Oh man, she's here!

Although Angela and I had been through all the pre-natal training to the point where I was bristling in anticipation of stepping up to my coaching duties, we really used none of the information. Well, that's not entirely true - some details of what to expect definitely came in handy, but the lion's share of the course - i.e., how to be a maximally supportive spouse, turned out not to apply in the least, in our case. The reason - Angela instictively, and very effectively, turned almost entirely inward to her own resources in coping with the pain of contractions. Although she claimed it was comforting for her to have me sitting over in the corner tied up in knots, she appeared to me to be a completely self contained unit. This was no doubt due largely to the fact that she's no stranger to pain, as her Oxford Dictionary sized medical record will attest to.
I suppose I should be at least modestly cronological, although I don't think of the overall experience in those terms at all. Contractions started in earnest at, again, T minus 41 hours. After approximately 27 hours of increasingly severe, yet fairly sparsely spaced contractions, we went to the hospital. The timing turned out to be nothing short of impeccable, since women are admitted only after they'd reached 4 cm of dialation, which was exactly where we were when we arrived.
One conern we'd had all along was this baby's propensity for situationing herself in a transverse attitude (sideways) in the womb. Already we'd shown up to have a version, i.e., a procedure where the baby is moved via external "massaging" by a clinician. This procedure is potentially quite painful and offers a good possibility of avoiding a c-section, although this can't be guarunteed since 4% of transverse babies return to their original position prior to delivery. At any rate, in our case it was determined that the baby had returned to a healthy head down position, but only after having been hooked up to the IV and otherwise prepped. As a result of our case, ultrasounds are now given immediately to women showing up at this particular health care institution for the version procedure to avoid unecessary expense/discomfort.
So on November 16th the baby was feeling transverse to everyone again. And again, as the end game approached she dutifully assumed the head down position again. Eventually the contractions started to get huge, so Angela opted for the epidural. It took them 3 semi painful attempts to get it in - but from that point on, things were pretty relaxed. Over the course of that day they decided Angela wasn't dilating as fast as they'd like, so they started a petosin (sp?) drip.

Eventually the epidural was fixed, but not before the nurse anesthetist tried to distract me by talking about my cameras. E.g., "So that's what a Leica looks like in real life!" - a comment that would normally be completely euphoric for me, but one that seemed horribly inappropriate given the pain that Angela was in. In retrospect, I probably looked like I needed more help than Angela, and the guy was probably doing his best to distract me.
So before we knew it, it was time to push - from this point on th
