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revolutionary motherhood

On Postpartum In a Pandemic

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On Postpartum In a Pandemic

My baby was just about five weeks old when the lockdowns began and the beaches were “closed.” Forced isolation was the exact opposite of what she and I needed at that time. We were in the midst of my postpartum expansion, getting to know one another on the outside of my womb while friends and family cared for our basic needs. Suddenly the support was withdrawn, and I sat at home nursing my brand new babe while her two older sisters kept busy with art projects and make believe. Some days it rained, some days it didn't. Some days we went on walks, some days we didn't. We waited for those first two weeks to pass, and then the lockdown extensions began.

At certain points in time I couldn't believe that any of this was actually happening. Because of "public health" orders, I, along with countless other mothers, newborn infants and children, was abandoned and forgotten by humanity in an instant. One of my greatest fears was being alone with my three daughters after giving birth - unable to rest or heal as I needed to. I was afraid that I would grow fragile and no longer have the will to continue on in such lonely hardship. The world was crumbling at my feet, and I knew not how to overcome the rubble that seemingly blocked my path.

I drew on what I had learned during my years as a postpartum care provider, as well as the knowledge that was refined at my Innate Traditions training just a few months prior to giving birth. I continued to connect with my placenta medicine. I drank, bathed in and steamed with herbs. I held my baby close at all times and maintained constant contact with Mother Nature, the mother that would still hold me in her arms. I slept when I could and I ate well. My daughters and I nested underneath the lemon tree in our backyard most afternoons and watched the hawks gliding above us. We heard their screes and took them to heart. We let ourselves be wild and unscheduled. We held and kissed the baby and told her how much we loved her. She gave us smiles and hugged us back. She slept in our arms and kept her ears close to our hearts.

Those days in the yard, surrounded by thriving fruit trees and many pollinators, were profound. I watched my young daughters thrive in my care. They were endless springs of love and wonder, the three of them so enamored with one another. I quickly learned that, despite the lack of other adults in our presence, I actually was not alone at all. Though my former community had seemingly vanished, my immediate family - my life blood, my children, my muses, my guides - never once left my side. I felt deeply the love that my daughters had for me. I could feel their empathy in spite of their young ages, and we held space for one another as we grieved our many losses. What had once seemed an insurmountable challenge was now my greatest blessing. I was (and still am) with my daughters 24/7, and though their strong will often exhausts me by nightfall, my cup is never empty. They fill me with love, and I exude gratitude. My biggest offering to them is a safe and love-filled home, where grace and forgiveness abound, and where love sets us free.

There are days when my love for my children overwhelms me. On these days I sense what I only know to describe as a panic attack beginning, but rather than being filled with fear, I am filled with love. Tears pour from my eyes as I vocalize gratitude to that which guided these souls to and through my body. I express gratitude for the opportunity to birth them and to be a student of their journeys, including the journeys of theirs that are intertwined with mine. In these moments I hold them close and tell them that they are everything to me. I make sure they know that, in spite of the chaos characterizing our present time on Earth, our love and devotion to one another is steady; that together we are a giant pillar of truth and light for the world at large. They always laugh and hug me in return after I say these things, and they tell me that I am the best mom ever. They wipe my tears and make the baby giggle at their antics. The baby nurses and plays with my hair as I feel into the deep magic of our present moment together. The way we lock eyes is proof that we are one.

In moments when I feel overburdened by all that is required to raise three children in the modern, grieving world, I hold my baby to my chest and make my way to our bed. I lie with her while she nurses and falls asleep. Allowing my eyes to close, I rest my body as my mind takes me to another time entirely. I go back to the night where I gave birth to her on my bedroom floor. I remember my husband handing her to me. I remember looking into her eyes. I remember the way she tasted like the ocean when I gently sucked the fluid from her nose. I remember her latch, as strong and confident as her emergence into this earthly realm. The life force that carried her body from my womb and through my sacred portal brought with it a new mother, and in those first few weeks with her I became the woman I had always sensed at my center. I was strong, capable and powerful. Finally, I was free.

When I remember my baby's freebirth I remember what I have done in my past, and what I can do in my present and future. I remember that in life's most primal human moments, I am me. That this "me" is always here. I can always tap into the strength that I had the night she was born. Because of her birth, I have evolved, and it couldn't have happened a moment sooner. Her timing transcends the concept of "perfection."

Babies born during this time of duress know why they are here. They are creating mothers and families that the earth so desperately needs. They are sustaining mothers and families by gifting us with rushes of oxytocin, strong intuitions and an urge to thrive and orient to that which sustains life. These babies are gifts. They are tiny bodies filled with love and a commitment to thriving life. They are souls perfectly suited to all that is required for this shifting of paradigms. My baby shows me this in the way she completes me and our family. Connecting with her allows me to feel this as truth. Her spirit has kept our family grounded, preventing us from spiraling into the deep abyss of fear that has been presented to us by the powers that were. She reminds us of the wonders of living and learning. She inspires us to bravely continue forward into uncharted territory. I couldn't imagine going through such a wild time without her and her sisters by my side, for she is me, they are me, they are each other, and we are one. I gave my three daughters life, and they continue to give me life in return.

