Certified Birth & Bereavement Doula® serving Albuquerque and Rio Rancho, New Mexico
email: EvonnieFomento.SBD@stillbirthday.info
Support for birth. Support for bereavement. Support for you.
Certified Birth & Bereavement Doula® serving Albuquerque and Rio Rancho, New Mexico
email: EvonnieFomento.SBD@stillbirthday.info
Certified Birth & Bereavement Doula® serving Phoenix, Arizona
email: BeckyBrimhall.SBD@stillbirthday.info
Becky is a wife and mother to three babies in heaven. Since her last loss on October 7, 2013, she has been undergoing fertility treatments and looking for ways to use her grief to help other women.
In 2013, she co-founded “Forget Me Not Ministries,” which provides resources and encouragement to women and families grieving the loss of a baby.
Becky is so excited to have completed the Stillbirthday Birth and Bereavement Doula training and hopes and trusts that the Lord will use what she has learned to continue to support these women to whom she is ministering.
2 Corinthians 1:4
He comforts us in all our troubles so that we can comfort others. When they are troubled, we will be able to give them the same comfort God has given us. (NLT)
Certified Birth & Bereavement Doula® serving Colorado Springs, CO
email: ChristinaTrimble.SBD@stillbirthday.info
Luminosa Wellness & Birth Services – luminosawellness.com
Certified in Psychological First Aid
I am an Army wife and mother of 2. My passion for supporting clients is based in Holistic Health and Wellness. True wellness is comprised of emotional, physical, and spiritual wellbeing and I believe providing all three together is important for my role as a Stillbirthday Doula. I knew I wanted to become a doula during my first pregnancy. After my second was born friends of mine experienced the loss of their son. In researching loss support I came across Stillbirthday and knew immediately that I wanted to become a doula through Stillbirthday so that I could help families in need. Loss support, birth education, nutrition and wellness are all things I am passionate about.
I offer customized support to fulfill the individual needs of each client. Bereavement services are free of charge; however, love donations are gratefully welcomed so that I can continue to support other families in need. I believe no mother or family should feel alone when walking any journey of loss. I can assist local mothers and families in person and anyone by phone, email, or Skype.
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Since the DSM –V changes there’s been talk in the healing community about the insult it is to even suggest that grief is anything near depression.
But might I offer another perspective?
In my own little experience, grief has been like a spiritual cold. I laid down on that crinkly thin paper on that hard table, felt the gel on my belly. Saw my lifeless baby bobbing gently on the ultrasound, in time with the motions of the technician, searching, pressing in for his heartbeat.
A spiritual cold. A sudden chill, causing me to wrap my arms around myself and have an inconsolable compulsion to curl up in – ironically – the fetal position.
Filling the trash pail with snot and bunches of tissue.
My grief requires my self-care through nourishment. Warm brothy soups quench blood loss in the earliest days of grief, and warm a chilly soul on any day. Deep mugs of cocoa with dopples of cool whip and droplets of peppermint essential oil befriend my taste buds and remind me that some things are still good.
My grief requires my self-care through action. Expression of some kind – art, poetry, dance, throwing rocks into a pond.
My grief requires my self-care through rest. Bereavement can be stored in our physical body and manifest as seemingly unrelated issues if not nurtured into healing. Plus, sometimes, grief can get kind of messy. So if you’re one whose grief dance looks more like a shrieking, yelping, frenzied wild lady with hair pasted to your face with sweat, you might need a good long nap after your beautiful expression.
Grief, like a cold, has its moments of pure comfort in the midst of the ache. Maybe even because of the ache. When the warm blanket feels just right. When the bath feels sublime and when the toast with jam is delightful because – hallelujah – you know your stomach is strong enough to handle it.
We think we can pre-emptively prevent a cold. We think we know when “cold season” nears and we think we can find ways around it. We follow old wives’ tales about how we catch a cold and we follow old wives’ tales on how to treat a cold.
When my grief is showing, people run from me like they’re afraid of catching a cootie.
For gracious’ sake, sneeze into your arm, not your hand! We smear sanitizer all over our feelings and placate our hearts with plastic gloves, believing that the impression of a touch is as good as real contact.
And, like seasonal sneezes, even after months of sunshine, happiness and splendor, I can still catch that cold of grief again. And so I’ve learned to tend to my grieving heart, stock up on broth and hankies, and discover purpose in the respite.
Depression is different.
Depression, feels like spiritual cancer. And I don’t want to trip up my Christian friends so if you believe that your soul has an eternal home, spiritual cancer does not mean that this home is eroding or becoming any less secure. What I mean by spiritual cancer is still purely within the earthly realm. Nor do I mean to belittle anyone surviving with physical cancer. I mean this analogy in the deepest reverence for your endurance.
And so yet this becomes harder to explain.
