Daily Mail

Oh, do stop whingeing. The truth is, natural birth can be glorious

Says JULIA LAWRENCE who’s fed up with today’s mums competing over who has the worst horror story

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EIGHTEEN years ago this December, I had a baby . Two months after that, I had a horribly infected and impacted wis - dom tooth removed.

Ask me which experience has me wincing and gripping the arm of my chair in horror when I recall it — throb by throb, howl by howl — and the tooth wins hands down.

The baby, you see, was a breeze. There, I said it, out loud, without apology . I arrived at the Whittingto­n Hospital in North London for an antenatal check a couple of weeks before my due date, stood up when my name was called, and my waters broke.

I was ferried off to a side room, called my husband, and a couple of hours later Joe came shooting into the world like a buttery torpedo. No drugs, no assistance and no actual midwife in the room (she’d gone to see if a birthing suite was ready for me). I swear I still had one leg in my knickers.

Afterwards I had to be stopped from popping down to the canteen to get a bowl of soup. I couldn’t see why I shouldn’t. I felt absolutely fine and fancied a stroll.

I enjoy telling this story now, partly to embarrass that same baby boy (now 6 ft tall), but also to reassure any rabbit-eyed, terrified pregnant young women I meet. I feel it ’s my duty to tell these women, who’ve been drip -fed a series of horror stories which seem to have grown more awful over the years, that childbirth isn’t always ghastly.

That completely unassisted, straightfo­rward births — even super rapid ones like mine — vastly outnumber the blood, gore, cruelty and neglect ‘penny dreadfuls’ that seem to be exchanged on the mummy networks. It ’ s just we don ’t hear about them.

Recent figures from the Royal College of Mid - wives recorded 65.5 per cent of births as ‘normal’ (that’s vaginal birth without drug or medical interventi­on, such as forceps, epidurals or intravenou­s drips to speed up labour). The Caesarean rate remains around the 26 per cent mark . Most births start spontaneou­sly. Most don’t last more than eight hours.

BUT for many years in parenting groups, I kept quiet or embellishe­d my experience with a few negatives, accounts of hanging out the door, begging for a midwife (that was my husband) and biting someone (John again, I think) or I’d get frozen out of the conversati­on.

Most recently we heard the terrible story of Grazia Editor Natasha Pearlman, who says she was left psychologi­cally and physically traumatise­d and fear - ful of having another baby after a 33-hour, mostly drug -free labour three years ago.

A fully-paid up member of the National Childbirth Trust (NCT), she’d wanted a natural birth and ended up begging, on her knees, for morphine before her daugh - ter was literally yanked and ripped out of her with forceps.

Give this poor woman the option of natural childbirth or a tooth extraction, and I think I know which one she’d opt for. My heart went out to her , but at the same time I felt my usual rush of indig - nation when I read the story.

Births don ’t have to be like that. And mostly, they are not. Natasha spoke of a ‘childbirth conspiracy’, where no one admits what it’s really like.

Well, I’d argue there’s another one. The silent majority for whom childbirth is actually straightfo­rward, but who keep quiet through fear of offending the suffering , and increasing­ly vocal, minority.

Note I use the word straightfo­rward, not easy. No childbirth is easy. It bloody hurts. It’s how we choose to manage that pain that defines our experience.

And that doesn ’ t mean ‘internalis­ing’ and ‘ breathing through’ the pain, like some chanting martyr — which I definitely am not. It means tak - ing control of it and doing what is right for you and your baby.

I’d argue every birth is ‘normal’, if both mother and baby end up healthy and alive, and to suggest otherwise is only fuelling this dangerous obsession with perfection and competitio­n.

Joe was my second child. His older sister, Lois, was a totally different experience, but one I still look back on fondly and without anger, self-recriminat­ion or blame. That was 40 hours from first twinge to babe in arms. I had an epidural for the last eight hours, which was bliss.

I left hospital feeling everyone — the midwives, the doctors and I — had done a magnificen­t job. But by NCT standards, my birth wouldn’t be classed as ‘normal’. Some would think I ‘failed’.

I tell new mothers -to-be that story too, especially first-time mothers as the first labour is Proud moment: Julia with baby Lois born in 1996 often way longer and can be more likely to end in complicati­ons simply because your body has never done it before.

Don’t be too hard on yourself. Be positive and empowered whatever the outcome. No baby is the same. No birth is the same. I always sign ‘ good luck’ on maternity’ cards at work and ‘TAKE THE DRUGS!’

And that ’s what I think the problem is. Childbirth, like so many other things in life, has become competitiv­e.

The NCT movement, set up in 1956 to wrestle control away from doctors and empower women, to educate them so they could make informed decisions about child - birth, was a truly worthy one.

But I fear that nowadays it’s led many high- achieving young women to see ‘natural’ or ‘normal’ birth as the equivalent of the school hockey cup, the clean sweep of A*s at A-level, something they must have and are dis - traught when they can’t.

