Inexplicable Ways

Humbly building the universe

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    Hypnobabies class beginning February in Greenville. Six Tuesday nights from 6pm-9pm. Registration is open. Email for details j_byers(at)bellsouth(dot)net.

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Archive for December, 2008

Christmas Loot

Posted by Inexplicable Ways on December 31, 2008

One of my favorite things about Christmas is spending time with my family.  We have loads of rituals surrounding the holiday.  And we know we have only a small, precious window during which all of us are together.  Soon my sister and her husband will be living overseas.  So we really savor our time together now. 

Ok, now one of my other favorite things about Christmas:  the yearly loot from my Aunt Helen’s garden.  When I see her husband carrying in huge boxes to place under the tree, I get so excited.  I try to time it each year so that I use my last jar just before Christmas.  This year, I used up the final jar of tomatoes making veggie soup the week before Christmas. 

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Posted in Family, Food | 2 Comments »

So you want to be a doula

Posted by Inexplicable Ways on December 30, 2008

I frequently encounter women who say “I think I’d like to be a doula.”  I get that.  For those of us who love birth, what better profession to choose than midwife, l&d nurse, doula? 

It does sound like fun–emotionally and physically supporting couples during one of the most important moments of their lives; being invited to witness such a stunning event.  And it is.  I love being a doula.  It is the best job I’ve ever had.  But…let me also share the reality of the profession.  Just like any job, it has challenges.  And I don’t think I really thought about these challenges before jumping headlong.

Looking over my births this year, the average amount of time I spent with a client in labor was 12 hours.  So while that means I may have had one four hour labor, I also had a couple of 20+ hour labors.  And I have no way to predict how long I will be gone when I kiss my toddler good-bye.  And I bail on my friends all the time.  Choosing this profession means that I commit to my clients that I will be with them through their labor.  I look at it this way:  What would it feel like to a mom who has been laboring 15 hours for her doula to leave?  To call in a replacement?   

I’m on call.  Enough said.  Ask my husband how he feels about that one.

I have a list a mile long of friends and family who can care for Norah.  I regularly interrupt their lives with sentences like this “Hi friend.  So I have this client who might be in labor.  If she calls me before 6am, Scott will take Norah to person A.  But if she calls after 6am, can I bring her to you?  Oh, and I don’t know who will pick her up or when.” 

My job is to support women who are feeling discomfort.  For hours.  At 4am, when I’ve been there for 10 hours already, I do sometimes question why I’m doing this. 

Doulas must be physically lithe.  Seriously.  I contort into bizarre positions to apply counter pressure to a woman laboring in a tub.  I crawl around on the floor, hold women carrying an extra 30lbs in a supported squat, climb on top of hospital beds, and let my hand be squeezed…really hard!  

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Somewhere around hour 13. I kept sliding backward as I applied counterpressure.

We need to have strong stomachs and gracious hearts.  I’ve been kicked in the face, covered with amniotic fluid, and I’ve cleaned up lots of poop and vomit.  While I’ve not yet been cursed at, I have had a birth ball thrown in my general direction.

Sometimes (though not too often), the rest of the birth team doesn’t want you there.  Sometimes nurses don’t like you.  Or sometimes, the client’s family resents that you get to be at the birth instead of them.

Doulas must hang in there emotionally.  It is hard to not get distracted by discouragement, hunger, the need to pee, conversations between nurses or midwives, a husband asking when are you coming home, or just fatigue.  Our intuition is key and for that we must stay alert and in the moment.

Finally, after the joy of birth (which of course makes all the work worth it!), it is hard to leave.  After the postpartum care is over, it is difficult to suddenly not see this family you’ve worked so closely with over the last weeks or months.

I’ve worked in non-profit, corporate, education, and ministry.  Doula work is by far the most difficult.  And the most rewarding.  I take my definition of doula as Jesus and early Christians used the word:  slave.  The One I most want to emulate was described as emptying himself and taking on the form of a doulos–the male form of doula (Philippians 2:7).  What better role model?

Posted in Birth, Doula | Tagged: | 7 Comments »

One of these women

Posted by Inexplicable Ways on December 22, 2008

I love this breastfeeding ad from Scotland.  Would an ad like this one ever run on American TV? 

This one from Australia is wonderful, too!

