A few months ago I posted here asking people if they felt cheated by having a really fast birth. My actual question was "do you feel gypped". Unfortunately, I didn't get many replies because some people focused on the use of the word "gyp" instead of answering the questin. The few people who did answer said they were pretty okay with it.... I'm three days out from a fast birth and it's just a giant blur! I"ve sat down to write his birth story several times and it just frustrates me. It went so quickly. It was so intense and fast and everythin blurs together. The sights I remember seeing, sounds I remember hearing, thoughts I remember thinking -- all of it is a jumble. I can recall teeny details about my first son's birth 7.5 years ago. This one was less than 72 hours ago and can barely remember any of it. I even broke my vow to not watch the video, thinking it would jump some memory...it didn't because my mom didn't tape as much of it as I wanted. I almost feel like the birth didn't even happen because it went so quickly. I feel bad for feeling bad about it too. All I really want is to write this story and share the totally awesome birth I had and I can't. I'm sure postpartum hormones don't help any.
There's really no point to this post, just felt like whining, thanks
Someday I'll get his story done! I"ve been waiting so long to write it and now I have one to write but can't write it...go figure!
Namaste, Tara
There's really no point to this post, just felt like whining, thanks
Someday I'll get his story done! I"ve been waiting so long to write it and now I have one to write but can't write it...go figure!Namaste, Tara






I really think some of those post-partum hormones are for exactly that reason, to wash away any of the negative memories of pregnancy, labor, and birth, so that you just focus on the good (the baby!) and have the desire to make more of them.


What about just writing down bits and pieces as you think of them? Then, when you feel you have enough written down, are further away from the birth itself and have had time to process, digest, heck sleep even you can sit down and go through it all and put it together in a way that makes sense and flows well. I wrote my son's birth story out about a month after he was born. Then, when he was turning one I sat down and wrote it out again with what I remembered a year later. It was pretty cool to compare the two, especially since the one I wrote a year later had a lot more detail/memories in it.





i guess i figured it would be much more intense (my 1st was an induced labour on pitocin)


and there is no way I would have made it to a hospital.