Photo by: Mahalie

Birth Advocates or Extremists in Disguise?

by Danielle Elwood of "Momotics"
Photo by: Mahalie

In the past week I have been watching twitter closely and observing a first time mother become overdue and some of the comments she got as she considered talking to her provider more about labor induction. While I am not someone who supports labor induction for non medical reasons, I am someone that supports women being able to make their own educated choices in their health care.

Now, we all may favor natural childbirth over medicalized childbirth, but when we start telling women they are uneducated, or putting them down, this is not going to reflect positively on the natural childbirth community. I have had so many women pregnant, and not pregnant contact me via twitter thanking me for my information and not putting it in a radical way. I always viewed myself as a radical when it came to passing along information regarding childbirth too.

I think it was about a year and a half ago I made the change from radical to true advocate. I had a couple people in our local community talk to me about my approach on childbirth and give me some tips that could help me get my message across in a more positive manner. One of these women is a highly respected local midwife, and also internet blogger. So when her words came out, I listened very carefully and then started to understand and see that the message I had, and information I was passing along was received better when backed up with facts, information, and given in a positive delivery than it did before when I would just rant and rave about how bad hospitals are or about how women are idiots for listening to their provider and taking their word as gold.

While those are certainly some things I believe, there it just a better way to approach things that wouldn’t make me look like a raving lunatic and in that period of time, I also found my message is reaching more people. From increasing my own blog traffic, writing for our local newspaper about childbirth, pregnancy, and early parenting, and getting on board the new Giving Birth With Confidence Blog powered by Lamaze, and reaching more women in my local community, it has really put my message and approach into perspective for me.

Certainly there is a time and place for rants, and for raves. I saw some amazingly authored ones this week by Kristen at Birthing Beautiful Ideas, and from my all time favorite blogger Gina The Feminist Breeder, which talked about Doula Bans and birth plans. Well authored, amazingly worded, positive outcome rants. Which is how we should all work to word our rants instead of spur of the moment words we can’t take back that will in turn make others look differently at you, or maybe not take you as seriously as they once did.

The purpose of this is not to hand slap anyone, or to say you should or should not be approaching childbirth the way you do, or the way you council women, or tweet, or however you are involved. The message is simply step back and take a look at your approach and ask yourself… Will this be helpful or hurtful to the cause I am working for?

Danielle Elwood is the author of Momotics and the mother of two boys three and under. She is a New England native who is a passionate advocate in the parenting community, and best known for her writing in the Pregnancy, and Childbirth community.

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16 Comments

Lovely advice. I am a believer in natural, peaceful birth, but find that decision making in the last months of pregnancy very, very stressful. Finding a doula with your approach was very important to me because it cut down on the stress.

I'm a believer in natural natural natural, and no frills. I thought a doula etc would be more than I needed for the ancient art of pushing a baby out. I wasnt' in the mood for involving a doula. My lamaze class prepped me enough in my mind. I knew it would hurt, and I knew it would be over when it was over.
My step cousins all do their very numerous births at home...

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".. step back and take a look at your approach and ask yourself… Will this be helpful or hurtful to the cause I am working for?"

Excellent advice! I'd like to see this applied to discussions regarding religion and politics.

yeah, nothing scarier to a doctor then a mom to be that isnt going to be frightened into believing that she is "ultra high risk", my obgyn dr hyde had me so stressed during my pregnancy, i did one amniocentisis and two sonagrams, only to have him order more testing done before we even left his office. he decided that my deformed left arm (due to a car wreck) was a birth defect and wouldnt listen to us when we told him it wasnt...

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I enjoyed your article, even though I gave birth via C-sections at the hospital. Lots of natural birthers seem to advocate for doulas and au natural, to the point of ignoring/forgetting that lots of women and babies have died during childbirth through no fault of their own...

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I just wanted to say even if you try to go natural it does not always work out for you. I had a midwife and a doula and wanted to do everything naturally. After 39 hrs of labor and 5.5 hrs of pushing I ended up w an emergency c-section. I guess if it had been the past I might have been one of those women that died. Then I wanted badly to breastfeed and was extremely anti-formula...

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You make a good point about checking to see if you're being helpful or hurtful when offering advice. If there's anything we learn as mothers, it should be that each birth is different - for each child and for each of us. We should be sharing our experiences as a way of offering information and options, without judgements or condescension. No one was ever persuaded to look into natural childbirth by someone who lectured them about ignorant they were.

Excellent point, although I think it may be lost in the natural versus unnatural childbirth debate, which I can see you're not trying to make here.

I just wish more women could be given the respect of having thought through their decisions. Maybe some actually want to follow the advice of their doctor. That's their choice and they sholdn't be called ignorant and worse for choosing to rely on a professional...

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This is a great posting! I have never been interested in natural childbirth, but it could be because everyone I've met who pushes this idea has been pushy in general. I have never felt pressured to have an epidural or unnecessary tests done on my baby (maybe my OBs have been exceptional, but they've been very supportive of whatever decisions I make), but I have absolutely been made to feel like a bad parent by other parents in my area for getting those things...

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Great advice for people who give advice. I'm not an advocate for natural childbirth, but rather for what the mom is most comfortable with. I'm also an advocate for good medical advice, so I kinda disagree when you say that "women are idiots for listening to their providers". While I feel we have to have a discerning ear about what sounds right and what doesn't, I believe we should recognize their extensive schooling and experience. Clearly, a doctor knows more about medicine and birth than I do...

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This is grat advice. I'm not strongly tied to either form, it depends upon the woman, her childcare provider and the education she seeks for her condition.

However, it remains very true an amazing amount of women do not know anything about childbirth, or infant and child care for that matter, and that is quite frightening.

women are not idiots for listening to their healthcare providers, but you have to also balance that against the realization that you are a consumer of what the doctor is selling, you not not just a patient, and if the doctor can scare you into taking/paying for completely unnecessary testing, chances are good, that is exactly what they are going to do.ans a soon to be mom is the perfect patsy...

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Hmmm yes I definitely avoid the radical "birth advocates" in favor of the medical establishment. And yes the "you're not educated" thing is thrown my way quite often, which is as ludicrous as it is false. I like that you are promoting changing your approach, but I don't like that it comes back to proselytism...

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where is health care really going when your obgyn can claim in writing that you are retarded because you refuse to have completely unnecessary medical testing done ? and you refuse to go on a diet WHILE PREGNANT !! If I done all the testing that DR Hyde tried to sell me, I would have ended up having three aminocentis and a grand total of five sonagrams, all in a span of less then six weeks ! because he "decided" that I was "ULTRA HIGH RISK" sounds more like he was trying to use me to pay for his kids private school.as it was, i had one aminocentisis and three sonagrams.
karin h.

Thank you for your article. I had wanted to go natural with my first born but ended up having a prolapsed cord, my daughter's cord got pinched between her head and my pelvic bone, and her heart rate plummeted. They tried to move her and unstuck her but to no avail. So she was an emergency c-section. On my next pregnancy I was planning on going for the v-bac, but in the hospital in case of an emergency...

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