Momma’s Favorite Lactation Cookies

One of my favorite ways to boost my milk supply has to be these lactation cookies! They are super delicious and every time I eat them my milk supply is awesome! I make them when I know I have to pump a little extra milk for my little lady.  I’ve tried a few recipes, but these are the best tasting and most effective ones I’ve tried. I’ve adapted this recipe from http://www.bellybelly.com.au/breastfeeding/lactation-cookies/.  I hope they work out for you. Worst case scenario, you just get to enjoy some delicious cookies:D  several people have asked for this recipe so here it is!

Prep time: approx. 15 minutes

Oven temp: preheat to 335-340F

Makes approx. 14-16 cookies, using a dessert spoon per cookie (double the recipe for more)

Recipe

1 cup self raising wholemeal flour (if you have plain flour, add 1/2 teaspoon baking powder. You could probably substitute with coconut or almond flour but I haven’t tried that yet)

1/2 cup coconut oil

1/2 cup brown sugar )

1 egg

2 tablespoons flaxseed meal

3 tablespoons of water

1 tablespoon vanilla extract

1 teaspoon cinnamon

2 tablespoons of brewers yeast – do not substitute with bakers yeast or any other yeast

1/2 teaspoon salt – use himalayan salt if possible

1 & 1/2 cups oats – organic, steel cut oats are best for you, but rolled oats are fine

1/2 cup of dark chocolate chips or your favorite cookie extras- you can alter this and add fruit, nuts, whatever your lactating self is craving 😂

 

Directions

In a large mixing bowl, cream the butter and sugar, then add the egg and vanilla. Mix well. In a separate bowl, combine the flaxseed and water, let them sit for a few minutes before adding to mix. Add the dry ingredients (apart from the oats and your additional ingredients) and mix well again. Finally, stir in the oats and your additional ingredients. Spoon 2 tbsp sized scoops cookie dough balls and place them onto a lightly greased or lined baking tray. Bake the lactation cookies for around 10-12 minutes, depending on how soft/ crunchy you want them. I like mine super soft so I do 10 minutes. Remove from oven, take pretty picture and enjoy 😂😂

I hope these work wonders for you!

Charlie’s Birth Story

She’s here! She’s here!  Our beautiful Charlotte Reece was born January 2 at 2:21 pm weighing 7lbs 15oz and 20 inches long.  Based on how big my belly was, I was sure she was at least an 8lb baby, but she was just right!  Our sweet Norah is down for a nap and Charlie is snuggled up asleep as well.  As I look at my two beautiful daughters, and am overwhelmed with how blessed Chris and I are. We have joked since we were 20 years old about having two beautiful daughters we were once told Chris would give me, another story for another time, but they are here!!! We are SO in love!

I thought while the girls are sleeping, I could start to write about our home birth experience.  I am not exaggerating when I say it was one of the most incredible experiences of my life!  When Chris and I found out we were expecting baby #2, I knew that a home birth was the way I wanted to go.  I really struggled with Norah’s birth experience.  There were no actual complications, but a really long labor (30 hours) and an experience that was unfortunately fairly common, was full of joy and also trauma. I should share that a hospital is not a place I associate with comfort or care. While they are necessary and I am so grateful we have access to the care we do, I find it very difficult to feel safe or relaxed in that environment.  Any time I would tell the staff what I felt my body was telling me to do, they would tease me and have me do something different.  I won’t get into the trauma of our first birth here, but I walked away from that experience fully believing that if I had a provider who could truly advocate for us and be in an environment where I felt safe, our experience could be different.  And Charlie’s birth proved this big time for me.

I started looking for midwives right away, like the day I found out I was pregnant. Chris wasn’t sold on a home birth at this point but the more we researched and the more I stressed to Chris how badly I wanted a home birth, he decided we should do it.  We met with our midwives and decided home birth was going to happen.  Their values aligned with ours and I felt strongly that this was the way we were to go. The whole experience seeing a midwife vs. a Dr. was so different.  They gave us so much responsibility and ownership in the whole process.  We checked so many of our own vitals and levels, were given nutrition education, pre and post natal education, asked to follow a stricter diet, asked to take different vitamins and nutritional supplements, specific to my needs, and there was such an emphasis placed on our health and creating a healthier lifestyle than we even came close to experiencing with our first experience.   Everything was so natural, warm and comfortable.  All my checkups were done in a big cozy bed and I just felt so taken care of.

