If she is lucky she has a normal labor, but others have C-sections. If she has complications and needs the baby to come out without going into labor, it becomes scary. She has to do everything the doctors say, so that her baby does not die. They put her in a cold, white hospital room, hook her up to a machine that has multiple functions and different numbers all the over it, she probably has no idea what they mean. They inject her with different drugs she needs to keep the baby alive. They have this one drug the doctors often give pregnant ladies with high blood pressure, called Magnesium Sulfate. About thirty minutes after they inject someone with Magnesium Sulfate, the person starts to feel woozy and sick. If they have eaten anything previously it all comes up. The doctors say it makes people feel drunk, however, it more so, makes someone feel; ill, cross eyes, anxious and unable to move their legs. The doctors have her on that up to a day after she has the baby. When it comes time to have the baby, the doctors roll the bed into a separate room. The room is bright, loud and full of people in operating masks. They are all real nice and helpful, to make her feel as comfortable as she possibly can sitting naked in a room full of people she has never met. They inject a large, pointy, thick needle into her spine, which then begins to release a clear fluid that numbs her whole body. She can’t move anything, so they carry her to the cold operating table and begin to wipe her body down. They then raise a large blue sheet up to obstruct her view from seeing anything they are doing. She can feel pressure as they cut her open, she feels tugging and pulling at her skin but no pain. It’s quite an interesting feeling. She is pretty out of it from all the drugs the doctors gave her previous, almost delirious. Then she hears a faint sound in the background, a tiny cry. It’s her baby! She does not get to see it yet because they have to sew her back
If she is lucky she has a normal labor, but others have C-sections. If she has complications and needs the baby to come out without going into labor, it becomes scary. She has to do everything the doctors say, so that her baby does not die. They put her in a cold, white hospital room, hook her up to a machine that has multiple functions and different numbers all the over it, she probably has no idea what they mean. They inject her with different drugs she needs to keep the baby alive. They have this one drug the doctors often give pregnant ladies with high blood pressure, called Magnesium Sulfate. About thirty minutes after they inject someone with Magnesium Sulfate, the person starts to feel woozy and sick. If they have eaten anything previously it all comes up. The doctors say it makes people feel drunk, however, it more so, makes someone feel; ill, cross eyes, anxious and unable to move their legs. The doctors have her on that up to a day after she has the baby. When it comes time to have the baby, the doctors roll the bed into a separate room. The room is bright, loud and full of people in operating masks. They are all real nice and helpful, to make her feel as comfortable as she possibly can sitting naked in a room full of people she has never met. They inject a large, pointy, thick needle into her spine, which then begins to release a clear fluid that numbs her whole body. She can’t move anything, so they carry her to the cold operating table and begin to wipe her body down. They then raise a large blue sheet up to obstruct her view from seeing anything they are doing. She can feel pressure as they cut her open, she feels tugging and pulling at her skin but no pain. It’s quite an interesting feeling. She is pretty out of it from all the drugs the doctors gave her previous, almost delirious. Then she hears a faint sound in the background, a tiny cry. It’s her baby! She does not get to see it yet because they have to sew her back