Depression, despite its name, does not feel so much as a pressing in. It feels like a cataclysmic barging in, like a wringing out of any last droplet of the dew of happy. Where grief is a tenderness in my heart, depression’s work feels mostly rooted in my mind. Physically, I can feel it there, like a presence invading my home. Depression feels like my mind has become so preoccupied with a conversation with this intruder; it feels like the purpose of my committing to this conversation in the first place is literally to tell this intruder that it is not welcome here. The dialogue is in trying to deny my feelings for the good of others, and is such an investment of my attention, such a consuming task, that anything from outside of this conversation becomes an interruption and invariably, proves to be an attack against the very point of the conversation.
My depression requires self-care through my permission. Resisting the reality of depression does not heal it. Willing it away only works as long as your will does. If depression’s really here, it’ll test your will and, it will break your will.
My depression requires self-care through my building of my team. This is the tipping point and why so many who endure depression do so alone. Because the alternative, attempting to build your team, does something terribly frightening to someone already becoming deepened by depression. It means you become vulnerable to even more attack, and, at your most vulnerable – the place you are literally asking to be filled. And if you are vulnerable to attack, you will likely find it. Because your loved one who is depressed and who has the boldness to ask for help, is like a little kid with a scraped arm. They cusp their hand over their crooked, outstretched arm – taking it to you, yet guarded even in doing so. They move their clasped hand and, with eyes wide and wet, reveal their wound to you. And rejection of depression is like the trusted school teacher or parent slapping the arm down and ridiculing the child for the injury in the first place. Exposing depression is a terribly frightening thing to do, because it’s hard to prove the worthiness of the injury.
These statements sound bleak, and at first, they are. Frighteningly so.
Both in and out of grief, I require affirmation, validation and love. Because I need these things, I have learned to harvest them from safe places, like home, friends and church. But under attack of this spiritual cancer, even these safe places have become infested with doubt, minimization, silence, and even flat out rejection.
My depression is a kind of starvation. A soul gnawing hunger for the most basic acknowledgement of the worth of me. When I take a deep breath and become intentional of the other parts of me, I find that depression feels like a full grown person squashing my stomach. It makes me literally ache. It hurts to breathe. It hurts not to.
My depression is not a new version of grief. If I could just suppress my feelings about the death of my baby, the death of his personhood, his inherent worth, his place in my mother heart, I would be relieved of neither grief nor depression.
Depression is not grief magnified. Depression is not grief.
Cancer is not caused from too many colds. There may be some precautions to prevent cancer, or depression, but those should not be blamed on or waddled in with shame once the cancer, spiritual or physical, manifests and is identified.
But what is it like, when the two meet? Grief, and depression?
Let me say this:
I am still bereaved. I am still depressed. I am still good.
I know it’s grief when:
I know it’s depression when:
My personal life is such that the feeling of impossibly trapped in alone, suffocated by everyone else manifests quite often. It perpetuates and festers the depression.
I have felt like those who have a view of my life have taken an irresponsible approach in waiting for me to identify my own mental unwellness as the root of all that is not in place in my life. I have felt betrayed and abandoned. I have felt blamed.
I have felt that their breathing their assessments in my face has taken up the sweet oxygen I have needed when I was already drowning.
I have already crossed that tipping point and have asked for help when I so desperately needed it, and I have felt the slap on the wound.
So I want to be careful to those who are reading this who are nearing the embrace of your own depression. You should ask for help.
But I need to speak about what to do when help doesn’t help.
I was ignored.
I was ignored.
I was ignored, again.
And there was no book to read, there was no phone number to call, there was no place to drive to, that heard me.
When I read Bible verses like horoscopes and they still didn’t work.
When I called my counselor and was put through voicemail.
When I went to my church and was left in the hallway.
There might be a time you reach that critical moment. That peak. When you feel like you are supposed to jump. To quit. To quiet the depression, to find rest from this exhausting journey.
In those moments there is literally nobody else. Not your husband, not your friends, not your children. Nobody. Nobody is rescuing you, nobody is even hearing your heartcry, and in fact may seem to be taunting you with even more needs you’re expected to fill.
Please, just don’t jump.
Someone once said, and there’s beauty to it, that when everything hurts, do the thing that hurts the least.
Pull over to the side of the road, if you have to. Get into a storm shelter.
Crumble, if you must. Collapse on the ground, and let the dirt mix with your tears and make you a mud mask. Roll around in it, and maybe you can even laugh at the fun.
Just, don’t, jump.
I promise, I promise, I promise, a gentle breeze will come. One that listens, believes you, believes in you.
For me, that breeze has been God. I have felt in those sudden, terrifying, horrifically overwhelming moments on the cliff that it is literally just me and God. I can’t explain it academically and even the word God might seem to you to carry the stench of proselytizing. But I have been in some real moments, when there was literally nothing else. Nothing. Else. Call it what you want, I do not care. Just call for it. It will come. I promise.