There were many times when I would ask my doctor or nurse a question and they wouldn’t have an answer or, after researching, I would discover many of the answers they gave me were inaccurate.  It wasn’t that I was being lied to, I was just being given the only information that they knew, which was not truthful. Our midwives gave us nutrition classes, birthing classes, pre and post-natal classes and the education aspect of this experience was so cool to me.

It wasn’t until about a month before we had Charlie that we decided to do a water birth.  The last 2 months of my pregnancy I had crazy back pain and our midwives thought that the water could provide some nice relief for me.  I’m so glad they suggested we do a water birth!   A few weeks before we were due, the lead midwife was going to be in Haiti and she would need to leave a week before my due date.  We talked about what we  might do and we decided she should go to Haiti and we would naturally encourage labor the day before she left.  At first I struggled with the thought of encouraging labor in any way because I wanted to do things “all natural” and this seemed to contradict this, but everything worked out well. (Coming in to edit this. Several years later, knowing what I know now, I grieve choosing to go about this and would advise if any provider tries to encourage you to be induced early for non medical, non necessary reasons, do not do it. We chose another midwife, the secondary midwife in this birth, for the rest of our deliveries and are so grateful we did so. Neither of us wanted to be placed in this situation and learned much from the experience. Being induced early without good reason or for convenience of the provider puts both the mother and baby in danger.)

Monday morning, December 31st, I was dilated at a 4, 95% effaced and Charlie was at station 0.  The plan was to go again Wednesday night to see how I was doing before Thursday, the morning we would encourage labor, but due to snow we decided we would just see them the next morning.   I could hardly sleep Wednesday night knowing we would meet our sweet Charlie the next day!

So, Thursday morning, Chris and I woke up early and made my labor encouraging milkshake which consisted of castor oil, chocolate ice cream and chocolate syrup.  For those of you who have never eaten castor oil, you’re not missing out on anything.  That stuff is funky.  I had read horror stories about the fun bathroom times that castor oil would give me, but I did not experience this.  I probably would have been sicker just eating at a salad bar:) I had a little bit of this concoction at 6:30, 7:30 and 8:30. Chris started juicing me a bunch of delicious fresh juices to drink during labor and I snacked away on crackers and sprite.

Our midwives arrived at 10am and I felt great.   The ladies came in with all their gear and were all set up by 10:30.   Here’s where the fun begins.

They put the tub in the dining room and set up shop in our bedroom which was so very cool.  Basically our bedroom was turned into a birthing/ recovery room.  I got all nestled in bed and felt so comfortable.  I was dilated to a 9!!! A 9 and I was experiencing 0 pain!!!  An 8 is usually when you hit transition and is considered the most painful/hardest stage of labor, yet I had no discomfort or pain at all?! I was still 95% effaced and Charlie was moving on down!  My water was broken and I started having contractions right away… Man, they were good! I guess I wasn’t expecting things to go so fast, but I didn’t mind.

I labored on the couch for a short while, walked around the house, and just hung out with everyone through the contractions.  We visited like it was any other day.  It was so cool and relaxing.  I was in active labor but I felt so comfortable.  There was no fear, no discomfort, just peace and relaxation.  There were no IV’s, no beeping machines, no chords, no hospital bedding, no unnecessary checks, no hospital smells,  no other patients for my nurses or doctor to tend to, no fall risk bracelets or big red bulky socks. Just our midwives and the people I wanted in that space with me. Our midwives laughed at me a lot and told me that I was the most positive person they had ever seen in labor.  I was just so very excited to be having this experience and so excited to meet our Charlie!

After about 30 minutes, I decided to get into the pool which felt AMAZING!!! I just hung over the side and rested through each contraction.  They were coming on stronger and stronger and lasting longer and longer, but still not super uncomfortable.  One of the big differences I experienced between our experiences with our midwife and Dr.’s and nurses is the way I was taken care of through the whole process.  At home, I was the only person being tended to. There were no other patients, no other agendas, no beds needed, no strangers in and out, and nothing conflicting with our birth. The only goal was to make sureI was cared for and as comfortable as possible while waiting for that beautiful babe to arrive. Rebecca rubbed my back through my contractions in the pool & whispered words of encouragement, while my mom rubbed my arms and played with my hair.  I like to be touched, but even more so during labor.  It’s hard to describe what the water did for my contractions but the ladies told me to ride my contractions out.  I rocked and floated through each contraction and it was like I just melted through them.

