Of course it's all up to you and your wife.....
But are we just gonna sit around and act like that story is okay? It's wacky as hell. I can't even think about the placenta eating part, it makes my stomach turn.
Still, congrats on the baby. Please take him for checkups and vaccines and stuff.
congrats and all, but i think i just fucking threw up.
Home births are more common than you think. I'm surprised they aren't more common with how much hospitals charge in the US for a delivery.
Curious, what so bad about hospital births? Both your gf and the OP and wife seem to be hesitant of them.Middle class folks tend to have to pay a lot on out of pocket charges. My girlfriend and I have considered at home birth if it ever gets to that point. She's worked in labor and delivery and her preference is to have at at home birth based on everything she's seen.
We all did, but it's the miracle of life, dude!!
Surprised many people haven't heard of this.Oddly enough, the only thing in this thread that made me even slightly queasy was the insinuation that OP was gonna actually eat some of the placenta.
People actually think the OP is a antivaxxer or something based on some of the replies.
Curious, what so bad about hospital births? Both your gf and the OP and wife seem to be hesitant of them.
Surprised many people haven't heard of this.
It's been around for centuries.I thought Tom Cruise made it popular... or some celeb did it.
Honestly, you'd want to be in a hospital if something went wrong, but if you've already got the okay from a doctor that everything is probably going to be normal, I don't see why home birthing should be seen as a bad thing, or even about shunning modern medicine (as in it can be, but doesn't have to be).
It's been around for centuries.
It's goes back to tribal traditions.
I think it's just over 1MB, IIRC.kiddie pool full of blood and that's my limit for the night.
edit: congrats. I think..maybe you are viewing this with father-vision though. Thank god the plancenta picture didn't load. it's probably 10 Mbs jpeg and huge.
Now I have someone to train. :-OCongrats!
No more Smash 4 for Karst
Encapsulation = turning into pills. Some people fry up the placenta, but that isn't what my wife wanted to do.Congrats on the baby! We had ours in a hospital, and would do so again - I find there to be too much risk with home-birthing in case of medical emergency. My ex-wife's second kid was born with spina bifida, and hydrocephaly, and don't want to imagine what would have happened had he been born at home.
What does encapsulating a placenta mean?
Wow, congratulations! I had no idea you were pregnant. I'm glad you appreciate the account - I just want to share my personal experience. Everyone is welcome to do as they like or prefer.Very cool. Congrats, Karsticles! Really interesting to read, and I say keep the bath and placenta pictures in. They're part of the process and potential parents are going to see a lot more than that. As someone in the process now, I appreciate candid accounts and alternatives like this.
Me too. Come back to FGW and post sometimes.congrats karst. hopefully your son will have a new marvel game to play in the future.
The process, as I understand it, is:First off, what is encapsulation with the placenta? And are you seriously going to eat a piece or was that a joke?
I would have died if I chose home birth, so I'm glad I didn't. (Really weird birth defect gave me to two uterui and only one cervix, I had to deliver all three via c-section)
Yes. I have had an obsession with cannibalism for much of my life, and this is probably my only real chance to eat human flesh. I'll try a pill and a "jerky slice".''the midwife is going to save a "jerky slice" for me to try.''
Does that mean you're gonna eat it...?
It's only like that because of the water. She bled a lot more in the bed, though.Fuck dude, dat pool D=
On the other hand, CONGRATS! You a daddy!!!!!
We didn't have to take care of the pool at all. The midwife brought a sub pump and pumped the blood down our toilet, and she packed the entire thing up. She was like a third team member throughout the entire thing. She also taught my wife how to breast feed, and will continue to act as a lactation consultant.Gratz man, can't imagine doing a homebirth, just glad to hear there was no complications.
Did you get to spend some skin on skin time with bubs or did you spend the rest of the day emptying and cleaning a bloody pool?
Like what?This. I'm glad your kids is healthy but you write a bunch of stuff up as fact when its just your opinion. Glad your kid is healthy.
