Shared by: Holly
Evanee and Carleigh
Support for birth. Support for bereavement. Support for you.
You two have been through a lot together. Write him or her a love letter.
Just use our sharing tab, and it will be held here.
And, you can read this collection of Love Letters, here.
Because of the unique nature of the role of the SBD doula, we often come in contact with other birth professionals, trained through other birth preparation organizations who do not have the depth of training of birth and bereavement support that we do here at stillbirthday.
It is because of this, that I feel led to write a statement to make it clear of the stillbirthday position regarding an action that occurs among other birth professionals. This should be considered an open letter to those birth professionals (doulas and midwives) who engage in this behavior.
To be clear, I’d like to articulate two terms:
It is flat inappropriate, to rally with public frenzy for bailout funds, for every incarcerated midwife, simply on merit of one calling herself a midwife. It is irresponsible, shortsighted, and it abandons the reality that both a birth and a death have taken place. It is just as shameful to exploit bereaved mothers’ experiences as an effort to stop homebirth, as one doctor has done.
It is inappropriate for the families that you serve, to see your focus seated squarely and entirely on the legal aspect of these situations with bailout rallies. It shows that your service to families is actually conditional, and that service ends when it becomes uncomfortable for you.
It shows that your reactionary behavior to unexpected infant loss is entirely presumptuous and fear based. “We need to preserve our ability to support *future* families” as a reason for this response abandons the families whom you are already charged with caring for.
I am thankful that the number of birth professionals who respond in this way are few, but, to be sure, the potential damage this response can cause already bereaved families is exponential and catastrophic.
It is important for all of us to remain squarely in our scope.
A baby died. A baby died. A baby died.
Take the rest out of it. Wherever the midwife is – in jail while her accountability is being reviewed by those qualified to review it, or at home, curled up on the couch with a blanket – a baby died.
There are midwives who go into jails to support pregnant mothers. Why aren’t there rallies to get into the jail to simply offer bereavement support to the midwife?
Where is the acknowledgement to the bereaved mother, who has breastmilk and no baby to suckle? Who has lochia and no baby to help shrink her uterus? Who has postpartum hormones spiraling AND grief to mix in with them, and no coohs to listen to soothe her aching heart, no sweet baby smell to console her desperately broken heart? How are you responding? By telling her that midwifery is ancient, that she chose the coffin so let the baby lay in it. By telling her that we don’t believe her, that we don’t care about her, and by the way, would you like to donate to our bailout fund.
In situations like this, stillbirthday has been the only platform that says,
“accountability or not, that is only part of your experience. Let’s begin to work toward holistic healing”,
and we do this, for mothers who believe their midwife OR their doctor OR even themselves might be accountable.
We do this, for every situation, for every birth method, for every person, every time.
To respond in any other way is dishonoring both to the family and to professionals involved, each of whom may be grieving.
To every mother who has ever experienced a pregnancy and infant loss, and who has, additionally, had her involvement speculated, who has ever been made to feel that her child is secondary to any other aspect of her experience, who has had her experience splashed through conversation in any atrocious, predatorial, speculatory fashion, I am so sorry. The possibility of such glaring neglect to your needs can rapidly and easily become a secondary trauma, one which you may need comprehensive support through. You have a right to your own interpretation of your own events, and you have a right to be loved, simply and inherently, as a mother who gave birth, and as a mother who is grieving.
And to every birth provider, of any level, who has ever been incarcerated in regard to your involvement in a birth, I am sorry for the focus that might have been seated squarely in your physical location or even your title, rather than on addressing the grief you may have felt or may feel at the death of the baby whom you were charged with guiding in birth.
To all mothers, and all providers:
May you each, feel validated, for the entirety of what you experienced.
May you each, come to find the releasing, freeing truth, that any guilt – felt, inflicted or accused – is not the entirety of your experience.
May you each, find healing.
Yesterday, at the stillbirthday Facebook page, I shared this:
“In English folklore butterflies were said to be the souls of babies who had not yet been named. The act of naming a child is believed to be a covenant that binds the baby to the physical world – now he is a member of our family and a wider community.” ~With Child
Following this, I extended an invitation to parents to share the names of their babies. That names list is long and growing.
Last night, as I was thinking on the very different but very real ways we parent both our living and our deceased children, the thought occurred to me, that there are very few ways to parent all of our children, together.
Which brings me to this, that because we parent our deceased children, we are, in fact, still together.
So, there is now a place, at stillbirthday, where you can keep all of your children, still together, just like they are, in your heart.
Do you have a photo that includes your living and your deceased children together? Ways might include:
If you don’t have such a photo, you can simply write the names of all of your children, living and deceased, together. Just a simple little place, really, where you can come and see the names of all of your children, together.
How to share your Still Together entry:
Whether a photo or a written list of all of your children, you can share your Still Together entry by emailing to Heidi.faith@stillbirthday.info with “Still Together” as the subject line, or you can use the Share Your Story link. Contributions are held in a special section of stillbirthday entitled Still Together.
