Sunday, February 15, 2009

Audre Lourde

Now That I Am Forever With Child
By Audre Lorde

How the days went
while you were blooming within me.
I remember each upon each-
the swelling changed planes of my body
and I thought it was my heart.

How the days wound down
and the turning of winter.
I recall with you growing heavy against the wind.
I thought
now her hands are formed
and her hair has stared to curl.
Now her teeth are done
now she sneezes.

Then the seed opened
I bore you one morning just before spring.
My head rang like a fiery piston,
my legs were towers between which
a new world was passing.

Since then
I can only distinguish one thread within running hours.
You, flowing through selves
toward you.


Sunday, January 04, 2009

Birth Story

My birth story starts and ends like most others...nearly 40 weeks of planning, anticipation, high emotions and great physical metamorphoses, all of which lead to the main event of child labor (not to mention the gift of a child!). It is the details in between that make my and every other mothers story wonderfully, beautifully unique. 

The night was November 24th (my 30th birthday!) and we knew the baby's birthday was going to be soon. We had been staying at my mothers house for the last two weeks both because Katie pleaded with us not to leave after the successful version and also to create a nest at the place we intended to birth. My mother and her husband suggested that Ben and I go out to dinner alone for my birthday and that they would watch Theo for the night. So that is precisely what we did! Went to my favorite restaurant The New Scenic Cafe up the north shore of Lake Superior. I was anticipating the Butternut Squash Ravioli, but in my heart I knew I needed all the protein I could get so I opted for a savory Salmon fillet. It was a wonderful dinner and unbeknown to us, the last "alone" dinner we would have in a long time!

It was about 9:30pm when we got home. We chatted with my Mom and her Husband for a while and then hopped into bed with Theo to watch a movie. As I was undressing to get into my pajamas  I started to get this really strange and slightly painful cramp/ache in my upper inner thigh, a sensation I had never had before. My mother noticed, as the cramping lasted for 20 minutes or so on and off, asked if I was okay and said many times over that she was sure "tonight was the night"! Nonetheless we watched our movie, with the thigh ache gone, and then prepared for bed. It was about 1am and I decided to go to the bathroom (as pregnant women often do!) and it was in the bathroom that my water spontaneously broke with a slight bloody show. With my first pregnancy, labor also began with SROM (spontaneous rupture of membranes) as it did for my mother in her three pregnancies. As can be expected, I was thrilled and felt my adrenaline kick in so intensely that my legs were barely holding me up!

I ran into our bedroom with a towel between my legs and whispered as to not wake Theo,  "Ben! My water broke...baby is near!". We called Katie and she advised us to get the tub ready. Since she was our Midwife for our last pregnancy, she knew that I would probably start contracting soon. I woke my mother and her husband and the four of us transformed the living room into our birth room. Although I had started contracting, I knew it would still be a while so I decided not to fill the tub, only to set it up, and also told everyone to go back to sleep. It was about 2pm by then and Ben and I decided to hop back into bed to gather energy. Ben fell asleep right away, but I laid in bed excitedly working through my rushes and meditating in between. At about 4:30, the rushes were becoming too intense to lay in one place so I snuck out to the "birth room" and essentially walked in circles. At about 5:30 my mother and her husband got up and started filling the tub. It was at this point that I really started to feel like I needed Ben...not for anything in particular, but just to be there with me. So I woke him and after about 20 minutes of him being awake I had him call Katie again. The rushes were getting strong enough that I could not really talk through them and pretty much had to be positioned on my hands and knees or on my knees with my arms draped on the seat of the couch. Anne, our fabulous Doula/birth assistant got to the house first and then Katie got there at about 6:45am. Although I was still feeling good, I was beginning to enter labor-land (a place you can only know if you have been in labor!) and was very thankful to see both Anne and Katie. Everything felt surreal...like the the worlds best "happiness" drugs were entering my consciousness, while still letting my body feel the intensity of hard work.

For the next hour I just did my thing, while every one else prepared. I sang my birth-song (loud-deep moaning) and kept imagining my uterus smiling...as if my cervix was the smile, getting bigger and wider with every deep moan. I imagined I was summoning my little boy fourth and into this world. At about 7:30 Katie checked my dilation and discovered that I was only 3 cm, but 100% effaced (this would be my only vaginal check...thankfully, because they do not feel good!). I of course felt a bit discouraged, but ready to take on what this labor-journey had to bring. At about 8am I started to get pretty pukey so a bucket became my new favorite attachment.

