Archives for January 2015

Brittany Lawrence, SBD

Certified Birth & Bereavement Doula® serving Vancouver/Camas Washington

email: BrittanyLawrence.SBD@stillbirthday.info

 

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238

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Stephanie Luce, SBD

Certified Birth & Bereavement Doula® serving Kansas City, Missouri

email: StephanieLuce.SBD@stillbirthday.info

 

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237

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Amy Donahue, SBD

Certified Birth & Bereavement Doula® serving San Diego, California

email: AmyDonahue.SBD@stillbirthday.info

 

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236

 

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I Am Sorry

What do you say to a mother whose baby has died?

We bereaved mothers have a simple yet impassioned cry

please, begin with, “I’m Sorry.”

We bereaved mothers believe this ought to be a simple concept, and a simple thing to do.  After all, you are not actually even taking responsibility of the cause of the death of the baby or even the cause of the person’s bereavement.  Yet, receiving the simple message of “I’m sorry” seems to be something so very many of us struggle with actually getting from our loved ones.

I wonder why that is.

I have challenged myself to consider that perhaps it is, in part (among other very real social issues) because, we tend to have a culture that is not sorry-friendly.

Apologizing is hard to do.

It seems it’s nearly always met with internal struggle, and sometimes, outward struggle as well.  Will our apology be accepted?  Will it make us vulnerable?  Will that vulnerability be used against us?

I think most of us wrestle in some ways with apologizing.

So I am challenging myself, and inviting the public and all who read this, to help gently hold me accountable, to opportunities in which relationships and situations might best be served by beginning or including an apology.

Because, after a really good, richly deep, soul filled apology, one that includes empathy, compassion and love and leaves the blame, shame and fear behind, I have to tell you, the feeling truly is magnificently refreshing, intrinsically rewarding.   The feeling is goodness, and goodness is something worth striving for.

I-am-sorry

Will you take the challenge?

Katherine Eltzroth, SBD

Certified Birth & Bereavement Doula® serving Maryland and Virginia

email: KatherineEltzroth.SBD@stillbirthday.info

 

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235

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Alyssa Rose Green, SBD

Certified Birth & Bereavement Doula® serving Kingston Ontario, Canada

email: AlyssaRoseGreen@stillbirthday.info

 

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234

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Audree Birdsong, SBD

Certified Birth & Bereavement Doula® serving Navajo and Apache Counties, Arizona

email: AudreeBirdsong.SBD@stillbirthday.info

 

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233

 

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Michelle Criss, SBD

Certified Birth & Bereavement Doula® serving Northwest Iowa, Southeast South Dakota, Northeast Nebraska

email: MichelleCriss.SBD@stillbirthday.info

 

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232

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That Moment

I was raised in foster care.

Every six months I had a new mom and dad.

And a real mom and dad was all I ever wanted.

Not real as in biological.  Logistics didn’t matter to me.

But a mom who would take me training bra shopping and tell me all about menstruation in ways that affirmed the beauty of maidenhood.

A mom who would teach me how to cook by sharing her family recipes and telling me they were ours.

A dad who would take me to father daughter dances and twirl me around and tell me that he loved me.

Parents.  People of authority who wouldn’t misuse power.

When little girls grow up wanting to marry a man like daddy, and little boys grow up wanting to be strong and brave like daddy,

this little girl raised in a broken system grew up believing she should and would take up employment in that broken system.

Until I became pregnant.

And the need for doula support was so compelling, that I shifted the path I had envisioned in my mind as far back as my first memories.

And I began my doula work by supporting struggling pregnant mothers.

Incidentally, mothers who were often choosing an adoption plan.

I wanted adoption.  I wanted family.  I wanted stability and love and I wanted to belong.

But adoption isn’t for everybody.

And so I began to watch as mothers, scared but in love with their babies, had hesitations.  Reservations.  More than that.  Torment.

They wanted to know, if there really is any other way.

And so I watched mothers holding their newborns, sobbing, asking me if I really will help them.  If they really can have resources.  If they really can have support.

And when they would hear the word “yes,”

that moment

It’s like they had met their baby all over again.

They would breathe even more deeply of their baby’s sweet new smell.

Their fingers would widen as their hold is somehow, more confident around their newborn.

They met their baby once, the wonder of the physical, biological connection of this baby.

And then they met their baby again, the magic of the hope, the daring to believe they can pave a path for two, in a different way than adoption would have.

Adoption is wonderful.  I longed for it my whole life.  Adoption brings redemption and healing and interconnected love and mercy and life.

But adoption quite simply isn’t for everybody.

If you are an adoption doula, you need to be open to that moment.

You need to be accountable not to misuse power.

You need to provide love unconditionally, so that the mother can, too.

You need to be in support of mothers who may be choosing an adoption plan,

rather than supporting adoption, while it just so happening to be a laboring mother in front of you to place your agenda upon.

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Rebecca Edgin Harrington, SBD

Certified Birth & Bereavement Doula® serving San Antonio, Texas

email: RebeccaEdginHarrington.SBD@stillbirthday.info

website: www.loveborndoula.com

 

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231

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The SBD® Doula provides support to families experiencing birth in any trimester and in any outcome.

Here at stillbirthday.info, you can learn about the SBD® Doula.