We did have a fantastic breastfeeding campaign here in the states but it was never launched.  The US Dept of Health tried but the ads were squashed by political pressure and a powerful pharmaceutical lobby.  Here is an example of one of the commercials:

Posted in Breastfeeding | Tagged: , | 4 Comments »

X-ray Vision

Posted by Inexplicable Ways on December 21, 2008

I’ve been absent. 

For some crazy reason, I decided to make all our gifts this Christmas.  So I’ve been busy, busy, busy sewing, baking, concocting, and knitting.   

Norah turned three this month and with the grand old age of three years, she also turned chatterbox.  Seriously.  We obliged her wish for a “blueberry birthday” and celebrated with our family.  Thank you Zach for the amazing blueberry smoothies.  Thank you Broomes for the incredible blueberry bush.  Thank you mom and dad for letting us use your house.  Thank you everyone for the precious time together and of course, Norah thanks you for her gifts!

One quick story before I get back to the gift making:  Norah had her very first sick visit to the doctor.  I was furious because our oh-so-carefully-selected-for-this-very-reason family doctor could not fit her in and told us to go to urgent care.  !!$&*#&@!!  Incidentally, earlier this year, they could not see my husband when we thought he smashed his face in a kayak accident.  That was an urgent care trip, too.  I thought this is why we HAD a family doctor!   

At urgent care, we were honored by the extraordinarily brief presence of a doctor who had consumed way too much coffee and barely looked at Norah before ordering a chest x-ray.  

After the chest x-ray (which was clear), the not-on-a-caffeine-buzz technician showed Norah her heart.  Norah squinted at the x-rays, paused a moment, then asked “But where is Jesus?”   

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Posted in Family | Tagged: , | 10 Comments »

Sparkles

Posted by Inexplicable Ways on December 14, 2008

If I sent Christmas cards (which I don’t under the guise of sustainability– ah, but note the non-LED lit, freshly cut fraser fir in the background, bah humbug, I’m found out), they might look something like this:

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And yes, I do remember that Samuel Clemens said ”Parentheses in literature and dentistry are in bad taste.”  I went a little crazy with my parentheses.  (Sorry).   

 

Posted in Family | 3 Comments »

Dr. Polo Shirt Makes a House Call

Posted by Inexplicable Ways on December 7, 2008

I’ve had a wonderful streak of unmedicated hospital births lately.  Strong mamas and papas who were prepared and thoughtful about their births.  

I learn so much from each birth.  My latest birth was unusual–days of prodromal labor, slow progression with intense contractions.  We were laboring at home when Dr. Polo Shirt (you’ve read about him before here and here) stopped by the house to see how we were doing!  What a great encouragement to this family for their doctor to step onto their turf, validate their progress, and then leave them to their privacy to continue laboring.   

[Let me interject here:  if you are pregnant, live in the area, and are planning a hospital birth, you will not find care like this anywhere else.  I won't promise you'll get a house call, but I do promise you'll be surprised by the personal care you'll receive.  I've seen many doctors in the delivery room.  Trust me.]       

I won’t go into all the details of this birth but I’ll sum up with:  beautiful baby, happy mama, and proud papa. 

I’ve also loved that all my recent births have involved immediate skin-to-skin contact with babies left on mama’s chest for at least the first hour.  That sounds like such a reasonable request but sometimes it is so difficult to get in the hospital setting.   

Now I’m lounging beach-front at Hilton Head.  Lazing the days away for a little while.  And I must turn off the ‘puter to take my tot swimming!

Posted in Birth | Tagged: , , | 6 Comments »

Norah’s First Advent Calendar

Posted by Inexplicable Ways on December 1, 2008

I don’t like to think about crafts.  Planning them makes me shiver.  So, when the whim strikes, I plunge in without pattern or really much of an idea.  This craft began yesterday with the thought:  “I should make an advent calendar.”  Scott carefully reminded me that tomorrow was Dec. 1.  The gauntlet thrown, I walked to the craft closet, grabbed random items and began cutting strips of construction paper.  No idea what I was going to do with them.  Here is my finished product. 

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Fancy-schmancy, I know.  Seriously, my craft ability is equal to a 2nd grader’s.  Thankfully, Norah thinks I’m amazing because I can use scissors. 

Each envelope contains a small surprise–I didn’t buy anything.  I found objects around the house:  a button, jingle bell, seashell, bead, pebble, pecan.  Norah loves collecting these little treasures and sorting them in an egg carton.   

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Posted in Family | Tagged: , | 1 Comment »

 
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