by Adrienne B.Lieberman
What Does Labor Feel Like?
From the intense, cramping pull or squeeze of the
dilating contractions to the profound stretching
sensation as the baby's head moves down the birth canal,
labor is characterized by powerful feelings. Some women
describe the dilating contractions in terms of a more
familiar sensation--a cramp, like a menstrual cramp; a
charley horse; a gas pain; or a feeling of rectal
pressure. One mother says her contractions were like
"strong gas pains, tremendous pressure around the pubic
area." Another describes labor as "huge waves, like
diarrhea cramps, one after the other." Still another
says, "My labor felt like extraordinarily severe
menstrual cramps with a lot of pressure on the rectum,
like constant pressure to have a bowel movement."
Confronting the intensity of pain before you give birth
may motivate you to learn ways of dealing with it more
adequately when you're actually in labor. In fact, a
study published recently in Birth suggests that women
with higher levels of fear before their first childbirth
class actually reported less anxiety during labor and
delivery. The authors concluded that these women
probably had dealt with their concerns before they went
into labor.
One woman, for example, coped with the pain by
envisioning the purpose of each contraction: "I
visualized my uterus rising up and pulling back, opening
the cervix more and more with each contraction."
Why Is Labor Painful?
Now, painless labor is possible--Alice, who opened
this chapter, certainly experienced one-- but it's quite
rare and should always be considered an unexpected
bonus.
Labor is usually painful for several very good reasons.
For one, the cervix, completely insensitive to burning
and cauterization, is nevertheless extremely sensitive
to pressure and stretching--precisely what it undergoes
during labor. Most women feel contractions as cramping
sensations in the groin or back, though some experience
more pain in their sides or thighs. As the contractions
get longer, stronger, and closer together over the
course of labor, they will be perceived as more or less
painful by different women.
In addition, the uterine muscle--at term, the largest
and strongest muscle in your body--may have to work at
alternately contracting and relaxing for hour after
hour. That can lead to a tired, achy feeling, just the
way the voluntary muscles in your arms and legs might
feel exhausted and sore after a difficult workout. The
normal decrease in oxygen flow to the uterus as it
contracts can add to that achy feeling.
During labor a lot of pressure may be exerted on the
fallopian tubes, ovaries, and ligaments. The baby's
presenting part (usually the head) presses firmly
against your bladder and bowel as he descends through
your pelvis. This can lead to great pain, particularly
if you don't empty your bladder frequently. About once
an hour is a good rule to remember.
The rectum usually empties itself ("nature's diarrhea")
in early labor. If it doesn't, you may choose an enema
to give your baby more room (see chapter 17). Whether
your rectum is empty or not, the pressure of the baby's
head on surrounding nerves will be surprising. This
feels as though you are going to have a bowel movement
right now. To some women, that feeling of rectal
pressure is extremely painful.
When you are in the pushing or second stage of labor,
you will probably feel an extraordinary sensation of
stretching in your vagina. "I felt," said one mother,
"as if I would burst." Birth is a normal function, of
course, but it's hardly an everyday feeling.
Dr. Ronald Melzack, professor of psychology at McGill
University and a noted pain researcher, helped develop
the McGill Pain Questionnaire to answer just such
questions. The McGill Pain Questionnaire characterizes
different types of pain in terms of their distinctive
attributes (like throbbing, burning, rhythmic, pounding,
etc.) and also allows a rating of the intensity of any
pain on a scale from "none" to .excruciating."
According to Melzack, "Labor is ... among the most
severe pains that have been recorded with the McGill
Pain Questionnaire." But while the average labor was
indeed rated as very painful, women's scores ranged
widely. A few mothers reported easy, almost pain-free
labors while others experienced extremely difficult
ones.
Whether or not a woman had a baby before seemed to
make a big difference. In an early study, Melzack and
his associates queried 141 women, 54 of whom had a
previous baby and 87 first-time mothers. One in four of
the first-time mothers rated labor as horrible or
excruciating, while only one in 11 of the experienced
mothers rated their labors this harshly. The proportions
were reversed at the bottom end of the range, with only
one in 11 first-time mothers but one in four experienced
mothers rating their labors as mild.
Also, change the meaning of the situation to make it
more or less painful. One study, for example, showed
that women who had previously experienced high levels of
pain unrelated to childbirth reported less labor pain
than other women.
Another recent study compared Dutch and American women
giving birth. American women were much more likely to
expect labor to be painful and to assume that they would
need medication for it. They predicted correctly.
