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Birth: Part Three.

March 11, 2017 Pamela Samuelson

Birthing.

My water broke nearly 2 weeks early, waking me up at 1:30 in the morning on a Monday. I woke Adam and called the midwives, who told me to go back to bed and sleep as much as possible. I didn't manage to sleep at all, but went into a very deep and restful trance, felt the location and intensity of the first contractions introducing themselves, which were like nothing I'd ever felt before, and had heroic preparatory dreams. 

The following morning we drove out to the midwives' office, where Catherine, Leslie’s partner, checked some of the fluid under a microscope to make sure that it was actually of amniotic origin. Upon confirming that it was, she told me that because my water had broken and because of the positive GBS results, they needed me to be in hard labor by nighttime - as I said earlier, a hospital would have given me 18 hours from my water breaking to deliver because of the GBS results, and the midwives didn't need to push that hard, but they did need me to get things moving. 

We came home, our beloved Willa came over and helped us to Mary Poppins our house into a place fit to birth in, and I started drinking castor oil cocktails by late afternoon. Castor oil is a trip: it's a bowel irritant (most hospitals will tell you not to drink it because it can cause diarrhea, which, apart from potentially causing dehydration, creates a mess for them to deal with - they would rather administer a pitocin drip they can control) and is a classic way to intensify contractions which doesn't in any way affect the flow and receptivity of the nervous system to oxytocin, as pitocin does. My former doc's PA had told us an incredible story about using it to bring on labor with her 2nd kid. In her own words: "My first kid was born at 42 weeks and was so big that he gave me a completely new ass, and I didn't want to deal with that again, so I made myself a castor oil and tequila sunrise at 41 weeks, and he was born 45 minutes later. No time for anyone else to even get there, so it was just me and the dog.”

Heartened by all of that, we made the cocktails with top shelf tequila and orange juice. That plus liberal nipple stimulation did the trick: contractions steadily intensified and grew closer together. At some point in the thick of it all, I attempted to use a vibrator to steer the sensations towards pleasure, but it just intensified what was already well on its way to overwhelming rather than making it more fun. It seems possible that if I had tried stimulation earlier it might have been possible to take the labor in a more orgasmic direction, but I honestly have no idea. Needless to say: if you try it, gentle reader, please do let me know how it goes :)

We were graced with the presence of three deeply trusted friends as our doulas through the night: Willa, Liz, and Cynthia, all of whom had attended births before, and the latter of whom is a L&D nurse who's seen a zillion births in hospital but for whom we were the first experience of homebirth. Because there were enough loving hands, whoever needed to could nap or eat or take time and there was always still someone with me, and frequently two or three people. I vividly remember the entire night, the faces and the words, dancing to Whitney Houston with Adam, the beautiful hands on my body, the unendingly generous support of my loved ones: Liz's care and levity, Cynthia's excitement and total confidence in directing me, Willa's unshakeable calm and loving encouragement, Adam's comfort and solid support. There was a lot of giggling and a lot of affection and absolutely no stress on anyone's part.

In the middle of the night, I got into the tub (they had set up a kiddie pool on a tarp in the middle of the living room) and realized that it was wonderful to be in the water because it was slowing contractions down and letting me rest. Cynthia was with me, and I told her that I was starting to consider a transfer because I had no idea whether or not the intensity I was experiencing was actually progressing my labor - this was the crux of the births I had seen rushed into C-sections - and I was fucking exhausted and didn't know how much more I could manage. Cynthia reminded me that I had said to her before going into labor that I didn't want an out, and that if I started talking about a transfer to please remind me that if I had an epidural I wouldn't be able to walk or feel my legs. (She also had been the person in touch with the midwives all night, and was aware that if I wasn't dilated enough to start pushing come morning when the midwives arrived that I would very possibly be transferred - it was Now or Never.) She told me that she would let me stay in the tub a little bit longer, but then we were going to get in bed and we were going to work the baby down, and that it was time to marshal all of my energies into making this shit happen.

And then she revealed herself as my Jedi master. It was fucking incredible. What followed was among the most painful experiences of my life, and it was without question the furthest my nervous system had ever been pushed, and I have no idea how it would ever have happened if I hadn't had this profoundly capable woman ordering me around like a cosmic drill sergeant. Everyone got into bed with me, and Cynthia had me turn one way on my side and focus on the eyes of the person in front of me, and I howled my way through several contractions, and then had me turn onto my other side and repeat the howling with someone else, and back and forth for what felt like thirty years until the midwives arrived at 6:30 in the morning. I looked up and saw Catherine smile at the ruckus I was making, was aware of her slipping on a glove to check my dilation, and felt an utter jubilation erupt in the room upon her finding that I was at about 9 cm. She pulled the lip of my cervix that remained out of the way and brought me to 10, and told me it was time to start pushing. 

