My daughter’s birth

DSC00746

This post is a bit different from my usual blogging, and it’s long, but I’m writing it because I think it’s important for the experiences I’m writing about to be discussed. Last Sunday morning – Mothering Sunday – my partner Emma gave birth to our baby daughter Elisabeth. Elisabeth is, of course, delightful and gorgeous, wise and mature beyond her years, judicious in her calculated emissions and possessed of a frown promising Socratean wisdom. I’m very proud of her, and of her mama, who was and is absolutely amazing.

However, they both had a rough ride to get here. Emma had a complicated pregnancy. Two sweeps failed to get her labour started, although they got her dilated to a centimetre, and on Thursday 23rd (her due date), she went in to hospital for medicated induction of labour. 48 hours of painful contractions later, she was still only just over a centimetre dilated. Her waters were broken and she was put on a drip to induce contractions. Several hours later she was still only just three centimetres. By Saturday night, she was in a lot of pain, and eventually had an epidural, which worked. She became fully dilated in a very short time, and by the early hours of Sunday morning she was in a lot of pain again, and ready to push. Emma pushed for an hour, but the baby was barely moving down the birth canal as she was lying back to back with Emma, with her head tilted at an angle. Meanwhile, Emma’s heart rate was regularly spiking into the dangerous range, and at one stage spiking higher than the baby’s heart rate. After an hour, it was found that Emma had a temperature, and because of the danger to the baby, we were told she had to deliver as soon as possible. After a failed forceps delivery, Emma had an emergency c section, and Elisabeth was delivered (wiggling and crying!) at 7.58 am, almost three days and 70 hours after induction of labour.

Initially, Elisabeth seemed fine, and Emma was in worse shape. Both were put on antibiotics for the presumed infection causing Emma’s temperature to rise, through cannulas in their hands. Soon, however, Elisabeth started struggling: she was failing to feed, and when she latched on to the breast she wasn’t strong enough to carry on sucking. She had swallowed a lot of amniotic fluid during the section and was constantly coughing and vomiting it up. Her crying was weak and she never really slept, although she closed her eyes a lot. Both she and Emma were monitored, with checks for different things every few hours or minutes. By Monday, Elisabeth was very sleepy, and refused to feed from breast, bottle, cup or even syringe, while Emma was finding it very hard to get a position to breast feed as she was in a lot of pain from her c section and forceps, and Elisabeth’s cannula in her hand was obviously also painful when she brushed up against Emma’s body. She kept trying to pull it out (succeeding twice), and had to have it re-inserted, which was difficult to see. At this point, Emma was on a cocktail of drugs including codeine and morphine, which was making her very anxious and managing her pain very unevenly. In the middle of the night, tests came backs showing Elisabeth’s viral count was abnormally high. She was taken for a lumbar puncture, where spinal fluid is taken with a needle, and we were warned she might have viral menigitis or a related infection. Over the next day, Elisabeth became worse, and had to be given a nasal tube to feed, although she was vomiting up a lot of her feeds. She became very sleepy and floppy. Her viral count had increased again, and she was put on more, stronger antibiotics.

We seem to have been lucky. Yesterday, Elisabeth became to improve. Some tests are back – some are not – but she seems to be getting much better. Today, she was able to cry (loudly!), and was much more alert and engaged, and she drank a good amount. Emma, who had been painfully expressing colostrum, got her milk in, and, amazingly, Elisabeth managed to go entirely onto breast feeding today. Around midday she pulled her own nasal tube out (!), but so far it hasn’t needed to be replaced as she hasn’t needed top-up feeds. She might be able to come home quite soon.

Most of what I’m describing here, though it’s horrible, is not ‘my’ experience alone. The labour isn’t my experience at all, and a huge number of people have got in touch to share stories of their experiences of difficult births and newborn baby illnesses, and to reassure us that we will soon forget quite how horrible and frightening all of this has been.

What I wanted to post about, though, is a slightly separate strand of experience. It’s, obviously, not the most traumatic part. But it is an experience which, unlike the complicated labour or Elisabeth’s illness, is one I’ve never read about. No one got in touch to share stories. But lots of women will have had this experience, and so I want to explain what happened, partly so women in my situation can be prepared, and partly because I think the medical professionals were saw were really completely unaware of what was going on.