I got out of the pool and learned I had a cervical lip. It was adjusted and immediately I was adamant that I needed to use the loo… They knew what was happening but they let me get up and go to the bathroom anyway.  That’s when I realized I didn’t need to use the ladie’s room, just have a baby!  I told them I felt like I needed to squat, so I left the bathroom and came out and squatted on a C stool, an awesome stool used to help you deliver in a squatting position.  I squatted, pushed once and the ladies suggested I hop back in the pool.  Again, the water felt INCREDIBLE! I laid back and the ladies told me to push on my next contraction.  I bared down and there was Charlie’s head! I had no idea she would be here a push later!

While I was pushing, they were putting hot oil compresses that had been soaking in oils in a crockpot on my lady bits and asked me if it hurt anywhere.  They had me push very slowly through my first contractions which made them seem to disappear, like not hurt at all. Chris was by my side, holding my hand and was just so awesome the whole time.  I was anticipating lots of pain and being in the tub for a long time, but I was way wrong. Our midwives ensured that I was comfortable during the whole labor process. Surprisingly, I only felt very little pain and when I told them when and where I was experiencing discomfort, they just supported me so that I wasn’t hurting or stretching in a way that could cause me to hurt or tear.  The infamous “ring of fire” that I had heard so much about was nothing like I had imagined.  Like pretty much nonexistent.

There were also some other things they did to help assist my body,  like instead of administering pitocin to speed up contractions, they maybe suggested Chris twerk my nerps a bit to help produce natural oxytocin. No complaints there:D  Fun and effective:D  One more push and there she was! It was the most incredible feelings!  I felt the most insane rush of adrenaline and a feeling of joy that I can’t even describe! Norah had napped through my whole labor but woke up right as I began pushing.  My mom was holding her across from the pool so they could watch and when Charlie came out of the water, Norah held out her hands and yelled, “MY BABY!” It was SO cool.  I felt like I had just climbed Mt. Everest!

A perfect Apgar score and was, is, absolutely beautiful! After cuddling and nursing in the water for a while, Chris cut the chord and I delivered my placenta which was also very different from my hospital experience.  They took their time and it came out gently and pain free. We headed back to our bedroom to to check on Charlie’s vitals and I snuggled up and got all warm and watched as they weighed and measured our precious new babe.  It was so cozy.  Chris and I just kept smiling at each other and saying how awesome of an experience this was and how thankful we were! There was no stress, no fear, no anxiety, no discomfort…just so much peace and joy.   From the time my contractions started until we met sweet Charlie was right around 3 hours!

About 10 minutes after I was all cuddled in bed, I had to use the restroom.  I got a little scared because this was more painful than birth itself with Norah.  In fact, it hurt to sit down or go to the bathroom for 8 weeks after having Norah… However, I was surprised when I had absolutely 0 pain, tenderness or sensitivity! Had it not been for sweet little Charlie laying in my bed and my cute little jelly sack of a belly,  I didn’t feel like I had just had a baby at all!  I have had no pain or tenderness in my nether regions whatsoever since having Charlie!   Another thing I’m so grateful for is no back pain!  I had really bad back pain where I received the epidural with Norah that still hurts. It caused permanent damage for me and was a completely unnecessary procedure. I begged the staff not to give it to me with Norah and give me an explanation as to why I needed it and they said if I didn’t get it,  I would be too tired to push when it came time to push and then threatened a C-section or an epidural. We know so much more now, but we didn’t know how to advocate for  ourselves then. It’s hard to not feel sad when I think about Norah’s birth knowing what we know now, but all I can be is so grateful that we have learned what we have and get to choose to have different experiences now.