After the vomiting ceased, I started to get really tired and did not feel up to eating anything, just small sips of water. So I decided to lie down on a mattress we had in the room on the floor. It was only a matter of minutes until I got into this really amazing pattern of having serious contractions, which I was pretty much in the fetal position for, and then sleeping in between. This very reality brings to light the amazing and almost magical elements that make up labor and delivery. When else can someone get actual sleep (for maybe 30 seconds to one minute at a time) in between experiencing some of the most intense physical sensations possible to human kind??!! Nonetheless, I did this for nearly an hour...intense rush, sleep, intense rush, sleep, intense rush, sleep. All the while, Anne was right by my side with her hand in mine. I am not sure how I would have gotten through that time without her.

At about 9:15 I was ready to wake up, get up and move on to a new location. I remember thinking...okay, I am really ready to bring this labor into a new realm...I am ready to kick it into high gear. So I moved myself just 4 or 5 feet to the couch where I stood and swayed my hips to the pulse of my contractions. It was only just a few minutes until I started to feel "pushy".

My memory is that I yelled out to anyone that would listen, "oh, he's coming. he's coming, he's coming!". I could be wrong in that quote though because as anyone who has given birth knows, the memories of labor are both brilliant but also fantasy-like...foggy, subtle...as if you can remember the emotions but not the actual occurrences...
I took off my pants, heard someone suggest that I move to the tub and watched between my legs as some blood and mucous started to emerge. I could feel his head deep in my pelvis and hard on my butt. I knew this was it, it was the time to meet my sweet babe. His hard little head was moving down slowly but surely and the sensation made moving to the birth tub incredibly difficult. Nonetheless, I made it to the tub with the help of someones arms and body (labor-land made it near impossible to engage with the outside world, thus the omission of an actual identity). As soon as I entered the warmth of the 105 degree tub, my body both relaxed and opened wide. I am not entirely sure how many times I pushed while in the hands and knees position, but it was not many. Maybe 4 or 5? Strangely enough, the only thing that caught my attention during the pushing phase, was Theo peering over the edge of the pool. His big blue eyes were full of curiosity, wonder and fear. During my final push, I was rather loud in my birth-song and Theo started to cry and I remember telling him that "mama was okay...no owies, baby-belly is coming". At least I think I said those words! Another great memory I have from that time in the tub, was when his head was crowning underwater and I could feel his long and plentiful hair sweeping in the water and tickling my butt. I verbalized this happening and got a rather loud reaction of laughter from the on-lookers! Anne and Katie said that statement was going down in "the quote book"!

Jasper emerged with delight and beautiful color at 9:48am on November 25th. He was so gorgeous and tiny. As I turned my body to see him, I exclaimed, "oh he's so little, oh my baby is so little". And he was, weighing in at 6 pounds 7 ounces. He didn't start to breathe right away, in fact it took him nearly 1 minute to inhale for the first time. I saw my mother crying during this time and I had no idea why. I fully realized that he was not breathing, but I felt no fear...not an ounce. I knew he would breath. Without a doubt, he would breath. And he did...though a bit slow to start, he color remained beautiful and his APGAR were 8 and 10.

This birth was in some ways more intense, but no less amazing, than Theo's birth. With Theo, I think the progress from latent labor (1-4cm) to active labor (4-10cm) was more even and steady. With Jasper, I dilated from 3cm to 10cm with a quick delivery in just a bit over two hours (and I snoozed for some of that time!). That is pretty quick, even for a multiparous woman (more than one child).

It may be curious why I have not mentioned Ben, Theo, Katie, Anne and my mother for they all were there and integral to the entire journey. I could never thank any of them enough for their love, support and patience. The way in which each of them was present was wonderfully subtle. My mother was tending to Theo so that he could be involved, but not all over me. Ben was offering to rub my back and told me I was doing wonderfully many, many times. Katie was there silently offering me strong birthing vibes, while Anne held my hand and whispered encouragements at my side. I must have given off the energy that I wanted to be on my own, for this is what they allowed for me to do...progress through in our (mine and the baby's) own way, space and time. I knew they were there busily doing the behind-the-scene work and/or watching and sending me energy for strength and deep love and I believe this is the best gift they could have given me at the time.

How lucky am I.

I wish every woman could have the opportunity to birth at home, naturally and surrounded by those that she loves most (and by those that are willing to allow for the journey to unfold instead of control it).

