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My grandmothe­r, my midwife

My grandmothe­r gave birth in her own house 10 times. I should be able to do it once

- ELIZABETH PIMENTEL

“YOU’RE having your baby at home?” my mother gasped when I told her my plan for delivering my third child. “You’re 43 – are you crazy?”

All I had to do to quieten her was ask: “Where were you born, and how old was Nona when she had you?”

The answer was at home on the farm, at age 43. In fact, all of my Italian grandmothe­r’s 10 children were born at home.

When I became pregnant with my third child in 1992, I was convinced that a home birth was the best thing for me and my baby, contrary to the misgivings of most of my friends and family.

I knew that to be successful, I would have to call upon Nona, who had died at 94, as my spiritual and emotional midwife.

My first baby was born in a large hospital in 1985. I wanted only the healthiest, drug-free environmen­t for my child. My husband and I had written a birth plan that specified no anaesthesi­a, no labourindu­cing medication­s, my husband’s presence, and breast-feeding only. I trusted my Yale-educated, feminist obstetrici­an. Yet she scoffed at my directives, stating: “Things often don’t go according to our plans.”

They didn’t. From the 32nd week, I’d been telling her that it seemed that the baby’s head was up under my diaphragm instead of down toward my pelvis where it belonged. “That’s its tight little butt,” she replied smugly.

Two weeks after the due date, after 15 hours of contractio­ns, an ultrasound determined that my child was indeed breech, and I was rushed into the operating room for an emergency Caesarean section.

Given general anaesthesi­a, I was out cold with my husband in the waiting room. When I came to, I learnt my baby had been given sugar water for the first drink rather than my breast milk.

I swore it would be different next time. Two years later, in my quest to regain control in the delivery and avoid the complicati­ons of C-section – the longer recovery time, nerve damage, and postpartum depression I’d experience­d – I switched to a smaller hospital and found a physician who was skilled at vaginal births after Caesareans, a rarity.

This “natural” childbirth was much more fulfilling. But the doctor’s technique of squeezing the baby out by pressing forcefully on my abdomen every time I pushed, left me feeling like a used tube of toothpaste.

For my third delivery, I wanted to have my dreamed about, noninterve­ntionist experience that would give me back my power over what was happening to the baby coming out of my own body.

I thought about Nona in her big brown-shingled farmhouse in the winter of 1918, assisted at my mother’s birth by her 15-year-old daughter, Elizabeth (my name’s sake). I visualised my strong grandmothe­r right after delivery.

As family lore had it, she gave orders from bed to my aunt to strip the sheets and soak them in the icy water of the nearby cranberry bog. It seemed so simple back then to have your baby at home, but it was way more complicate­d now.

Mine was a “geriatric pregnancy” (now called advanced maternal age), the term used for having a baby at age 35 or older, which put me at high risk for hypertensi­on, diabetes and miscarriag­e. Not only that, my uterus was scarred from the surgery, raising the possibilit­y of uterine rupture.

My older sister, married to a physician, said: “Better to go to a hospital, where necessary precaution­s can be taken.”

Well-meaning friends felt compelled to warn me of the dangers. Still, I refused to view this pregnancy as pathologic­al. I would take safeguards to protect me and my child. And I would channel Nona.

Born in a village in northern Italy, my grandma had no formal education beyond grade school. She raised her children “without using any psychology”, my mother bragged, referring to Nona’s lack of book-learning. She crossed the ocean with three small children, arriving at a pier in Boston in 1902 to join her husband. Members of the community of Italian immigrants came to her for advice. Nona was their unofficial midwife and had brought a number of babies into this world in their dwellings.

I devised a strategy for success by creating my own village. I joined a support group of women who had had previous C-sections and wanted to have vaginal births.

We educated ourselves at our monthly meetings on how to achieve this. Through them I found a certified nurse-midwife who had physician back-up in a nearby hospital. My husband and I took a course in delivering at home that explained exactly what materials were needed, what exercises to do, and how to stay active to keep the contractio­ns strong.

I found a doula to provide physical, emotional and informatio­nal support to me and my family during labour and after the baby was born. I emphatical­ly told the naysayers: “My grandmothe­r gave birth in her own house 10 times. I should be able to do it once.”

Months later, in the throes of labour, I looked across my bedroom to my dresser mirror where I’d hung the amethyst rosary beads, a cherished keepsake of Nona’s, passed down to me after her death. Conjuring up her strength, I gave birth to my healthy, 4.08kg son at our abode.

When my eldest yelled out the window to the neighbourh­ood kids that I’d had the baby, it was like the white smoke heralding the election of a new pope. I can’t say I did it alone, because my midwife, husband and doula were all attending to me while my two children played securely downstairs with my sister’s daughter. I can say that I pushed my third baby out under my own efforts without medicinal, physical or surgical interventi­ons.

Like my grandmothe­r before me, I did it with the love and comfort of family and friends – an oldfashion­ed support system.

Sometimes, to move forward, it’s helpful to go back to our roots. – The Washington Post

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