I need to write a rant in response to a comment I often get when I attempt to contribute to a conversation about childbirth. They say, “Jen, you were just made to have babies.” It’s a kiss off though, not at all a compliment. Sid gave me the best comeback last night, “Really, you don’t have a vagina?” But seriously, why do women want to reject my experiences? Why do they want to separate themselves from me regarding this, alienate me, really? At the very least, why aren’t they open to what I might have to say? One more question, why does it seem as though so many Christian women want to acknowledge God in every other area of their lives, but ignore His influence over the area of childbirth?
I did have 4 uncomplicated pregnancies and births, but that doesn’t mean I didn’t experience the general challenges the average woman faces. And when you work with a midwife, she explains exactly how to make sure you stay low-risk so that you are less likely to encounter complications. That wasn’t my “just made to have babies” body, I cooperated with my midwife as she supervised everything from my stress level to my protein intake and blood levels. There are numerous variables that contribute to staying low-risk and I have to mention that I have a friend who endured traumatic, life-threatening complications that resulted in premature induction, which could have been avoided if her ob-gyn had been keeping an eye on certain factors, or intervened earlier when symptoms were manifesting.
I am convinced that birth was no easier for me than it is for the average woman, I have heard of painless birth, and I did not have that. I was scared of birth, all four times, because it is tremendously difficult and there’s that “unknown factor” too. But my fear led me to fill my mind with tools (I specifically remember Googling “pain management techniques” when I was pregnant with my first, knowing I wanted a homebirth [because I was scared of the hospital]), positive birth stories, prayers and I cultivated an open attitude to what I might endure in my births.
Guess, what? If you talk to me about birth and let me tell my stories, you will hear about the intensity, my screaming (for real screaming, not roller coaster screaming), back labor, my attempts to deal with such overwhelming sensations and thinking I would lose my mind and not recover if I had to make it through yet one more contraction, but you will also hear about my children and husband comforting me, the Lord giving small gifts to help me relax and move on to the next stage, as well as what I learned about opening my body through my mind and the gentle language I coached myself with. You will hear about Ina May Gaskin and her books and you will hear about Susan Scott Gill, my genius-midwife. I have heard stories of the most difficult and traumatic births, I have been in the delivery room with one laboring mom on her second epidural, vomiting from her shot of demerol and with another just before and just following her c-section, I have heard stories of disappointment, loss, infection and illness. I take them all in, I feel that those stories should be granted as much space in my perception of birth as the positive ones. Yet, I think it unwise to fail to acknowledge the fact that negative outcomes in women’s birthing experiences are significantly more common among conventional hospital births, than natural, birth center and homebirths.
My message to women about birth is simple. It will be the most intensely challenging physical experience of your life – in most cases – and you will (most likely) wish it to be over sooner than it is, but if you give yourself over to God’s will for your experience, when all is said and done and that most perfect little person is finally in your arms wriggling, making its precious little noises and causing a full on upheaval of everything you’ve ever known because you’ve never loved like this, you will look back at your birth and God’s grace will be undeniably woven throughout, no matter what challenges you faced. It takes openness, it takes a heart fascinated by God’s design for birth and it takes a willingness to endure physical agony (but with an end and for a purpose). That’s how I see birth, NOT that I’m “just made to have babies.”
If anyone wants to hear more from me regarding birth, that’s why I created this website! Poke around, if you don’t find what you’re looking for and/or if you want prayer for your birth, I would love to pray for you, email me! bouquetofparentheses@gmail.com





























































