Sex

When I had my baby, I was 27 years old. I had an episiotomy, which I hemorrhaged from. I was POINT 2 away from a blood transfusion. A very large and painful hematoma formed around the area. I was forced to stay in hospital for six days after the birth – my baby was sick.

One day I was told that I was going to be given some sort of herbal solution to put in my maternity pad to help with the wound. I received an large and unmarked syringe which I applied as directed. When the doctor came back she had said that the stuff in the syringe was in fact a laxative that I was to take orally and she laughed at me.

A week later – the day I got home from hospital – the stitches came loose because my flesh was so damaged, the stitches had nothing to hang onto – like a vintage, moth bitten cloth.

When I had a look ‘down there’ to confirm there was something wrong, I couldn’t tell which was the wound and which was my lady part. When I called the hospital they refused to see me. I was sent to a GP who insisted that they see me. Back at the hospital they made me sit on a hard plastic chair in a room full of pregnant woman for hours and hours. My baby was at home and my boobs ached with milk.

I cried, and cried and cried. I was so scared.

On the charts marking the damage after birth- 1 ( minimal ) to 10 ( maximum ) – I received a 9. My physio marveled at the fact that I was still continent ( ! ) I received short wave therapy but when the infection set in we had to change to laser therapy- (the word laser used to give me such joy, I was thinking Star Wars.. ) These sessions would leave me with a very painful throbbing.

The physio asked if some photographers could come in on Monday to take a picture for a ‘before and after’ – to be printed in a book.

(At last- I’M PUBLISHED! )

I couldn’t believe this was happening. I wasn’t offered counseling, barely given any information – there was no one to talk to. A friend put me in touch with his girlfriend, who I had only met on skype. She told me how to look after my wound- a woman I didn’t know, on the other side of the world, was of more help to me than any of the doctors, nurses, midwives that were there and meant to be helping me.

I think the worst part is that I felt no one wanted to help me.

I was treated with contempt.

So for 7 to 8 weeks I had to juggle soaking my open wound three times a day, hospital visits for my therapy and trying to adjust to life having a small baby mostly on my own as my mother went back to Australia and my husband had to return to work.

But I did heal, when it closed I was so happy, I had been terrified and very focused on getting it closed. I thought there was a huge chance of me dying because no one cared and no one would help.

So needless to say- sex wasn’t something I was ever interested in having again. And in a society that is obsessed sex, I felt like I was in my own private hell.

My body began to loose the weight but what I was left with was a shriveled, damaged shell that was unknown to me. My boobs were limp, as was my stomach and my bum. I was COVERED in stretch marks, they seemed to be carved into me.

My smell wasn’t my smell.

I tried masturbating one night and I couldn’t feel a thing. I know my body went through the motions, but I couldn’t feel it. I was so worried I never would feel anything ( good ) again.

You know all those comments about loose women because they’ve had babies? Well, they are fucking lies. It was so painful.

My daughter is almost two years old and I still struggle with it. It’s not the same- I don’t think it ever will be, but it’s still not right. I think that the relationship with my body and with sex has changed in ways I haven’t even realized.

Sex used to be so many other things- it used to be cool, it used to be powerful, it used to be competition, it used to be a ticket, it used to be an act, it used to be fashionable.

Now – I’m not sure what it is.

The picture above is what I was like pre- baby, and I can’t go back to that. After having your vagina busted open and torn apart as the final result of this act.

So if I’m not using it to be cool, fashionable, powerful, get things, be cooler than her- what do I do it for?

I’m not convinced the girl I used to be in the above picture had better sex than me now – I just think it was easier for me to buy into all these trends to do with sex. I can’t and don’t want to go back to being her but I would like some of the ease back, some of the weight off.

But growing up and changing isn’t like that.

7 thoughts on “Sex

  1. Such a layered question: “what do I do it for?” I suppose that’s one of those journeys everyone undertakes at one time or another. Just as you had sex for the many reasons that you did before being wounded from your experience, perhaps you are also discovering different reasons while you’re healing.

    I’m so sorry it was so horrible and traumatic, Lily.

  2. I’m so sorry for how traumatic it was, Lily. The reasons for having sex is bound to change over time. I believe that, away from how it is portrayed one-dimensionally in the media, it can still be a charged moment of intimacy, lovely and powerful and messy and awkward and funny and strange in its ways.

  3. Oh Lily. It gets better – it truly truly does.
    My eldest son turned 20 last week.I am 46. Sex is better for me now than it was in my 20′s before I had him, and certainly better than it was for the months and years after I tore up to my clitoris trying to get out the 9lb3 baby he was (followed 2 years later by his brother who was just as big) and was butchered rather than stitched by a doctor that even the nurse was trying to get the needle off and throw out of the room. I then found out a week later that I had retained placenta and an awful infection which required a D&C and a lot of antibiotics. I felt violated.
    I breast fed for 5 years non stop (went straight from first son to second son), and for years I couldn’t stand the thought of anyone ever touching my breasts again. I still struggle with how they look now compared to the lovely things they were in my youth, but oh the pleasure they can give me when the man I am with does not care that they are empty and soft.
    After tearing so badly, for a few years if I ever did manage to orgasm (rarely and mostly alone), the scar tissue would hurt terribly. Predictably I began to associate orgasm with pain. I split up with th Father of my children – for many reasons but a lot to do with my reluctance to have sex and his way of dealing with that (which I can now see came from a sense of rejection, whilst I was seeing it as a lack of empathy and a pressure).
    It took time and a lot of self searching and one or two wonderful men, but it came back – not the same,no not the same at all, but just as good and often even better.
    Finally I OWN my body. Hang in – you are one hell of a remarkable woman x x x

  4. What an amazing and frank account. The issues you raise are so important, and so rarely discussed, even among close women friends. Yes, I never realised how much my body would change after giving birth to two children. It does take time to accept this but discussing it is a good first step, so thanks. Another positive is how all these complex issues can inspire our writing!

    • Thanks Kirsten, Thanks Ivy!

      I didn’t realize the post was going to go in the direction that it did! It was something that was always sitting in the tips of my fingers, but I had no idea what it would be- so I just gave it a broad title and the rest followed.

      The picture of myself also confronted me a lot. That person/ side of me is now far behind- dead.

      It is difficult when it isn’t spoken about because you have no idea what is normal and what isn’t. Then the depression sets in because you feel so so alone. I remember feeling so very overwhelmed by the unknown of life- my life- after birth. So I have made it my mission to talk about it, give it air time. It’s so big and complex I thought breaking it down in this project could serve to help me articulate things better- one at a time.

      Thank you again for your comments and support- it really means a lot to me- it keeps me going.

      Lily Mae
      x

  5. Pingback: Body, valley cushions – PILES, statistics | Berlin Domestic

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