish the blog post. I cried every time I thought of Bennett no longer being a small baby. I cried about everything. I couldn’t even hold a conversation without my voice shaking and me tearing up. At our second doctors appointment, our sweet Dr. was voicing her concerns on Bennett’s weight loss (thank the Lord, we are back on track), and I sat there in my yoga pants and messy hair and sobbed. She thankfully reassured me that I wasn’t the first mother to sit before her and completely unravel. Luckily those hormones stabilized and I’m back to my usual level of sappiness.  Our Pediatrician even commented on how I look like I’m doing “much better” after I was able to show up with my makeup and hair done and hold a conversation without losing it. HA!

After the first two weeks of barely leaving my house, trying to recover from birth and learning what this new mommy life was going to look life, the Tobler household started to normalize again. The days are flying by and everyday Bennett and I are venturing out more, staying away from home longer and slowly rejoining the world.

Things we did in our first month:

1. Doctor appointments

2. First trip out of the house by myself with Bennett was to CVS for diapers and wipes and Target for a few food items.

3. Trips to target

4. Sleeping for 6 hour stretches at night

5. Finally exceeding his birth weight

6. Meeting his Meemaw who flew in from Texas

7. Lots of picture taking!

8. Family photos with Brittany Pelegrino

9. First sit down restaurant was a Mexican restaurant near the mall. He slept the entire time.

10. Rolling on his side

11. Wearing his first cloth diaper

12. Being worn in the Moby wrap – LOVES it!

13. Outgrew Newborn diapers at 2 weeks

14. Outgrew his first pair of newborn pj’s at 2 weeks

15. Still fits into most of his newborn clothes but starting to fit into his 0-3 months clothes

16. SMILES all the time!

17. First trip to church at 3 weeks.

18. Started tummy time at 2.5 weeks

19. Following things with his eyes

20. First sponge bath home during the first week. First submerged bath at 3.5 weeks. LOVES bath time.

21. First chiropractic adjustment at 4 weeks. He fell asleep during it.

22. First time he was left with Daddy was so I could go find non maternity pants. @ 2 weeks

23. Lots of head control – He’s a strong one.

24. Starting to find his hands

25. Peeing on the walls, pooping on the couch. Ohhhh yea.

26. Lots of snuggles with mama

27. Baby acne

28. LOTS of laundry

29. Picking pumpkins and carving them

30. Learning to jump and pull himself up with Daddy

31. First giggle was in the bathtub – can’t wait to hear it more often

Learning how to be a mom has been awesome yet challenging. Thankfully we are slowly getting into a routine which this mama loves. I can’t believe the first month has already passed. Before we know it, we will be celebrating 1 year. My goals for this next month are to venture out more, make new mama friends and watch my little man grow. Leaving the house still seems daunting for me. I haven’t mastered nursing in public so it really limits how far and how long we can be gone. My goal is to become more comfortable nursing away from home so that we can experience greater adventures.

There is NOTHING like being a mom and loving your child. It is a complete joy even on the hardest days to be Bennett’s mom. I am so thankful to be able to stay at home during this season for our family and really enjoy every moment. I am even more thankful that Bennett makes my job easy. He is such a laid back baby. Sure, he has his fussy moments but for the most part, he’s cool and calm. Love him to pieces.

We will be taking his picture on the 25th so look out for that. 🙂

OH and can you believe that Patrick and I are celebrating 4 years next month??? I sure do love my husband and I am SO thankful to be doing life with him!

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^ First night home. So tiny in that big crib

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We have a side sleeper yall.

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Tummy time with Daddy 

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First cloth diaper

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Tummy time fail.

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Brittany Pelegrino Photography

My body gave me Bennett.

Pregnancy made me mellow. A lot of times, you hear about how woman become raging hormonal monsters but this pregnancy did the opposite for me. If you know me, you know that when I’m not pregnant, I’m a crier. Tears can flow for the silliest of reasons and I just can’t help it. During my pregnancy though, I can distinctly remember how many times I cried. 4. Yep, you heard that right. I only cried 4 times my entire pregnancy. One of those 4 times was a few days before I delivered and I remember it like yesterday.