While I was resting, the ladies put together a basket full of diapers, wipes, gauze and goldenseal (used to help dry and protect the umbilical cord), arnica oil and olive oil (natural and great moisturizer, helps with bruising, and used on their bum to create a layer for the meconium so it doesn’t stick to their skin), thermometer, stethoscope, q-tips, baby blankets and anything else we might need for little Charlie.  This way, we had everything we needed easily accessible and ready for us to change Charlie and do our vitals.  Since we weren’t in the hospital, they taught us how to check both Charlie and I’s respiration rate, pulse, temperature, and other important vitals.  Another awesome thing the ladies did was take notes the entire time.  They noted when my contractions were and what they were like, all the important transitions and different things we said and did and different stages of labor. I thought that was neat that we get to have those kind of things recored as sometimes we miss those details ourselves.

Big sister Norah holding her little sister for the first time!

Charlie’s first bath in our kitchen sink:)

Getting those sweet little footprints

I am so thankful we got to have this truly redemptive experience.   I believe being trusted and supported along with the comfort I was provided  played a huge role in this experience as well. Thank you so much to everyone who encouraged us and prayed for us during our whole pregnancy and through this process.  Chris and I are so grateful for all of the encouragers in our lives!  Charlie is such a blessing and we are so excited to watch Norah grow into her new role as a big sister!

I also want to add that we fully understand that everybody’s circumstances are different and home birth might not be and does not have to be the experience for everybody. I so badly wish every mother could experience the birth she wants, in the environment she wishes for, with the care she deserves, and with the outcomes she dreams of.  We are all coming from different places with different stories, concerns, preferences, needs, options, and desires. This was a beautiful experience for us, but we do not share this as medical advice,  to push our preferences onto anyone else, nor discredit anyone else’s experiences or stories. Thank you for reading and celebrating with us!

Norah’s Birth Story

EBB8978F-9D6A-482B-9788-6A4B8687D881The Week Of:

I am so excited to share the birth story of our first born daughter, Norah Grace. The day we were blessed with our darling daughter was quite the day…Let me rephrase…Quite the 2 days…  I’ll start with the week of her arrival.  A week before I was due, I was 70% effaced, dilated to a 4, and Norah was positioned at 0  so my Dr. told me she thought our labor was going to be really fast.  My mom and little brother came down for the week and she was very hopeful we would have Norah by my due date, September 4th, because my  younger sister was due with her first little girl and my mom wanted to be able to attend both our births. Our girls ended up being born 4 days apart.

I was HUGE! Like, HUGE, HUGE!  I gained 60 pounds during my pregnancy and I was just so excited to meet little Norah!  My mom came to visit for the arrival of Norah and bought us chocolate, pineapples, spicy foods, black licorice, primrose oil to ripen my cervix, and red raspberry leaf tea to strengthen my uterus.  We watched funny youtube videos because supposedly a good laugh should help contractions,  then we watched sad movies because we read maybe a good cry would also work. Anytime we were sitting around that week my mom encouraged me to sit on my exercise ball and bounce.  She was funny. I loved having her with me. Chris and I went for lots of walks, curb walked, and did all kinds of fun things to try and kickstart labor.  Around 7:00 every night for days leading up to meeting Norah, I would start having contractions. Chris would pull out his guitar and play while I would sit in my rocking chair and rock through the contractions.  We were convinced she would be coming, and then about 4 hours into the contractions they would stop. I was discouraged after 4 nights of this and one pretty decent false labor incident I left work for. Prodromal labor is wild, but we knew it would be soon.

Day I:

The week leading up to Norah’s birth, both of Chris grandparents passed away.  They passed two days apart from one another peacefully. They were married over 50 years, raised 7 children, and many grandchildren. Their funeral was to be held Saturday morning and Chris was asked to be a pallbearer. Saturday, September 1st, the day Chris was suppose to be in his Grandparent’s funeral, I woke up at 5:30am by a sudden gush in my bed.  I thought, great! I just peed myself! Thank goodness we were advised to put trash bags under our sheets! I sat up and then realized my water had broken. I woke Chris up and shared and showed the news.  I stood up and there was waters everywhere! It wouldn’t stop! Every time I would step, there was more! I felt so bad that we wouldn’t be spending the day with loved ones, but everyone showed excitement for us, even amongst the grief.