I pushed in the tub for a while, but it was a huge and slippery contraption that made it difficult for anyone to support my body without actually getting in with me, so I moved to the floor, where I realized what exactly the quality of an effective push was, which was more or less that the hand of God was doing the work. Catherine suggested that we move to the bathroom, because the toilet is an ideal place to push, both because of its birthing stool shape and because it’s a place where the body is well accustomed to letting go. Pushing took on a lightninglike quality once I was on the pot, which scared the hell out of me, and I asked to move to the bed. 

Once on the bed, I had the central realization of the entire experience: namely that as mammals we are wired to flee from pain, but that the only way to move the baby out of me was by diving directly into the pain, into the lightning. Upon understanding that, I committed myself fully to riding through it without hesitation, and asked to move back to the toilet. I felt the baby move down and crown, and felt her head with my hand (there is no crazier sensation) and at the point that her head was emerging, Adam came and sat under me and held me while I pushed Kora out. At some point I felt my tailbone snap, and simply made a mental note that I would deal with it later. The hardest part of the entire labor was pushing out her body after her head had emerged - I scraped the bottom of the barrel of my energies, and tapped out the last of myself moving her all the way out. As soon as she was in my arms, she cleared her own nose and throat, let out a single yowl, and opened her eyes to see. 

After it stopped pulsing, Adam cut the umbilical cord. I watched that, saw all the blood on the floor, and because my nervous system had reached its limit (but probably also because I'm a fainter when it comes to blood) I passed out. Becky, Catherine's marvelous assistant, took the baby and passed her out to Cynthia and Willa (where Willa held her skin on skin), and lay me down on the floor, where I delivered the placenta. I’m told that everyone slapped me, Catherine gave me two shots of pitocin in the thigh to stop the bleeding, and finally after I passed out a couple more times she jerry-rigged an IV and gave me half a bag of fluid. It took about an hour and the threat of calling an ambulance for me to get it together enough to crawl out of the bathroom and into bed. Willa gave Kora to me to hold and I gave her the nipple for the first time. We missed the golden hour for breastfeeding because I was out cold, but we caught up without any issues.

Nursing.

I didn't know it, but milk doesn't come in for three to four days, and the baby is fine just having colostrum during that time - please call bullshit on anyone who tells you differently. Kora and I began to figure out nursing, and I realized that what is a strange and gorgeous and crazy process at the best of times has the potential to be downright nervewracking to a new mom who is utterly exhausted and has inaccurate judgement. So I made a lot of phone calls and asked everyone who had offered for help. I was advised by a family friend who is a lactation consultant to use Vitamin E on my nipples to prevent problems, which it absolutely did. When my milk started coming in 3 nights later, I became unbelievably engorged and used cold cabbage leaves in my bra to soothe the hot spots and hard places in my breasts while the tissues adjusted to the flow of milk. I asked for a lot of counsel until we got the hang of it. Once we did, and ever since, breastfeeding has been a deep pleasure.

Recovery.

The postpartum body takes time to heal. Time as in weeks and months. The landscape of the body is significantly changed by birth. There are huge amounts of ill-conceived pressure and shame, private and public, on postpartum women to pull themselves together and get back to whatever they was doing before all that, and it is frankly a fucking tragedy. There is nowhere near enough space created for the healing and rest and brand new life-giving intimacy that begins the moment a baby is born, and that, more clearly than nearly anything else I’ve ever come across, reflects the cultural demonization of the female body. There is little regard for the recovery of women after the fundamental act is complete, and little thought given to what we need to return to an active life with our health intact and our experiences integrated. 

I’m extremely lucky in that I have the kind of support that allowed me to carve out for myself what wasn’t given to me - but which is, for example, freely provided in a country such as France, which seems to have an entirely different model of medicine than we’ve created in the US - and I had enough of an education to know what to seek out. 