So much happens when you’re pregnant. Your entire life changes in a quick 10 months. Patrick and I went from going on an exotic 7 day cruise and joking about never having kids to 2 weeks later making the decision to start a family to 3 weeks after that staring at a positive pregnancy test. Ok… I won’t lie. It was 5 positive pregnancy tests. Life changed and it changed quickly. We would talk about Bennett daily, planning for the future as a family of 3. The first half of my pregnancy were plagued with vomiting and all day nausea. I lost 10 lbs and (looking back) hardly looked pregnant. Then I found diclegis and my appetite returned and the weight started to add up quickly.

I would consider my pre pregnant self pretty in shape. I went to the gym, ate fairly healthy and was working towards new fitness goals. I was no extreme race person, marathon runner or olympic lifter BUT my health and my weight were something I was conscience about. I found joy in improving physically. I loved seeing new muscles, being able to run longer, lifting heavier weights than before. When I found out I was pregnant, I had in my mind that I would only gain 20 lbs…. or MAYBE 25. Wrong. So wrong. My body decided it had other plans.

Days before my labor, I stood in front of our full length mirror after getting out of the shower and I sobbed. I hated what I saw. I was disgusted at the cellulite that plagued my back and legs. The overall swollen look that I presented. The numb belly skin that was stretched fiercely across me that separated Bennett from the outside world. The angry red stretch marks that covered my sides and the white textured ones that plastered the front. I was angry with myself for caring so much. I kept telling myself that it shouldn’t matter to me and that I should just be thankful that I was growing a healthy little boy. Not everyone gets the gift of carrying a child and I was angry that I was shedding tears over how I looked. When all was said and done, my body added 50 lbs to my frame during my pregnancy. Yea…. 50. I saw numbers on a scale that I NEVER even dreamed of seeing. 50 lbs and a body I didn’t recognize as my own and I felt so much disgust towards myself…. even though I was growing a life. Even though I knew a lot of it was fluids. Even though Bennett was healthy and thriving on the inside of me. Even though everyone said I looked great…. I was miserable.

Bennett was born and I left the hospital swollen and barely able to walk. My body literally felt broken. I looked down at a deflated belly but something was different. All I could think about whenever I looked at my new post baby body was that it gave me Bennett. My body gave me the greatest gift and one of my most treasured and loved people in my life. I look at my body so differently now. I embrace my once despised stretchmarks as a reminder of the time that I carried Bennett on the inside of me. I look at my saggy and soft belly and can’t help but be thankful for the life that it once held. I have so much appreciation for what my body did over this past year and what it continues to do. My body knew how to grow a child. My body knew how to bring Bennett into this world. My body knows how to feed and nourish my son and continues to give life. I’m amazed with my body. I’m more in love with my body post baby than I ever was pre baby simply because of what I’ve seen it do this year. Do I want to eventually shed the remaining 25 lbs? Yes. Do I want return to running and lifting weights and tone my body again? Yes. Will I stand in front of the mirror and cry at my stretch marks again? No. I’m thankful that my body was a kind home to my son as he grew in my womb. My body grew my sweet Bennett and I will forever be thankful.

All you pregnant mama’s who might be struggling with your bodies as they grow and everything is changing. Know that it is worth it. Once they are here, it is all worth it.

Say a thank you to your body today and appreciate all that it has done, is doing and will do for you.

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39 weeks and 3 days pregnant | 3 weeks and 1 day post baby.

Excited to see what my body will do this next year. ❤

Bennett Journey’s birth story

I figure that typing out Bennett’s birth story would be easier and faster than writing it down in my journal. With the days quickly passing and us celebrating his 1 week birthday today, I figure it’s time to start writing down my thoughts, feelings, and memories of the events that brought my son into this world.

The end of my pregnancy was actually a lot easier than the beginning. Other than being large, swollen and peeing all the time, it wasn’t that bad. I knew that once Bennett arrived, life would drastically change so I soaked up the last few weeks and days of just being “Ann” instead of being “Mom”. As I was nearing my due date, I was mentally preparing myself to go over and I honestly would have been fine. I was enjoying the last days of childless dates with Patrick, visiting with friends and finishing things around the house.