That being said, no matter how a mother's birth unfolds and no matter where it my occur, birth truly is beautiful and amazing. I feel like I would do it a million times over. However, in the end, birth is really only the the beginning of what is beautiful and amazing. As you gaze at your babe for the very first time, you see the future full of dreams, hope and deep, deep love. As you watch that child grow, the dreams and hope for the future never fade and the love only expands infinitely.

So with that I close this chapter in my book, but not without first sending every birthing mother one last wish: that she will trust in her laboring body to do what it needs to do and to accept what she cannot control. Learning to trust and to surrender are both integral to being a mother and will never fail her no matter what her life may bring.

Peace and much love,

Brook

Thursday, December 11, 2008

External Cephalic Version (ECV) finally....

Sorry it has taken so long to finally post about the version, but a whole lot has happened since that day, including the birth of our son (next post!!)! So the story of the version goes like this:

Katie our fabulous, wonderful midwife suggested that we consider version and with flurry of research to back up our decision, we decided to schedule one for the following week (November 12th, one day prior to turning 38 weeks pregnant!). I was a bit nervous going into the consultation meeting since it was at a hospital and with a doctor I had never met. After a bit of conversation with what turned out to be a fabulous doc (recent transfer from Seattle), she decided we were good candidates for trying a version. She wanted to schedule it soon since I was almost 38 weeks and started to look into her calender when I bluntly asked her if we could do it "tonight". Fortunately she graciously agreed and sent us up to the birthing unit of St. Luke's Hospital. The reason they do the version in the birthing center is in case something "goes wrong" and medical attention (i.e. emergency cesarean) is needed. So up to the birthing center we went...a nicely lite, but oddly quiet part of the hospital (one would think it would be noisy with birthing mama's and singing babies right??!!). They hooked me up to IV as a preemptive and cautionary measure, should I need to enter the OR and monitored the baby's heart rate for one full hour before the "procedure" began. Luckily our Midwife came along so we pass the time with good conversation, mostly regarding pregnancy, birth and especially the beauty of homebirth (trying to stay optimistic amidst the fetal monitoring, the hospital gown, the comings and goings of the nurses, the failed attempts to find the right vein for the IV and the sterility of the hospital in general). Anyway, when the time finally came to try to turn our baby I was a bit nervous and very hopeful. They gave me a tocolytic drug, which relaxes the uterus so that contractions do not happen during the version. The drug only has a 15 minute half-life, which is good because it instantly made me feel like I was on a serious amount of caffeine or speed.

The doc felt for the baby's position using the Leopold's maneuver and quickly used ultrasound to see the exact position of the baby and to view his heart to monitor heart rate visually. Then she started to push on my uterus. First she started with his butt, which was lying just about my pubic bone, and pushed it up, then went to his head and pushed it clockwise. He moved a bit, but sensing the need for another set of hands, our Midwife asked if the doc wanted her help and sure enough she did. So with Katie at his butt and the doc at his shoulders and head, they turned him clockwise maybe 4 inched or so. The doc then started up the US and quickly checked his heart rate which deceled for a short moment and then quickly went back up to normal. They did this about 3 or four times and then wallah...he was vertex. US showed him in perfect head-down position and Doppler confirmed that his heart rate was beautiful and showing no signs of stress at all. So that is the technicality of the version, here is the emotional aspect...

It was intense. Not only did I feel this small little love of mine moving to a position I had never experienced in this pregnancy, but I also felt very aware of his sense of vertigo. All of a sudden he was being forced into a place not of his choosing...and I had been so accommodating up until then! I watched as my Midwifes hands and arms shook with fatigue from pushing so hard on my womb for a good 10 minutes. I felt every ounce of that pressure and I am sure the little guy did as well. I felt the entirety of my "natural" pregnancy take a philosophical turn (no pun intended) as we attempted to and successfully did defy nature. I felt happy and exhilarated and sorry and guilty and grateful and hopeful all at the same time...talk about cognitive dissonance!! I was so thankful that it was successful and hopeful that he would stay vertex, but also unsure if it was the right thing to do. If he had not gone down on his own...was there a reason that I was not tuned into?

They made us stay in the hospital with fetal monitoring for the next hour. His heart rate was excellent so we made our way home with the instructions to squat as much as possible to assure that he would nestle his head down into my pelvis.

