My water broke at 37+2 and I went through two days of labor, so what do I need to do when I go into labor? What do I need to bring with me? The maternity ward of the hospital where I gave birth is on the eighth floor, and the obstetrics ward is on the ninth floor. On the evening of the day when my water broke, I went to the hospital to wait for delivery, and I was directly in the waiting room on the eighth floor, and my husband took the waiting room bag to the ward on the ninth floor, so that I only needed to take the nursing pads to the waiting room when I was waiting for delivery.
Because my water broke, I prepared my own pants for the holidays. I used six packs of pants and two packs of pads for two days of labor, and the pads were used more when I went into the delivery room. After entering the labor and delivery room, the nurse would tell the family members to wait outside the labor and delivery room with the baby's clothes and blanket. In the process of labor and delivery because it is more than four o'clock in the morning into the labor and delivery room, very sleepy drink a bottle of red bull, so it is recommended to wait for the labor and delivery to prepare red bull, chocolate and so on depending on personal preference. What do you need to pay attention to in the waiting room?
Psychological preparation, every mother-to-be upgraded to become a mother, are required to go through the pain of the birth process, we have to be mentally prepared, ready to meet with the baby, must be cheered. I was in the bout of pain when the time comes to silently say cheer up, you are the best, ready to can meet with the baby in the belly, what pain is bearable.
Don't yell, I was in the waiting room the night my water broke, and there was a mom in the waiting room who was in severe pain while waiting for her uterus to open up and kept yelling at the doctor that she wanted to have a cesarean section, but the doctor would tell you not to yell, and that the doctor would get very annoyed if you shouted too much because he was worried that if you yelled too much you would burn up your body strength and wouldn't have enough strength to go through the labor and delivery process. I was gripping the bed and doing deep breathing when the pains came, and when the uterus opened to eight fingers at the end of the contractions, it really hurt, and I kept gripping the bed and taking deep breaths, and sometimes I couldn't help but stifle my voice, thinking that I would be able to save my strength, and the doctor said that I had a good stamina. After the opening of the uterus ten fingers can enter the delivery room, and then just need to listen to the doctor's command, do not push.