May all the babies and mothers raising their young during these times be seen and heard, for while we are strong, we are not meant to be strong without being witnessed. We are wading through what feels like shark-infested waters with our children on our backs. We were forgotten and dismissed by society a long time ago, but in 2020 and beyond we were quite literally invisible to the world as we raised our children behind closed doors. True public health centers mothers; it does not force them to isolate under the instruction of false prophets. Our babies are blessings, and we will not settle for a world that does not honor their lives, or all LIFE in its entirety. Our children are the future and we are their protectors. Just as we gestated and gave birth to them, we shall gestate and give birth to the new Earth, whether the world is paying attention or not.

Rest assured, we are strong enough. Rest assured, we are wise enough. Rest assured, we are ready.

Select images below to enlarge and read captions.

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Be The Light

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Be The Light

kaitlin coghill be always blooming birthkeeper postpartum doula classes mentorship consultation birth consultant freebirth

These rainbows shower the very place where Metzli was born in my bedroom, on the floor right in front of her birth altar. They also dance upon the wall that holds a framed photo above the altar. The photo is of her two sisters a few years ago walking along a pathway at a hotspring we loved that was later burnt and destroyed in the Thomas Fire. Atop the frame is a selenite wand, Metzli's newborn footprint and an affirmation card that reads, "I Am The Light." I am. And so are you.

I see people saying they don't know what to do in these times. That they feel helpless and drained, especially after conversations with people they disagree with. To them and all people who want to shift the energy from fear and stress into love and gratitude but don't know where to start, I say: go help new mothers. You cannot go wrong when you are helping new mothers. It is an "essential" job, as they say, and it is the responsibility of each and every one of us to make sure that new mothers and their infants are taken care of. 

You can deliver homemade healthy food to a new mother. Ask her how she's feeling and if there's anything she needs to talk about, and then listen with an open heart and mind. Buy her groceries and drop them off. If she wants people in her home, go be in her home with her. Fold her laundry. Hold her baby while she takes a long bath. Make her an herbal tea and share a conversation in the sun. Make sure she has a good water filter and, if she doesn't, buy her one. Join her for a walk by the ocean. Lead her through a meditation. Give her a massage. Hold space for her to grieve - when caring for a newborn 24/7 there is little time at all to process all that is changing and disappearing before our eyes.

We need to hear each other crying. We need our crying to be heard.

We need to see each other's smiles. We need our smiles to be seen.

We need to witness each other's rites of passage and transformations. We need our rites of passage and transformations to be witnessed.

There is no existence in which these needs no longer are needed. They are always needed. It is time to fulfill these needs once more and continue living our beloved lives.

Please show the mothers, especially those caring for infants, young children and teens, some love. They are forgotten and not considered at this time, and they desperately need to be seen and held by the collective. Some have given up entire careers that they invested tens of thousands of dollars into because their children must stay home from school. Some can't afford to feed their children. Some are beaten. Some have had their homes blown to pieces. Some are suicidal. Some have already taken their own lives. 

Please, show the mothers real, human love.

And also, please hear this. I tried the soapbox thing and the screaming from rooftops thing. It didn't really work to affect real change. It only serves to feed the same energy monster - the one filled with righteous rage. It's just as they say, which wolf do you choose to feed? Because the one you choose, is the one that lives.

I choose the one filled with light. I am the light. The light feels amazing, and I plan to live in it always and to share it with all who are ready and willing to see for themselves what is life, and what is death.

Mothers and infants are life. Fear and isolation are death. Let us serve LIFE.

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Strength and Sacrifice

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Strength and Sacrifice

Last week I traveled by boat to Santa Barbara, past the many missing people buried in the Montecito mudslide, up and over a big and endless swell, vomiting repeatedly and shaking and shaking and shaking. It was a gnarly two hours. And then I soaked in my sister's tub in a bath of various salts to warm my body and ground myself. After all, the reason I made the trip was to support a client in labor, and she was deep in its throes by the time I arrived.  

The first thing I witnessed upon entering the birth space was my client, Lilly, being so lovingly supported by her fiance. He exuded excitement and awe toward what he was witnessing. It was beautiful. Because of his confidence, I sat on the sidelines until I was needed. They were a perfect team, so excited to meet their baby and so fully connected in that moment. 

After a drawn out transition due to a bag of waters that never broke, Lilly birthed her beautiful baby en caul, and dad announced that it was a girl - Baby Cleo. I totally cried. 

Baby Cleo's mama is an amazing photographer. View her work at lillyrosenthal.com.

Baby Cleo's mama is an amazing photographer. View her work at lillyrosenthal.com.