Emma’s pregnancy gave both of us a tiny warning call about how most people interpret our relationship. Everyone was loudly surprised Emma was having a baby, not me. A pretty typical illustration of that attitude was our (lovely, and otherwise highly competent) fertility clinic, who made us fill in forms twice as they were sure we’d filled in the ‘wrong’ section for birth mother and partner, and then still managed to get confused about which of us planned to get pregnant and to run blood tests for the mother-to-be on my blood, not Emma’s. Responses from people we knew ranged from casual surprise to outright questioning, and even our midwife (again: otherwise lovely) thought it was perfectly ok to break off in the middle of our booking-in visit to ask why I hadn’t got pregnant. I will say, at this point, that while I know infertility and pregnancy loss attract insensitive comments across the board, I think people are particularly bad at assuming that, if you’re in a lesbian relationship and not pregnant, it must have been purely a fun choice you made.

These sorts of comments had made both of us very aware that 9 people out of 10 will assume I ought to be the pregnant and maternal partner, while Emma strikes them as less likely to want to be pregnant. So we had become a little used to misunderstandings. We thought we were prepared. We weren’t.

A basic issue was access. In the hospital where Emma gave birth, partners must leave the ward to go to the loo or to eat (food can be brought for labouring women, but if you want to bring your partner something at a different time of day, or to bring her drinks, you need to go to buy them). This means that when you come back to the ward, you press a buzzer and wait for someone to hear the buzzer, see you on the camera they have at reception, and ask you who you’re coming to see. Each time, I faced a barrage of questions and misunderstandings. No, you can’t come in, no visitors. Who are you? No, who are you? No, who are you coming to see? No, you can’t come to see your partner, he is not allowed in. No. Eventually, I would be let in. But, also, it was fairly clear that sometimes, whoever was watching the camera would see me (a woman) waiting at the door and simply not answer – I could tell this because several times, when I had been waiting, a man would turn up behind me, and the door would be buzzed open for him. Twice, a midwife came hurrying to intercept me at this point, insisting I wasn’t allowed in. The longest wait was nearly half an hour.

This was stressful, because I was genuinely worried about Emma while I was gone. She was very upset, in a lot of pain, and not remotely compos mentis because of the codeine and gas and air she had been given – and when Emma is in pain, she is often silent or incomprenhsible, so I needed to be there. I was also, of course, worried about missing the birth. As a result, I more or less stopped eating and drinking so that I could stay on the ward.

Throughout all of this time, new people – several midwives, doctors and nurses – came and went. Most of them wanted to know who I was, understandably. But many of them were not satisfied with a simple ‘who are you,’ and repeated questions. Some shut doors in my face; others refused to speak to me and spoke entirely and only to Emma, even when there were questions I could answer, and even when Emma actually asked them to ask me. This was important, because as the pain and contractions became stronger, Emma was finding it hard to talk and push.

Throughout Emma’s induction, we had been told that a c-section was a likely outcome. We’d known for a long time a section might be needed, as Emma’s sister had preeclampsia and had had to have one, and Emma was being monitored for the same condition. Each time, we discussed it and Emma told me she wanted to try for a vaginal birth, but knew it might not be possible. By the time Emma was in active labour, we were well aware it might come to a section. But when Emma had been pushing for an hour, a surgeon came to talk to her. He questioned me aggressively about who I was, and then spoke entirely to Emma (who was contracting every minute or so). She was finding it very hard to reply, and feels that he could have communicated much more clearly, as he constantly trailed off with statements such as ‘of course, vaginal birth is ideal …,’ without completing his sentence. At the same time, the midwife was telling Emma when to push, and Emma was asking him to stop talking so she could push instead of talking. He explained that he wanted to attempt a forceps delivery, but thought there were likely to be problems with that. He wanted her to sign consent to a forceps and episiotomy procedure and also to a c-section, so that if the forceps failed, the c-section could be done immediately. Emma asked if she could avoid the episiotomy and forceps, and have a c-section. This seemed reasonable, as we’d been given to understand the c-section had been an option for around 18 hours at this point, and Emma had been reassured by previous doctors that she could simply say yes, and they would do it. But this surgeon continued to insist that a c-section was, of course, not ideal, and vaginal delivery was ideal, and Emma needed to consent to both at the same time. Emma kept asking the midwife if she could push now. I could understand what she was saying, and attempted to explain it to him: that she wanted a section and not the forceps and episiotomy. He ignored me. Emma was coerced to sign the consent as we knew the baby was at risk if she did not deliver.