The house was clean, I had gotten a pedicure on Monday (the first since my wedding!) and Patrick had made up time in school, so we were READY if Bennett wanted to come. We had jokingly, except not jokingly been praying that he would make his arrival on Thursday simply because it would work best for our schedules.  Tuesday night we went out with our neighbors to Over the Falls for dinner to celebrate Mr. B before he arrived. They showered us with homemade blankets and hats, the cutest pajamas and a monogrammed thirty one tote bag! I don’t know who you live next to, but I promise, it would be hard to beat our neighbors. Patrick and I headed home, settled down to watch “Chuck” on netflix and then called it a night around 10:30. Now, at 39 weeks pregnant, I got up to pee about every hour and a half. Skip this next part if you’re not interested in hearing about my water breaking. Still reading? Ok, here we go. So at 4:50, I woke up to use to the restroom. I waddled to the bathroom and while sitting down, I felt a small gush. I thought, “hmmmm that was close, I almost pee’d on the bathroom floor!” I sat on the toilet, finished my business and then had the thought…. “Was that my water breaking??” When you’re 39 weeks pregnant, you begin thinking every little symptom is the start of labor, so I decided to brush it off and go climb back into bed. Patrick’s alarm began to go off at 5:00 while I climbed back into bed. While laying there, I began to have some pretty strong cramps and contractions. I silently laid there for 30 minutes, listening to Patrick continually hit snooze until I finally rolled over and said, “babe… I think I’m in labor.” Half asleep, he rolls over and says, “Let me feel” and puts his hand on my stomach. We laid in bed for another 5 minutes talking about why I thought I was in labor. I felt like I needed to use the restroom again before Patrick jumped in the shower so I rolled out of bed and then…. BAM! Water works galore. I stood in shock at the fact that I was either peeing on myself or my water had broken. I frantically said, “BABE!!! MY WATER JUST BROKE! GRAB THE TOWEL!” I had been keeping a towel next to the bed for the past 2 months just in case this was to happen. Patrick jumps up and goes to grab the towel and it’s gone. I forgot that I decided to wash it the day before and it was still in the dryer! He frantically runs to the linen closet and can’t decide on which towel to bring me. I’m shouting, “JUST BRING ME ANYTHING, IT’S GOING EVERYWHERE!” He is shouting back, “I don’t want to bring you a good towel and you get angry that I would ruin a good towel!” We both laughed at this interaction afterwards. I threw the towel in between my legs and waddled to the bathroom. I mentally was in shock. Was this really it? Had my water really broken or did I just pee all over myself? I decided to call my sister in law, Jenn who also was my doula and then call my OB and see what they wanted me to do. After speaking with both, it looked like it was game time. The OB wanted me to come in to be checked and then admitted if my water did actually break. I tried to remain calm as I showered and finished packing the hospital bags. Thankfully Patrick hadn’t left for school (which is an hour away) yet and was able to help finish the last minute tasks before we headed off to the hospital. We decided that breakfast and coffee were a necessity in case this was actually the real deal and I would be put on food restriction upon being admitted into the hospital. We drove to Breuggars and then Starbucks. I stayed in the car due to the lovely fact that I was still gushing fluid. Gross, I know. As Patrick ordered my food and coffee, I called family members to let them know that today was going to be baby day and that I would let them know more once I was admitted.

