The gentlebirth.org website is provided courtesy of
Ronnie Falcao, LM MS,
a homebirth midwife in Mountain View, CA
An interactive resource for moms on easy steps they can take to reduce exposure to chemical toxins during pregnancy. Other excellent resources about avoiding toxins during pregnancy These are easy to read and understand and are beautifully presented. |
by Carolyn Keefe
from Citizens for Midwifery News, Fall/Winter 2004
Welcome to our humble establishment. We hope you enjoy sharing your special Thanksgiving Dinner with us. Well do our best to make your dinner a unique and memorable experience.
Our highly trained professional staff is among the best in business and will work to ensure your comfort, privacy, and safety while dining in our establishment s state of the art facility. The home-like ambiance will help you relax, and you'll appreciate the comfort of knowing that the operating room is right down the hail, should the need arise.
Thanksgiving is coming up, and I thought this would be a great opportunity
to think about the normality of birth. We often say that birth is a normal
physiological process, but its hard for most people to understand what
that means. Comparisons to other normal physiological functions are valuable.
Although some others more closely resemble birth, eating will work to illustrate
how a normal function can be spoiled by over-zealous attempts to control
it.
Of course, birth is a far more profound and rare experience. Also,
in both cases, sometimes some people need help when eating people can
choke, have allergic reactions, have digestive disorders, and even need
to bypass the whole process. But in both cases, most of the time, our bodies
can perform the function more or less as designed.
Let's imagine, then, consuming our Thanksgiving dinner under the same
circumstances that most women in the US give birth:
First, you make the decision to leave home and go out to the best
restaurant in town with the best chefs. This means leaving behind your
children and most of your family, but you agree anyway.
When you make your reservations, you are informed that consuming
the meal will very likely be dangerous and difficult, so a surgeon will
be supervising in case it becomes necessary to insert a tube.
The restaurant insists that you arrive before Thanksgiving and get
started on the meal early, so as not to miss the holiday.
You are shown to a small, cold, dark room that smells awful, but
is good and sterile. You are encouraged to change into appropriate clothes
for eating, though they may be uncomfortable and make you feel self conscious.
Before you can sit down to eat, you're hooked up to an IV and wires
to monitor your progress with swallowing and digestion, just in case emergency
surgery is needed.
As you eat, various medical personnel hover, looking in your mouth
periodically sometimes in mid-chew
to make sure you're progressing well.
At the first sign of displeasure or difficulty, you're offered seasonings
to mask the flavor and the meal is pureed to make it easier to swallow.
If you aren't eating quickly enough, the surgeon comes in to give
you something to improve your appetite and tells you that the tube will
need to be inserted if you don't finish soon.
When the moment you've been waiting for finally comes, the surgeon
performs a procedure to expedite the process.
When the meal is all over, everyone tells you that are lucky to have
finished it alive, with your entire family intact. After all, such unpleasantness
is the price we pay for eating safely.
Even if you are able to complete the meal under these circumstances,
any complaints you might have are dismissed as ingratitude. You learn to
not discuss it and accept that you will be expected to undergo exactly
the same experience for each Thanksgiving dinner.
Of course, birthing women are in a far more heightened state of awareness. They are extremely vulnerable to stimuli, which can have a profound effect on their ability to function well under such circumstances and on their perceptions of the experience later.
If the meal described above seems unpleasant, imagine how difficult giving birth under such circumstances must be. That so many women do it successfully with a minimum of negative effects is remarkable. Then again, many do not. Small wonder.
We hope you have enjoyed sharing this very special meal with us. Please remember us for all your dining needs, and tell your friends and family about your wonderful experience. We look forward to serving you again!
Happy Thanksgiving and Bon Appétit!
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