Indeed, only one in six American women received no
medication compared to almost two-thirds of the Dutch
women.
The biggest difference among people, however, isn't in
their perception of pain but in their ability and
motivation to withstand it. In one experiment, for
example, Jewish women increased their level of tolerance
after they were told that their religious group had a
lower pain tolerance than others.
It's well known that a person may have a low tolerance
for pain in one situation, but a high tolerance in
another. For example, soldiers whose severe wounds would
warrant strong painkillers in a civilian population
nevertheless denied feeling high levels of pain when
they were interviewed away from the battleground.
Athletes are often observed to continue playing despite
injuries that a non-player probably would find quite
painful.
Your pain threshold can also be lowered or raised by the
type of attention you focus on a sensation. In one pain
experiment, simply reading the word "pain" in the
instructions made subjects find a low level of electric
shock painful. They didn't report the same level of
shock painful when the suggestive word "pain" was left
out of the instructions. This, of course, is the reason
childbirth teachers refer to "labor contractions" and
not to "labor pains."
By the same token, if your anxiety is reduced instead of
built up, your pain threshold may be increased. Another
pain experiment gave subjects control over the painful
stimulus, an electric shock. With a sense of control,
subjects found the stimulus less painful, probably
because they experienced less anxiety about what would
happen to them.
Reducing Labor Pain
Because pain perception is so malleable, you can
reduce the pain you feel during labor in a variety of
ways. You may be able to alter the physical sensation
itself, say, by changing your own position. Perhaps
you'll choose to intercept the pain message, closing the
gate or jamming the transmission of pain by sending
competing soothing messages--counterpressure, massage,
or TENS are but a few of the means to do this.
You'll probably also use many psychological methods of
restructuring the pain messages, like tuning into your
body and employing positive imagery to reinterpret
painful sensations as "opening" or "the baby
descending." You can soothe yourself with
attention-focusing devices such as relaxation, slowed
breathing, and music; and you can supply yourself with
calming sights to look at, and special companions to
comfort you. Perhaps you'll choose to concentrate on
so-called left-brain (rational) activities--counting to
yourself, pacing or patterning your breathing, focusing
on a particular picture, or listening to your partner
count time on a watch. Practicing lots of strategies and
being flexible about changing strategies midstream can
help you get through the painful contractions and
prevent you from tensing up in anticipation of future
pain.
All these techniques represent merely the tip of the
iceberg of methods you can use to lessen the pain of
birth. Many ways exist to respond to the challenge of
bringing a new life into the world, and we'll explore a
good number of them in detail. With education, practice,
and commitment, you'll be well equipped to help yourself
alleviate pain and get the most out of your birth
experience.
How do you picture yourself during labor? Perhaps you've
imagined yourself getting into bed, pulling up the
covers, and simply lying there awaiting your baby's
birth. Your husband mops your face with a wet washcloth
while doctors and nurses flutter around your bedside.
This image bears little resemblance to reality. If you
really want to have your baby more quickly and with less
pain, plan to get up and keep moving around as long as
you can through labor. Since having a baby requires
active participation on your part, you may want to
prepare yourself to help the process by engaging in an
exercise program during pregnancy. In your childbirth
preparation class you'll probably learn several
stretches to promote good posture and the proper
functioning of the muscles that support your uterus.
You may also want to get involved in some regular
aerobic exercise that pushes your heart and lungs to
perform at their peak level. Aerobic exercise during
pregnancy provides many benefits. It can build stamina,
make you more comfortable, alleviate aches and pains,
and relieve stress.
Aerobic exercise may even make your labor shorter and
less painful. An American study published recently in
the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology
reported that women who continued running or aerobic
dancing during pregnancy enjoyed labors about 30 percent
shorter than women who stopped exercising. Women who
maintained a regular exercise program also required less
labor stimulation and fewer epidurals, episiotomies, and
cesarean deliveries. An Italian study in the same
journal examined women having their second or third
babies who pedaled on stationary bicycles three times a
week for 30 minutes beginning around the fifth month of
pregnancy. The bicyclists maintained higher endorphin
levels during labor. Accordingly, they reported less
pain than a matching group of sedentary women.
Even if regular exercise can't guarantee you a shorter
or easier labor, it undoubtedly can help you to cope
better with whatever labor has in store for you. Going
into labor physically fit also means you will recover
more quickly afterward.
