The BirthCircle | Birth, Pregnancy, & PostPartum Conversations
Health & Fitness
In today’s episode, we talk with Margo Blackstone, an independent midwife and co-creator and co-director of the Indie Birth organization and midwifery school. Margo had a unique introduction into the birth industry, studying criminal justice and applied criminology and how midwives were legislated out of practice all over the world in the last 100 years. She shares how she became an independent midwife, and how her high blood pressure restricted her from the home birth option. We discuss the nuances about the laws surrounding the practices of licensed and unlicensed midwives. We talk about the importance of not restricting choices for women, and the impact of being able to find the right midwife or provider for you. We talk about educating our children and what having conversations about birth with our kids might look like. We talk about teaching kids when to use anatomical terms, as well as teaching radical consent and body autonomy, especially for our daughters. We talk about putting your personal fears and concerns behind you and honoring the preferences of a woman, as well as when to know to honor your own boundaries as a care provider. We talk about what you can say if you notice that your provider is putting their personal needs before your own needs and wishes with your body. We speak about how many women want the care that hospitals provide, but if we were all on board with radical consent, many problems could be prevented and needs would be protected. We talk more about the midwife-client relationship, emphasizing that there is a provider for everyone. We discuss the importance of interviewing midwives, and key questions you can ask to determine if you’ve found a good fit. We invite you to visit https://indiebirth.org if you want to learn more, as well as http://www.indiebirthmidwiferyschool.org if you’re interested in becoming a midwife.
“If you’re choosing an OB, do you realize that they’re probably not going to actually be the provider that’s there on the day of birth? Continuity of care is one of the biggest issues, I think, in the U.S., currently, in terms of birth culture and the way we do birth — that people don’t have that continuity with somebody through pregnancy, the birth, and postpartum. It’s so piecemeal…I think so much birth trauma comes from that mismatch, and sometimes you don’t even know what questions to ask.” 17:29
Email Margo With Any Questions: margo@indiebirth.org
https://birthcircle.com
For Any Questions, Email Me at media@birthcircle.com
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Healing Somatic Trauma in High Risk Pregnancy | Parijat Deshpande
Granny Midwives and Aiding Birth in Liberia | Marcia Stevens
Protecting Your Choices Through Prenatal Education | Dr. Nicole Calloway Rankins
Creating Your Self-Care Plan | Kate Rope
You Matter, Your Story Matters | Thais Nye Derich
Optimizing Your Pregnancy With Simple Strategies | Laurel Wilson
Your Strong, Sexy Pregnancy | Desi Bartlett
The Path to an Empowered Birth Experience | Bailey Gaddis
Guiding the Infertility Journey with Mindfulness | Janetti Marotta
Proper Support for Newborns and Newborn Mothers | Julia Jones
Learning to Trust and Finding Emotional Strength Through Pregnancy, Birth | Julia Aziz
Nutrition for Pregnancy and Postpartum | Ryann Kipping
From My Side of the Change Table | Kelly Carrington
How to Optimize Prenatal Nutrition Using Real Food | Lily Nichols
Orgasmic Birth | Elizabeth Davis
Getting to the Heart of Birth | Nikki Shaheed
Taboo Postpartum Truths | Marissa Zwetow
Train Your Brain for a Positive Birth | Tracy Donegan
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