Certified Birth & Bereavement Doula® serving in York and Lancaster County, PA and Harford and Baltimore County, MD.
Email: MaryBethNance.SBD@stillbirthday.info
Visit MaryBeth’s website
I am DONA, CAPPA and Stillbirthday trained and certified as a labor, birth and bereavement doula. I am also a Patient and Family Advocate and Volunteer Lay Chaplain at my local hospital. I serve the Harford County, MD and York and Lancaster County, PA areas. I have both personally and professionally experienced pregnancy and infant loss.
MaryBeth Nance, CD, CLD, SBD
Discover what the SBD credentialed doula has achieved.
Told by: Stephanie
I found out I was pregnant with twins at my six week ultrasound, and I was really thrilled! I just knew it was twins because I was looking like I was five months pregnant when I was only four weeks pregnant.
I was looking at the ultrasound screen and saw only one sac and one fetal pole. Then the ultrasound technician moved the trans-vaginal probe and there were two little sacs and two little fetal poles. The technician looked at me and said “How does twins sound”? I said to the technician “I knew it was twins, I look huge”.
Everything went great through the whole pregnancy.
At my thirty first week into my pregnancy all chaos broke loose. I went into pre-term labor and had to be admitted to labor and delivery. I was dilated to one centimeter and had to be put on a magnesium sulfate drip. When the nurse lowered my dosage I went back into full contractions and ended up dilating to two centimeters. I ended up having to be left on a high dosage of magnesium sulfate for 24 hours. After 24 hours of the magnesium sulfate drip I was taken off of it. Everything was going well in the hospital I was on a contraction monitor the whole stay and a non stress test every four hours. I had an ultrasound done at thirty two weeks into my pregnancy in the labor and delivery and both babies looked great, heartbeat was wonderful, they where weighing wonderfully. The scan showed that my daughter which was baby B had placental aging, the technician who did the scan thought she would be brought into the world early due to this. Unfortunately, no one did anything about this, nor did the doctors put my twins on a fetal heartbeat monitor except the every four hours, I was just left on the contraction monitor.
On April 16th 2009 at 32 weeks the nurses couldn’t find two heartbeats during the non stress test in the morning, and they failed to do an ultrasound at that time as they thought just one was hiding behind the other. Later, when the nurse change occurred it was time for another non stress test in which the nurses couldn’t find the second heartbeat of the other twin. So, they talked to the doctor and the doctor ordered an ultrasound right away.
The nurses came into the room there was about four nurses and a ultrasound technician who followed with the ultrasound machine. I was looking at the ultrasound screen looking at my twins when I noticed the nurse squeezing my hand, I looked at her and smiled, then I looked back at the ultrasound screen and realized that there was no color to the placenta. The nurse kept squeezing my hand the whole time she asked “Are you okay”? I replied “Is there a heartbeat”? She responded “No sweetheart, I am sorry”.
We all thought that I was going to be induced that night to keep anything from hurting my son baby A who had his cord wrapped around neck three times. Unfortunately, the perinatologist wouldn’t do this, and said that the longer the baby is in the better, and only 1% chance the same thing would happen to him.
On April 17th I had an ultrasound early in the morning to check on my son. I was so used to seeing both of them on the screen but the technician only showed my son. He was doing great and all the perinatologist said to me is “See he is okay”! I took a nap around one pm and I was woken up to “sweetheart I need you to roll over” by the nurse, and the nurse looking at the heartbeat screen. At this point I was on the monitor 24/7. My son’s heart decelerated. I said “go tell the doctor to take him out now!”
The doctor was called and told what happened. The nurse came back in and said “we will induce you.” I received an epidural and my water was broken. I waited on the contractions to start, but after two hours my contractions where not coming as fast as they wanted; at 2:00 am on April 18th 2009 they started me on pertocine to jump start labor faster. I was dilated to 7cm when my son started to crown so I started pushing at 4:50 AM and welcomed my son into the world at 5:00 Am. I stopped contracting after he was born so the doctor had to put her arm all the way up to elbow inside my uterus to get my daughter to turn somehow so the doctor could either grab my daughters feet to bring her out, or get it to where her head would go down. Finally, after 24 minutes of the doctors arm elbow deep I welcomed my daughter into the world . I was able to see my son for a minute before they took him back into the NICU.
I was able to hold my daughter whenever I wanted, give her a bath, put clothes on her. This by far was the worse thing ever in my life. I couldn’t see her eyes, hear her cries. I felt dead and empty. I was able to visit my son but not hold him since he was put on CPAP. He was able to go home after a week or two. But, I had to put my daughter in the ground .
Serenity was born at 5:24 am on April 18th 2009. 3 pounds and 12 oz and 17 inches long at 33 weeks.
Tristan was 5 pounds 8 oz and 18 inches long. There is never a second of the day that goes by that I never stop thinking of her and what she would have looked like today. How would her eyes look and her hair how long would it be. It never gets easier every year it gets worse around the time of the birth of her.
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.