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On Being a Good Girl During Labor

March 21, 2016 By Deena Leave a Comment

“She had such a calm, quiet, beautiful birth!”

There seems to be some sort of ideal out there that birth is done right when we are quiet, calm “good” girls. This gives the impression that those of us who are loud during labor had done something wrong, or at least weren’t as good as our quiet peers.

Good girls are polite, don’t speak out of turn, and are quiet and respectful. They don’t ask for much and they definitely do what they are told. Good girls listen to those who are in charge, and they don’t question the directives delivered from their perceived superiors.

In labor, the good girl is quiet and calm. She stays in bed and doesn’t bother her doctors or nurses. She does exactly as she is told and she isn’t a nuisance to her care providers. She “breathes her baby” out and isn’t sweaty or messy. She is compliant and doesn’t have her hair mussed.

Good birth, Silent Mother, Deena BlumenfeldWhere did this “good girl” in labor idea come from? We have to take a peek back at history. When birth moved out of the home and into the hospital in the early 1900’s, we see the beginnings of this concept. Hospitals, up through the early 1980’s, had maternity wards, not individual labor rooms. There would be 12, 15 or 20 women laboring in one ward with a small handful of nurses to monitor them. When it came time to push, they were brought to the delivery room. After birth they went to a multi-woman recovery room.

Now, since they were laboring all together, with little or no privacy, they were required to stay in bed and not be too demanding of their nurses. A woman who was loud and out of bed would “disturb” the other women in the ward and be more difficult for the nurses and staff to control. So, the laboring mother needed to be a “good girl” and be quiet, still and not complain. Staff needed a solution to this problem and new medications, combined with effective marketing, afforded them their answer.

Women, feminists, at the turn of the century were clamoring for pain medication. Twilight Sleep was the new thing and it brought them into the hospitals for birth. Pain medication was not only seen as desirable by the mothers, but by the staff as well. A painless birth was the way to go to make birth easier on all involved parties. Oh, but this doesn’t count dad. He wasn’t allowed in for labor and birth.

Digging a bit deeper into history, we get this idea of breathing to stay calm and manage pain, otherwise known as psychoprophylaxis. Lamaze’s original name, by the way, was The American Society of Psychoprophylaxis in Obstetrics (ASPO). This is usually referred to as “that Lamaze breathing thing”. (Which, by the way, most educators don’t teach anymore. It’s still listed in our curriculum, but it’s bumped way down the priority list.)

This technique, psychoprophylaxis, was developed in 1930’s in the Ukraine. There was a need for some pain relief techniques because of the post-WWI depression medication was in short supply.

To make a long story short, psychoprophylaxis was specifically designed to control women and to keep them, calm, quiet and in bed. Those noisy, demanding women who had the audacity to move their bodies in a way that seemed feral while the sounds emanating from their throats reminded staff of bedroom pleasures, needed to be restrained and restricted by either the scopolamine / morphine cocktail or by breathing techniques dictated by her husband. A husband’s job was, quite simply, to keep his wife quiet and well behaved during labor if there were no drugs available to her.

Want to know more? I blogged about this in greater detail a while back on Science & Sensibility.

Let’s move forward in time. Feminism shifted in the 1960’s and 1970’s with regards to childbirth. Our hippie foremothers brought forth the idea that birth can be natural and normal. The idea that women could be moving around in labor; that their husbands or partners could be there with them; that labor didn’t need massive medical intervention in all cases and that women did know a bit about their own bodies.

Yet, we are still confronted with the “good girl” idea. There are other childbirth education organizations out there that sell this idea of being quiet and calm during birth as the “right”, “preferred” or “best” way to go through labor. There are mothers out there who sing the praises of their “calm” births and how “beautiful” they were; which, in turn, sets the expectation that future births should be like that as well as making women feel less-than for not having a quiet, calm birth.

True enough, that some women are naturally quite and calm during labor and true that some women will “breathe the baby out”. However, that should not be the ideal. In fact, there shouldn’t be any ideal way to give birth.

Sometimes labor is loud. Sometimes we swear. Sometimes we puke and we poop. Sometimes we cry and we scream. Sometimes we yell at our partners and then feel guilty about it. Sometimes we make animal sounds and are on our hands and knees. Sometimes there is blood and fluid and it gets all over are legs and the bed and the floor. Sometimes our hair is messy and we are sweaty.

If we fight the process just to be seen as being a “good girl” we increase our pain and complicate birth. The idea that calm and quiet is good or ideal is erroneous. Calm and quiet may be birth for some of us – sure as heck wasn’t for me…

Birth is always beautiful. Laboring women are always beautiful. Mess and noise are normal. Birth is primal and it rocks us to our core and we can come out stronger and more confident because of it. If we permit ourselves to be present in our bodies during labor; if we tune in and pay attention; if we release and let go of the hold our societal conventions have regarding “good” behavior, then we have a much better birthing experience.