I am! I am a big fan of modern science, but I also think that it has overextended itself in some ways.you seem pretty evangelical about home births.
I am extremely confident in my parenting beliefs. I plan on saying a lot of "Thank you for sharing that" to folks so they go away, haha. We also plan on home schooling him - I don't trust teachers.You are going to get so much advice you'll start to hate it lol. (Btw, please warn me if I am starting to get to that weird place as well)
I wish I could like, share labor experience with you, but all I got is that the contractions weren't anywhere near as painful as I expected them to be. And I was at full dilation by the time they figured out something was wrong, so at least I got that full experience. I apparently slept through 90% of my labor, woke up with a bit of cramping like I really needed to go to the bathroom, got out of bed, walked two steps and my water broke. Like, busted everywhere.
For most people though when the water breaks it's just a trickle. My weird anatomy and the fact he was breach meant it alllllll came out at once lol.
It's unlikely that if our midwife has done 800+ successful deliveries, that we will be the first death. She knows what she is doing. Thanks for calling me stupid and posting a random Youtube video that I won't watch, though. I appreciate it.You were very stupid in opting to have a homebirth. I'm glad it went fine, but you put the child's life at risk, should anything have gone wrong. You got a midwife which is better than nothing, but it's still no substitute for an actual medical facility with onsite equipment and staff prepared for any possible situation.
Patton Oswalt - Home Births
"If one more of my Whole Foods friends tells me that I have to have a home birth I am going to punch all the soy on the planet."
If you go back farther, it was even worse. In the early 1900s, women were so drugged up that they lost consciousness. My grandmother was strapped down to a bed like a mental patient. This is discussed a lot in Father-Coached Childbirth (not a fantastic book, in my opinion, but I read it...).I kind of dig that, and kind of don't. Birth isn't a medical procedure, it's true. And these days too many hospitals are charging for a quickie C-section when mothers could have natural births. In a lot of areas if has become a class thing, where impovrished mothers almost exclusively have their babies cut out of their wombs in a quick procedure and wealthier mothers have natural births with all the waiting an extra care that goes with it.
So now there is a movement lead by midwives and homebirthers to bring the focus back on the event between mother and child instead of doctor and patient.
Yes, I am aware of this. Natural birth also leads to higher breast latch rates, lowers chances of post-partum depression, and increased parental bonding (your body releases specific "falling in love" chemicals while pushing the baby through the vaginal canal - these don't release if you have a C-section, which, IMHO, might be related to how some women feel disconnected from their children after birth).I was reading that natural birth---not necessarily home birth---allow the child to obtain beneficial bacteria from the birth canal and yes even some fecal bacteria from the mother.
Those beneficial bugs are important and babies delivered via C-section do not get that "bathing" of beneficial bacteria.
It's really new research:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3110651/
I have a chemistry degree, so I'm not a Luddite.Pretty much lol. My son is 3 now and more of a butthead then ever. He didn't start sleeping fully through the night till he was 2.
He basically said "LOL modern medicine".
I will.Please don't eat the placenta.
Congrats! The most important thing is that the baby is healthy and mom is ok! Good luck on being a father.
Say goodbye to gaming for six months
(post)
What, no picture of the baby coming out of your wife's vagina? I'm disappointed.��
I am extremely confident in my parenting beliefs. I plan on saying a lot of "Thank you for sharing that" to folks so they go away, haha. We also plan on home schooling him - I don't trust teachers.
Her water breaking didn't cause a big mess. The equivalent of wet panties, really. She was so tired by the time everything concluded that she was nodding off in-between contractions. Her contractions also woke her up - funny coincidence between you both!
We were prepared to go to a hospital if things went poorly. The hospital near us has a very pro-baby approach, so I wouldn't have been devastated if we had to go. The acknowledge the importance of the Golden Hour, and have charts showing successful latch rates and lowered C-section rates throughout the last year. I think a hospital that is proud of those accomplishments is a good place to be, if that's where you have to be.