Rex is about a 30 minute drive without traffic from our house. We unfortunately left during 8 am traffic which prolonged the travel time. On the up side, my contractions were more than manageable and still far enough apart that I was able to eat my breakfast and down my latte all before making our arrival. Patrick and I prayed as we drove to the hospital and talked about the surreal fact that we would be driving home with Bennett. After 10 long months, this was it. It was very hard to fully deal with all the emotions that we were feeling. Patrick dropped me off at the front doors to check in while he parked the car. I remember trying to joke with the cleaning staff while I waited for him to come, but the staff was not amused by my humor.  We waddled upstairs to check in and our first nurse was amazing (they all were). I had 4 due to being in labor for so long. I forget her name unfortunately but she took me straight to a room instead of triage because she was sure that I was being admitted. She needed to check the fluid to make sure it was my water breaking and I guess from the car ride over, Bennett’s head decided to plug everything up! I started to panic that it wasn’t my water when she couldn’t find any fluid. I was going to be so embarrassed if I had just peed all over myself and alerted all the family members and the photographer for nothing. Jenn arrived soon after us, as we were all anticipating a quick labor. She got me moving so that Bennett would move and the fluid would come out again. After about 30 minutes, the strip turned blue and I finally got the exciting news that YES, THIS WAS IT! TODAY WAS BABY DAY! Little did I know, it wasn’t baby day and the journey that I had a head of me was going to be the hardest of my entire life.

When I was checked, I was only .5 cm dilated and at a -2 station. If you don’t know what that means, it basically means I had a LONG way to go before I could even think about having Bennett make his entrance. The doctor on call was my third favorite doctor (out of 6), and he warned me that we were in this for the long haul. He said as long as I monitored well and baby monitored well, he would allow me to labor as long as possible. His exact words, “I’m here until 8 am tomorrow.” We had arrived at the hospital around 8 am on Wednesday, so that gave me 24 hours. I KNEW that I would have Bennett before 24 hours…it never even crossed my mind that it might take longer.

My birth plan was to labor and deliver naturally. Patrick and I fully believed that I could do it. I didn’t like the idea of being confined to a bed, laying on my back and having a whole bunch of needles in me. Ok, let me be honest… it was the needles part that freaked me out the most. I had to compromise and get a heplock which is where they start an IV but it isn’t attached to anything which allows me to move around and labor. The contractions became harder, closer together and I began to get into full blown labor mode. I walked the halls with Patrick, bounced on the birthing ball and before I knew it, it was early afternoon. Every 15 minutes out of 60, I had to be in my room to be hooked back up to all the machines to monitor our vitals. I’m thankful that the nurses never complained about all the hooking and unhooking that this required. By early evening, contractions were close and took a lot of work to breath, groan, work through. I was beginning to tire and they decided to finally check me. I was sure that they would say, “You’re at an 8, almost there!” My doctor came in and decided to check me….. let me tell you, that was one of the most painful things that happened that day. I lost it. I screamed and writhed and begged him to stop. Tears poured from my eyes and pain shot through my body. This is probably the first time Patrick had seen me in that much pain.  I was NOT expecting it to be that painful, especially since I had cervical checks prior to that, that NEVER felt remotely close to that. I don’t share that to scare any first time moms, but this was just my experience.

After I regained control, I asked how much I had progressed. I was already in hour 12 of labor (I’m assuming it was around 5 pm). The amount of devastation that followed her response was crushing. I was only 2 cm’s dilated and he was still high. 1.5 CM’s IN 12 HOURS!!! I sobbed. I questioned myself. I was tired, hungry and wanted to be done. I stared at Patrick as he stroked my hair and reassured me that I could do it. That he was proud of me and that he loved me. We decided to continue on the natural route and labor on. Between 5 and 9, things became a lot harder. Contractions were close, hard and exhausting. I labored standing up a lot due to having some back issues prior to going into labor. Around 8, we decided to try and have me labor in the bed on my knees while leaning over the birthing ball for support. After an hour of this and knowing that I was physically come to my end, Patrick and I asked everyone except the nurse to leave the room. 15 hours of laboring naturally and I was exhausted. I would shake my head with tears in my eyes every time I felt a contraction come on. I didn’t want to labor anymore. I began thinking that if I COULD make it to the pushing part, I would be too exhausted to push. I wanted to enjoy Bennett when he arrived. I didn’t want to pass out the moment he entered into the world. I was emotional, exhausted and knew it was time to discuss the option of an epidural. Patrick and I talked with the nurse on how it works and then asked her if we could have a few minutes to talk alone. This was the first time Patrick and I had been alone since labor really picked up and the quietness and intimacy of just him and I was refreshing. I was terrified of getting an epidural. I didn’t want something in my spine but I didn’t want to labor in pain anymore. I was done. I needed to rest and Patrick knew this. We prayed and made the decision to try to labor for a little bit longer and then if I REALLY was done, we would ask for the epidural. I labored for around an hour and finally through tears, I whimpered, “I’m done” and Patrick knew I meant it. It was time for an epidural. They were quick to bring me relief. They hooked me up to the IV and started me on a bag of fluids which were needed prior to the epidural. I had to labor another 30-40 minutes while the fluids pumped and then the anesthesiologist arrived. I sat up on the side of the bed and stared at Patrick and bawled. I was so scared. Terrified. Patrick was my rock and he told me over and over again that I could do this, that I was strong. It was almost over. He loved me. It brings tears to my eyes (again) thinking about how much Patrick supported me during the labor process. I love my husband and the labor and delivery process brought us closer than I could have ever imagined. I cried as I told the doctor doing the epidural about how I was so scared. It wasn’t a horrible feeling but it definitely was painful. I felt everything. I felt the needle go in, the tubes, whatever he was doing… I felt it all but I didn’t flinch. Even when the contraction happened during the process, I was frozen. Just like that, it was over with and they laid me back in the bed.

