Thursday, January 24, 2013

What Matters to Women, Matters to Midwives – 13 Essentials ©

1. Context Matters

Contributing author Arisika Razak
Context is the circumstance in which events occur that will, to a large degree, determine meaning, define who is in power, and have a profound effect on those giving birth, those being born, and birth workers.
“Birth, this elegant, simple, yet intricate process has had unnecessary, complex, expensive technology superimposed onto it, creating a dangerous environment for birthing women.” -Alice Bailes
2. Content Matters
Content of maternity care is defined by the model of care. The midwifery model and the medical model each utilize different content, such as values, beliefs, ethics; skills, tools, interventions: practices, protocols, providers; politics, economics, and so on. While birth remains the same the world over, the model of care is a cultural construct.
“Midwives carry sacred knowledge of reproductive processes. The mother-infant bond, for example, is so central to the aims of healing and social transformation that it’s not just about delivering babies. It’s about the power of women to transform life.” -Katsi Cook
3. Holism Matters

Contributing author Carol Nelson
Holism in midwifery practice recognizes that what affects one part affects all parts because everything is intimately connected.
“At the moment of birth, there is a rare and brief glimpse of the connection between this world and another, of before and after, of mortal and immortal, of spiritual and physical, of known and unknown.” –Ida Darragh
4. Nature Matters
Nature has designed the elegantly complex processes of pregnancy, birth, lactation, and mother-infant attachment to work innately, and in most cases, no amount of tampering can improve them.
“I think midwifery was developed by people with common sense, people who were close to nature, and people who observed other species of mammals and saw that there were lessons there to be learned.” -Ina May Gaskin
5. Sacred Matters
Midwives say there is a sacred and invisible domain through which women and infants must pass to birth and be born. Birth is not just physiological; it is a soul journey.

Editor & author Geradine Simkins
“I pushed three times, and for a moment I felt I had the Universe between my legs…an image of the Hindu Goddess Kali giving birth to the Universe. It left me joyfully ecstatic. It changed my life forever.” –Arisika Razak
6. Relationship Matters
It is essential in human nature to be in relationship with one another. Midwives and the clients they serve are dynamically intertwined like a braided grapevine of interlaced roots, branches and fruits that feed and support one another.
“I have learned that when you are with a client, she must feel as if she is the only person in your life. She is the center.” -Abby J. Kinne
7. Compassion Matters
Compassion is not a luxury, it is a biological imperative, because as humans our brains are hardwired to care about one another.
“Women need to be cared for and given a safe haven as they walk through the sacrament of birth. Babies need to be properly welcomed as they begin their Earth Walk.” –Geradine Simkins
8. Self-Determination Matters
At the core of the ethic of self-determination is the critical question: Are women in charge of their bodies, their births, their babies, their decisions and their lives, or not? Midwives resoundingly say “yes” and relentlessly advocate for women.
“Years of standing by, of listening to thousands of birth songs, birth cries, complaints, years of seeing joy, blood, sweat and tears have taught me…a woman and her baby are wise together.” -Kip Kozlowski
9. Service Matters

Contributing author Sister Angela Murdaugh
The ethic of service affords deep connection to a community, creates an experience of belonging and purpose, and allows us to live our passions.
“My walls were lined with honors, yet I reflect that somehow it seemed wrong to reward me for doing what I loved to do. I consider myself blessed beyond measure to live and work in such an authentic manner as I was granted.” –Sister Angela Murdaugh
10. Activism Matters
Activism is about ordinary citizens taking charge of creating what we want and fighting for what we feel is right. It is not idealistic. It is a pratical way to live, a way that many culture have, and still do, function.
“I love catching the baby, it is the ultimate experience, but I am also birthing a movement that will eradicate infant mortality, increase breastfeeding rates, and increase the number of Black midwives to improve community health.” -Shafia Monroe
11. Courage Matters
Courage underpins almost everything that midwives do. It is beyond boldness, it is beyond valor, and it is beyond daring. Courage is not a skill, it is a way of life, a willingess to walk with an attitude of fearlessness.

Contributing author Debbie Pulley
“I never intended to be an outlaw, but I was born at a time when the midwifery profession was illegal in many states. Future generations will wonder why we risked jail and our freedom to do midwifery. It is our hope that our grandchildren and our great grandchildren can be born without fear, safely and surrounded by love, into the hands of midwives. -Kate Bowland
12. Lineage Matters
Midwives know and value that we stand on the shoulders of a lineage of ancestor midwives. They may be blood relatives or the family tree of indigenous, traditional, immigrant or grand midwives of the past. They are connected throughout time to this lineage.
“The Smithsonian exhibit celebrated the impact and work done by ‘granny’ midwives from the 17th century to the present and included my authentic birth bag and supplies I take to home births. I learned so much about my sister midwife ancestors. It was in my blood!” – Marsha Jackson
13. Midwives Matter
Midwives matter because what they offer women, infants, and families is unique, ephemeral, artisanal, precious and rare. Midwives will relentlessly advocate for women and will continually take risks in their own lives to support women’s choices.
“I know how we are born makes a difference. The midwives who fought to keep birth sacred and free can be seen as folk heros. We are legendary! I am proud to be part of this noble cause.” -Linda McHale
Birth Matters. How one gives birth, and how one is born, matters deeply.
Whether we enter it intentionally or unintentionally, happily or unhappily, prepared or unprepared, giving birth is a rite of passage like no other. And afterwards, birth is forever embedded in our memories and embodied in our flesh. It is something we remember deep in our bones and our souls our whole lives.
What Matters to Women, Matters to Midwives – 13 Essentials © Geradine Simkins 2010. Excerpted from Into These Hands, Wisdom from Midwives ©, published by Spirituality and Health Books, 2011.
Photographs on this page copyrighted by Tina Williams

