tattercoats wrote:I was hugely inspired, Adam, by a book called 'Spiritual Midwifery'.
It's basically the account of the birthing practices of a very hippy/christian/buddhist community in America over a couple of decades - they were isolated enough on their farm that they decided they needed their own midwives, and had a battle royal getting their own folk certified to deliver at home on the farm (when of course many poor americans can't afford hospitalised births anyway!).
Basically they evolved a very natural attitude and have very very good statistics. They avoid the intervention cascade where at all possible, but have back up on site, in their midwife kits, and in their own skills, where needed.
The hippy dippy stuff is not everyone's cup of chai. It's not mine, but what was inspiring was to read many many accounts of natural births, to get a grasp of the vast spectrum that comprises 'normal'.
It's all risk assessment, isn't it? Goodness knows there are other areas of life where if we weighed the risks and probabilities the way births are managed, we'd never cook at home for fear of salmonella, nor cross the road for fear of being run over.
Hoping for a fine and healthy outcome for you and yours, and a baby who sleeps!
The book sounds like it had the same effect on you as "The Business of Birth" had on me. I didn't really appreciate quite how profound giving birth was as human experience.
It so true about weighing up risks. Throughout the rest of our lives, until the day we die, we are going to be making decisions about probability of accidents and assessment of risk on behalf of our children.
I wonder if we were living an hour away from a maternity unit, emordnilap, whether we would be so relaxed about a home birth. The midwives where we are seem to be very well prepared for home births and we are doing a "Hypno-birthing" course, which teaches you auto-suggestion techniques to put yourself into a state of deep relaxation. Two of the community midwives have said to us that they were really surprised at how effective it is at easing births. Despite that, if a one in hundred problem arose which required a hospital admission, a one + hour journey would not be fun.