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Baby, Deliver Thyself

Baby, Deliver Thyself: pregancy photoI’m thirty-four weeks pregnant, have two weeks of work left before I start maternity leave, and I still don’t know who’s going to deliver this baby. My doctor can’t, because the local hospital (which is only two blocks from where we live) doesn’t deliver babies. (They claim it’s because they have no anaesthesiologist. I’d like to tell them that the hospital where Sunshine was born didn’t have one either; if I’d required a C-section, it was a fifteen-minute ambulance ride down the highway to the city hospital.)

At my last appointment, my doctor transferred me to the care of a doctor in the next town over, where the baby will be born. (On a more interesting note, that means this baby share a birthplace with both his or her grandfathers.) However, that doctor is on holidays and hasn’t called back yet to schedule an appointment with me. Her office also told my doctor’s office that she’s very booked up for May and might not even be able to take me (though if she doesn’t, another doctor in her practice will).

Great. So now not only could I not get a midwife because there are so many babies due in May, I can’t get a doctor either. If I’d known May was the month that everyone else was having a baby, I would’ve had this one in April or June. (Yes, if you know how much planning went into this baby’s arrival in May, you can laugh at that.)

So on one hand I’m a little bit stressed over the doctor situation, and on the other hand I keep telling myself that Sunshine’s birth went fine and this one will too, no matter what hospital we’re at or what doctor we end up with. Then an article in the autumn 09 issue of Birthing caught my attention. Janine Carter says, “We can remember that pizza and packages are delivered, babies are born and women give birth. We all, each and every one of us, has a birthday. We do not celebrate our delivery day. So why do we continue to detract from that special process that only the female of our species can do, by saying babies are delivered?”

That made me stop and think. Maybe I shouldn’t be so worried about who’s going to deliver the baby. Rumour has it that most doctors only show up in time to catch the baby anyways (and to make sure that everything’s okay). So six weeks from now, this baby and I will do our thing, and it’ll go just fine, wherever we end up and whoever is there with us.

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8 Comments

  1. Koala Bear Writer April 1, 2010
  2. Nat April 1, 2010
  3. carla stewart April 1, 2010
  4. Koala Bear Writer March 31, 2010
  5. Nat March 31, 2010
  6. Koala Bear Writer March 30, 2010
  7. Anonymous March 30, 2010
  8. Krista Phillips March 30, 2010

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