Remember, birth is beautiful and you don’t have to be a “good girl”. 

Being Badass feels so much better!

Train with me! Become a Lamaze Certified Childbirth Educator

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Filed Under: All Topics, Dirty Secrets Tagged With: Feminism, Good Girl, History of Pregnancy & Childbirth, Ideal Birth, Labor, Labor Support, Lamaze, Pain, Pleasure, psychoprophylaxis, Sexuality, Twilight Sleep

How is an Orgasm like Childbirth?

February 2, 2016 By Deena 1 Comment

Recently, one of my students asked me how she could make childbirth pleasurable. My eyes dilated and I was beaming from the thought answering of her query. I wanted to scream, “Yes, yes, yes! Birth can be pleasurable!” However, I restrained myself, as I was in front of a classroom full of students.

The rest of the class looked mildly aghast at this mother’s inquiry. So, I began to ruminate as to why they reacted in such a manner.

As a society, we have a reluctance to talk about sex, or even allude to it. We don’t even call our genitals by their proper names, for goodness sake!

We want to believe in virgin births and not to think that babies emerge from vaginas. We are loathe to imagine that not only do our cervixes stretch open to 10 cm, but so do our vaginal walls and our pelvic floors; that our bodies accommodate both things which go in as well as things which come out.

We tend to believe that the vagina, and breasts for that matter, serve one purpose – sex and pleasure. We forget that biology dictates that babies are born through the vagina and that breasts feed babies. This duality of purpose confounds our sensibilities. It creates an uncomfortable and conflicting state of mind.

We don’t like to sit with our discomfort. Rather, we do our best to avoid discomfort in the first place. It makes it that much more difficult to cope with discomfort when we are in the habit of avoiding it all together. This is one reason why some women preemptively seek pain medication for labor. It’s why women are told to “just get the epidural” by their friends and family.

We need to sit with our pain and experience it. Without the experience of pain, there is no pleasure to be appreciated. I ask you now, Dear Reader, to sit with your discomfort as you continue reading.

The stigma surrounding sex and pleasure runs deep in our culture.

It’s not polite.

It’s improper.

Someone may think badly of us for speaking of such things.

Sex is private.

 I’m a good girl.

 Sex is shameful. Except that it isn’t.

So what does all this have to do with birth?

Childbirth is sexual.

Hang on, what?

Yes, childbirth is sexual.

No, it can’t be! Sex is what I do with my husband. Birth is, it’s, um, a thing that happens. A bodily function…

It all seems to have a bit of a squick factor for many people; except, you can’t take sexuality out of birth. Birth is sexual. Birth is the direct result of sexual intercourse. They don’t call it “sexual reproduction” for nothing!

The merest suggestion that birth might not hurt; might be pleasurable; might even be orgasmic is bizarre to most, offensive to some.

With birth there is the biomechanical or physiologic process, but there is also a major social emotional component. To bring pleasure into childbirth, mothers must feel safe enough to surrender to their bodies and to the process.

Childbirth and Orgasm, The Silent MotherTo have an orgasm, one must surrender completely to the process. An uncomfortable body or, more precisely, a distracted mind will prevent us from not just experiencing orgasm but being able to fully enjoy the sensation. It’s the difference between the biomechanical process and a mind-blowing, eye brightening orgasm which leaves us in a state of euphoria for ages afterwards.

Both orgasm and childbirth need safe, private spaces so that the individual can give up control to their bodies. Giving up control, surrender, is fundamental to the experience of pleasure.

Think about it. If you have a luscious piece of chocolate cake and intend to eat the cake, but you are being observed by friends you are less likely to eat all of it. You’ll take a bite or two, but feel guilty. It’s not healthy, you tell yourself. I’ll gain weight. My friend who is on a diet will feel bad if I eat the cake in front of her, and so on.

Now, imagine you are at home, alone on the couch. You will eat that cake in its entirety and savor each bite. There is pleasure in the act of consuming your piece of chocolate cake. That pleasure wasn’t present in the previous scenario.

The setting, the people who surround you and your feeling of safety all converge to either aid or inhibit pleasure. The pleasure is in the surrender. Pleasure arises from a willingness to release control.

Mothers, give yourself permission to release the control you desire to have over the birthing process. Attempting to control the process creates tension. Tension creates fear and pain. Fear, tension and pain all feel the same in the body. They are different expressions of the same sensation. When you give yourself permission to surrender and the birthing space is quiet, dark and private, pleasure in the process can be had.

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Filed Under: All Topics, Dirty Secrets Tagged With: Childbirth, Labor, Orgasm, Pain, Pleasure, Pregnancy, Sex, Sexuality

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