Briefly, these are the circumstances of my postpartum recovery, and the details of the care that were the most indispensable:

My entire pelvic floor was sore for about a month in ways that are difficult to describe to anyone who hasn’t experienced it: the entire structure of my pelvis had shifted in the most extreme fashion and I felt terribly bruised and torn. I didn’t want to be touched at all for about 6 weeks. The snapped tailbone took longer to heal, and I was in wincing discomfort, sitting and standing slowly and with extreme caution, for perhaps 3 months. At the point that I felt healed enough that I could tolerate deep touch, I began to work with my own hands into the scar tissue at my perineum where I had torn and been stitched, soaking with hot water to warm the tissue and then massaging myself intravaginally and externally around the scar as firmly as I could manage with castor oil using my fingers and thumbs, whenever I was in a bath or shower. This was something I had studied as a sexological bodyworker and thought about within the context of the protocols of Holistic Pelvic Care, and it helped a lot with the general discomfort and especially with the pinchy, sharp discomfort I would experience with any penetration. I also began to practice the Arvigo self-care protocols, which are delicious and simple and incredibly restorative, and the Holistic Pelvic Care exercises detailed by Tami Kent in her amazing book Wild Feminine.

It’s worth writing a little bit about castor oil packs here, because they are so wondrous. 

The topical action of the oil of the castor bean is a goddamn miracle. There has been precious little study in scientific quarters about why it does what it does, but its primary action seems to come from a component called ricinoleic acid, which has been shown in clinical studies to reduce pain and inflammation. It’s thought that castor oil helps to flush lymph, clearing toxins and excessive waste from the area where it is applied. What I do know firsthand is that castor packing has consistently reduced my recovery time from sprained ankles from a month to less than a week, that it does beautiful things to my digestion, that it visibly reduces inflammation in surface tissues, and that it makes deep tissue and myofascial bodywork much less painful when it is used. It’s a recommendation in the annals of Arvigo, and it has nearly unbelievable results with internal scarring in mucous membranes - Ellen Heed and Kimberly Ann Johnson, with whom I studied scar tissue remediation, reported having felt intravaginal scar tissue dissolve from a single application of castor oil. And it was hugely helpful to me in doing internal work on myself. 

After a while, I had two internal scar tissue sessions with Ellen, who brings a beautiful combination of laserlike, merciless focus and exquisite attention to her work, and found that receiving internal work was a major key to recovery. I believe this is true for all births - a significant amount of scar tissue is created by the act of birth, whether it’s a vaginal delivery or a caesarean, and scar tissue has to be addressed to maintain fluid and energy flow through the abdomen and pelvic floor. 

Another common postpartum situation is diastasis recti, in which the abdominal muscles separate. This can be a minor separation, a finger’s width across, or a major one, four or five fingers across. It’s not a thing to ignore, and it’s a strange and amazing road back to a normal abdomen - DRs don’t knit back together from crunches or any of the usual abdomen-building exercises, and in fact are made worse by most normal exercise. The best things I found to resolve mine were binding my belly with a splint from the Tummy Team and doing the one kind of abdominal exercise that works to resolve DRs in which one engages the deepest layer of abdominal muscle, the transversus abdominus. Katy Bowman talks about it quite a bit on her excellent blog.

The return of a body that feels like mine is ongoing - when I’m back in aerial training, I feel sore in all the right places, flexibility returns, and my core bounces back to what I know it to be. And: the time to train is dear right now, because making time for myself is a whole new equation with a baby. I end up doing yoga at home as often as I’m able. 

Also, kegels are real. They aren’t a thing to overdo in general - their effectiveness has everything to do with whether or not the pussy in question is lacking in strength from lack of engagement or over-engagement, too little tone or too much tone - but as a postpartum exploratory exercise, they’re pretty essential for beginning to feel like oneself again. I prefer the exercises associated with the use of jade eggs, as having something inside the vagina to provide some interoceptive feedback is wonderful, and the practices develop sensation and control involving both engaging and letting go, rather than just repetitions. 

The open portal.

I understand that this isn’t the case for everyone, but birth blew me open in a way I had never experienced and didn’t anticipate. My sensitivity to sounds and energies was on hyperalert for weeks, and as a result I became extremely private, still, quiet, and slow in the first weeks with the baby. The midwives had left a sign on our door when they left which asked that guests wash their hands upon entry, make themselves useful while visiting, and limit their visits to 15 minutes, and although that sounds unnecessarily draconian from a normal state of being, those rules actually saved my sanity. It was absolutely exhausting being with anyone but Adam and Kora. We rested, took a lot of space from the world, stayed in bed, watched Orange is the New Black, moved very slowly, read books, shnookled, and rested some more. Going outside for the first time 8 days after the birth was unbelievably overstimulating and brief - I could hear everything for several blocks around, and felt like a wild animal suddenly released into the middle of the city.