Emma was taken to theatre, and I was taken to the male partners’ room to be given some scrubs to wear. In theatre, the surgeon attempted to turn the baby with his hand. A colleague asked whether it was likely he could deliver using forceps. He replied ‘no, but the mother is very keen for a vaginal delivery’.

I was utterly shocked. I didn’t manage to say anything (this all happened very fast, and at this point I was very worried about Emma, who was seriously out of it, very scared and rambling, and very white with a racing heartbeat). The surgeon began the c-section. His phone alarm was going off; he asked his colleagues to ignore the music. Chattily, he asked Emma whether she’d had other surgery, as she had some scar tissue (Emma hasn’t had any surgery, and he had asked this already). Emma panicked, noticeably, but wasn’t really able to answer. He continued, casually, to advise her that she should really think about future pregnancies, and leave at least a year before conceiving again. (This advice isn’t stupid or wrong – and we did know already – but it was an utterly bizarre thing to say mid-procedure to a woman clearly terrified and not compos mentis. Especially since, as Emma points out, it is unlikely she would get tipsy one night and fall into a fertility clinic by accident …).

When the baby was out, I immediately went to see her being checked (as we’d agreed). I had been told I could take my phone into theatre and I took a quick picture and took it to Emma, as many people had told us that mothers who have emergency sections can often feel both very frightened about how the baby is when they can’t see it immediately after birth, and very disconnected later on when they don’t remember the early moments well.

At this point, the staff in the room were swapping over, and new staff discouraged me from holding the baby or doing skin-to-skin contact (again, something Emma and I had discussed, in the event she had a section). When we were taken to the recovery room, several medics spoke to us in succession, but addressed only Emma, both with congratulations and with questions, many of which she still wasn’t able to answer well, and some of which frightened her as she was panicking about some of the surgeon’s comments, which she hadn’t understood. One group, hearing Emma refer to ‘Lucy,’ assumed it was the baby and confused Emma further; another laughed merrily when they realised the mistake and told me that – in my scrubs – they had assumed I was another midwife.

After this – while it was becoming obvious that something was wrong with Elisabeth – we were taken to the post-delivery ward, and then moved within the ward. Here, it was very noisy and chaotic, and many checks and questions were repeated multiple times by different medics, so it was hard to understand who was who. However, we still faced the same problems: many medics ignored me, refused to listen to my answers, drew the curtain to shut me out of Emma’s cubicle, or became confused when Emma referred to me. Here, as in the delivery ward, partners had to go outside to use the toilet or to eat, and whenever I went to the dining room to collect food for my partner, I faced a barrage of angry refusals. When I tried to get back onto the ward, we had the same old confusions. Several times, I was asked to leave as it was ‘after visiting hours’. At this point, Emma and I had had very little sleep for three days, and neither of us had eaten or drunk properly. Emma was in a lot of pain. We both spent a lot of time crying and I think it would be fair to say neither of us was really processing anything very well – we were shocked and not yet quite aware how badly shocked we were.

On this ward, I broke down a few times and tried to say why I was upset, as I was very much aware of a constant sense that there was no place for me there. Many medics simply assumed I was breaking the rules and should not be on the ward, and it was often too chaotic and noisy even to correct them before they moved on. At one point, when Emma had explained to a midwife that I was her partner, I ended up in tears saying that I felt I constantly had to justify that I was the baby’s mother. The midwife – who must have meant well – immediately exclaimed that I was just stressed: of course I shouldn’t feel that way! She probably thought this was kindly and helpful. As it happens, though, I have never felt I wasn’t my baby’s mother. It just didn’t occur to me. It feels peculiar when people ask me whether I feel less her mother because I didn’t carry her. And, of course, this response, despite being well meant, was effectively a denial of the experience I’d been having for the past four days, which was that I had to justify that I was the baby’s mother. I had to justify that, not to myself for reasons of my own emotional inadequacies or struggles, but to all of her colleagues who had failed to accept it.

