Dear Founder of PowerBirth,
It's been brought to my attention that my midwife is encouraging you to sue me and the other women who have spoken publicly about their negative PowerBirth experiences. I believe you're being misled that such a law suit would end favorably for you, but I suppose stranger things have happened in our judicial system. I'm not writing to try to discourage you from doing whatever you feel you have to do.
I heard that one of the Powerbirth midwives said after my birth story went viral that "there's no such thing as bad publicity." Where PowerBirth is concerned, I believe this is true, since more women in my community are asking the right questions of their midwives these days, and are making more informed decisions about who to hire based on the type of births they desire.
I do sincerely hope that threatening to sue is not just another attempt to bully other PowerBirth survivors into continued silence. It is easier to heal and move on when you let go of secrets. I encourage all women who are recovering from traumatic births to find a safe place to talk about it. It can be hard to discuss openly, particularly when the trauma took place in a small community, involves an abuse of power in the caregiver relationship, and the caregiver has demonstrated a willingness to twist facts, revise history, and accuse victims in an effort to manage public perception.
The reason I'm writing to you is to discuss the speculation you posted on your business website recently that the women who have been traumatized by the PowerBirth technique must all be victims of sexual abuse. (Because birthing women who haven't been abused enjoy a hand in their vagina during every contraction--enjoy having their cervixes and perineums forcefully stretched and their babies pulled out?) You wrote on your website that you pray for our healing...
So, first of all, Thank You. Thanks for your prayers. Because it's true: Some of the women who have been traumatized by PowerBirth are survivors of sexual abuse/assault and have a lifetime of healing ahead of them. Prayer certainly can't hurt. Some of the women who have been traumatized by PowerBirth are not survivors of sexual abuse and deserve prayers for continued healing as well. But let's talk about the sexual abuse survivors who are also survivors of traumatic PowerBirths.
I would like you to understand the prevalence of abuse and how important it is for care providers to approach prenatal care sensitively and with full candor and respect for the mother's ownership of HER body. It would be great if you could see how an abuse survivor's history may influence her experience of being PowerBirthed without her consent. Maybe then you will begin to see the big picture. This is primarily an issue of maternal rights, not midwifery theories.
It is estimated that one in four women in America has been the victim of some form of sexual abuse at some point in her life. In Utah, where some of your PowerBirth midwives practice and where I had my PowerBirth experience, the rate is slightly higher than the national average. So midwives should assume that at least 25% of their clients have a history of sexual abuse. They may not know which clients have been abused because some survivors do not have any conscious memory of the abuse, and some may be incapable of acknowledging it openly. As Penny Simkin tells us, "Lack of memory of abuse does not eliminate the pain."
It would be reasonable for midwives to assume that possibly many more than one out of every four clients has been sexually abused, because abuse survivors may be more inclined to choose homebirth than women who have not been abused. This is because the abuse survivor needs greater control over her surroundings and what is done to her body during the vulnerable act of giving birth. She may be hyper-vigilant about her own and her baby's safety and choose homebirth to avoid separation from her baby and disruptive routine medical procedures.
I think it's statistically reasonable to assume that out of the thousands of women who have experienced the PowerBirth Technique (or PBT, as it was commonly called until recently), at least 25% were predisposed to being triggered and traumatized by a midwifery method that routinely invades the mother's space and exerts control over her body. Especially when the mother's first introduction to the method is during her labor, instead of during the prenatal education period, the application of the PowerBirth technique can feel like a reenactment of previous abuses.
