Different Types Of Pregnancy
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You’re pregnant and sometime within the next 9 months, you
will give birth to your child. Take a moment to think about
your own life: your beliefs, religion, choices available about
childbirth or lack of, health issues, what you’ve been taught
about childbirth from your mother or father, your previous
birth experiences and what you want for this birth. Then take a
moment to look around you at your neighbors, work colleagues,
or other women you pass on the street. What do you share in
common with ALL these other women? You might find some
similarities, yet you will probably focus more on the
differences that exist.
Can you blink or cough? Can ALL those other women do the
same? That’s what we have in common…our human and universally
shared human body. Using that ‘of course’ as a basis of
thinking, know that there is a way for any woman to prepare for
childbirth that teaches us about our birthing body. It’s such
common knowledge that you’ll wonder way it you didn’t know it
before. That’s why Common Knowledge Trust has produced The Pink
Kit Method for birthing better™ resources. The main resource is
The Pink Kit: Essential Preparations for your birthing body
(multi-media: video, audio cassette and book) and The Companion
Guide.
Now, let’s take another leap of thought. Think about your
choices about childbirth, what assessments, monitoring and
procedures your birth professional is speaking with you about,
your concerns about ‘pain’, possible pain relief options and
even possibly having a non-labouring birth, or your health
issues that might affect your birth choices and think about
your Birth Plan. When you learn the skills in The Pink
Kit, you can take those skills with you into whatever birth you
find yourself having. Regardless of where or with whom you will
birth or whatever is happening to you or around you, you will
have another contraction. If you are having a non-labouring c/s
then you can use these resources to prepare for the birth of
your child anyway , thus giving you a deep sense of connection
to the process of childbirth. If you are going to labour and
give birth, you can learn the truly universal skills, which
work. You’ll still be breathing, so why not learn the Directed
Breathing (the most natural way to breathe through
contractions, particularly when they are intense). You’ll still
either be sitting, lying, standing or walking, so why not learn
how to relax inside The Pelvic Clock as a focus to keep relaxed
inside and how to Map Your Pelvis so you can find the positions
that really keep you open, even if you have to stay in bed… or
choose to.
Taking another leap of thought, consider your partner. As
different women and men are, they still share the same human
body. Using The Pink Kit Method for birthing better™, your
partner can experience the same body knowledge. This helps
fathers become the exceptional coaches at birth, you want them
to be. At it’s simplest, birth is moving an object (baby)
through a tube (pelvis), opening a diaphragm (cervix) and
opening an aperture (vagina). You are the container and you can
use your mind to prepare those areas, keep them relaxed
and mentally accept the sensations by using these skills; then
your baby will come our of your body into your arms more
easily. Fathers love the information. It’s practical and
works.
Taking yet another leap and think about labour. It’s like
driving on an unknown journey. The journey is unknown, even if
you’ve taken it before… this one will be different, however, if
you’ve already learned to drive the car, the journey will be
easier. The Pink Kit is your driving manual. You can learn how
to drive your vehicle (your body) through this unknown journey.
Your partner can help you throughout as he learns the skills to
keep you focused, relaxed and able to meet the challenge of the
experience. He can help you reduce back labour with The Sacral
Manoeuvre or relax tension in your hips and create space for
your baby with The Hip Lift. He can help you prepare your
‘aperture’ so that it opens easily and heals rapidly. Many
women who do a lot of the Internal Work, will tell you that
they ‘didn’t feel like I had a baby’ several hours after
birth.
The hardest leap of thought is to consider all the issues
around ‘interventions’ and ‘natural’ birth. Consider how the
thousands upon thousands of couples who consider themselves
Pink Kitters have experienced these complex issues and often
part of an individual Birth Plan. Most couples who used this
information have laboured in hospital where there would be
heaps of assessments, monitoring and procedures. Personally,
they will negotiate about their ‘choices’ with their birth
professional or not. Health issues and the unexpected may
change the Birth Plan. Regardless, couples prepared and then
just ‘did the work’ in whatever situation they found
themselves.
Because the woman used her skills to 'manage' her labour,
staff would compliment her on how well she was ‘coping’ or
‘doing’. Because the father also had the coaching skills to
really help (speaking the common language and using the common
touch) staff would tell him that they wished more fathers would
be such great coaches. After the birth, the couple was
complimented on 'what a good birth' they had and 'how lucky'
they were. Couples tried to explain that their good birth was
due to the preparations and skills they brought to the
experience. Yet, staff often would tell them that really
nothing they had done could have made a difference, because
‘you never know what labour is going to be like'. These couples
ALWAYS felt that they had had a natural birth. They realised
that assessments, monitoring and procedures were being done;
however, it was the way they had self managed and worked
together that left them elated. To them, they had had a natural
birth even around all the ‘interventions.’
Become a Pink Kitter and reap the benefits for yourself and
family. You will pass these skills on to your children. More
importantly, all couples speak about the continued benefits:
closer partner and parenting relationships. You and your
partner can go into labour and birth feeling confident and
capable. ‘Do the work’ and use the skills and always remember
The Little Engine That Could….’I think I can, I think I can…I
KNEW I could!’
It’s an ideal gift to give at a baby shower. Ask your mother
to get it for you. She’ll tell you that she wished she had had
this information when she had you and there are work-at-home
opportunities by wholesaling the Kit in your local area.
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