Childbirth is a contact sport!
September 10th, 2020
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For many women, childbirth will result in physical trauma, the effects of which can be life-altering. Body-based trauma counsellor Thea Baker wonders why, after working so hard to conceive, carry and birth our children, do we feel the need to compress our recovery into the shortest amount of time imaginable?

[Trigger Warning: contains content around trauma]
I am writing this blog with the honour of nearly 15 years' worth of hindsight.
Almost 15 years ago to the day that I write this I was about to go into hospital for the induced labour of my firstborn.
She would arrive after less than six hours of very fast labour which, with the distinct lack of wisdom that comes with first-time motherhood, saw me push her out in literally two attempts. (My eyes still smart when I recall that burning pain.)
Along with Martha’s unnecessarily dramatic arrival earth-side, came a second-degree tear that proved to be quite an irritating addition to my postpartum recovery.
In retrospect, with at least 10 years' worth of work as a specialist Personal Trainer, Health Coach and Women's Health Counsellor, and more professional development hours than you could imagine, I consider myself incredibly fortunate to have come out of birthing two children vaginally with so little damage.
I have worked with countless women who have experienced far worse and many, many more who believe that they should be bouncing back to their pre-baby bodies (a term I literally come out in a rash typing) working out, sweating, lifting and dieting to achieve merely six weeks after what for many was the workout of their lives.
Regardless of how your baby is born (a debate I am absolutely not engaging in) your body will suffer a variety of torn, strained, bruised and damaged muscle and connective tissue. And that’s if everything went well!
Tears like mine are incredibly common. Up to 90% of women experience some degree of tear during childbirth and is especially common for first-time vaginal deliveries (Burnley Institute, 2019).
Whilst women who have caesarean section deliveries avoid perineal and vaginal tears, they do undergo significant abdominal surgery in order to birth their babies. Most of these women's pain will settle between three and six months postpartum, however approximately 11% of women will continue to have wound pain for at least 12 months (Weibel et al., 2016).
For many women childbirth results in physical trauma that for many isn’t identified immediately. It can include:
- Continuing pain around the site of a tear or episiotomy
- Urinary or faecal incontinence
- Fistula
- Pain / difficulty having sex
- Constant lower back pain
- Pelvic floor / vaginal muscle laxity / injury
- Pelvic organ prolapse
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