Later on, the morning after we had found out that Elisabeth was being tested for viral meningitis and when Emma was having a particularly bad time with pain and had been crying constantly, I went to fetch Emma some breakfast. The women serving refused. Your partner is not allowed food. Your partner is a he? Your partner is a he? He is not allowed food! Look: there is a sign! Really, this is not allowed, you must not try to ask. I explained, increasingly upset. My partner is a woman. She had a baby on Sunday. I repeated it several times. Eventually I burst into tears, and the server finally understood, crowing Oh! You’re so sensitive! Of course, she can have some toast!

The last time I actively became angry was when one of the senior midwives lectured me about what ‘the mother’ should do, and what the baby needed from ‘the mother’. When I snapped that I was the baby’s mother, she was very apologetic. And things did change then. Not completely; not to the point that I could get onto the ward without justifying myself (I still found that, often, the answer to my intercom buzzer was a calm ‘no, dear, no one is allowed in now,’ which often meant I had to buzz again simply in order to explain that I was, in fact, a partner and not the visitor they assumed was trying to come in outside visiting times). But things did change a bit.

Yesterday, we were moved onto a ward that provides care for Elisabeth, hopefully until she is well enough to come home. It is a much less busy ward, and they have been wonderful.

I wanted to write this post because, although it sounds quite negative, I wish I had been more prepared for what happened in terms of the way we were treated as a same-sex couple. I had been prepared to advocate for Emma in labour. We had discussed a lot of things. We knew, especially, that Emma copes best with pain when she can be allowed to speak as little as possible. We knew she would probably become slightly incoherent. We discussed possibilities, such as c-section and skin-to-skin contact post-birth. In order to be a good birth partner, I should have been hydrated and well fed. I should have been calm. I should have been able to explain Emma’s decisions. Of course, at times, medics would have had to talk to Emma alone, and to ignore me. Of course, at times, I might get things wrong. And of course, how I was feeling was immensely less important than how Emma was feeling (although, even in labour, Emma was reasonably aware I hadn’t really eaten properly for three days, and because  she is a big softie, she was worried). But, despite these caveats, I came away feeling that the experiences I’m describing was cumulatively quite a big issue for me (and some issue for Emma and Elisabeth), which was totally avoidable.

Almost every single person who did or said something I’ve mentioned here, clearly did it without meaning to do anything wrong. They meant well. Some of them even thought they were being comforting and inclusive to us as a lesbian couple or to me as a non-birth mother. None of them could shake the belief that they were seeing a solitary moment of overreaction, or an understandable and isolated bit of stress. Cumulatively, though, there was a real impact. It’s hard to realise that, if we had been a straight couple, Emma might have avoided a forceps delivery she didn’t want (as the surgeon might have listened to me explaining what she was saying). She might have been better looked after in labour, which I feel horribly guilty about. She and Elisabeth might have done better after birth.

I wish I’d anticipated some of these problems. I’m writing this partly so that people can share this post and, hopefully, spread a bit of awareness about the impact of seemingly trivial decisions and assumptions by people in the medical profession. I’m also writing because there are practical points I wish I’d known, for people in my situation.

  • Get used to correcting people and not laughing off the ‘oh, I had no idea you were the partner!’ comments. I was so used to not making a fuss, and not drawing attention to my sexuality, that I wasn’t primed to do it when it mattered.
  • Be aware that you may forget to over-explain when you’re stressed. When Emma was in labour, I know I sometimes answered the question ‘who are you?’ with my name, or ‘I’m Emma’s partner’ or ‘I’m here to see my partner,’ none of which were specific enough. It’s quite possible that, had I reeled off a fluent explanation ‘I’m a lesbian coming to see my lesbian partner who is a lesbian mother who had a baby,’ people might have understood more quickly.
  • Don’t trust your birth plan to do the communicating. We had, naively, put down what seemed (at the time) like an exhibitionistic amount of detail about the fact I was Emma’s partner and I was female. No one glanced at the plan, and even people who did actually know I was Emma’s partner, tended to forget in the heat of the moment (including a midwife who asked me to ‘get the dad’).

This post has been quite depressing, I am aware, and I want to end on a positive note. I had no idea, before last week, that I would be so utterly delighted with my baby. Of course, I knew she would be wonderful. But people do tell you that you’ll struggle to bond, or you’ll be less important, or you’ll really have to work to get a relationship with the baby. I don’t think this is true. Babies, even ill ones, see and smell and take in a huge amount. They will, very soon, recognise their mothers (or, I’m sure, fathers). It was much less than 12 hours before Elisabeth would settle down for me before she would reliably do so for a stranger. She will follow me and Emma around the room with her eyes, and she will go quiet when we sing or talk (she has been listening to us talking for months on the inside!). And she is lovely, and increasingly able to respond and focus (blurrily) on us, and to do all the things that babies do, which evolution dictates must make us become huge bundles of hormonal response and gushy emotion. It’s great fun.

