Thursday, April 26, 2007

Transitioning to TRUST BIRTH MIDWIFERY

Many midwives are operating from a level of fear, even after many years of practice: Fear of not knowing how to handle complications, fear of making mistakes, fear of criticism, fear of litigation, fear of going to jail. These are all legitimate concerns, perhaps, but it is inconsistent with the idea of "with woman" midwifery to practice under a cloud of fear.
I think there is a cure for at least some of those fears. Your fear as a midwife will decrease as you internalize the reality that your role as a midwife is not one of authority but assistance....and that is a life-changing paradigm shift.
Once you think of yourself as a paid consultant and NOT the holder of bottom line responsibility and certainly not the woman's authority, everything is different.
When you think of your role this way, you will realize that most of your work is done long before your client goes into labor. Your role will be to encourage, motivate, and believe in your client. Your work involves helping her recover her own sense of ownership, authority and confidence in her ability to assist her body in doing the job it knows how to do.
Once you LIVE as if you believe that birth is safe and interference is what is risky, and once you realize that the responsibility and authority for what happens to a woman during her birth is her own, and not yours....I think you will find many fears dissipate.
Transitioning to Trust Birth Midwifery and Transitioning to Trust Birth Childbirth Education will be two of our panel sessions at the upcoming Trust Birth Conference in March 2008.

2 comments:

Pittsburgh Midwife said...

I'm VERY happy that I have been blessed with not having to spend 15 to 30 years practicing to get to this point. I have always had this point of view and it's what has always felt right, even in the face of criticism (and there's been tons). I also come from an anti-authoritarian mindset in the first place, so extending my personal Anarchist beliefs over into midwifery, only seems natural to me. I am not an authority figure to my clients, nor should I be. I do not own their experience or the right to control/direct it, even when paid to share it with them.

Anonymous said...

What books do you recommend for childbirth education?