This new position felt so oddly good. My stomach looked different (lower) and my walk definitely changed to a waddle. Not only that but all of a sudden we were thinking about birth differently than we had the past 6 weeks. If he stayed vertex for the duration, then we would not need the entourage of Midwives as planned and I could all but leave behind the meditations of having a vaginal breech birth or worst case scenario a hospital transfer (which only means c-section). I had to once again redefine my notion of what this birth would/could be and admittedly, I felt much more confident and comfortable with this new version (no pun intended again!!). I knew that I would have a butter-birth if he stayed head down.

So in the end was it worth it? Worth the intensity? Worth the cognitive dissonance? Worth putting my baby at risk? Worth manipulating natures path? Worth missing out on the opportunity to show the skeptics that a vaginal breech birth can be done at home (selfish reason I know)? I don't know. I think so. He stayed head-down with no sign of trying to return to breech. We did have a beautiful, butter-birth at home. He is a happy, healthy baby...but he cannot tell me his side of the story and never will. If he could he maybe I would feel regret. However, we did what we felt was best for us and our baby at the time and that is the decision we are okay living with...hopefully our little guy is okay with it as well (my heart tells me this is so).

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Silly breech baby!

As soon as we found out that all was well with my hemoglobin, another surprise hit....of course!! At 28 weeks it is not totally unusual for a fetus to still be breech (head up) instead of vertex (head down), but at 33 weeks (which is when our next prenatal appointment was), it is becoming less favorable!

The deal with breech, a position that many Midwives still call a "variation of normal", is that the longer the baby stays breech, the less likely s/he is to turn. Why do you want for a baby to turn vertex (usually by 34-35 weeks)? Well, if the mother is planning to birth in the hospital, chances are that she will not have the option of a vaginal birth because OB are simply not trained any longer to help deliver a breech presenting baby, thus necessitating a cesarean section. If the mother is planning to birth at home, she may have difficulty finding a Midwife who has breech experience because the incidence of such a presentation is only about 3-4% of term pregnancies. Since Midwives attend about 1% of the births in the US, her chances of getting to work with a breech mama/baby duo is nearing unlikely. However, if you are fortunate enough have a Midwife with breech experience (of if your Midwife knows and is willing to work with another Midwife who does), then a vaginal birth may be in the picture for you!

There certainly is fear, some realistic, some not, regarding vaginal breech birth. First off, there are more complications associated with breech birth, such as a damaged brachial plexus (could cause temporary or permanent paralysis), skull damage, or meconium aspiration...but these only occur in a small portion of the women who decide to have a vaginal breech and can happen in a vertex vaginal birth as well. As long as the mother is prepared emotionally and physically and in the company of an experienced Midwife, then a vast majority of the time the baby is perfectly fine.

The decision the plan a vaginal breech birth at home is not an easy one however. At 36 weeks, a time when the light at the end of the pregnancy tunnel is beginning to shine, our little one was still head up (I think he like to listen to my heart!). So I started doing all the usual breech turning tricks! I did moxabustion , many, many inversions, swimming, headstands in the water, pulsatilla, meditation, talking with baby and so on. It seemed like there were a few times that he tried to flip but just couldn't.

So we decided to get an ultrasound to rule out placenta previa (when the placenta covers the cervix, thus not allowing baby to turn down and also necessitating a c-section), a short cord or some other fetal anomaly such as hydrocephaly. Luckily, all was well! My uterus looked great, baby looked beautiful, cord was long (though it was a nucal cord, meaning around his neck) and placenta high! We were ecstatic!

Although our fabulously wonderful Midwife does not have experience with breech delivery, she knows a Midwife from Minneapolis that does and evidently that loves to teach! So we contacted her and she made a special two and a half hour trip to Duluth to meet with us and our Midwife. It was an excellent and enlightening meeting. We left feeling totally confident that if our baby did not turn, that we would go fourth with a vaginal breech home with with the help of our Midwife and the Midwife from Minneapolis. It felt good to make the decision, because the possibility of a scheduling a cesarean was on the back of my mind. Needless to say, we did not give up hope that our babe would turn down.

Though deliberations with our Midwife we decided as a last attempt to schedule an External Cephalic Version (ECV) at the local hospital. This is where the Doctor manually tries to move the baby to a vertex position. It has a 65-70% success rate and at 38 weeks and still breech, we figured we had nothing to lose!!!

Last night we went in for the version.......(will return tomorrow to finish the story and to let you know the results of the version so stay tuned!!).

