From the day I heard the word “midwife” spoken, I knew that was what I wanted to be. Before I knew anything about labor, or birth, or life itself, somehow I knew that was my destiny, what I was created for.
I began attending births as an apprentice at the tender age
of 18. I was at my sixth delivery at
Family Birth Services, that hot July of 1988, when I realized why my DNA had
called out for this job.
We were attending a reserved Muslim woman of Arab decent, age
32, having her first child. She had
dilated efficiently enough, but then, because the baby was posterior, had trouble
pushing her daughter out. As the
midwives did what midwives do- repositioning, encouraging, coaching, maneuvering,
consulting, trying new positions- I ended up doing what the apprentices often naturally
did at that time- taking the role of support person and doula. I ended
up on the bed next to her along with her concerned husband, providing not just
emotional support, but physical, as we got her into a variety of positions together
in an attempt to bring her baby under the pubic bone.
As she pushed, she
became less and less inhibited, and more and more desperate. With her arms around my neck, her hand in a
vise grip around my hand, and her sweat mingled with mine, she bore down in
response to her midwife’s directions. I felt the pain and the anguish and the
desperate desire for the baby to come right along with her.
When at last she triumphantly delivered her first born daughter after three hours
of pushing, she and I together explosively burst into tears of mutual joy and
relief. As she grabbed my face and
kissed me passionately in gratitude, my life’s calling fell into place.
I wasn’t able to define it at the time, but I can now. Under what other circumstances would I been
seeing, much less sharing the agony and joy of this woman? She and I, and her husband, and the midwives,
in that brief eternal three hours went beyond the veil of social, cultural,
racial and religious boundaries that would have normally separated us, dropped
all our inhibitions together, and brought her child forth.
The more I attended women, the more I noticed the uniqueness
of that day or night when the outside world ceases to exist, creating a bubble of
time within which a woman labors. Inside
this bubble, the rules change. Under what other circumstances does a woman lay
aside her coverings- both literal and emotional and become so utterly without
reserve, pretense or hypocrisy?
That’s why I love most about being a part of this special
time of labor and birth. You can’t pretend
during natural childbirth. You can’t act
like you have it all together. You can’t
bluff your way through and act like it isn’t hard. You can’t act at all.
You have to be real.
And those who are with you when you birth share that moment of realness.
Because un-medicated childbirth is as real and raw and honest as it gets in
this life.
Now that I’m more than twice the age I was on that pivotal July
afternoon, I’ve come to value honesty and transparency even more than I did
then. I’ve learned that people have many motives for the things they do and say
that aren’t fully honest, and many ways they act that are misleading. I’ve come to despise insincerity above almost
everything else short of a full lie. And
I’ve been told plenty of those too.
But when I go into the birthing room, I leave the
insincerity and lies behind, and go to a place of ultimate realness. This is the place I am most at peace, where I find the antidote for the superficiality that inundates most of the human experience.
The blue light of early morning slips in between the blinds
of the same birthing room where I was sweating twenty-five years ago. Today I calmly sit in front of a woman from Nigeria pushing on the birthing stool. My hands hold the head of her crowning child,
and my eyes hold her eyes. She tells me she
can’t. I tell her she can.
And her baby slips out into my hands.
True story.
Footnote: The pictures I posted here are not from either of the birthing stories I wrote about in this blog- because there were no pictures taken at those births. These pictures are from Sarah Warnick's birth, photo credits: Reflecting Grace Photography: http://www.reflectinggrace.com I chose them because I felt they were an accurate "reflection" of the theme of this post.
Sometimes people feel the need to protect themselves from stark clarity. They avoid situations which would absolve them of the mask. However, it's in those real, raw moments that they discover their own strength and what is truly important. It is not necessary to run from that. You learn that when you are faced with a challenge and have the support of someone who is strong like a warrior and shows you unabashed tenderness and encouragement. You learn that you don 't want to face adversity in the future without that kind of support...and you run no longer. But, your expectation of your inner circle has now changed from this point on. Beautiful piece -thank you for sharing. I too, appreciate your refreshing and realness.
ReplyDeleteOh Jenny, thank you for this! Hugs!
DeleteI love this post. Not only did it take me back nostalgically to a couple of births you did with us, but it made me yearn, once again, for realness in relationships, and realize why I do. God must have made the birth experience, among many other more obvious reasons, to show us how things can be when all our energies are synchronized together for a common purpose. Would that we could accomplish even close to the unanimity of purpose as we pursue Christ, and making him known, in the church in general and so, in our relationships with our brothers and sisters in Christ!
ReplyDeleteWould that we could, LaDonna! Thank you for that challenge and that hope.
ReplyDeleteAs I was reading, I thought about the 'birthing room' where spiritually we push out those things God has been preparing us for and has for our lives. We can't stop or give up; those who assist us must be sincere or it could be fatal to God's plans; and in the mist of the worst pain life can seem to bring, hold on because if you keep yourself in God's will and refuse to give up, His best will be 'birthed'. Many times people give up right at the brink of breakthrough, but that is when we need to push the most. These are just some thoughts that went through my head when and after reading.
ReplyDeleteBawling my head off. This is so lovely.Roxanne - Seeking permission to repost this with link to your post.
ReplyDeletetara
Of course, Tara! What a compliment!
ReplyDeleteWoow! I just thought to visit your blog today and look what I found! I am that woman from Nigeria, I did get tired to push but your gentle care and calm 'amens' as I called on the Holy Spirit helped me get through. I will NEVER forget you Roxanne!
ReplyDeleteIt was my honor, Nonye! You are a strong beautiful woman, and I will never forget you.
DeleteHi,Every day I visit a number of blog sites but I'm very happy to read your post Thanks for sharing the informative blog post about Home Birth Care NH.
ReplyDelete