Saturday, January 12, 2013

Introducing Doro

It took a lot of prayer to decide where the Lord wanted me to serve when I return to Africa in 2014. It was HARD to decide! When I first started my midwifery training here in the Philippines a contact in Doro, told me of a maternity ward they were opening. Then he happened to mention "maybe you will join us when you finish." That statement has stayed in the back of my mind since then. Lingering. After much prayer and guidance from trusted friends it became clear that this was the direction the Lord is leading me. This past week I committed to serving in Doro! I am excited about what the future holds for me there. 

I have committed to serving in Doro's Maternity ward for two years starting in the spring of 2014. 

Where is Doro? 
Doro is in Maban county in the Upper Nile state near Ethiopia (the cream colored area on the upper right of the map). I formerly lived in Eastern Equetoria (the yellow area, lower right side of the map) near the Uganda border in the Didinga Hills.

Maban county is home to over 100,000 refugees 
 "A year ago previously-inaccessible, remote peoples from Sudan to the north of our Doro home began streaming into the new country of South Sudan, fleeing the systematic bombing of their villages and markets.  Today there are more than 110,000 refugees in tented camps around Doro.  Refugees come by foot, impoverished, with but a few goats or sheep. These people are our friends, and they are poor.  They did not choose their lot in life.  They suffer in ways we barely comprehend." ~ Missionary couple serving in Doro 

Where will I live?
I will live on this compound in a mud hut, probably with another young woman. There are 15-20 (roughly) other medical missionaries that also live here. Looks cozy! (this picture was taken in 2010, not sure what it looks like now). There is a dog or two, which of course makes me happy :) 

The weather in Doro is HOT. In the dry season the temperature rises above 100ºf  with out any rain! From what I have read this is for 7 months out of the year. There is also a rainy season from roughly July-September (I think) and the area gets a lot of flooding from what I have read. I am not choosing Doro because of the lovely weather. 

Doro airstrip
This picture is a bit old, so not sure what it looks like today, But it made me feel at home :) I believe AIMAIR will be flying me in and out, at least some of the time. I sure love the men & their families that serve faithfully in AIMAIR flying missionaries in and out of hard to reach places! 


What will I be doing in Doro? 

My first 3 months will be spent language learning. I will learn the Mabaan language and possibly Juba Arabic. After these 3 months I will start serving in the maternity clinic along side other midwives, doctors & nurses. We will be providing prenatal, labor & delivery & postpartum care along with training up national midwives and community health teaching. 

I will be spending four days each week in the clinic and be on shift for births at night. The other 3 days of the week I can have a ministry outside of the maternity clinic, which I don't know what that will look like yet. There is a lot of unknowns as far as the maternity clinic because it is just getting up and running this year. 

One of the changes for me in serving in Doro is that I will be working under a different organization. Africa Inland Missions will be lending me to Serving in Missions (SIM). I will still be a AIM missionary, but will be under the authority of SIM while in Doro. If you would like to know more about SIM, you can visit their website at: http://www.sim.org

Pictures were found on google
I step out in faith in my commitment to serve in Doro. There will be many challenges and heart breaking moments of that I am sure, but there will be joy and hope in the midst.  I offer up my gifts to the Lord to be used for His glory. To bring hope to the hopeless. 

 "The LORD is close to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit." Psalm 34:18

Thursday, January 3, 2013

Thankful Thursday

Today I am thankful for a wonderful nights sleep that was followed by a fun filled day in the "big" town a 1 1/2hr van drive away.  Tuguegarao City isn't what you would call a beautiful place. It is normally very hot, congested and full of exhaust fumes. Yet, for us it means McDonald's - who doesn't love their fries? Yummy smoothies, Duncan donuts, large supper markets with things like American cheddar cheese! a lovely book store, along with a few other odds and ends. It really was a lovely day for my two fellow students and I and I am thankful for it!

One of my new year goals is to really learn how to be thankful. I feel that I often have a sense of thankfulness, but not a true spirit of thankfulness. As part of this goal I am reading the book, One Thousand Gifts by Ann Voskamp. I just finished chapter two and so far I really like it. I have heard it has been life changing for some people. Anyone read it and have any thoughts about it?

"Thanksgiving -- giving thanks in everything -- prepares the way that God might show us His fullest salvation in Christ." - Ann Voskamp 

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

Happy New Year

Across the midnight sky the New year was welcomed in with a beautiful display of fireworks. It was beautiful. Those fireworks shooting into the sky felt like promises from God about the hope for the future.
Thank you goole for the picture, I was too busy soaking in the moment to take a picture last night
May this new year be filled with blessings. May I love more, forgive faster, count my blessing and live each day to the fullest in 2013! 


“Yesterday is gone. Tomorrow has not yet come. We have only today. Let us begin.” 
― Mother Teresa 


Happy New Year!!