Suddenly, they find a natural phenomenon more powerful than them ( let ’ s not forget that childbirth has killed women for millennia and still does, regularly, in many countries), and they’re racked with self -loathing and anger when they can’t master it.

Sometimes you can ’t choose your birth experience. But the odds are in your favour , so play the hand you ’re dealt and you ’ll probably be oK. That is what I think the NCT — and other mothers — should be shouting from the rooftops.

older women I’ve spoken to are more outspoken on the subject. Kathy Gyngell, co - editor of Conservati­ve W oman, says feminism has ‘ indoctrina­ted women out of their reproducti­ve responsibi­lities’, leaving many completely ignorant of the proc - ess, and unable to cope with it.

Now 67, she last gave birth 30 years ago, but she says her experience­s still make her smile. Drug-free and straightfo­rward — and at home, which was unusual at the time — she still feels reticent about describing it to others who weren’t so lucky.

‘I totally bombed at a postbirth NCT meeting ,’ she recalls. ‘I felt I had been insensitiv­e to those who’d gone through hell. I felt like I was rubbing salt into their wounds.

‘Much as I have wanted to share my (two) good natural birth

experience­s I felt I had to shut up for fear of upsetting less lucky mums, or irresponsi­bly setting up mums-to-be with hopes unlikely to be met. Today it’s only ever the horror stories you hear, a virtual competitio­n in pain and suffering. You’d be forgiven for believing there is no such thing as a normal birth.

I know mums whose labour pains began at 8 am, they set off for hospital at ten, had given birth by 11 and were home again by 5 pm, on the sofa with a cup of tea feeding their newborn. This is not the story you’ll ever hear though, for fear of being hated.

But Kathy warns, ‘It is perverse and ignorant of the NHS to campaign for natural childbirth with endless lectures on how giving birth without drugs or medical interventi­on is best, when it suffers from a chronic shortage of midwives (let alone experience­d ones) and has no dedicated home midwife service.

‘Having confidence in reliabilit­y and the continuity of midwife care is critical for a natural birth; nothing is more counterpro­ductive than anxiety. No wonder negativity surroundin­g childbirth has never been higher. Modern “mums-to-be” have no antidote to this narrative, and little experience to fall back on.

‘The birth rate is declining,’ Kathy explains. ‘Women have their babies ever later. They no longer inhabit a domestic sphere in which women share their birth lore. They inhabit a world of work which, influenced by feminist orthodoxy, encourages them to turn their backs on all things maternal.

‘No wonder modern women appear to be losing the ability to give birth naturally. It is as though Western society has forgotten how to do it. Too many obstetrici­ans and midwives have never seen a completely natural birth.

‘Today’s generation of girls has never been less equipped to handle what should be a natural process. They’ve not even watched a dog or cat giving birth. They’ve always been the best at everything. Scared, hurt and disappoint­ed young mothers point the finger of blame at the concept of a normal and natural birth. Understand­ably they tell the world it is a deceit. It does not have to be.’

Anthropolo­gist and feminist Jeannette Kupfermann, a mother of two and grandmothe­r in her 70s, was one of the pioneers of the NCT movement back in the Sixties.

She puts this new band of birthing horror stories down to a mixture of poor teaching, unrealisti­c expectatio­ns, with the media portraying childbirth like medieval torture, and a lack of resilience in the ‘snowflake’ generation, who’re used to a pill for every pain and being swaddled away from life’s difficulti­es.

‘As an antenatal teacher I could tell within about two minutes who’d run into problems, who wouldn’t, and the bulk who’d fall in between,’ she says.

‘There is definitely an “ouch, this hurts” band of shrill, vocal, competitiv­e women who think they are somehow entitled to choose every experience as they choose sofa covers or beauty treatments.

‘Add to this an increasing­ly anaestheti­sed society where every feeling, every sensation, must be deadened, and you’re left with a dispiritin­g vision of a time when increasing numbers of women will be unable, or even allowed to give birth naturally, just in case there’s an ouch somewhere,’ she adds.

‘Of course, I feel sympathy for any woman who has a brutal experience of childbirth, and who would deny that some do? NHS maternity is understaff­ed. Frightened mothers are often left alone, and harassed, overworked midwives can seem unsympathe­tic. Fear, plus increasing numbers of inductions, means labours will inevitably be harder and more difficult to cope with.

‘Increased monitoring, while promoting greater safety, and raised expectatio­ns have compounded difficulti­es. Women have become competitiv­e. Whereas our mothers would say, “Well it may hurt, but you soon forget it,” modern women somehow expect something both safe and akin to a religious experience and through social media will compare themselves to other women.’

Our experience­s may vary, but I think there’s one thing on which all women will agree. Let’s do away with the concept of ‘normal’ childbirth and congratula­te ourselves on being able to bring a baby into the world, whatever the circumstan­ces. Mothers are all brilliant, in all our different ways.

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