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Vision of a Freebirth Community Copyright © Jeannine Parvati Baker, originally appearing in "Living in Balance"- Vol.4, No.3. This is the final article in a series about Jeannines vision of a freebirth community. The first articles are Freebirth, Every Mother a Midwife and Fear of Birth.
Imagine a world where childbirth was a sacred event in the
family cycle, where the birth of a child was completely free
in all senses of the word. The word "free" originally
meant an affectionate relationship between members
of a household that was not bound by slavery or payment.
Contrast that to the reality in Western civilization where
birth attendants are professionals. Midwifery is the worlds
second oldest profession and in ancient times, prostitutes
and midwives worshipped the same Goddess in the same altar. The World wherein babies are born in freedom as a celebrated community event, not a privatized medically MANaged emergency, would transform society. Mothers who give birth focused on the spiritual dimension bring this awareness into the world with them forevermore. A mother who falls deeply in love with her baby will carry a fierce devotion to sustaining her childs wholeness. Rather than the current scene of detached parenting that we can witness at any marketplace in any venue in Western countries, where mothers carry their babies in plastic baskets rather than on their bodies, we would see Mamatoto the African term for the holy unit of mother and baby together. There are no words in this tribes language for a mother
and newborn as separate individuals. The Africans see it the
way I do when birth is a spiritual as well as
natural rite- of passage, it doesnt look as if
mother and baby are two separate individuals after birth.
We see that mother and baby are indeed one until such time
as the baby makes moves to crawl off mamas lap. With
six children, I can virtually see my heart walking around
the planet in six different bodies. Mothers who open their hearts through freebirth can make the next step in the spiritual journey and we can extend this unifying vision to all people. Our capacity for compassionate care intensifies when we fully bond with our babies and doesnt stop there. We can feel on a cellular level that we must engage in the
community to make it the best possible place for our children
and our grandchildren. If when giving birth, I hire an institution
and professionals to deliver me, I have less practice in being
pro-active for the sake of my children, at the very least.
I also have someone else to blame. If I had taken drugs (epidural)
when giving birth, I would not have been able to secrete oxytocin,
the love hormone. I wouldnt care about, or for, my children
as fully for missing this intense bonding and, by extension,
my larger community if I gave birth the American way. Does
this describe the present condition of society? Apathy? My vision of freebirth is a community where every mother
is her own midwife. It is the worlds best kept secret
that giving birth is a natural expression of heterosexual
loving. It is the most ordinary miracle. We must build a community
which supports living closer to the natural world, where birth
is celebrated through empowering ritual, rather than managed
control as if it is dangerous. In some tribal culture, those which are not technocratic
and are closer to nature, the visitor, upon asking who is
the midwife, will be shown every mother. Mothers help their
daughters give birth. There are tribal rituals which support
the passage. Obstetric ritual has supplanted the less mechanical,
more natural rituals in our culture and mothers who were previously
delivered by "experts" have lost the confidence
to guide their own daughters. Imagine a world where birth was truly free in all meanings of that word because each pregnant woman had a loving relationship with her own mother a world where mothers felt free to experience this rite of passage fully empowered from within, rather than need others to tell them they were okay. In a culture where freedom was experienced at birth, mothers would be empowered to no only protect their babies from harm, but also care for their children without dominating them. Mothers would teach, by their being, that power is not control,
but rather the freedom to be who we really are. How do we
co-create a free community of beings who cease to dominate
one another and the rest of creation? By giving mothers the
body experience of freedom at birth, so we can in turn nurture
children who will neither allow victimization, nor attempt
to control of manipulate others. Power from within, not power
over someone or something else, is the way to freedom. Our communities and our planet are in crisis. We have run the extent of the rapacious greed that focuses on dominations. The problem doesnt seem to be so much overpopulation as it is overpopulation of greedy people. When individuals have been born gently, welcomed kindly into the community, breastfed for many years, they do no become greedy people. They come from a place of fullness and balance with all our relations. My breasts taught me a universal principle about giving and receiving, the exchange of goods between people. When I would nurse my babies in completion, my breasts would refill even more. However if I cut off the milk flow before my babies were done nursing, I would diminish my supply. My breasts express a spiritual principle of human relations the more we give from the heart, the more we receive. Contrast this to the imprint for intimate human relations
a bottle of substitute milk gives use it up, throw
it away. Sound familiar? Could this be a description of our
cultures values and the disposable relationships that
are so prevalent? Relationships in which love is measured,
sometimes scarce, and one is thrown into feelings of abandonment
of enormous proportion? Our relationship with the Earth reflects this primal imprint
as well. Our tendency is to relate to the Earth as we have
related to our mothers. From this perspective, it looks like
people are rebellious teenagers, trashing Moms house
before they leave for another planet. To sustain our matrix,
the planet Earth, we must reclaim birth as a sacred creation
event and free ourselves from old primal patterns. As my fathers people, the Native Americans, say, "We did not inherit the Earth from our ancestors so much as we have borrowed the Earth from our children." Let us return this gift in good shape. Let us manifest and (wo)manifest freebirth and celebrate the possible family. May we all experience "Mamatoto" with our communities and our shared planet. * Retyping effort by Leilah McCracken at BirthLove.com* This article retyped by Karen Love |
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Dear Jeannine, et al., Finding you on the web is a joy! Then, reading though your articles, especially the 'spider & fear' one, was a blessing... or , rather, many blessings. Many years ago , a friend and I welcomed you to give talks in Huntington Beach California, when Halley was a baby. Later, another friend and I attended a ritual evening you gave at in Portland, Oregon. My first "meeting ", though, came many years earlier, in my teens, when my mother bought Prenatal Yoga . Your wisdom has been a boon through four births, years of nursing and more. Now, with my son and daughters in their teens and beyond, in my crone era, and newly widowed, it's a wonderful thing to find a familiar voice. Many thanks for your wisdom, courage , and creativity. Jamie F. Brown |
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