I woke my mom up and the three of us were giddy!  My water would gush with each contraction and did so in the bathroom while I got ready, in the kitchen while I ate some snacks, in our living room while we visited, in the laundry room while I tidied, at the dining room table while we snacked some more, in the car on the way to the hospital, and all over the hospital parking lot as we hustled inside.  I wasn’t in any pain but, I could feel my contractions.  We had taken Bradley method classes and had been advised of what to do in this situation. Chris encouraged me to stay hydrated, made me a healthy breakfast before we went to the hospital, and juiced me some fresh orange juice for me to drink after delivery.  We packed extra hydrating drinks, honey sticks, and healthy treats to snack on for energy during labor. I am SO thankful we did this! Little did we know, we were in for quite the experience, and no pack of 2 tiny stale hospital saltine crackers was gonna cut it!   We got all checked in and everyone acted surprised that I could be in labor but in such high spirits.  

When I got hooked up to their IVs and monitors, which was probably the worst part of my hospital stay, the nurse informed me that my contractions were strong and only 3 minutes apart.  I had no idea!  I stayed active and walking around as much as possible for the first…day. Well, as active as I was allowed to be.  Unfortunately, the wireless monitors were broken and the staff would only allow me out of bed every for small durations. As long as I was standing and walking around, my contractions were consistent and growing. The moment I sat back in the bed, they completely stopped. I loved being up and doing what I felt my body was telling me to do. I would walk and squat and lean into my contractions, welcoming each one. I didn’t have a desire to try and avoid pain or to fight it. I was so excited to experience birth! 

I slipped into my nightie and robe I brought to birth in and put on these fun little booties I was excited to get to wear and birth in. We did some intake information and I made a joke about being clumsy. The nurse grabbed me another bracelet that read FALL RISK and told me I had to take off my little booties and replace them with with these neon red massive, thick, truly uncomfortable neon red grippy socks. This would alert the staff I was a walking liability. My feelings of excitement began to grow into that of discomfort and concern. 

We were asked if we had any preferences for our birth and when we shared our birth plan and that we wanted a natural birth with no pain meds, we were actually laughed at and told we did not. When I expressed I felt I needed to walk around and that I felt my body telling me to walk more, I was also laughed at and was told my body didn’t tell me that. I started to feel confused, scared, unsupported, discouraged, and so uncomfortable, all which are not great feelings any time, but especially troubling when welcoming a baby, and for the first time to add to that. I waddled into that parking lot SO excited to experience labor and had imagined such a different experience, and it was as if everything we had prepared for began to be taken away as soon as we entered the OB.  

I was learning in real time that the environment I chose to birth in, might not have been wise for what I wanted to experience. I loved the idea of home birth, but for some reason, we were under the impression that we should be in a hospital setting for our first. The pungent hospital smells began to make me feel queasy, the sounds of beeping and monitors, the doors opening and closing, having no idea who would be entering the room when I heard those sounds, the shuffling of unfamiliar voices outside the door were making me grow in discomfort. And I said a little about the IV part. Much more painful than any contraction I experienced, was my IV that was shooting hot throbbing pain all over my hand and arm. I cried and explained the pain and was asked if it could be changed, but it was not, and with every move I made, that IV was a reminder of the extreme discomfort I was in and a distraction from the real work I needed to be doing.

I hated so much how my labor would start to get more intense and the anticipation would build,  get plugged back in, and watch my contractions stop. Some of our nurses were really funny and so kind, and one nurse even bought me a giant candy bar to enjoy after Norah’s arrival. And then some nurses were not like that. I wasn’t aware of or prepared for how many different people I would be seeing in my time in the hospital or how this would also make me feel. I had to keep reminding myself that the staff was only doing their jobs and doing what they knew and were trained to do, and sadly, none of them were trained to support the natural birth I desperately wanted, and many even trained and advised to encourage women against it.

Luckily, we had lots of friends stopping with beautiful gifts and fun distractions. The surprise treats, sweet gifts for Norah and I, fun humor, and kind encouragement; that part I loved!  

Last picture as a family of 2 

I’m going to fast forward and remind you that my Dr. told me my labor would be so fast… And at 20 hours into being in the hospital, I teased her that we had different definitions of fast. I came in at a 4 and I was still at a 4. My labor would truly stop when I would get into the bed and I knew I needed to walk around more.  I finally progressed to a 7 and that’s where things felt more difficult… I felt like I was in transition for days. I did not want an epidural and although I was in pain, I never asked for and did not want pain meds.  I wanted to feel it all. I was excited to experience it all. We played lots of music I enjoyed, tried several birthing positions, and used all that we learned in our Bradley Method classes. I was also so surprised that no staff helped us with this part. We would receive periodic checks, but I didn’t realize how on your own to birth you really are. And with every check, I was offered pain meds, something I eventually asked them to please stop doing.