From that perspective, the care I’d recommend for new families is this:

Respect their space, and help them defend it if necessary from people like guilt trippy relatives, as best you can. Move slowly and with sensitivity. Speak quietly and gently. Ask them what kind of food they would like, rather than bringing food that you want to bring them, as digestive distress will affect both the nursing mom and the breastfeeding baby. Offer foods that support nursing: raw, clean fats like avocado and salmon, bone broth (if the mom is a carnivore) and coconut water are all incredible support to the recovering body. 

And, if you REALLY want to help, friends: offer to clean. Wash 4 dishes. Do a load of laundry. Get in there and clean. It is, in fact, the greatest and most intimate kindness. 

Resources.

These are some of the books I found to be especially wonderful.

Spiritual Midwifery and Ina May’s Guide to Childbirth by Ina May Gaskin

Heart and Hands by Elizabeth Davis

Birthing From Within by Pam England

The Birth Partner (Adam found this one absolutely invaluable - it’s also a required text in many doula trainings) by Penny Simkin

Orgasmic Birth by Debra Pascali-Bonaro and Elizabeth Davis

The Gentle Birth Method by Gowri Motha

The Thinking Woman’s Guide to a Better Birth by Henci Goer

 

The website that was far and away the most useful in preparing for the birth was www.evidencebasedbirth.com

In learning about breastfeeding, both www.kellymom.com and www.lalecheleague.org were awesome.

 

I STRONGLY recommend taking a birthing class, if you can, with a partner if you have one or with another loved one if you don’t. Ask around, go online, find out who’s really wonderful who is teaching in your area. The one we went to in LA was at a birthing center called Gracefull, taught by Elizabeth Bachner and J.J Brake, and it was tremendously helpful for both of us.

 

Your best resource, full stop, is your local community. Face to face as well as online. Ask around about midwives, hospitals, birthing centers, doulas, books. Talk to friends. Ask for support from people who have comparable priorities to yours and who you respect. I stopped speaking to people who I suspected would freak out about my plan to birth at home, because pregnancy really does render one more permeable than usual, and I was clear that internalizing other people’s terrors on any level held no benefit for me. Instead, I surrounded myself with people who could get with my program and support me in planning a fierce, unmedicated birth - and, better yet, with women who had already had such births. Talking to educated moms who are ahead on the curve is the single best medicine there is. 

Similarly, going into online forums can quickly become overwhelming - everybody on earth has a strong opinion and will want you to benefit from their wisdom, which cascades rapidly into oversharing and storytelling, not necessarily the most useful for a pregnant person just trying to do a little research. Set your filters properly when venturing into the jungle of the internet. 

And that, my loves, is all I have to say about that for now.

Thank you for reading. Please reach out with any questions or if I can support you in any way.

May you experience all phenomena as fodder for your growing awareness and deep, amazing joy.

In Feminist Women's Health Tags birth, homebirth, orgasmic birth

Bio: The Hydrated Version.

October 20, 2016 Pamela Samuelson
photo by Morgan Spencer klein

photo by Morgan Spencer klein

About me.

My work as a bodyworker and educator began as the silver lining of exploring and transforming my own wounds.

As a dancer in a rigorous conservatory program in college, I developed a chronic injury so severe that I was unable to stand still without searing pain and spasms in both of my hips, and was brought over the course of 2 years to a complete physical crisis that forced me to stop dancing. MDs told me that they could find nothing structurally wrong to explain what was happening to me. Upon their recommendation, I worked briefly with a physical therapist and found that the repetitive exercises were a blunt instrument which, in the absence of understanding, made my condition worse.

The first true relief I experienced was in the sitting meditation practice I cultivated while studying Buddhist philosophy and practice in India and Nepal the following year. The teaching I was blessed to receive during that time from the immensely kind teachers and translators I met turned my entire world toward an unprecedented era of rightness. As I trained my attention, my body began to calm down. It was a vital lesson in subtle awareness and control, in allowing and witnessing my mind amidst all the comings and goings of discomfort, and in our amazing malleability as ordinary human beings.

The second gift of that journey was to receive hands-on Feldenkrais work for the first time from a friend and traveling companion who hipped me to the incredibly rich world of sensation to be discovered in the body’s tiniest movements. The hands-on meditation on micromovement and perception that Feldenkrais offers, and particularly what arose for me in the permissive presence of a loving witness, made a profound impact on my sense of the exponential deepening of healing that becomes possible when attending to oneself at the body’s own pace, and in good company.