Congrats on the baby! We had ours in a hospital, and would do so again - I find there to be too much risk with home-birthing in case of medical emergency. My ex-wife's second kid was born with spina bifida, and hydrocephaly, and don't want to imagine what would have happened had he been born at home.
What does encapsulating a placenta mean?
First off, what is encapsulation with the placenta? And are you seriously going to eat a piece or was that a joke?
I would have died if I chose home birth, so I'm glad I didn't. (Really weird birth defect gave me to two uterui and only one cervix, I had to deliver all three via c-section)
Sub pump and a long hose!How does one dispose of a bathtub full of blood in their house?
Home births are more common than you think. I'm surprised they aren't more common with how much hospitals charge in the US for a delivery.
GMO foods and vaccines are fine. GMO food gets digested just like any other food - there's nothing risky about it.Good job on the home birth. Now make sure the baby doesn't eat any GMO foods and for gods sake no vaccines they have thiomersal.
Yeah. As I have mentioned in other threads, Obamacare fucked my health insurance over. It went up 70% last year, and another 40% this year. It would be $900/month, with my workplace kicking in $300/month already, to cover me, my wife, and my son. For just my wife and I, it would be $550. I had to drop health insurance, and she is now covered by medicaid. That all happened in the last month, though.Middle class folks tend to have to pay a lot on out of pocket charges. My girlfriend and I have considered at home birth if it ever gets to that point. She's worked in labor and delivery and her preference is to have at at home birth based on everything she's seen.
There's nothing a doctor checks for that a midwife doesn't. Our midwives was far, far more thorough than our M.D. we started off with. An experienced midwife will have a better idea if your child is at risk than a doctor, because established midwives spend a lot more time with you. My wife met every other week with her midwife for an hour, and got a check-up. Blood work, ultrasounds, blood pressure - all the stuff doctors do, midwives do, too. Obviously, just as in the world of doctors, quality of results are going to vary. We thoroughly researched our midwife selection before interviewing and hiring her.Honestly, you'd want to be in a hospital if something went wrong, but if you've already got the okay from a doctor that everything is probably going to be normal, I don't see why home birthing should be seen as a bad thing, or even about shunning modern medicine (as in it can be, but doesn't have to be).
I encourage you to do your own research. This is the book I read in preparation:lot of fear-based talk and of course the medical community is split over homebirths, with some saying it's not a big deal as long as you fully prepare and also get checkups to precaution for any complications. And then others saying that the potential risks are far too great, you can't prepare for every complication, and that you should come to their hospitals to be completely safe.
It's not like there aren't any conflicting interests in this, but the health industry has so many conflicting interests, it makes me wonder if midwifery might be a good alternative for change.
I don't remember how I found out about eating the placenta. I think I learned about it ~10 years ago in college. My wife has an anthropology degree, so she and I have read a lot about tribal customs. There's no scientific evidence that eating placenta provides any kind of unique health benefit, but it's something she wanted to try. Some women (anecdotally) find that it increases energy and lactation rates. Others have said it makes them feel anxious. It could all be a placebo - who knows. While I greatly respect the scientific method, I'm also not someone who feels like I need science to justify everything I do in life.Well I mean Cruise made it "pop culture popular" again, for the modern layman less informed about ...y'know, placenta eating histories. x)
He was under blood-colored water for the birth. Hard to take a picture.What, no picture of the baby coming out of your wife's vagina? I'm disappointed.��
We're doing that.Don't forget to home school him too.
Oh wow, so...how does the double-uterus thing work? Any articles I could read? I haven't heard about that before.The placenta thing is interesting, thanks for sharing!
And yeah, all my kids are healthy. My last, my daughter, nearly killed us both. She was conceived in the 'wrong' uterus (it was underdeveloped), I was on bed rest most of the pregnancy, and she was born two months early. NICU saved her life, but I didn't even get to see her beyond reaching out and touching her incubator from my hospital bed for a week - she had to be life flighted to another state, and I was still in to much danger to move. That sucked, but we have a great bond none the less, and she is totally fine now (though very small for her age)
As for the water breaking thing...Man I was NOT expected that. It was literally like a huge water balloon had popped in my stomach. It was the craziest feeling. I froze for a moment like 'why the fuck is there a huge puddle on my bedroom floor' before freaking out and shaking my husband awake. He jumped out of bed and splashed right into it lol.