If you can, please do share this post. I think it matters, and I hope you’ll agree that it does show why seemingly small, trivial, well-meant heteronormative decisions are actually not just funny, coincidental or harmless: they mount up.

Thanks!

DSC00766.JPG

134 thoughts on “My daughter’s birth

  1. I’m a woman who’s done childbirth twice. The first time involved such a paradigm shift, I was left reeling. I’m very “in my head” so I think this hit me harder than some. Going through that shift WHILE SOMETHING IS GOING WRONG WITH YOUR BABY and people are screwing up might be the most roiling thing you ever experience. (It probably was for me…) Congratulations on living through it! May every further minute of Elisabeth’s life be smoother sailing. Best wishes!

    I shut down to a “please no talking” place during labor as your partner did. We knew I was like that, too. I hired a doula to help me physically during labor, which helped tremendously. (Consider it for any future pregnancies if it’s allowed in UK hospitals…) I told my husband that, relieved of the doula’s back-massaging, etc, his role was “birth guardian.” That label, and that image, helped me relax amidst hospital chaos to have a vaginal birth in spite of complications and in the nick of time. You did your job valiantly; you nurtured and protected your partner and child though circumstances that made that unconscionably difficult. Well done!

    And the policy to send partners out and away to attend vital needs is preposterous! The partner is too important to be excluded even that much. It’s backwards and counter-productive.

    • Thanks for replying. Yes, we do have doulas here – it’s allowed. And might be good. Glad to know it worked well for you. 🙂

  2. Wow, this sounds so incredibly difficult and stressful. A shame that a society that has grown so much in awareness and appreciation for non-heteronormative relationships cannot integrate that into our institutions. Thank you so much for your vulnerability in sharing this!

  3. First of all a big and hearty congratulation to you and Emma for getting such a beautiful angel,Elisabeth.I’ve seen both of their pictures they just look awesome.I am so happy for you both….I know how it feels when the society treats you in such a way….because I’m myself have psoriasis and I know how it feels when you become unacceptable in the society.But I would not get sympathitic for you as from my life I’ve learned one thing that you got to fight for your life and rights.So just don’t care and live your life on your terms.Btw Happy Easter to you ,Emma and the little one.

  4. Pingback: Having A Baby With Two Mums – Practical Positives | Jeanne de Montbaston

  5. Wow you reminded me of my 1st baby where I was in labour for 12 hours and I had to have epidural. Worse after giving birth I had internal bleeding where my gone need to open me up. I had normal birth and imagine cutting me up from the bottom. Nevertheless it’s definitely worth it and my baby is now 5 years old.

  6. Heartiest congratulations to you and your partner. Your story disheartened me gravely. All I can say is that you will both be raising your beautiful daughter together. She will love you both immensely. These hurtful instances will definitely be overshadowed by the loving experiences you have together as a family. If men are never questioned about their position as a father even if they don’t give birth to their baby, neither should you be questioned. The irresponsibility shown on the part of the surgeon is beyond unfair. I feel it should be punishable somehow.
    I’m sorry that you, Emma and the baby had to go through just a difficult time during these days. I pray that you receive all the joys and love of life. All the best to all of you.
    You and Emma are strong women. This experience must have made you even stronger emotionally. May you get all the strength and power to protect yourself and your family from the judgmental prejudiced society .
    Lots of Love ❤

