Category Archives: Doula

Couple of things

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1) The Upstate BirthNetwork website is (mostly) finished!  Go on over and check it out!  More importantly, spread that news to local families. 

2) You may have noticed I have not updated my upcoming events in awhile.  So, upcoming this week:  Greenville Babywearing group meets Thursday at 6pm.  At Natural Baby.

3)  I have a spot open in my upcoming Hypnobabies class.  The class filled so quickly and then this one little spot has stayed open.  Just waiting for the right couple to fill it!  Class begins June 14 so don’t wait too long…

4)  I’m am completely, 100% fully booked for doula clients this year.  But I am super-duper happy to doula-match you with your perfect mate.  Call me the doula pimp.  Ok, not really.  That was just some sort of weird tough talk.  I never pull that off well.

5)  Finally, and this is exciting, the three upstate babywearing groups are adopting The Parenting Place teen mom program.  We’re collecting used wraps or 6-yrd fabric lengths to be distributed to the moms-to-be.  I get to train their in-home staff so they can teach the moms how to wear their babes.  Bring your donation to a group meeting or drop off at Natural Baby.  For fabric lengths, we suggest jersey knit, crinkle gauze, or muslin.  We have group member who are willing to sew or serge the edges if needed.  We only need 25 wraps to start.  We are also collecting used slings, pouches, and mei-tais to donate to the young moms served by BirthMatters in Spartanburg.  You may also drop these at Natural Baby.

Sometimes it feels so nice to simply make a list.  I almost want to put check-boxes beside each item.

Shameful Neglect

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I know I’ve been absent from my blog.  Bear with me, dear readers! 

I’m focusing on the new Upstate BirthNetwork website which I hope to launch this weekend.   More news to come.  In the meantime, if you’d like to get the scoop on UBN, you can visit our facebook page or come to this weekend’s Blessingway.

What else has been going on?

Oh yes, I helped a mama have her baby!  Ho hum, I’m a doula…that is what I do.  But no!  It was a fast-moving baby and there was no one to help except her husband and me.  And she gave birth standing up.  Wearing her Nike’s. 

I’d like to nominate her as a new Nike spokeswoman!

Other than that, it has been a quiet week.

Heard in L&D

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“Pitocin is natural.  It is the same thing that is in your body to make the baby come out.  It even helps your milk come in!  All my babies have pitocin.”

Yes, spoken by an OB.  I think she even threw in a “girl,” or two into the conversation.  As in, “Girl, you’ve done the natural thing long enough.  Get the epidural!  I did!”

This same friendly OB also ruptured membranes without consent or warning.  Usually I am able to intercept a move like that so mom can give consent first, but I completely missed this one.  It happened so quickly.

When the mom did get an epidural (at 8cm, AROM) after “bad cop” OB suggested it could be another “five hours of excruciating torture,” pitocin was automatically administered and cranked.  The mom was progressing normally.  But “good cop” OB wanted to get home.  I heard her say this.  So Pit was cranked.  Not a gradual increase.  And I watched baby’s heartrate which had been varying in the 130’s-150’s immediately begin dipping to the 100’s during the fast-peaking pit contractions. 

But the pit worked quickly and soon a precious babe joined the world.

I’m thankful mom had a beautiful baby with few complications.  I wish the OBs had been more supportive, encouraging, and patient.  I wish there had been more informed consent.  The mom is happy which is the most important thing and lets me know I did my job.  It is her birth; not mine. 

What can expectant moms take from this?  Talk to the doulas in your community.  Even if you don’t plan to hire one.  Doulas know the inside scoop.  We witness what happens in L&D.  All OBs/midwives are not the same!  I show pictures.  Pictures of different styles in the birth room.  A picture speaks a thousand words.  Does the doctor wear what looks like a radiation suit; so covered you can’t even recognize her?  Does he hand the baby to the nurse instead of the mom?  My observations are just one part of the story but they are things I have witnessed.  Honestly, how else is a family to know what birth looks like in different environments, with different care providers?  I know one mom who wanted to switch to a more natural-birth friendly hospital but one doctor was booked for her date and the other group has a policy about taking patients after a certain date.  I was really saddened that she was unable to birth at the hospital she wanted. 