The strength I've seen within my clients (some of whom nearly lost their homes in the fire), our community and the many care providers that keep us safe in an area that has experienced so much devastation is oddly in endless supply. I personally am working the hardest I've ever worked. I've pushed past almost all of my comfort zones and I'm still here, thriving and serving and learning and doing my best. And still, I feel so small.

Mother Nature is a force that no one could ever compare themselves to. She will always be the one whose mercy we are at. But it is my belief that the more we care for and respect her, the more she will care for and respect us back. She too has endless strength, but we cannot control how she chooses to use it, especially when triggered by the misgivings of manmade creations

All of this said, don't doubt yourself. Don't doubt what you're capable of, whether it is an unmedicated birth or making it through the coming days as you grieve all you have lost. You are surrounded by support and love and the undeniable determination of many to guide you through these times in life that seem to be the most impossible to get through. 

Though I made it to this Santa Barbara birth, I missed another birth in Ventura and had to reschedule with many people over the following days. Some understood, others didn't. Nothing is ever perfect or easy. Going above and beyond in one area means sacrifices in another. This season has taught me this repeatedly, as has motherhood. It seems to be a never-ending lesson. I embrace the fact that "perfect" doesn't exist, but so long as I do what feels right in my bones, all will be well in the long run. 

For now, I pray for my community, for all the lives lost and all those yet to come Earth side during such a tumultuous time. It isn't a perfect world to become a part of. No. It is very, very far from it. These little babies being born right now have a heavy weight on their shoulders, and it is up to us to draw on our endless strength to guide them through this new unknown. We must teach them how to care for the Earth, how to care for their neighbors, how to care for themselves and how to be a helper in times of duress. We must teach them by example - and that's the hardest part. 

I also wish the best of luck to us all as we take on the role of parent, mentor, teacher and guide. These babies deserve all of the goodness we could possibly help them find. Cheers to a better tomorrow, which is a fitting way to end this post since the 20th was my 29th birthday, a special day I share with my own mother. Even more fitting was the fact that I was blessed to attend the birth of my neighbor and friend's son, Fisher, that night. It was one of the best birthdays I've ever had, gluten-free cake and all.

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Revolutionary Motherhood

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Revolutionary Motherhood

My mother and me at my sister's wedding reception.

My mother and me at my sister's wedding reception.

I think the revolution that is to come will be led by mothers. Mothers of all shapes, sizes, colors and age. Mothers of all types of children, with all types of capabilities. Mothers as a whole.

It will be led by mothers because mothers don’t do anything that isn’t essential, and a revolution is absolutely essential. They make decisions based on the well being of their children before anyone else. They can sense threat and they can protect fearlessly. With a vigilance like no other, mothers always succeed at that which needs to be accomplished because the livelihood of their children depends on it. Mothers know best, and mothers do best. No matter what the circumstances are, they always do their best.

It will be led by mothers because mothers have endured pain. They have endured abuse and disrespect for centuries. They have always come last and yet always continue to put others first. They are an imperative part of nature and its cycles, and are treated as such - but this is not a good thing. Like nature, mothers are treated as property. They are torn down, mistreated and destroyed simply because they are women, women whose bodies and hobbies have changed since bearing children. Women who are sexualized while simultaneously being very undervalued in their personal lives, in their maternity wards* and in their workplaces. It is truly disastrous, for mothers and for society as a whole, that this is the way we treat our mothers.

In contrast, mothers who are revered - who are treated like queens, who are supported by their communities and upheld by the laws, who have love made to them and exude love within them - these are the mothers whose children are happy and healthy; primarily because of the amount of maternal love that is always bestowed upon them, and secondly because of their mothers’ access to the services she needs so as to care for them.

It is time to value the mother, and mothers know this. They will not stand for the current state of our world because their daughters need them to clear the path, and their sons need to know how to treat the mothers of their own children. They will do it because it is what their children need them to do, and the children come first. Please note that it is so fucking good for society that children are first in the eyes of mothers, for society’s well being** depends on it.

The future of everyone is reliant upon how children are raised, how well they develop and how much they thrive in their environments. Thus, the mothers themselves will lead the revolution because the children need them to in order to survive. A key component of the mothers’ success is that you will help them. You will help the mothers to win the revolution because you need the children. You need the children because without the children, there is no future. Without a future to strive for, what’s life? Because, eventually, the future will come and it will be the present. If that future never comes, what happens to the present it was supposed to become?

So, yes, mothers will lead the revolution. And it will be celebrated for centuries more. Until then we will all continue to fight for the rights of mothers, especially in the worlds of healthcare and business. We will work to empower them and care for them when they are in need. We will not judge them, we will assist them. We will not outcast them, we will enable them. All of them.

I help mothers by guiding them through birth and early motherhood as a doula. I do this because I believe that world peace starts with creating positive pregnancy, birth and postpartum experiences for mother and child. How do you help mothers? Together we will help them to attain all that is required to truly change the world.

* Further reading on birth trauma here.
** I do not personally practice any religion, but I am spiritually inclined and admire other spiritual thinkers. What the Pope says here about mothers is truly beautiful.

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