  7. Lucy and Emma, first of all a huge congratulations on your beautiful baby girl! Elisabeth looks like a gorgeous little one and I’m sure she’ll grow up to be as intelligent and lovely as her mums 🙂 I love the name too – my middle name’s Elizabeth, but the ‘s’ spelling is much nicer and more unusual. Many congratulations, I’m delighted for you!
    However I’m so sorry to hear about the treatment you received at the hospital. I read this with shock and horror, and I’m so sorry to hear about all the added stress you received because the hospital staff were so keyed in to expecting a heterosexual couple – I wouldn’t have expected it today and as many people have said, you’re surely not the first lesbian couple to have a baby at that hospital! I also wonder if people such as a younger woman with her own mum as a birthing partner had the same kind of difficulties? Surely there are other circumstances in which its not a man who accompanies a pregnant woman to give birth (and even if there aren’t, needless to say they should be prepared and welcoming for homosexual couples in any case!).
    I’m certainly going to share your post, although I hope that couples my own age won’t experience this kind of treatment if and when they have children of their own. I completely see what you mean that individually staff didn’t mean to cause any upset (although the lady in the canteen really was not understanding or sympathetic at all, clearly), but I think that’s a really important point of education for people – that individual momentary confusion might be understandable in a pressurised environment, but that if everyone reacts that way, these microaggressions build up to make it a really uncomfortable and unwelcoming environment. I’m so sorry that you’ve had to go through this, but thank you for sharing your account of what happened even though reliving it can’t have been pleasant – I think it’s important that people are aware of the way this kind of treatment can affect you, and that people know it’s still happening in 2017 so we can make sure it doesn’t happen in future!

    All the best to you, Emma, and Elisabeth xx

    • Hannah, thank you so much for commenting! It’s really lovely to know you were thinking of us and took the time to say so here. I’ve been ages replying for obvious, baby-related reasons. But yes, I do wonder how other women with non-typical birth partners fare. Anecdotally, I think Cambridge may be particularly odd here. In lots of places, especially where women give birth younger, it is more common for them to have their mothers as birth partners. Cambridge has an average age for a first baby of 35, which is a lot higher than the national average. Still, there must be lots of women who have friends or sisters or mothers, or female partners, who give birth!

      Thank you so much for sharing this post. I really think it might help make a difference.

      Looking forward to seeing you and catching up in happier medieval-related times before too long!

      L.

      • Not at all – I kept thinking that you must be having the baby soon and was so glad to see your post, although so sorry to see how much you’ve all been through, so much of it unnecessary and unfair. Let’s hope that things are changing – from much of what you’ve said about post-natal care hopefully they are, just clearly not fast enough.

        That does seem unusual that the average age is 35, but as you say surely that doesn’t mean that all other women in Cambridge are giving birth with a male partner by their sides! It may be a factor in the complete lack of understanding you received, but it’s certainly not an excuse… I hope that you will be able to get somewhere with that particular hospital by filing a complaint or sending feedback, but from the number of comments you’ve had here I’ve no doubt you’ve already made a difference to many people by sharing your story. I know some of my friends have been really grateful to read something like this speaking honestly about the discrimination same sex couples might face when having a baby, although like me they’ve also been horrified to see the extent of it.

        I hope to see you soon, but in the meantime best wishes to you, Emma, and Elisabeth. You are a lovely family and I’m sure you have a lot of happiness before you to make up for the difficult start! And of course, no worries about replying (don’t feel you need to!) – I imagine babies take up about 26 hours a day…! But I hope those 26 hours are mostly filled with love and joy (alongside the mess of a young baby!), from now on!

        Hannah xx

  8. Congratulations on your wonderful baby!

    I’m so sorry to hear about the worse parts of your experience as a lesbian couple in childbirth, though. I’m a medical student myself and can unfortunately recognise how these things will have happened, which of course makes it no less awful. I’m sharing it on my facebook now, including to a group of 1000 or so medical students in the hope that your painful experiences will educate future medics and this kind of thing will happen less.

    Best best wishes,

    Katherine (a friend of Hannah’s)

    • Katherine, thank you so much. I’m really grateful to you for sharing this post, and really heartened that there are med students like you out there (though so many medics have shown me over the last few weeks that a huge level of care and commitment is just normal for the profession, which has been really lovely).

      All the very best with your studies – qualify soon! We need you! 🙂

  9. Thank you so much for sharing your story. It was really powerful to read and I will take much from it in my work as a doula. If you need support please don’t hesitate to reach out. All the best to you and your beautiful family, Sophie x

    • Thank you very much – for the post and the offer. You do important work – I’m so thankful there are people out there doing it.

