Karla Akuhata got the surprise of her life last Tuesday when she unexpectedly gave birth to baby Tamarangi. Photo / Alan Gibson
Kiwi mum Karla Akuhata had no idea she was pregnant. That was until she unexpectedly started giving birth and reached down to find her son already pushing into the world. She shares her story with Ben Leahy.
Karla Akuhata had barely slept a wink.
Plagued by agonising cramps, the 41-year-old had been trying to breathe deeply.
It had been ages since her last period. Now it was back with a vengeance, she thought.
Taking a shower in her mum's Whakatāne home early last Tuesday, she hoped to try and relax and then maybe get a little more sleep afterwards.
Reaching down she felt a head. She was having a baby.
"Oh my god," she thought, her mind racing.
About 15 minutes later, Akuhata gave birth to son Tamarangi, right there on the bedroom floor.
He was a "total surprise", a "miracle baby", she tells the Herald on Sunday.
She knows many will find it hard to believe her. How could she not have known she was pregnant?
Looking back, there were some small signs, Akuhata said.
She had been down on energy and suffering from bloating. Yet she put that down to work stresses and a medical condition she was dealing with.
She had also added a few kilos recently - perhaps five - and her pants tightened in the week or two leading up to the birth, but she didn't have a "pregnant belly".
No one around her - including family and close friends - had said they thought she was pregnant, Akuhata said.
And while so called cryptic or stealth pregnancies like hers are rare, they are more common than many think.
British woman Klara Dollan's story is among those - making headlines two years ago in the UK.
Despite being in pain, the then 22-year-old had been due to start her first day in a new job and so took the bus and train to work - unaware she was pregnant - before quickly returning home and giving birth on her bathroom floor.
Bangladeshi Arifa Sultana, 20, drew international headlines around the same time.
She gave birth to a baby in late February 2019, before being rushed to hospital again 26 days later after feeling pain and not knowing why.
She was found to be pregnant with two more babies - twins developing in a second uterus.
Back in New Zealand, Akuhata had thought it wasn't possible - or at least highly unlikely - for her to get pregnant again, and so hadn't considered it at all.
While one of Akuhata's sisters has two children, her other sister and brother are both childless despite trying for families.
Infertility seemed to be a problem in the wider Whakatāne community also, Akuhata said.
Her father had been a sawmill worker and the family grew up playing in the grounds near it.
She fears chemicals previously used in the sawmill had caused infertility in local families.
Ironically, in the days before her surprise birth, Akuhata had - through her links with the Sawmill Workers Against Poison group - made a submission to an inquiry seeking to investigate the matter.
Added to all of that, Akuhata had stayed active right up until this month.
She only finished her latest netball season in mid-August.
She would even have played in Rotorua's Kurangaituku netball tournament just one week before her surprise birth had the tournament not been postponed due to lockdown, she said.
It was not until last weekend that she was finally knocked off her feet.
Normally living in Rotorua, she had decided to take her son to spend lockdown at her mum and dad's Whakatāne home.
It was there she spent last Saturday, Sunday and Monday in bed complaining of bloating.
She drank peppermint tea and tried to cram the vitamins in, hoping to feel better so she could finish a work project for her communications consultancy Tu Mai Te Toki Content Management.
The room looked like a "murder scene" and her mum didn't want the paramedics to see it in such a state, Akuhata said with a laugh.
Akuhata's other son and father also walked in, rubbing their bleary eyes in wonder.
When the "amazing" paramedics showed straight after, they cut the umbilical cord and made sure mum and baby were okay.
When Akuhata went for a quick shower, she handed her son to his grandma while one of the paramedics even took over the duty of cleaning the room and stripping the sheets.
By 2pm that day, Akuhata and baby Tamarangi had been given a clean bill of health and were discharged from the hospital back home.
In that time, her sister-in-law had rallied the family.
"Obviously, we didn't know we were having a baby, so there was no baby clothes in the house - there was nothing," she said.
"By the time we got home from the maternity ward, this little boy had everything he needed."
Cot, clothes, nappies - everything had been found.
Akuhata told the baby's father and later posted a message telling her story to her private Facebook page.
She's been overwhelmed with love from friends and family, many calling her son a "miracle baby".
"I know that by sharing my story in the media I'm going to get a whole lot of judgment from people who may not understand the story or accept it," she said.
"In this time of Covid and lockdowns and suspicion and fear, it is really lovely to remember there are so many people out there that give their love so easily."