At this point, Lenona, my nurse, asked me what my pain level was. I said, it was very minimal if none. She laughed and said, “That’s great because you’re in the middle of a contraction”. I told her to shutup. HAHAH! It was more of a “are you kidding me shut up and not a stop talking shut up.” My pain was gone and it was time to get some rest. We invited Jenn (Doula), Amanda (photographer), and both the grandma’s to come up and see me before we sent everyone away so that we could sleep. It was so nice seeing everyone. I realized I had my eyes closed in pain for most of the day so it was really great to see and talk with everyone. The grandma’s and Jenn decided to stay downstairs and sleep and Amanda headed home to nurse her son and grab a few hours of rest before heading back to photograph the remainder of the birth.

Once everyone left, Patrick and I talked about the days events and realized that our son would be born on the 25th instead of the 24th. With numb legs, they rolled me on my side so I could sleep and finally get some rest. Lenona sat in our room most of the night monitoring me and rolling me to a different side every hour. She preformed hourly ice tests to see the level of the epidural and asked me my pain level. We bonded. I asked about family and she asked about mine. I found out that Bennett would be born on her daughters birthday (28 years ago). Lenona was amazing. She was sweet, kind and patient with me. I began to get nervous that Bennett wouldn’t arrive before her shift ended at 7 am. She promised to come back and visit me if she missed the birth, in which she did. I wanted her to meet him. I felt like I had known her forever and she was exactly what I needed during the long night. Around 1:00 am, I realized the epidural had worn off on my right side. THAT was painful. That meant I could feel the contractions again AND the catheter that they had placed. They rolled me on my right side in hopes that the epidural would cover the nerves on the right side and bring me relief again. Unfortunately this process was miserable due to my back problems and I was back to having to breath and moan through my contractions. While it was just Patrick and I, Lenona decided to check me at 2 and then 3:30. At 2:00, I was 4-5 centimeters dialated. At 3:30, I was almost an 8. This was so encouraging. We alerted everyone to come back to the room around 5:30. I labored on my side for the rest of the morning. I no longer felt the pain from the contractions but the pressure from them was very intense.

Everyone arrived around 5:30 am and the labor process continued until 7ish? Between 6:30 and 7, things progressed quickly. The nurses and doctors were surprised at how fast I felt the need to push.They checked me and I was almost a 10! They allowed me to start pushing. I STILL was unaware of how much work it was going to take to actually deliver him. I began pushing on my side and eventually they flipped me to my back so that Jenn and Patrick could hold my legs. For 2 hours, I pushed. I felt defeated. I was frustrated. I was absolutely exhausted. I was in pain. I began to fall asleep…. or passing out, not really sure…. in between contractions. I sobbed again as Lenona left and was replaced with Kelly? (I think that was her name). Kelly was kind but stern. She was exactly what I needed to get through the pushing phase. At 8 am, my doctors changed and thankfully my number 1 choice doctor walked into my room. It’s funny, I originally didn’t care for him but throughout my visits, he became my favorite.