We entered the hospital with a lot of false assumptions found ourselves kind of shocked by the many sad realities of our experience. 

Around midnight, my contractions escalated. They were non-stop and on top of contractions with no break in between.  There was about 5 hours that I went into a trance that I don’t really remember but, Chris tells me I did good though.  I was able to close my eyes and allow my body to do what it needed, working hard not to fight the contractions. 

Every few hours someone would come in to check me, and those checks rivaled with the pain of my IV and also seemed to shut down my labor.  Every time I would hear a beep or the door open, or sounds outside the door, I would get so scared and it’s like my labor would actually reverse in progress. I hit 24 hours since my water had broken.  I couldn’t believe I had been in labor for this long.  I didn’t understand how this could be, especially since I had been expecting a fast delivery.  My mom and Chris were so good to me. They stayed up with me through it all. They alternated rubbing my back, legs and arms, playing with my hair, and praying over me. My primary love language is physical touch and I wanted it more than ever during labor.  I know there were a lot of pee breaks and a hot shower mixed in there somewhere as well.

Day II:

At 26 hours of labor, I began to run a low grade fever.  This is not so good.  I was hooked up to some antibiotics to protect Norah from any infection. I was getting so tired both physically and emotionally. I was still having contractions but I wasn’t appearing to progress as far as dilating goes.  Fearing that I would be too weak to push once Norah did arrive, the doctor gave me the ultimatum of getting an epidural or C-section. I was so devastated as I did not want either of these interventions and was confused why I needed either. I asked for a medical reason why and wasn’t given any other explanation besides I had been there for a long time and I would be too tired to push when the time came. 

They assured me Norah was doing great, nothing had changed in any of her heart tones, but these were my options. I cried so hard when they told me this. I was so sad and angry and didn’t understand. I so badly wanted to have a completely natural delivery. I honestly wanted to leave. When I cried and told them I wanted to feel it all, they actually giggled at me and I couldn’t understand why people kept doing that.  I felt so scared and defeated. I asked them if there was anything else I could do or try, but was told these were the only options I had. I wish so badly I would have had the knowledge to better advocate for myself like I do now, but if I had that, I wouldn’t have chosen to birth in that space. I didn’t know what to do.

I think one of the most difficult aspects of this birth were all of the interferences and policy/protocol in my environment that induced fear for me and prevented me from being able to get comfortable and lean into my intuition. I know this all played a large role in my particular birthing experience. I was so uncomfortable, not from labor, but with my environment, and there was just so much I went into the hospital not knowing.

I remember looking at Chris and being overwhelmed with fear and disappointment.  I did not want an epidural. I did not want it or need it. I cried so hard as they administered it and I felt so angry.  I was given the lowest dose I could be given and unfortunately it only numbed one side of my body & I would learn after delivery that it caused some permanent nerve damage,  leaving the administration point hurting, and possibly will hurt the rest of my life.  As they laid me back into the bed, I fell asleep & was woken up 2 hours later by the doctor asking me if I wanted to push.

PUSH?! PUSH?! I was so ready! I sat up so fast and was so excited!!!! IT WAS TIME! Sleeping allowed my body to experience the comfort it needed to fully progress. I was so grateful! I had been given a low dose of medicine in my epidural, and could feel my contractions, but my legs were still pretty numb when I awoke. I disliked that numbing sensation much more than my contractions, but I was just so excited this time had arrived. Chris and my mom helped hold my legs and after pushing for 10 minutes, 5 pushes,  SHE WAS HERE!!! At 11:32am, after 30 hours of labor, Norah Grace Pahls was laid on my chest!  One of the most incredible moments I had ever experienced!!!! 

