Birth Story: Sheila from Philadelphia
Reprinted with permission from A Living Family. My experience of birth was what some might consider ideal but most would say is far from typical. Although I had a two day warm up, my water
Reprinted with permission from A Living Family. My experience of birth was what some might consider ideal but most would say is far from typical. Although I had a two day warm up, my water
Warning: You may be jealous of this birth story!
Here's our second guest birth story. I am honestly so excited to be sharing these with everyone - they're all truly remarkable!
Wonderful story of three amazing, though very intense, births. And a lesson that no matter how much we plan, our births may not turn out as we would have them.
The story of the birth of my daughter and the lessons I was able to take home from the entire experience.
Have you ever been fed, clothed, and dry and still been sad? Or scared? Or simply felt the need for human contact? If you answered no, you are either a psychopath or lying.
The fourth installment of Re:Birth Newspaper!
You call yourselves “baby whisperers” and “experts” on how to get babies to sleep and though you write books telling parents exactly how to care for their children, it seems as though you all require a bit of a brush up on your education.
30% can mean nothing or it can mean a lot. In my case, it was a non-entity, a number I never gave much thought to until June of 2009.
The article that stood out was the summary of research on homebirth, one of the first articles of the paper, but I’ve already written on that and sadly the articles seem a little too similar to have been written 25 years apart. But a little aside – if you read this issue closely, I get a few mentions, including a brief synopsis of my birth!