  10. I’m sorry that you felt that you were treated in a way that is unacceptable. You’re not the exception. When I had my daughter, with my husband, 38 years ago, I also thought that I was treated badly in the hospital and in the maternity ward. Maturity has brought wisdom, I now realize that my perceptions and expectations were not aligned with reality. Common sense tells us that people don’t like change. They like things the way they’ve always been because it’s easier. Accepting same sex parenting is no easier then accepting same sex marriage. We don’t like change and people never change and they don’t get better over the years. We are still the same people as we were since the dawn of man. Modern times and education does not change us into better people. It never has and it never will. If it did then modern society would have eliminated hate, crime, starvation and war decades ago and yet here we are with more and more people educated on the college level and we’re still the same, if not worse.

    • But accepting same-sex couples either as parents or spouses is perfectly acceptable? Somebody elses relationships and family make-ups are no concern of anyone elses unless children are vulnerable and at risk? Perhaps it could be because same-sex marriage is legalized in my country and has been for years, and it’s not an issue.
      I will disagree that modern times and education does change people in to better people. As does travel. Travel is the cure to ignorance. Your life experiences, knowledge and morals all shape who you are and, if you’re open to it, allow you to change what pre-concieved notions you have that you have either created yourself, or have been taught by parents.
      Things like starvation, war, crime, etc – It’s all profits for the people in charge. Starvation and poverty generate millions, ifnot billions, in revenue every year for various ‘charities’ that are attempting to combat it. War profits people who have never even seen a lick of the battlefield, casualties or leftover destruction. That is the world we live in, and it’s a world very much built on the foundation that the only way to be successful in the eyes of others, is by lining your pockets and bank accounts with ridiculous amounts of money.

      • Thank you for your response. Much of what you have mentioned is very true, unfortunately. Money always seems to be the #1 reason why there is poverty, war, crime and yes, even starvation. My point that people basically don’t change, still aligns with your own examples of man’s inhumanity to man and my preconceived notions don’t come from myself or my parents, they’re from God. So there is nothing wrong with them and they don’t need to change. I live in peace with the world even if the world doesn’t live in peace with me. I’m really not interested in being successful in this life either, because we are only here for the time given to us by God and look at what the common man does with the scant years given to him? He squanders it with “perceived achievements”, self glorification and pleasure. We will carry none of it past death. Beyond death is everything that we try to create here on earth but fail miserably. I’d rather keep my eye’s on the prize that God has set before us. Jesus Christ has made a way for me and I will not squander His gift to me, eternal life. This world can keep all of it’s money and treasure, I don’t want any of it. To serve others before myself gives me more joy then anything else. Jesus endured the Cross because He knew what was coming ahead of Him, joining his Father again in Glory. I will endure all of this mess too as long as I keep my eye on what has also been set before me.

  11. Thank you for sharing your story. Time in a hospital is already way too stressful — I’m sorry so many people made it this hard, but what a gift you’ve given others in offering your advice for what they can do differently. Enjoy that precious little girl and beautiful partner of yours.

  12. Wow, fantastic post! It brings back memories of when I gave birth! It is such an amazing yet overwhelming experience. One that I thoroughly enjoyed but scared to do it all over again in the near future!

    Carol
    trouvaillebycarol.com

  13. I’m so sorry that you had to go through all that! Thanks for sharing your experience, I hope it can help others who may go through the same kind of thing. I know you two will be great, loving moms. Glad to see your beautiful new baby girl!

  14. I am heartbroken that you had such a difficult time being recognized as Elisabeth’s mother during her birth. I worry about encountering the same issue when my wife and I start our family, but I feel a little more equipped to deal after reading your advice. Thank you for sharing your story.

    • Good luck to you and your wife! Elisabeth’s 10 months now (where did the time go?!) and it gets easier, I think. Plus two-mum families are the best! 🙂

  15. I’m a freelance journalist and also CEO of the Birth Trauma Association, a charity that supports women who have had traumatic experiences of birth. A few years ago I published a book on birth trauma, and I’m about to update it. I interviewed a few people for the original edition, but one of the notable omissions is any mention of same-sex couples. I read this blogpost when you posted it originally and it’s stayed with me ever since. I wondered if you and your partner might be willing to talk to me for the new edition? Could you let me know what you think? (Have tried and failed to find an email address for you, hence posting here! My email is kimthomas@ntlworld.com.)

  16. Pingback: SoftMachine.net | How pregnancy can be made more difficult by maternity care’s notions of ‘normal’

  17. Pingback: How pregnancy can be made more difficult by maternity care’s notions of ‘normal’ – Hekim.pro Professional Doctors

Leave a reply to indus Cancel reply