When you are ready to build your team (again) – consider these resources:
For those reading who aren’t familiar with depression, and you believe some of those old tales about what it is, here are some things that are true:
Love, itself, the mysterious force,
not by person, place or thing, but by simple, supernatural, invisible presence
can find you, even in the ugliest moments, the moments of disorder, chaos, and overwhelm.
The impossible moments.
If you believe this, simply and only this, you too can love wildly.
Families all over the world who have been personally impacted by pregnancy and infant loss gather to hold vigils throughout the month of October, and most especially on October 15, a day known as International Remembrance day.
October was declared Pregnancy and Infant Loss Awareness month in 1988 by then President Ronald Reagan.
So stillbirthday, with help from Missouri Senator Roy Blunt and Senator Claire McCaskill, is arranging for an American flag to be flown over the United States capitol on October 25, the date that Proclamation 5890 was signed.
Thank you, President Reagan, for honoring all families impacted by pregnancy and infant loss.
Please click here to read Proclamation 5890.
Links:
A mother experiences a pregnancy and infant loss literally every minute in the United States, many occurring at approximately 12 weeks gestation. The approximate size of baby in utero at 12 weeks gestation is about the size of a plum. If the number of American losses annually were represented in plums, laid side by side across the US capitol grounds (approximately 2 miles) it would take 24 rows of plums lined fully across the entire grounds.
24 rows
The pink & blue ribbon, for Pregnancy & Infant Loss Awareness & Remembrance
Certified Birth & Bereavement Doula® serving Atlanta, Georgia
email: CatherineCabe.SBD@stillbirthday.info
Discover what the SBD credentialed doula has achieved.
For three years, stillbirthday has offered support prior to, during and after birth in any trimester and with any expected or unexpected diagnosis or outcome, including NICU, and pregnancy and infant loss.
Now, we are offering the most frequently visited site pages in the form of a printed book!
These little booklets, about 200 pages, contain the most frequently visited pages of stillbirthday:
We also have helpful hospital brochures
you can print and freely distribute from this page about our doulas.
This giveaway is your chance to nominate your local hospital (particularly maternity hospital), independent ultrasound facility or birthing center. Share the name of the institution and why you’d like them to win. It doesn’t matter how many books they ask for, stillbirthday will issue that facility enough books they need to get started in supporting families experiencing pregnancy and infant loss.
When families learn that their baby is not alive, this book reaching them can guide them into the validation they deserve, along with the immediate, real practical information they need for the many decisions they face. This is a wonderful way to let a freshly bereaved mother hold onto something tangible as she tries to make sense of quite possibly the darkest days of her life.
Just leave a comment below to enter, with your nomination! Each nomination will be entered into the giveaway, and this gives you the chance to express in your own words what it will mean to you to know that your nominated facility will have a way of supporting families in those most immediate moments.
One random entry will be chosen on October 10, so that the named institution can be connected before October 15, International Remembrance day.
Every location and every applicable facility can be nominated, any individual can nominate, you can nominate more than one facility, and the same facility can be nominated by more than one person!
Every effort will be made to ensure the chosen location receives their necessary starting amount, which may be any number from 10 to 100 books. If the chosen location is not reachable, the nominee will select a second location.
Please “like” our facebook page for updates!
Right now the Immediate Decisions books are available in these versions, and include shipping:
If you need immediate support, please do not wait for the book. Please visit the resources throughout stillbirthday for support prior to, during and after birth in any trimester. We don’t offer tracking for international orders to keep a realistic cost for you. Shipping times vary.
Please note that the versions translated from English may contain translation errors.
High school mothers matter.
High school mothers matter, because mothers matter.
If she experiences pregnancy during the formative years of adolescence, the young mother deserves unobtrusive validation and unconditional love.
Less than a week ago, a teen mother experienced a natural miscarriage in a second floor bathroom stall at her public high school.
And, as the baby was discovered yet in the basin of the toilet by the school janitor, the high school principal alerted the local authorities.
The authorities arrived by vehicle. By helicopter. By what high school students called a “swarm.”
I personally hold a great deal of respect for our authorities and I understand the urgency in defending the life of this baby, and the importance of investigating to ensure that the mother is safe.
The fact that media coverage is painting an overarching response by police doesn’t seem coincidental and it seems like a ploy to turn one mother’s loss into propaganda against authorities trained to serve and protect our communities.
I sought a medical provider. I learned that my baby was not alive, and my provider literally said, “We need to get that debris out of there.”
I gave birth in my bathroom.
And my baby had no medical right, no legal right. I felt entirely abandoned and alone.
I do not appreciate the media coverage painting this story as if police were eager to barge into the school to shoot down an innocent girl.