At points I would cry through pushing, towards the end, I was screaming at Dr. Anderson to get this baby out. I didn’t care how. Patrick and Jenn were champs as they held my legs and I pushed against them as hard as I could to get Bennett to come down. There were several moments that I remember distinctly. 1. Before Lenona left, she said she could feel hair on  Bennett’s head. I was so excited. 2. When Kelly could start to see Bennett’s head as I pushed him down. They even let me see it in the mirror but that was WAY too distracting haha. 3. The moments between Patrick and I as he cheered me on. Again, he was my rock. He brought me back when I lost control of my emotions. He reminded me that I could do it. I remember him beginning to cry towards the end, knowing we were about to meet Bennett.

I begged Dr. Anderson to get Bennett out. With everyone telling me that I could do it, I didn’t believe I could. A c-section even crossed my mind. Dr. Anderson bluntly joked, “What? You want a c-section? You know you don’t want that”. Patrick thankfully answered NO before I could cave in. I remember everyone coaching me on and telling me he is almost here. I can do this. More pushing. More pleading with God to get him out. More realizing that it had to be ME to push him out. In sheer desperation, I begged Dr. A again to help me. I was so tired. He offered to use the vacuum and said he would be out in 1 contraction. If not, I still had 30-45 minutes of pushing. I asked what complications there were and decided to keep on pushing. I pleaded with God, I cried, I grunted, I moaned, I pushed and worked harder than I EVER have in my entire life.

I felt everything, the epidural was long gone and Bennett was crowning. I just kept hearing everyone say, “HE HAS SO MUCH HAIR!!! KEEP PUSHING, YOU’RE ALMOST DONE!” I pushed and pushed and then Dr. Anderson grabbed him and out he came. He arrived at 9:17 am on September 25th. All bloody and gross they placed him on my chest. Dr. A waited to cut the cord (delayed cord clamping) and then allowed Patrick to cut the cord closer to Bennett’s body. He was here. He was mine. I did it. In my blubbery exhausted state, I asked everyone to sing Happy Birthday. We all sang and it was a beautiful moment. Even Dr. A sang (and laughed) with us.

I did it and I even I kept saying, “I did it!” I was so thankful that he was out and that it was over. The next hours were a blurr. He weighed in at 8 lbs 2 oz and started nursing like a champ. Patrick and I finally had our son. He was here, healthy and perfect. We began looking him up and down. His toes, his ears, his hair, everything. Our sweet baby boy, was finally here and we couldn’t be happier. I’m so thankful for the team that surrounded me. The people who cheered me on when I felt like I couldn’t do it anymore. For a doctor who followed my birth plan even after it changed. For a hospital who let me labor for 30 hours and never once mentioned a c section. For a photographer who captured our first moments as a family of 3 and our last as a family of 2. For a doula who supported whatever decision I made, even when I decided that an unmedicated birth wasn’t how my story would end.

For a husband who was with me every step of the way. Every painful contraction, he was there to tell me I could do it. Every time I wanted to give up, he was there to remind me that I was strong and that I could get through it. For when I was too weak to hold my self up, he carried my weight. Bennett’s birth changed us, but not in a bad way. It made us closer, stronger, more in love. After going through that, we can conquer anything together. We make a great team. I am so thankful for my husband and my best friend.

I was admitted into Rex with a vision of how my birth was going to go. I envisioned a shorter birth, all natural and only a few pushes. None of that happened but that’s ok. All the events that took place, brought me my Bennett. All the hard work, all the crying, pushing, screaming, pleading…. everything… it was worth it. I love my son. He is absolutely perfect and I am one blessed mama. I wanted to write out his birth story to reflect on in the years to come. I didn’t want to forget the details as time passes. Birth changed me and brought me into a new season and I want to remember it all. I know this was long and kudos to  you if you made it this far into reading it. Thank you for all the support and love that we have received over the past week. It truly means the world.

I hope you enjoyed Bennett’s birth story and I look forward to sharing more of our Relbot adventures as our family experiences all that this life has to offer. I’ll add more pictures whenever I get the chance. 🙂

With love,

Ann and Bennett

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