As soon as I could get my ass out of school, I enrolled in an accelerated massage therapy program with the idea that I intended ultimately to become an acupuncturist, and wanted to be able to perceive capably with my hands before working with tools. I loved entering into an altered state with people in sessions, both giving and receiving, and began to perceive the body’s structure as the layered material form of someone’s consciousness over time. For the first time I witnessed clients as they experienced shifts of perception which rippled instantly through their bodies, clearly discernible to my hands. 

The next lightning bolt hit in the form of the titan who became my Core Energetics therapist, a person who is still a central inspiration to me. I had recently dropped to my knees in the middle of a sidewalk and received a stern talking-to by a council of Gods while under the influence of psychedelics at Mardi Gras in New Orleans, and as the gifts of massively expanded identity and hyperawareness I felt began to fade in the midst of everyday life, I hunted for a way to sustain myself and learn to live in that state of openness all the time.  A trusted friend recommended me to the Institute for Core Energetics, and I was introduced to the work of Wilhelm Reich and his protege John Pierrakos via the fearless presence and teaching of Warren Moe. Reich and Pierrakos’s respective works with human (and global) bioenergetics remain the cornerstone of what I see as the true scope of the human capacity to heal. The total authority and unmistakeable honesty of the body’s knowledge is what makes Core Energetics, and other somatic or body-based forms of therapy, effective where I've found talk therapy inadequate. There was nothing to talk about except what the body revealed, and no amount of posturing, theorizing, explaining or intellectualizing was able to touch what a single instance of somatic recall achieved. I was completely changed by this experience.

Upon moving back to Los Angeles, I simultaneously began to study at the Shiatsu School, which was a hub for renegade geniuses like Dr. Vincent Medici and Ellen Heed, and to work at Play Mountain Place, the oldest free school in the United States and a sister school to Summerhill, the first democratic school for children in the world.  At the Shiatsu School I was plunged into Traditional Chinese Medicine theory and practice. More centrally, Dr. Medici introduced us to his Rule of Four as a thorough, elegant working method for the assessment of dysfunction, and trained us in a hands-on approach to the high-charge psychoemotional centers of the human body. As a new Play Mountain teacher, I was led to study the work of Carl Rogers, and began to recognize the developmental basis of bioenergetic constrictions in the body. I also started to see an alternative to the culture of containment and suppression to which most people are entrained from birth. Play Mountain’s focus on nonviolent communication, parallel with its permissiveness toward and intelligent direction of violent emotions in all people through the same kind of technology I’d experienced in Core Energetics, was hugely eye-opening. I saw adults becoming healthy and treating children with the respect that they had themselves been deprived of as young people, and saw children who were able to be fully and exactly themselves. It was and is a place of enormous wisdom.

I began to study Visionary Craniosacral work with the wizardly Hugh Milne, who guided me to a level of self-trust and self-love that I had never encountered anywhere else. In addition to neuroanatomy and the subtle techniques which allow the body to unwind, much of his teaching focuses on cultivating the intuitive faculties of the healer, and on the tremendous impact of bodywork upon the unconscious aspects of the self when it is presented as a loving act of ritual. I also studied with and then began to teach beside Elizabeth Guilliams, an intensely talented energy worker and intuitive whose use of crystals as living tools for transformation became a pillar of my understanding of the human bioenergetic field and its expressions across the material plane. Liz and I have taught children and adults together for well over a decade, and our work is a continuously unfolding marvel in my life, a lens of unwavering clarity and an effortless invitation to play with the constant brilliance of Life. 

I began to work as a volunteer sex educator for Planned Parenthood, teaching their curriculum on sexuality and anatomy and answering anonymous questions in 9th grade classrooms all over Los Angeles. The anatomy geek in me really bloomed when I began to delve into sexual anatomy. I discovered the radical literature of the Federation for Feminist Women’s Healthcare which began in the early 70s, when women began to teach themselves and their communities gynecological self-care in order to take control of their own sexual well being. That, and Ellen Heed’s then-nascent work with sacred female sexuality, inspired a deep inquiry into birth control methods that could be both female-controlled and non-disruptive to the delicate harmony of the neuroendocrine system. Despite my immense respect for Planned Parenthood's hard-won political clout and the adherence to mainstream medical practice that allows for their radical work, I quit when I couldn’t justify teaching 14 year old girls that their only good option is to take synthetic hormones to prevent pregnancy in lieu of a proper education about their bodies. As someone who champions the agency and intelligence of young people, I felt strongly that there had to be another way to move forward. The beginning of a new sex ed curriculum for teenagers began to form, one that proposed developmentally appropriate ways to discuss barrier methods, the cycle of fertility, the spectrum of gender, an exploration of consent, and pleasure as something that’s essential to human health. 

