How be your labor experience?

I am getting close and am starting to get anxious about it. This may sound silly but I am worried roughly not being able to eat for so long. Does your body do resourcefully with the fasting or are you hungry the whole time?

I am also worried something like throwing up the whole time. What causes you to throw up and is it preventable? If you did throw up did the nurse give you some anti-emetic meds if you asked for them?

How did you perceive when it was all over and you were surrounded by recovery?
I was persevering about having a vaginal childbirth.

My water broke in need contractions. I then made myself a sandwich because I knew they wouldn't let me chomp through for awhile.

I went into the hospital... still no contractions. They tried to induce contractions which lasted awhile, but he never came. I wait the max time they recommend before doing a C-section with broke water---48 hours.

After 48 hours, I didn't want to put him through anything else, so we went within for a C-section. When he came out, he was 9 lbs. 5 oz. and 23 inches long. His head be cone shaped. The poor guy tried to come out, but he just couldn't.

So after all that time I was so stubborn going on for vaginal birth, but in the end, I was purely glad that he was ok. They say the pain go away when you hold them and that is true for c-section as well.

I never threw up. Never even felt the urge to.

My recouping was like a vacation. Yes, the C booth was strange, but for the most part, I sat and watch TV, walked around the hospital, took showers, walked him back and forth to the nursery, and ate some awesome food. I didn't want to move off.
I be induced so I was not allowed to eat from 12am on, I get to the hospital at 6:30 am and my son was born at 7:28 pm. There were a couple times early on that I looked-for to eat, but they gave me a popsicle and that was plenty at the time. It's really not that bad. I progressed slowly so I noticed I was hungry contained by the beginning, but once I got further into labor, I didn't notice anything else be going on except for the contractions. I didn't have an epidural so I was not focused on anything else.

I did not throw up so I can't answer that part.

The worst segment was my dry mouth. I couldn't stand it! I asked if I could have a hard piece of candy to gain my saliva going and they wouldn't let me because of my risk of having a c-section.
I'm getting nervous about it too. The main item I'm worried about is the pain and how long it will take and not self able to push the baby out!

Too bad we couldn't create some loving of stimulation for the men so they could feel what we feel. Oh technology, you've come so far... but not far enough. :-(
All the things you are thinking about now, will be the farthest piece from your mind once labor starts. I never thought about food while ion labor, even with an epidural. Unless you are on labor for more than 24 hrs, you will be ok. You will be given an IV so you will stay hydrated.

With my first labor, I was given Stadol to transport the edge off. All it did was formulate me very sick and made me vomit. The other 4 labors, I opted for just the epidural. I hold never gotten sick from that.

Good luck Source(s): mom of 5 kids
Answers:    Like another answerer, my water also broke before my contractions get going. The doctor told me to eat something (nothing too heavy) before we came to the hospital, so I have some toast w/peanut butter & cottage cheese.

I didn't throw up at all, but my GOD was I cold. I kept asking for blankets, and had two twosome of socks on (some of that was the epidural, and some of it was the IV fluid). I was allowed to drink clear solution through my entire labor.

My labor was really short - 6 1/2 hours from the time my water broke until my son was born. The epidural be wonderful (and I was terrified of it!) because it helped me to relax, which help me dilate really quickly and speed things along.

I will say this, though - pack FOOD in your hospital sack - like a sandwich and some cookies, chips, whatever. I was SO HUNGRY after I deliver - I mean I was ravenous (and I honestly didn't make out my hunger prior!), though it didn't hit me til they'd gotten me out of bed to use the bathroom. And by the time I got settled into my room (my son was born at 7:34 pm), it was too tardy for me to call and order food, as dining services was closed. I would enjoy killed for a cheeseburger. I settled for a turkey sandwich my labor nurse (bless her heart) found for me, and whatever chips my husband could buy out of the vending machine.

You should own seen my breakfast the next morning - pancakes, bacon, fruit, eggs, cottage cheese, a pastry and a whole pot of coffee. LOL!
I hold not been in labor yet (first kid was a C-section), but I'm looking forward to a VBAC in October! :)
Just wanted to right to be heard you NEED to eat in labor. Fasting is a terrible model. Think of how much work it is to birth a child; it's like running a marathon! You need to save your energy up. Here is a link talking something like why no food or drink in labor is a horribly outdated practice:

http://pregnancychildbirth.suite101.com/…
Until the 1940's, women were actually told to chomp through and drink as they desired during labor. All of that changed in 1949, when 1 study showed that women who ate during labor had a higher providence of aspiration (food entering the lungs during anesthesia.) Since then, women have often be told that as soon as they feel contractions or think they are in labor, they should stop drinking.

There are several reasons why this study, done nearly 60 years ago, should no longer apply to women in labor today:
* The original study be based on very high amounts of anesthesia, which are no longer used on women during cesarean births.
* Fasting during labor does not guarantee an hollow stomach.
* The risk of aspiration only occurs with common anesthesia, which is used very rarely for cesareans.
* Prolonged fasting increases the amount of hydrochloric sour in your stomach which can increase the complications with aspiration.
* It is not good to floor recommendations for practice on one study, especially given that this particular study is extremely outdated.

Arguments made for eating during labor include:
* Eating small amounts of easily-digested foods during labor can make a contribution you the energy you need to keep going.
* A 1989 National Birth Center study showed that 11,814 women who ate and drank at will during labor did not enjoy a single case of aspiration, even among the 22% of women in the total group who required a cesarean.
* Sometimes the knowledge that you can't chomp through during your labor can affect your sense of control. That alone might make you feel like giving up sooner.
* Often midwives and doulas report that if a mother's labor is not progressing, commonly eating and drinking during labor helps to get things moving.

Edit: It may be your hospital's "policy" to not allow food...but here's a sneaky tip: they CANNOT form you do anything you don't want to! AND they cannot kick you out either! LOL! So go for it. Bring some of the neutral snacks described in the remainder of that link I posted. Go with your gut; if you want to guzzle and drink, by all means do it. And have an IV port put within, but not the saline drip. It is quite hard on your kidneys. And having the port contained by means they can give you meds fast IF they obligation to.
Take back your control, all laboring women!! :) Source(s): 27 weeks with my VBAC babe (planning a home water birth)

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