So, meet with a doula.  Early in pregnancy.  When there is time to interview other providers.

Guest Post from a new Hypno-Doula

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Kristin Abboud took my Hypno-Doula training in January.  I asked her to blog her first Hypnobabies birth experience.  Her clients were first time parents who took my class.  Kristin teaches Bradley birth classes and is available for doula clients.  Hire her.   

I was fully planning on studying up on hypnosis and Hypnobabies to be certified as a Hynobabies doula 2 weeks prior to the due date of a couple I would be attending in labor, so when the dad called me 3 weeks before their due date I was nervous.

All I have ever known about hypnosis is that you get called out of a crowd to go up on stage and make a fool out of yourself doing crazy things.  How in the world was that going to translate to labor?  I soon found out.

I knew the basics.  Hypno-tools like the light-switch, cue word, and special safe place.  I had learned that hypnosis can be powerful.  I learned that a lot of the time, as a hypnobabies doula, you don’t really do much.  I was skeptical.

I went to their home and all was calm…too calm.  Went for a walk.  Came back and mom laid down to rest and listen to a hypnosis script while I crocheted.  About 20 minutes later dad came in and tells me mom is crying, pressure waves are intense and they want to go to the hospital.  

Transferring slows everything down, but dad is assertive about communicating with the nurse their wishes and what hypnosis is all about – quiet.   Only positive communication can be used around a momma in hypnosis.  She internalizes everything and that will be what she feels and perceives.

I have to say that I was antsy to get things moving.  She didn’t seem to be making progress visibly.  She listened to scripts through ear phones and barely made a peep.  Once in a while she would say “peace” or make a little moan. It was during scripts that the most work seemed to be getting done.   Vaginal exams were refused.  I wanted to DO something.  Shouldn’t we be walking, swaying, massaging, praising, encouraging, timing?  Shouldn’t she be breathing harder, moaning, groaning, snapping, needing?

Time, time was what was needed.  There were hints and clues here and there that things were progressing.  I couldn’t tell when a pressure wave began or subsided so timing was no use.  When she was on the monitor we caught a glimpse of her waves.  They would rise half way and hold on for 2 minutes or longer.  I watched her when they would start, peak and end.  Her hypnosis was so well practiced and trusted, she hardly flinched at the pressure.

Patience was of the utmost importance.  Dad seemed to overflow with it.  He trusted as well.  I, on the other hand, was getting worried that she was too relaxed and this was never going to happen.  Again, I kept thinking about all the things we could be doing and trying.  I texted my wise friend and Hypnobabies instructor for advice.  She said there wasn’t anything better to do than the hypnosis stuff, and to think of it as “supporting her brain rather than her body”.

There it was again, patience.  Patience is not my forte. I can feign it pretty well though! 😉

She slid into pushing without much fuss, although I could tell she didn’t want to give in to it.  I would love to attend more Hypnobabies trained moms to see what pushing is like for them because again, not much seemed to be happening. Dad and I decided to put the pushing script on which is to be played out loud.  2-3 nurses and the doctor were there to hear it.  Mom had maybe 2 pressure waves during the 20 minute script.  When it ended, it was like a complete turn-around.  Mom got down to business and her baby emerged in no time.  And just like that mom flipped a switch and was fully present and eating up every delicious feature of her sweet baby girl.

I’m sold. Hypnosis for labor works.

Any pregnant procrastinators out there?

I have some last minute openings for doula clients.  I could add an additional February or March client.  I know I turned away many families for these months and hopefully you’ve found doulas to serve you.  But if anyone is still doula-less (oh, the tragedy!), do contact me. 

Because you know…a doula is a very good thing.  AND, her presence at your birth can lower your cesarean risk and increase your satisfaction. 