Friday, September 26, 2008

And when the news arrives....

I am happy, happy and oh so relieved. The lab results for my hemoglobin came in at 11.3, down from 11.6 at 15 weeks! This means that all is well and that all fears were undo. Wow. Whew. Breath.

I am not sure why my Midwives hemoglobimeter read 12.5 when it was actually 11.3 is beyond me, but it seems apparent that it may need some adjustments!

See, this whole scare for me highlights in many ways how technology can seriously interfere with the natural progression of pregnancy. I worried quite a bit for no reason at all. Though my placenta does filter out most cortisol (the stress hormone), it cannot filter it all. This means that the developing baby is victim to my worries...we have a life time to worry, the womb is not a place for such a thing!! One of my good friends had a baby last December. She sought out prenatal care with the same Midwife that helped us with Theo but refused all prenatal testing. This means that she choose not to even pee on a stick to test for proteins, glucose, specific gravity and so on. Nothing. She intuitively knew all was going to go well in pregnancy, so why add the element of testing that can and often does go wrong? I think that if I am ever pregnant again and am blessed with the same intuition that the pregnancy is perfect, I think I will forgo all testing as well.

That is not to say that prenatal tests do not have their place, because they certainly do. They are a great way to keep track of progress and to spot red flags should they appear. Thank goodness we have prenatal testing, for the times when red flags do appear, then the appropriate measures can be taken and mother and baby can almost always be spared. Who knows how many lives have been saved? Some mothers need all the possible testing done, just so they feel comfortable in their pregnancy. Some Midwives need the same. However, there are certainly many women who, like my friend, do not need them or want them and that is perfectly fine (as long as pregnancy is progressing fine from observable measures and from the testimony from her heart).

Whew! Though slightly worked up about faulty testing, I am so far beyond relieved, I feel like I am in this zen state...no cortisol reaching this womb today.

Oh, and thank you so much for those that posted comments of well-wishing...maybe you are my lucky stars!

Friday, September 19, 2008

When things go wrong...

It is actually quite rare for anything to go seriously wrong during both pregnancy and birth, but when it does, it sure can make a woman feel like the mountain of joy is crumbling. My first pregnancy was absolutely perfect. I had not a single complication from beginning to end and labor and birth were no less amazing. This pregnancy has, until these past two weeks been no different. In fact, I have felt overall better energy-wise and the acne I suffered from in Theo's pregnancy (and that mostly continued until this new pregnancy) has totally vanished. My skin now looks better than it has in years! My weight gain has been normal and my uterine growth has been spot on. However at my last midwife appointment, we decided to do a third trimester hemoglobin (GB) test to make sure the the normal, healthy rate of blood expansion was happening (certainly expecting that it was).

Just for background, the maternal blood quantity grows by 50% by the third trimester. This allows for more fluids to be available for the baby both for food/drink, for their own growth, for amniotic fluid expansion, for adequate salt to be delivered to baby and so on. The process is vital. The HgB test is typically done in the first trimester to make sure that iron levels are good and to create a baseline measurement of hemoglobin,which is a predictor of blood fluid expansion as pregnancy goes on. As blood volume naturally grows, the components of the blood (such as iron and hemoglobin) become diluted. This is known as hemodilution and it is SUPPOSED to happen. This means that the HgB number that is found in the first trimester HgB test should be higher than the number found in the beginning of the third trimester.

Well, at my last appointment my hemoglobin measurement was 12.3 and at my first appointment it was 11.6. Going up is not good. This indicates that something is not happening correctly. It could be that my liver and/or kidneys are failing to do their job adequately, or that the placenta is weak. It could also be an indicator of the dangerous condition preeclampsia. Whoa. Hold on. There is no way that something could be going wrong in this pregnancy. I feel so great. The baby is moving all the time. Growth is good. What? When I heard this I literally felt my heart breaking and falling out of my chest, beating way too hard for it's own good. I soon became faint, sweaty and felt like I was going to not only throw up but definitely pass out. It was really, really weird. This had never happened to me all pregnancy so was it totally stress induced...or was it an immediate precursor to future problems?

Evidently, women do still feel pretty good going into their third trimester even when such conditions such as preeclampsia are beginning to manifest. However, very quickly she begins to get headaches, extreme fatigue, spilling protein in her urine (as indicated on at urine dip stick), may have trouble urinating, dizziness, blood pressure drastically rises, all of which leads to bed rest and often preterm labor. If left unwatched, (cause really there is no true treatment) can lead to eclampsia, which can manifest as maternal hemorrhage during labor/birth and possibly death.