I covered her in kisses, and she was just so perfect! Her little cry was SO cute!  Like a little velociraptor:) I pulled her up to my chest and she started breastfeeding almost immediately!  It was the most incredible thing I had ever experienced.  It felt like second nature to me. She was perfect!  Everything around me faded and all I can remember in that moment was, Norah…Our sweet little Norah, whom we had prayed for and over and anticipated like nothing before, was in my arms!!!  That moment, there are really no words for it. Sometimes I laugh because if I am being honest, my first thought was, “SHE”S SO NAKED!” And it’s not like I was never expecting her not to be, but I had also never held a naked baby that had just come out of my body. It was amazing, but also being a bizarre sensation. Her warm skin, covered in vernix. None of it felt gross and even though it was new and foreign, it also felt completely familiar and my body knew exactly how to receive hers, as if my arms had always been holding her.

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 I gained feeling back in my legs and body almost immediately so I was able to get up and move around.  I then got to enjoy the delicious orange Juice Chris had juiced me the day before…I can remember that first sip and thinking it was the best thing I had ever tasted!  Chris gave Norah her first bath and everything else they were able to do in our room.  Family and friends began to arrive and Chris’s parents showed up and ordered us the BEST…I’m talking, THE BEST pizza I had ever had. I like food, but I have never enjoyed food like that first bite of pepperoni pan crust dipped in ranch! Paired with that delicious homemade orange juice for balance of course:D Friends came and visited us until the moment we were discharged. And maybe another strange sensation was the, “you’re just going to let us leave with a baby now?” Which again, I knew would be doing, but in the moment just felt so wild! 1A5C7497-33E8-4CBF-8967-5DF895282C6E

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I am so thankful for this beautiful daughter. She is the greatest gift I have ever known, and as I gave birth to her, I too became a new person. What a cool thing that we get to grow in new ways together with and alongside our children. To everyone who helped take part in this special time in our lives, THANK YOU!

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Update: As we have welcomed more children and gained more education, I thought it might be worth revisiting sone aspects of our birth story. I first want to express that I do not believe that anyone did anything malicious or out of wishing me any harm. I am so grateful we have the option to birth in hospitals and for our hospital and staff.  I went into a medical establishment wanting a non-medical birth and medical establishments are simply not trained in the non-medical practices and interventions that I was wanting to experience. Our experience came by lack of research on our behalf and wanting an experience that the establishment I chose to birth in are not there to provide. We learned so much through our birth with Norah and our experience has allowed us to change many of our perspectives, challenged us to research better, and has lead us to make some of the most beneficial decisions of our lives since. While not everyone who gives birth in a hospital setting will share the same experience as we did, nor respond in the same way as I did, I have learned birth trauma and previous trauma triggered by birth is more common than I was aware of before we welcomed Norah. Hospital settings are simply not able to provide the gentle care, offer non medical interventions, or the emotional or spiritual support I desire while bringing a baby into the world.

I have chosen to pursue healing while focusing on my most favorite parts of Norah’s birth, rather than holding onto bitterness or harboring resentment or regret about my experience. It is ok to grieve things I wish were different, but I also do not want to be robbed of any more joy. For me, past trauma being triggered in a hospital environment, the sounds, smells, being restricted from leaning into the things that comfort me and my intuition, negative interactions, feeling unsupported, discouraged, coerced, receiving unnecessary medical interventions, the pain I am left with, and lack of postnatal care proved to be traumatic for me. They were all things I found myself trying to rationalize, defend, or accept as normal, but have now learned birth does not have to look like that, nor accepted as normal in many cases. 

I share this less glamorous side of birth because while there were so many beautiful things to celebrate, and I am so grateful for the staff who took such good care of us, advocated for us, and also gave me chocolate, I was also left having to process the parts that left me grieving things I was hopeful for. Women deserve so much greater care and we have learned you can have that first hand now. If you find yourself experiencing any of this, I guess I just felt like I wanted to say it is ok for you to process your experience, grieve the things that looked differently than you wanted, and to encourage you to pursue healing, and new experiences, all while rejoicing and celebrating the beautiful parts of your experiences.

Norah’s birth gave us the gift of learning we wanted something different and paved the way for healing in other areas of my life. The education we have gained since has lead us to many incredible experiences and a transformed life . Not just for our family, but for many other friends and family who also learned from our experiences and were able to make choices that better served their families and healing journeys as well. We share our experience to celebrate all that Norah’s birth was, and to empower those who read this to educate yourself as much as you feel comfortable doing, and to encourage anyone who finds themselves resonating with trauma of any kind to let go of bitterness and pursue healing.    Continue reading