One like you’ve never read before!!
Jessica
Baby born on I-43 during the morning rush
Annmarie Schulte cradles her hours-old baby, Cecilia, during
a news conference after the birth on I-43 Monday.



William J. Lizdas
Annmarie Schulte cradles her
hours-old baby, Cecilia, during a news conference after the birth on I-43
Monday.
The baby's name was supposed to be Cecilia Violet Marie Schulte.
But "supposed to be" doesn't work for a child born in the front
passenger seat of a 1998 Toyota Corolla driving through rush hour on I-43.
Her mother, Annmarie Schulte, delivered the baby herself at 7:28 a.m.
Monday, moments after she reached down and felt the little head in her hands.
One contraction later, the baby slid out into her mother's arms: pink, still
sleeping and - her mother knew instinctively - healthy.
"She's here!" Annmarie exclaimed to her husband, Matthew, who
still sat behind the wheel.
By the time they got to the hospital, they would christen their daughter
with a new middle name befitting her special birth.
But the story of how the newborn got her name began months ago.
Annmarie, 34, a stay-at-home mom, and Matthew, 39, a teacher who is looking
for work, have three older daughters - Megan, almost 7; Millie, 5; and Libby,
2.
For each of her three previous childbirths, Annmarie had gone to the
hospital too early and had to have a Caesarean section because of failure to
progress. This time, Annmarie wanted a natural childbirth. Some doctors told
her it shouldn't be done. Vaginal births after two C-sections are considered
risky because they can cause uterine rupture. She was due Aug. 4. Two doulas -
Wendy Kogler and LaNette McQuitty - worked with her during pregnancy, and a
physician and a midwife worked with her at Aurora Sinai Medical Center, where
she planned to give birth.
Wait until you know for sure the baby is coming before you go to the
hospital, Annmarie was told.
At about 1 a.m. Monday at the Schultes' Muskego home, Annmarie woke up
Matthew. Her labor pains had become more intense.
By 3:30 a.m., contractions came about two minutes apart. She and Matthew
called the doulas.
They came over and monitored Annmarie's progress. She got in the bathtub.
She changed positions. Around 7 a.m., she was fully dilated. They called the
midwife. It was time to go to the hospital - now.
Leaving their other girls with neighbors, Annmarie and Matthew rushed to the
car. In their hurry, they grabbed towels but forgot everything else at home - a
change of clothes for them, the baby's clothes, the car seat.
They drove toward Aurora Sinai, Annmarie still in her black-and-white
striped nightgown and Kogler and McQuitty following behind in separate cars.
Matthew remained calm, driving below the speed limit and soothing his wife
when she felt a contraction.
Kneeling on the passenger seat, Annmarie felt between her legs and cupped
her baby's head.
"She's coming!" Annmarie screamed.
"Do you want me to stop?" Matthew asked.
"No! Keep going!"
With the very next push, the baby entered the world. She didn't cry; she
slept peacefully.
"She's here!" Annmarie said.
Annmarie looked at the baby and experienced a deep feeling that everything
was all right. Unconventional, but all right.
Matthew was not so sure. He looked at the baby and felt the deepest sense of
terror he has ever known. He let out a primal scream. He pulled over into the
distress lane at the Plainfield Curve on I-94/43. The doulas pulled over after
him.
He ran from the car, still screaming. Words finally came. He frantically
waved and yelled for the doulas to come out of their cars.
Kogler called 911. McQuitty checked on the infant. The baby turned a bit
purple.
McQuitty gave her a breath and rubbed her back. The newborn turned pink
again, letting out a tiny mewl.
Everyone cried. Annmarie wrapped her daughter in a towel and held the
7-pound, 4.8-ounce baby to her chest.
Emergency responders arrived, giving the baby a clean bill of health.
Matthew clamped the umbilical cord and cut it.
People driving by on their morning commute, having heard about the freeway
birth on news radio, rolled down their windows and yelled: "Happy
Birthday!"
The emergency medical technicians joked: "You should name the baby 'Plainfield'
or 'Freeway' or 'Shoulder.' "
"Her name is Cecilia," Annmarie said.
Matthew and the doulas followed behind Annmarie and the baby in the
ambulance to the hospital.
"We freakin' did it!" Matthew yelled when they got to Aurora
Sinai.
"I think we really should make her middle name 'Freeway,' " he
said.
Well, Annmarie thought, this child has a free spirit. And the name certainly
fit the occasion.
So it was agreed. Cecilia Violet Marie Schulte would be Cecilia Freeway
Schulte.
"Each one of my kids is an amazing blessing, but this baby, I delivered
- not only vaginally but on my own," Annmarie said. "With the help of
my husband and the doulas, I did it. I feel awesome."