I don't remember, but he says it had the most interesting smell. Not a bad smell, but like, earthy and shit, like he'd stumbled into a damp cave in a forest or something. That was interesting to know!
Anyways, TMI, I was unconscious for all three of my kids births, and we still have an awesome bond and they are awesome, and I am glad your kid is awesome too Remember to get those vaccines though!
I've already told all of my students at school that I'm eating the placenta, so I'm pretty comfortable talking about this (I'm a teacher).Hah Karsticles I admire you sticking to your guns and calling out some of the silly stuff
Yeah, you can tell who just doesn't know anything about midwives. Like the midwife is just a lady down the street with no credentials or medical background at all.After a horrible hospital experience with our first kid, my wife had our last two at home. Both births went smoothly, would do it again (except wouldn't cause 3 kids are enough).
Pretty sure for both of these ultrasound would have caught the problem before hand and homebirth would have been ruled out? The thing about homebirth is they only let you go through with it if it's a low-risk pregnancy. At least the midwifes we went with were like that.
Not for images lolYeah spoiler tags don't work on mobile. Fuck.
Congrats though
Pretty sure for both of these ultrasound would have caught the problem before hand and homebirth would have been ruled out? The thing about homebirth is they only let you go through with it if it's a low-risk pregnancy. At least the midwifes we went with were like that.
Oh wow, so...how does the double-uterus thing work? Any articles I could read? I haven't heard about that before.
My wife was worried that her water would break in bed and ruin it, but I was honestly just too tired and lazy to put a plastic sheet over it. We got lucky.
It's a birth thread, so anyone coming in should expect "TMI". ;-)
A number of twin gestations have occurred where each uterus carried its pregnancy separately. A recent example occurred on February 26, 2009, when Sarah Reinfelder of Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan delivered two healthy, although seven weeks premature, infants by cesarean section at Marquette General Hospital.[6] It is possible that the deliveries occur at different times, thus the delivery interval could be days or even weeks.
pour it out on the driveway, the curb usually has a stormdrain or something.
After a horrible hospital experience with our first kid, my wife had our last two at home. Both births went smoothly, would do it again (except wouldn't cause 3 kids are enough).
BloodpoolGAF assemble
There's nothing a doctor checks for that a midwife doesn't. Our midwives was far, far more thorough than our M.D. we started off with. An experienced midwife will have a better idea if your child is at risk than a doctor, because established midwives spend a lot more time with you. My wife met every other week with her midwife for an hour, and got a check-up. Blood work, ultrasounds, blood pressure - all the stuff doctors do, midwives do, too. Obviously, just as in the world of doctors, quality of results are going to vary. We thoroughly researched our midwife selection before interviewing and hiring her.
The tipping point of being wary of hospitals was the lack of guarantee that OUR doctor would be available during the birth. It could be any doctor at all that's on staff when a woman goes into labor, and you might not have even met him/her. My wife is an abuse victim, so the idea that a random man she had never met before could come up and examine her was a red flag for us. In contrast, we called our midwife at 12:30AM, and she drove right over to set everything up for us. She didn't leave until 8AM the next day, and we were her only "patient". You'll never get that kind of focused attention from a doctor.
we need to get bbq gaf in here for some spice rub recommendations.
I want children someday. if its a boy im going to name it link if its a girl im going to name it zelda.
I just find the whole thing weird. Like, one or two things alone, I get.
But home birth. Then home schooling. And also anti vaccine?
Man.. I don't like your thinking process. Vaccinate your damn kids.
It's late so maybe I missed it, sorry. All I saw was him saying he is sensitive about the vaccine thing and also didn't want the baby to have a vitamin K shot.He said he's vaccinating.
I want children someday. if its a boy im going to name it link if its a girl im going to name it zelda.