The aerobic exercises of swimming, walking, and
bicycling are readily available to most pregnant women.
Or, you may choose to take an exercise class or purchase
an exercise videotape (see Resources). Some women even
continue jogging through their entire pregnancies. Be
sure to get your doctor's approval before embarking on
an exercise program, especially if you have medical
problems such as high blood pressure. You should also be
aware of the following precautions.
The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists
has established these guidelines to help prevent your
core body temperature from rising too high and possibly
harming your baby:
- Keep your heart rate under 140 beats per minute
during exercise.
- Check your temperature by armpit or rectum at
the end of your usual exercise to make sure it is
less than 101 degrees.
- Limit very strenuous exercise to 15 minutes at a
time.
- Replenish fluids after exercising.
- Avoid exercising outdoors in very hot weather or
if you have a fever.
- Walking through Labor
Given freedom of choice, few women in any part of the
world lie down during labor. The supine (flat on the
back) position reportedly originated in the French court
of Louis XIV. A voyeur who relished watching his
mistress giving birth, the king's quirky preferences
soon dictated fashion for the country. The supine
position found almost universal favor in United States
hospitals from the 1940s on because a woman's lying flat
enabled her obstetrician to perform interventions such
as forceps delivery, anesthesia, and episiotomy more
easily.
But lying down has no medical benefits for most mothers.
In fact, it carries several proven risks. When you lie
on your back for long periods of time, the weight of the
uterus compresses the descending aorta and inferior vena
cava, blood vessels that supply or drain the lower part
of your body. This interference with your circulation
reduces your blood pressure, compromising blood flow to
your baby and causing his heart rate to drop. When you
stay upright (or at least off your back), placental
circulation improves and fetal heart rate abnormalities
may be alleviated.
A host of medical studies have demonstrated conclusively
that upright positions shorten and ease labor. One
famous Latin American study comparing reclining to
vertical positions showed that labors for women who
stayed upright were 36 percent shorter for first-time
mothers and 25 percent shorter for mothers who had
previously given birth. A British study comparing
mothers who walked during labor to mothers who stayed in
bed demonstrated that walking not only shortened labor
but also reduced pain and the need for medication.
How does walking help your labor along? For one thing,
your contractions become stronger, more regular, and
more frequent when you stand up. Gravity helps your baby
make his way through your pelvis. Furthermore, the
upright position improves both the angle of your baby's
body to your spine and the application of his head to
your cervix. Because your uterus naturally tilts forward
in your abdomen during contractions, it meets the least
resistance when you are standing, leaning slightly
forward. Finally, even though contractions get stronger
when you're upright, many women feel more comfortable,
more in charge, and better able to relax in this
position. A typical mother put it this way: "When I lay
down, it slowed my labor down in the early stage. When I
was in active labor, I found lying down much more
painful than when I was walking."
To promote your labor, keep walking as long as you can.
One couple took a scenic stroll along the lakefront near
their home before checking into the hospital when the
woman's contractions were three minutes apart. Another
mother remembers "walking and walking and walking around
the apartment. During a contraction I would just hold
onto something for support--a chair or my husband.
Because you'll probably need to rest while you're having
contractions, learn to lean on your partner in a manner
that won't make him sore the next day. Janet Balaskas,
the author of Active Birth, suggests this as the best
way for your partner to carry your weight properly: As
you drape yourself around your partner, he should keep
his shoulders down, bend his knees, and lean back
slightly while tightening his buttocks. It's especially
important for your partner not to bend forward with
raised shoulders, because this will give him a backache.
Changing Positions during Labor
Most women can't spend their entire labor walking
around. Especially in a long labor, you may need to
alternate walking with resting. Brief periods of
sitting, kneeling, or side-lying can help you rest by
temporarily reducing the strength of your contractions.
Simply changing positions regularly will probably help
you to be comfortable longer than any one "best"
position you could find. One study found that
obstetrical patients assumed an average of 7.5 different
positions in labor.
Joyce Roberts, Ph.D., Professor of Maternal-Child
Nursing at the University of Illinois at Chicago, has
spent years researching positions for labor and
delivery. Roberts points out, "A woman's contractions
are most efficient if she alternately sits and stands
during labor." It's also necessary, she says, to adopt
positions that are comfortable and appropriate for your
particular labor.
For example, you may need to be in bed because of
bleeding, fetal distress, or premature rupture of
membranes with your baby's head in a high position. If
you have received an epidural, you have to stay in bed.
