BIRTHING BABIES, BIRTHING OURSELVES
with
Sandra Louise Walsh
www.awakenlifecoach.com
[email protected]
Growing up in the 1960s and 70s, I recall dreaming of the many paths my life could take. As the
second of four daughters, I was always surrounded by females, with the only male being a little
overpowering, and one for whom life held such disappointment as he didn’t realize his wish of
having a son. I aimed to ‘be’ that son, and wanted to achieve so much. Life chose a direction I’d
never considered - I found myself pregnant at the tender age of 16, albeit with a loving partner definitely not what I would have ‘consciously’ chosen.
My journey took many twists and turns from then on, and I grew up swiftly! The moment I gave
birth to my beautiful daughter, life changed irrevocably. I was thrust into the immense
responsibilities of the adult world. The pregnancy, labour and birth, weren’t the empowering,
enriching, evolving experience I now know they can be.
Fast-forward 37 years, and on reflection I see clearly I was truly gifted, rather than hindered, and
recognize what incredible treasures life’s brought to me that I’m now able to use to support others.
I became a midwife at the age of 27. My raison d’être was to empower women to
experience motherhood in a powerful and positive way, making informed choices for their
pregnancy, labour, birth and the first few weeks with their baby.
Supporting fellow midwives and other maternity support workers, as well as students and
particularly new graduates, became passions of mine too.
To be able to empower another, we must first feel empowered.
It stood to reason to me that to walk alongside women, the carers
needed to feel cared for. It breaks my heart now to read the stories
of some of the immense challenges of working in the NHS in the
United Kingdom (read more here: http://tinyurl.com/bvcxes3,
‘The secret midwife: Psychotic mothers, exhausted doctors and
nurses asleep on the job: A whistle blower reveals the desperate
truth behind those rose-tinted TV shows’).
Sandra as young mum, (1976)
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