The authorities were told that a teen girl had had a baby in the bathroom stall on a school day, and they came on the scene. A situation like this would have a million different questions, each gigantically important and they had to respond.
I am glad that they did.
With that said, mistakes were made.
A spokesperson for the local initiative to promote the Baby Moses law offered a presumptuous, ill-informed message about the mother that was saturated in arrogance and offense.
Baby Moses law is a valuable opportunity for struggling new mothers of many situations. It provides a small window of time in which the mother is exempt from criminal charges by relinquishing her baby to a designated institution such as a hospital, fire station, police station or even some churches. This as an alternative to abandoning babies in trash cans, and it is an option that has and is saving lives.
Opportunities to provide mothers with real options, such as the many different approaches to adoption, teen single parent education and the Baby Moses initiative, do empower individuals and families to make the best decisions in the situations they are facing.
However, for a spokesperson of an infant crisis initiative to declare that the display of authorities entering into the public high school or even that the death of her baby was preventable had she chosen to carry to term is cruel, ill-timed and flat not true.
It’s speaking into an area the man knows not of.
By the age of 19, seven out of one hundred girls become pregnant. And that’s not from a firmly pro-life source, that’s sourced from planned parenthood itself.
Add in the statistics that every minute a mother in the US experiences a pregnancy and infant loss, the reality that a teen mother can endure a spontaneous miscarriage or stillbirth is real.
The reality that teens can face not only parenting, but bereavement, is real.
Teen parenting is hard. Flat hard. But coming from the place that every teen mother either should have an elective abortion or wants to have an elective abortion is offensively irresponsible and horrendously inappropriate.
Teen mothers face doubts of their abilities, not only as mothers, but as mothers who are charged with the balance of wearing the shame from their parents and/or local leaders, the isolation from their previous social construct, the pressure of maintaining grades during a pregnancy that requires prenatal medical appointments, and trying to make due with the lack of emotional support from a partner who is facing many of the exact same challenges, pressures and burdens.
These, among many other things.
Here are just a few questions to consider:
There are options. Options not just for teen mothers, but options for those who are in roles of authority or charged with their care.
Inspired by Lisa Miller, stillbirthday has a Church and Campus Doula tuition discount program as an opportunity into our comprehensive birth & bereavement training to prepare individuals to serve as doulas (through our online doula program for a dramatic discount on tuition) who have a heart to serve within specific congregations of any faith or to serve as a real, tangible support for students on any school campus. In fact, it was Lisa who first came to know about the recent situation and the young mother in the high school.
To a warrior,
What you have faced, I do not know all the details of. Were you in love? Did you know you became pregnant? Did he know?
Oh, sweet young friend, I wonder so many things about you.
Did you know that labor was happening? Did you feel alone?
I think of you and in my mind I see you trying to go back to class. And I weep for you, I weep for you, my friend I think of with fondness.
You are courageous.
You have endured so much. So, very much.
And when the police came, how terrifying that must have felt.
Like a nightmare that not only didn’t end, but brought everyone you knew into it.
And then the shame and condemnation already thrust upon you, before you even spoke. People who are supposed to be trustworthy, representing places and resources and options that are supposed to be trustworthy. To hear from them that you did things wrong, that you did things bad, and that giving birth in a bathroom stall during school hours is a criminal act.
I want to tell you, and I want all teen girls to hear me.
Even if the thought of elective abortion had crossed your mind – or, even if you had decided on and had acted on elective abortion – you are still worthy of love.
Even if laws regarding the right of life in utero are involved in your story, even if medical involvement ensuring your obstetrical and physical health are involved in your story, those are aspects (aspects that likely feel huge, but they are only aspects) and are not – are never – the whole story.
You matter. You count.
And to the students of the school, if you felt that the police presence was a really big deal – may you know, that giving birth to a baby not alive really is a big deal. Your fellow student matters. She has endured more than you know, and she is in need of and worthy of honor, validation and love.
I can promise you, that many of your teachers, faculty, or friends’ parents have likely experienced pregnancy and infant loss. Your own mother might have.
We need to talk about it. Politics and agendas and propaganda aside. We need to talk about the realities, the needs of those impacted by pregnancy and infant loss.
I challenge you to open the conversation. Ask the women of all ages in your life.
“Have you ever, or do you know of anyone, who has been impacted by pregnancy and infant loss?”
Between miscarriage of all its names, elective abortion, stillbirth and neonatal death, for every baby who reaches two months old past birth, there is another who is not alive. Literally, the statistics are 1:2 in the United States.
So if you have not personally been impacted by pregnancy and infant loss, you are an arms length away from at least one person in your own life, who has.
Do you know who they are?
It is time we ask, and listen.
Additional Resources:
Certified Birth & Bereavement Doula® serving QLD/Gold Coast, Australia
email: LizLotscher.SBD@stillbirthday.info
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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.