I began to learn from friends about the politics of pregnancy and birth in the United States, and trained as an Orgasmic Birth doula with the amazing Debra Pascali-Bonaro, who showed me for the first time in my life that a peaceful, empowered, normal birth is actually well within reach for the majority of birthing people - and that it is far from the usual state of play in the US. She planted some essential seeds of revolution in my heart, handed me a set of effective tools for supporting birthing families in both the hospital and home, and kicked me out the door to go see for myself and change the world. 

Over the subsequent years I assisted with the births of my friends, all in hospital, and saw firsthand the limitations and boons of the kind of care MDs and hospitals have to offer to the huge majority of birthing people in the modern world. I also saw information withheld that could have prevented unnecessary interventions, and a general lack of interest in helping people who had experienced their birth as traumatic, or who had suffered birth injuries which set up patterns of dysfunction that would be with them, according to their doctors, for the rest of their lives. In particular, I witnessed a flavor of shaming around vaginal injuries, especially  those that prevented pleasure, that provoked a really deep ire in me. The need for a feminist model of healthcare became all the more evident in the context of the banality of birthing practices that are violent towards women and trans people, and I committed myself to becoming an axis for accurate information and stalwart support across the spectrum of our changing needs and desires. I began to escort at abortion clinics on major church holidays when protesters would come out in force, and began to comprehend more completely the realities of a culture that has only recently begun to contemplate its emergence from a belief system in which women and people of color are the property of white men. 

In a spontaneous ritual, I invoked what I would need in order to serve the needs of the people who were showing up in my practice and in my life, and the Gods disrupted my entire life by granting my wishes. I went to study Holistic Pelvic Care with the incredible edge-walker who is Tami Lynn Kent, and immediately afterwards immersed myself in the world of Rosita Arvigo’s Maya Abdominal Therapy. Within two weeks of my return home to my beloved partner, and having just been turned upside down by unexpectedly and unmistakably falling in love with a fellow Arvigo student, I got pregnant for the first time ever after 15 incident-free years of tracking my cycle and using a cervical cap as my primary methods of birth control. During pregnancy, I enrolled in the California Sexological Bodywork certification program through the Institute for the Advanced Study of Human Sexuality, and in my second trimester I traveled to San Fransisco for the intensive hands-on portion of the certificate course. I was the only pregnant person who had ever participated in the program, and became a state-certified Somatic Sex Educator (SSE/CSB) less than a month before our daughter was born. 

Kora’s birth was the most insane and extraordinary experience I have ever had, and I couldn’t have asked for a better experience: fortune smiled upon us and we were able to go through the portal in the privacy and safety of our home. I was free of complications beyond my control, and handled the complications within my control with solid research and excellent help. And, maybe most importantly, I was cared for through the birth by my dearest beloveds, who acted as my capable and loving doulas, and was delivered by an indomitable mountain of a midwife. I had minimal tearing, received excellent scar tissue remediation care (and, more recently, essential formal training) from Ellen Heed and Kimberly Ann Johnson, and healed quickly. If you want to read a more detailed account of my pregnancy and birth, it can be found here.

There is much to say and a great difficulty in adequately expressing the transformations of the past 14 months. As a woman with an expanding identity, as a parent to a willful, clever daughter, as a sexual animal, as a partner to two spectacular and very different people, as an educator and practitioner and somatic researcher, it’s fair to say that the past couple of years has had the pace and wildness of travel on a rocketship, one which seems most of the time to be copiloted by angels. These days are filled with wonder. It's perhaps enough to say for now that the urgency I felt previous to pregnancy and birth, the desire to burn the patriarchy to the ground and bring this long age of fear and shame to an end, and my readiness to throw my weight behind creating a culture of power and pleasure and self-liberation, for everyone, here and now, and as the legacy we'll live out and hand to our kids - the force of that desire has drowned out my fears and hesitations, and it is the light I’m walking toward at the end of this crazy tunnel. 

Please feel free to contact me if any of this resonates with something in you. I’m here to connect.

Tags bio, feminist women's healthcare, bodywork, somatic, education, orgasmic birth, doula, alternative education, core energetics