In spite of my awe, I also noticed that something was not quite right. In the next 20 minutes this woman and her baby suffered several complications which had us traveling to the hospital via ambulance arriving before the first hour ever passed.
Next, I stood in the tiny hospital room. Covered in her blood. Watching her on a gurney. Brave. Couragous. She calmly answered the hostile doctor's questions. She withstood the rolling eyes and the belittling comments. I fought to hold back the tears because I wanted her birth experience to be all that she had fought for it to be.
A week later I stood at her door. When it opened I braced myself. In front of me stood a woman with a baby in her arms. Shining. Strong. Vibrant. Rejoicing. She got the point of it all. She empowered herself because in that experience of her birth she learned that there is no perfect birth only imperfect ones which we learn much about ourselves in. I learned from her. I learned to grieve a little less about the complications. I learned to rejoice in the power of the journey.
8 comments:
Wow, Bettie-- so perfectly articulated, even in the face of there being no such thing as a perfect birth. Thank you for putting that down into words.
Thank you Jenny!
I will just say it again, Bettie.
I love you.
You are so awesome Bettie - a true inspiration to all women privileged to know you :-)
I love you guys, but I am just telling it like it is. Imperfectly.
I love this post, Bettie. It reminded me of the relatively minor - yet unexpected - complications I experienced during my first birth.
Thank you for this. I've had a rough doula month, and it's hard to feel like I matter to the mother, even when they seem grateful for my presence.
Beautiful Bettie! This is the truth of it! Thank you for your words!
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