So me being me, I did all the research that I could on hemodilution, high blood pressure (mine is historically really low, but has increased a bit as the pregnancy has gone on), preeclampsia, complications, remedies, precautions and preemptive ways to stop them from occuring. I poured through my midwifery books, raked through the Internet (though I do not really recommend this because there are more horror stories than anything else). The conclusion that I finally came to is that:

#1- I am not at all a likely candidate for preeclampsia/eclampsia. For the precursor's are a) overweight before pregnancy, b) high blood pressure, c) over 40 or under 20, d) had preeclampsia during proceeding pregnancy e) malnutrition f) severe dehydration. None of these apply to me in the least.

#2- the first HgB number was from a laboratory reading and the second frightful one was done in my midwives office with a hemoglometer. It is very, very possible that the two tests were fated to give different numbers. And I remember learning in my prenatal testing class that it is always best for two tests to be analyzed by the same mode in order for numbers to be reliable. This is true even between laboratories...always use the same method for assurance.

Upon this realization, I immediately contacted my midwives and requested for another lab test, not a hemoglometer test...and of course, being the wonderful women they are, obliged my request. So two weeks after the not-so-great results, I went back in to their office and they took my blood. That was yesterday, so I have at least until the middle of next week to wait to see how the numbers come back.

I tell you, it is painful. The very notion that my body could possibly be inadequately providing for my baby is horrendous. I have never known what is like to be one of those mothers that struggles to keep a healthy pregnancy...until now (maybe). Even if all is good and my hemoglobin numbers come back okay, I have learned some seriously valuable lessons regarding pregnancy and the imperfections that can occur, despite the mothers every effort to be as healthy as strong as possible.

This again is about surrendering to that which we cannot control. It is a good lesson for mothers to learn, for as pregnancy, labor, birth and then childhood unravel, there is so much that is not within the realm of maternal control.

I am certain these understandings will help me to be a better midwife someday......

I will post the results as soon as they come.

Sunday, August 31, 2008

Crunchy-mama!

I just recently learned of the term "crunchy" as a descriptor for a parenting style. I find the term hysterical and intend to use it from now on...even though I typically try to avoid trendy catch-phrases!

If you are not already enlightened, the term "crunchy" comes from the stereotypical label "granola" and since granola is crunchy....well, you get the idea. So I guess for all intents and purposes I would be considered a modern hippie for I believe in and protest for peace, I believe in the power of love, I listen to the Beatles, I eat organic brown and green foods and I practice liberal parenting. I have always thought it would have made more sense for me to have grown up in the 70's, but as luck has it, the sperm and egg that united to create me, could not have had me really any sooner than they did (yeah to hippie parents that believed in young free love!).

Anyway, as far as I can gather being a crunchy-mama in my life looks like this:

I (we)...
Had a home waterbirth with our first son (and doing the same with this next babe!!!!)
Practice attachment parenting
Wore our baby with a sling (non of that carry in the car seat crap!)
Co-sleep (going on two years now and about to add another wee one to the sheets!)
Child-led weaning (looks like we are still a long way away from our two year old being weaned!)
No circumcision (are you kidding me? its more like mutilation in my eyes)
No vaccinations (much to the chagrin of others!)
Intent to homeschool or unschool our children
Use herbs instead of modern medicine
Eat mostly all organics

Oh, and I like to burn nag champa as well!   

I know I am missing some of what makes me a crunchy-mama, but I would love to hear what makes you a crunchy mama as well!

Saturday, August 30, 2008

Political adversity regarding women and childbirth

Politics circle every aspect of our life, whether we acknowledge or give credence to them or not. Politics are of course the blood of our government, but they also play a sneaky role in our neighborhoods, in our places of work, on our bodies and in the birthing room. The AMA (American Medical Association) is currently on a rampage to decimate women's rights to give birth where she wants. Regardless of the many, many studies done around the world that point to the fact that childbirth for a healthy mother and healthy pregnancy is safest when in the comfort of the mothers home and in the presence of her own familial germs, the AMA and the ACOG (American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists) are ruthlessly trying to sabotage such a basic civil right. This is all, might I add, without the presentation of any good evidence that hospital births are safer than homebirths....just bureaucratic and corporate power at it's best (worst!).

