10 Valuable Things Anyone Can Do To Truly Encourage
Parents To Empower Themselves During Conception, Pregnancy, Childbirth and
Beyond
by Laura Morgan
1. Adopt and express a belief in, and behave in a manner supporting,
parent's rights and abilities to make and carry out the best decisions for
themselves throughout childbearing processes. The article "26 Ways to Change
Birth Globally" ( http://www.midwiferytoday.com/articles/changebirth.htm )
says that, "The more people are exposed to hearing about midwifery and gentle
birth, the more it will become a "norm" for them. " The same is true of
parental responsibility and self empowerment. The more people are exposed to
the idea that it is normal and good to care proactively for one's own health
and well being during childbearing processes, the more they will believe it.
2.Don't ever condescend to the parents you help, even mentally. You'd
think this one would be pretty self evident, but many, many people judge and
look down on parents even when they've never been in their shoes, can't
understand where they're coming from and don't know where they've been. Just
because someone is young, doesn't have much money, has poor communication
skills, makes life choices you wouldn't, or bends easily under pressure,
doesn't mean that there isn't a brilliant person living inside that would come
out if only given respect and encouragement to follow that inner wisdom.
3.Listen to parents' communication more than you communicate to them.
Research parents' experiences and opinions of childbearing , and revere them
as the true experts rather than the opinions and experiences of other birth
professionals. Talk directly to parents instead of about them. Develop,
produce, and market such materials and resources as books, websites, articles,
and videos, and direct them towards helping parents gain the crucial
information they need to help themselves during childbearing processes, rather
than producing more materials aimed at helping professionals assist at births.
4.Expend more personal energy on helping parents gain the information they
need to help themselves than on accepting roles and responsibilities that
result from or lead to parental abdication of their roles and
responsibilities. This point seems to be pretty obvious on the surface too,
but many birth professionals make more excuses for their clients' birth
choices (like that they are just not interested in taking more responsibility,
not mature enough, not "ready"emotionally, mentally or spiritually, and so on)
than they do giving unwavering encouragement and refusing to facilitate
unhealthy reliance on the advice and actions of birth professionals.
5.Be honest and up front about all the pleasures of witnessing and
participating in the joy, excitement, wonder, and satisfaction of childbearing
processes you know of -- like the ecstasy of being the first person to touch a
newborn child -- and make absolutely sure to express to every parent you help,
that those facets belong rightfully and gloriously to them and their family
alone, and should never be shared or given away casually.
6.Become a family and birth advocate rather than a midwifery advocate.
Understand that there would be no need to promote and fight valiantly for
midwifery if families knew (and were supported in the knowledge) that they are
able to care for themselves during healthy childbearing processes. Midwives
could return to the much less interventive role of being the older women in
the community, who simply explain the way pregnancy and childbirth proceed to
new mothers and reassure them that their bodies know what to do. Midwives
could remain invaluable through such activities as teaching prenatal courses
on childbirth, cooking and cleaning for new mothers and offering help
initiating breastfeeding, instead of telling laboring women when to push,
sticking their hands inside them, monitoring and testing throughout pregnancy
and birth, and performing other invasive medical procedures.
7.Let parents know that they don't need special techniques and gadgets to
give birth safely and happily. Make sure to communicate to every mother you
help, that she has all the essential ingredients for a safe, healthy birth
within herself. A womb, a baby, a vagina, and a few warm pieces of fabric
make an excellent, complete birth kit. Childbirth and early mothering needn't
be expensive or difficult, and shouldn't be made that way through the
requirements of misguided birth attendants.
8.Don't confuse the occasional need for humane and conservative treatment
of a complication with the need for medical treatment of the childbearing
process or the participants themselves. Encourage and support parents to
demand the respectful, gentle, and closest-to-natural-as-possible treatment of
any complication they encounter simultaneous with childbearing. Remember
that, for instance, just because an infant may truly need a treatment like
breathing assistance, that does not make separation, isolation, poking and
prodding, blinding lights, vaccination, circumcision, bottle feeding,
impersonal care, or other interventions necessary, beneficial, or even
harmless elements of his care.
9.Realize that the private, irreplaceable hours comprising the actual birth
are not where birth professionals can have the most valuable, positive impact
on their clients. Here again is a point that shouldn't have to be made, but
few birth professionals are willing to "give up" being physically present
during late labor and delivery even when they aren't needed, despite the
interests of the attendant being harmfully elevated above the best interests
of the family in such cases.
10.Truly believe and behave as though "birth is not an illness" and "birth
is as safe as life gets." How many other normal, healthy, intimate bodily
functions do we advocate professional supervision, direction, assistance and
consultation for?