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Birthing Heros ... Naturally

By: Marnie Eldridge (View Profile)

I live in Los Angeles, that wonderful city wherein everyone touts Botox, chemical peels and breast augmentation. It is a city wherein the natural is to be disdained—for what is natural is fleeting. Furthermore, LA is a city that often sets the standard of the pervasive mainstream mentality. And recently, I have come to recognize this rejection of the natural has seeped into the sacred realm of birthing. This issue became tinsel town table talk when one young starlit, at the end of her pregnancy, was quoted by the press as saying she was afraid of the pain of childbirth. Thus, feeling she could not handle such, she was opting for caesarian surgery. Many women alike voiced their sympathies for they too embraced pain bypassing epidurals and shortcut surgeries. One woman stated on national television, “Yes, I took the epidural,” throwing her hands up, “there’s no need to be a hero.”

I must disagree.

Though I do not want to make any woman feel under attack for the decisions she makes concerning her own body, we are very much in need of heroes, especially when it comes to reclaiming birth. Therefore, I must salute all the cowgirls out there, about whom we rarely hear, that had faith in their bodies. They, upon entering into that sacred pact with their child, saw it through to the bitter end and who found the courage in their hearts to embrace the full ramification of motherhood however intense and beautifully painful that may be. This is a Ye-Haw to my sisters, us lone rangers who not only did it naturally, but our way.

Upon discovering my husband and I had, in the act of loving, sparked the life of another, I immediately began to think about birth. Then, I began to pray about birth. For, as every pregnant woman innately does, I knew that this was going to be the greatest challenge of my life thus far.

To be frank, it scared the piss out me.

In my fear, I meditated, I spoke long and hard to the benevolent Spirit above and I fell back on faith. Spirit answered in the form of a gift from a lifelong friend who sent me Naomi Wolf’s Misconceptions. I tore through it, hungry for information, insight and direction. When the book lay devoured, I knew in my gut that I did not want to birth in a hospital. I knew in my core that childbirth was something very different from what it has been deformed into by our current birthing industry and our fear driven mass media.

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posted: 11.30.2007
Clare Allen
Wow, this is an amazing article, thank you :) I have just recently discovered I am preganant and I am very lucky to have a doctor that believes in all natural birth far away from hospitals, drips and sick people. As a young woman natuarl birth without drugs or cutting etc has not been encouraged in society, movies and soap opera's have depicted birth as so terrifying and people just seem to concentrate on the negative of what is suppossed to be a truly beautiful and natural experience... I am going natural all the way, and with God by my side I know it will only be a success!!
posted: 10.25.2007
Mommy pro Mommy pro
just a thank-you i hear everyone i know, who have given birth, talk about the pain meds they got durring labor an delivery or how they just loved their epidural and i just can't understand why they feel they have to have it i am a mother of 6 with #7 on the way and i had every one of them completely natural and am planning to do the same this time even with my oldest i was 17 and in labor for 42 hours i'm 4' 11" and 113 lbs. and i had no problem goin natural so thank-you again i was startin to think i was the only person who still went natural
posted: 09.05.2007
Lisa Walsh
I had my son three years ago, I went completly NATURAL!! It is very hard and all you can do is think of the positive the baby will be here soon. Alot of people I know say to me why?? how could you do that, the drugs are there take them. I always smile and say because I did not need it. I am very proud of myself for not recieving any pain medicine and here I am three years later with just over a month to go and about to do it again. If you are really strong and can get through the uncomfortable and at times unbareable moments when the doctor says "ok you are 10 centimeters dialated, if you need to push go ahead" (I must say those were my favorite words!!!!) The satisfaction after of knowing I did this, we created this amazing little person who is going to depend on you for everything, I feel deserves the best!!
posted: 08.02.2007
Mara Raden
Unlike some birth at home mothers, I had the benefit of being born at home myself along with my four brothers and sisters. So my experience has not been one of heroism but rather living up to the brave example my mother set for me. In a way I have not been a radical or a role model, but just amother, as nature intends. Although, when my third son was born outside in the front yard last June, in less than two hours labor, with little to do, I felt pretty tough.
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