I love my work.

New blooper added

Added a new blooper to my fumbles page. 

7)  I gave a woman poison ivy.  When we realized she was going to birth in the floor instead of the tub, I ran to find something soft for the floor.  I saw a fluffy comforter hanging over the stair railing.  I grabbed it and threw it down under the mom.  Little did I know, she had used that comforter for maternity pics in the woods.  And little did I know, she was super sensitive to poison ivy.  We all wondered at the itchy rash appearing on her legs postpartum.  And spreading to the rest of her body.  It took a few days to put it all together.  

Beware the postpartum poison ivy, my friends.

Thank You 2010 Families

From Mary-Grace, the first new baby of the year to the TWO sweet boys born today, I am incredibly honored to serve a tiny role in these births. 

  • To the couples who have invited me into their homes.
  • To the women who’ve met me at coffee shops to talk about their pregnancies. 
  • To the Hypnobabies dads who have fallen asleep (one even snored) while I read the scripts in class.
  • To the couples I’ve coached through contractions over the phone.
  • To the tiny new babies I’ve held as if they were the most precious treasure in the world.  Because they are.
  • To the clients who became friends.
  • To the friends who became clients.
  • To the women I’ve cried with.
  • To the first timers who dared to birth differently than everyone else around them. 
  • To the midwives, doulas, doctors, childbirth educators who have been listening ears, back-ups, and teachers.
  • To my husband who has texted me at births such questions as “how effaced is she?  did she do the rotisserie? and when will you be home?”
  • To the Anderson class who had to listen to the macarena playing outside the window while under hypnosis.  Wonder what the long-term consequences of that will be.
  • To Dr. Stafford who let me use his office (and his fancy technology) to teach classes and who consistently holds the space for alternatives and choice in the hospital birth experience.
  • To the women who have cared for my children when I leave.
  • To the VBACs who went to great lengths to avoid another cesarean.
  • To the nurses who sometimes broke the rules and who always remembered that patients have choices.  Even the choice to say “no.”
  • To my family who is tolerant when I find a way to talk about birth during every mealtime conversation.
  • To Cedar who cried every time I left and pretty much the whole time I was gone.
  • To the tearful postpartum mamas who called at 3am. 
  • To the babywearing groups and the women who shared their birth stories at Blessingways (pssst…I’m scheduling stories for 2011).
  • To the repeat clients who told me they were pregnant before they told anyone else. 
  • And to the births who have taught me so much about serving, honoring, protecting, and loving.

I love you and wish you grace and beauty in the coming year!

Anyone notice?

I added a new page.

I’ve been trying to remember all my blooper moments.  Email me if you remember something funny from your class or your birth.

Hypno-Doula Certification Workshop

I am offering a Hypno-Doula training in Greenville on January 29.  Deadline for registration is January 8.  This training is for current doulas who wish additional training and certification in supporting clients who are using hypnosis for childbirth.  

Doulas will receive 5 CDs, a workbook, and a study guide.  Following the training, doulas will submit a written exam to Hypnobabies.  If they successfully complete the exam, they will be invited to submit a professional listing on the Hypnobabies Hypno-Doula listings and may use the designation HCHD (Hypnobabies Childbirth Hypnosis Doula). 

Cost for the training is 65.00.

If you are interested in attending, please contact me at j_byers (at) bellsouth (dot) net.

Last Call for November and January is OPEN

The Mindful Birth class begins on Sunday.  Please sign up by Wednesday so I can order your materials.  I’m excited about the couples who have signed up (hospital and home birthers, all first time parents-to-be).  See you soon!

The next Hypnobabies class begins Jan. 2.  Registration opened today.  I only have two spaces remaining!  Contact me for information on this series. 

j_byers (at) bellsouth (dot) net.

Childbirth education is a gift to you and to your baby.  Forget spending all that money on new nursery furniture and gear.  Save some for preparation!  Oh, and a doula.  Don’t forget to hire one of those!