If you are instructed to lie on your back, make sure
your head is elevated with pillows and that you have a
pillow or rolled-up blanket under one hip to tilt your
uterus off your backbone. According to Roberts,
alternating every half hour between lying on your back
and lying on your side can help prevent the adverse
effects reclining has on your blood pressure, your
baby's heart rate, and your labor's progress.
Side-lying makes contractions less frequent than when
you are standing, but they are also more efficient. Best
of all, side-lying is good for your blood pressure. In
fact, because it enhances circulation to your uterus,
this position is often employed when a baby appears to
be in distress.
As long as your labor is progressing normally, however,
you may want to try any or all of the following
positions in preference to lying flat, which tends to
lengthen your labor and add to its risk and discomfort:
- STAND, leaning against your partner, a high
counter, or a bed.
- KNEEL on all fours or with your arms and head
against some pillows on an upraised bed. You could
also try this on the floor, leaning on a cushion
placed on the seat of a chair.
- HALF-KNEEL, HALF-SQUAT, with one knee up and one
knee down, in bed or on the floor. This is easier
than squatting, described below. If it feels good to
you, rock back and forth toward your raised knee
during the contractions. Change legs as needed.
- SIT UPRIGHT in bed or straddle a chair, leaning
on a pillow on the back of the chair. A review of
labor positions by the International Childbirth
Education Association concluded that labor
contractions were least efficient in sitting and
supine positions. But sitting may still afford you a
needed rest.
- SQUAT on the floor or on the bed. When you
squat, your pelvic outlet opens to its widest
diameter and your contractions will be strong and
effective.
Before you go into labor, you should practice
squatting to build up your endurance. With your feet one
and a half to two feet apart and your heels flat on the
floor, descend gradually, without bouncing, and hold the
squat for 15 to 20 seconds. Work up to holding this
position for a minute at a time. If you have trouble
keeping your feet flat, widen your stance a bit, or try
putting a rolled blanket under your heels, or wearing
low heels, or sitting on a short stack of books. Rise up
slowly and repeat several times. If you need help
balancing, lean against your partner or grasp a chair or
bed. It's not a problem if your knees "crack," but don't
do this exercise if you feel pain in your knees or pubic
joint.
During labor you can vary the squatting position by
squatting on the floor, leaning on a chair or on the
labor bed. Or ask your partner to sit down on the bed or
chair; facing away from him, try dangling into a squat,
resting your elbows on his knees.
You could also squat in bed, supported under your arms
on one side by your partner and on the other by a nurse.
Or try squatting on the side of the bed with your arms
draped around your partner's neck. Your partner could
even sit behind you in bed, toboggan-style, supporting
you under the arms as you squat. You could sit-squat on
the low footstool in the labor room. Put a pillow and
sterile pad on it, and just sit down with your knees
higher than your hips. Or perch on a short pile of
books, a large cushion, or a beanbag chair.
Look at the positions illustrated in the book.
Incorporate them into your practice of prepared
childbirth techniques, so you can find out which ones
are most comfortable for you and your partner.
One mother who moved around a lot during her labor
remembers, "standing, holding on to the bureau, and
literally dancing through the contractions. At times I
would go from sitting to standing to all fours. My
husband danced along next to me, wiping my face with a
cloth, following me when I started walking, letting me
hold on to him. During transition, I climbed on the bed
and got onto all fours, then walked around again when
the contraction was over."
You're probably wondering how you can do all this when
standard hospital routines--fetal monitoring and IVs,
for example--appear to command your complete immobility.
It may not be easy.
You'll need to negotiate with your doctor well in
advance of going into labor and come to a meeting of
minds about the conduct of your birth. Many physicians
insist on continuous electronic fetal monitoring and IVs
in high-risk labors. But women may be monitored by
remote control or on an intermittent basis, preserving
their ability to move around. If an IV is medically
necessary, it can be attached to a mobile pole, if your
doctor agrees (see chapter 17).
If you learn that your hospital's or doctor's custom is
to confine all women to bed for the duration of labor,
you may want to express your own wishes and come to a
compromise. It may be a good idea to have any agreement
you reach entered into your chart, especially if your
doctor might not be at the hospital while you are in
labor.
You could plan simply to arrive at the hospital at a
point late enough in labor that you are willing to get
into bed. Or you may decide to switch to a birthing
environment that respects your need to be comfortably
active during labor.
Excerpt reprinted with permission from
foxcontent.com