For just a few of the research articles that demonstrate what I have written above, go to:

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9271961

http://www.yin-yang.com/vbfree/docs/schlenzka.htm

http://www.bmj.com/cgi/content/full/330/7505/1416

Now, to be fair, here is a part of the AMA's official statement supporting the ACOG and admonishing homebirth:

"Whereas, An apparently uncomplicated pregnancy or delivery can quickly become very complicated in the setting of maternal hemorrhage, shoulder dystocia, eclampsia or other obstetric emergencies, necessitating the need for rigorous standards, appropriate oversight of obstetric providers, and the availability of emergency care, for the health of both the mother and the baby during a delivery; therefore be it

Continue reading "Political adversity regarding women and childbirth" »

Tuesday, July 01, 2008

Lioness

I love being pregnant. It is the most strange, beautiful, crazy, sexy and empowering time of my life. I have one other babe who is nearly two and felt the exact same way during his pregnancy. It is definitely a "I am woman, hear me roar" time of life. I feel like a lioness.

Although I am barely showing at 19 weeks (My brain says "yikes", but my heart knows all is well), I have definitely entered the bliss of feeling my babe dance in my womb. From the way s/he moves and grooves down there, I have the feeling that this child is going to be a fluid, calming person. With my first pregnancy, the little guy was powerful and enthusiastic...exactly how he is at 22 months of earth walking life! When the babe in my womb moves now, it is soft and flowery and calms every inch of my soul.

As all pregnant women know, as we grow larger in accommodation to the love in our belly, people...all people including teen-age boys, stop to look and to smile. It always makes me wonder what they are thinking. If it is an old man, is he remembering his lovely wife of 60 years pregnant with their first child? If it is a middle-aged woman, is her smile to cover up the pain of not being able to conceive herself? Or is she looking with awe, remembering her own pregnancy and honoring herself for the hard work done in raising a child? If it is a teen-age boy, is it due to the fact that pregnancy means sex??!! Whatever the thoughts, pregnancy, birth and babies bring out something in us that is so raw and so real. A primal achievement, created from a primal act and brought fourth in the most primal of all acts....birth!

In natural child birth,  the lioness, or the mama bear, or the money (choose your beast!) comes through our soul, down through our uterus, through our mouths and eyes and heart and especially through our vagina! It is cathartic and life changing...and it should be. It teaches us how to be mothers, how to protect our babes, how to surrender to motherhood and the whims of life with serious responsibility! Do not get me wrong, mothers that choose for pain medication are of course still going to be wonderful mothers and protectress of their young, but I would argue that by not going through the honor of true, unadulterated labor, women are robbing themselves of the natural empowerment and beauty that comes with the normal hormonal output, the normal stretching of vaginal muscles, the normal rushes that some people call "contractions", the normal discomforts and some people call "pain"....these all are so important in teaching the mothers physical body, emotional heart and spiritual soul, that she can do anything!   

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

After a wee hiatus.....

So I am back to the blogging after a not-so-wee period of time away. Not only has school been kicking my proverbial butt, but our family has just moved through a fairly substantial period of transition. First we found out that I am pregnant with our second child, an exciting but in some ways disarming reality! Then just a week following the revelation, we moved from Minnesota to Portland Oregon. In that time we have lived in an 18 foot trailer that served us well for a short while. My main issue with the 70's style home on wheels was that it was really small and had this smell to it that still haunts me. Had I not been processing through my very sensitive first trimester, I probably would have not minded the confinement or even the smell so much. However, the reality was that I was incredibly sensitive to ANY smell, including the brand of potato chips my husband has a long standing love affair with, and our enthusiastic (to say the least!) toddler, was a major force to be reckoned with (considering the fact that all my energy store was going to the developing embryo, then fetus). This was all combined (sigh) with the fact that we entered Portland at the rear end of the rainy season so outdoor activity was a bit impaired.

Nonetheless, the complaining ends there! And really, it is not complaining that I mean to do. Instead, it was our reality that brought with it lots of life lessons. We are now in an apartment that offers much more space and even a little patio for our tomato and basil plants to flourish. School is now back on track (another named difficulty of living in the trailer without electricity or internet!) and now so is the blog.

Regarding the blog, I intend to shift the focus a bit to include more pregnancy related topics that are wrought from the heart of a pregnant midwifery student. This time it may be more diary or conversational style than academic like the first phase. Life if full of change and this blog must roll with the punches as well!

Happy reading and please remember that this should be a conversation, not a monologue!

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