"Many abuse survivors, for very good reasons, have issues with control, helplessness, exposure, restraints, trust in their bodies, trust of strangers and authority figures, pain, especially genital pain, penetration of their bodies, and discomfort with new situations. Those who choose hospital birth try to lessen distress by prior planning and preparation and communicating their needs to staff. Those who choose out-of-hospital birth do so in hopes of avoiding those issues, but must also prepare for the possibility of transfer, which will bring about the circumstances they had hoped to avoid." When Survivors Give Birth, by Penny Simkin, PT, and Phyllis Klaus, CSW, MFT
In the above excerpt, there is an implied assumption that the abuse survivor birthing at home will be able to avoid the type of care that inflicts trauma unless she needs to transfer to the hospital. There is no warning that midwives can routinely inflict the same emotional and physical trauma at home, because this type of midwifery is not well-known around the world. When most people think of homebirth midwives, they picture the BirthKeeper, the midwife who believes in birth, in women's bodies, and in allowing things to unfold naturally, without interference, unless there is a true emergency necessitating action.
There are many things you've written about women and childbirth that I wholeheartedly disagree with. I do not subscribe to your theories which contradict research about the physiology of birth and I find many of your statements outrageous, such as your claim that "most women" prefer to give birth on their backs, that the lithotomy position coupled with perineal massage adequately approximates the benefits of squatting, that all women feel the instinctive urge to push at 5 centimeters and increase their risk of cesarean by not pushing at 5 centimeters, that it is safer to have an elective cesarean than to give birth with a "hands off" midwife, that digitally pushing aside the cervix during contractions is what a midwife is "supposed to be able to do", etc. etc. But these arguments have been debated ad nauseum for years with entirely too much ego involved, and too little regard for who really owns birth: Mothers.
My purpose for continuing to write and talk about PowerBirth is to do what I can to make certain that mothers in my community are not having their rights to informed consent and informed decision-making stripped away during their home births. There are others championing patient autonomy and reform in hospital settings. But when women decide to have homebirths and end up with hospital-births-at-home, having hired midwives whose standards of practice include routine, unnecessary, not-evidence-based interventions that are not being disclosed prior to labor, I feel an obligation to sound the alarm.
Regardless of her history, every birthing mother deserves to be involved in all decisions that affect her body, her baby, and her birth. She deserves the truth right from the beginning about what prejudices and practices her midwife brings to birth.
If I had had ANY IDEA that my midwife's standard of care involves attempting to speed up labor by inserting her fingers into the mothers vagina during every contraction, without explanation or permission; constantly assessing dilation by fractions of centimeters; digitally pushing and stretching the cervix during contractions; requiring the mother to lie on her back on the floor to push regardless of the mother's preferences; manually stretching the perineum with her hands while directing pushing; pulling baby out by the head; and pulling the placenta out by the cord moments after birth, I would not have hired her. I DIDN'T SIGN UP FOR THAT. These interventions were performed without my consent. They were excruciatingly painful, terrifying, and degrading.
As an abuse survivor, to have this technique sprung on me during labor was to experience a heartbreaking theft. Once triggered by my midwife's disrespectful actions, I lost touch with my surroundings and the purpose of the pain. When I pushed my baby out and she took her first breath and I heard her first cry, my first thought was "Who would bring a baby to this?" I had forgotten why we were there and didn't recognize my baby as my own for a while. I have healed a great deal in the years since my first birth, but there is a lingering hurt and shame.
All I am asking from you and the midwives in my community is full disclosure so that other mothers can avoid what I went through. Stop the cover up. Tell mothers during the initial consultation what they can expect if they hire a PowerBirth midwife. The ones who want what you're offering will hire you and those who don't won't. Hopefully all mothers will do their due diligence in researching the pros and cons of different theories and ways of birthing. I openly admit that I was under-educated and relied too heavily on the midwife's reputation, rather than my own intuition and research. Thankfully, the iatrogenic complications that my baby and I experienced at her hands did not cost us our lives, although they could have. We got lucky.
I am inspired by your courage to keep telling your story. Hopefully the fact that you do, will help other women avoid what happened to you. There are so many other victims of PowerBirth who have been bullied into silence. Some of them have contacted me to "warn" me that it is dangerous to speak up against Power Birth. I am glad that you have not been intimidated and continue to tell the truth about your experience.
ReplyDeleteThere is no science to substantiate any of the claims of PowerBirth. In fact, science leans heavily on the fact that women birth best with no hands in side them whatsoever. The claim that women are in more danger with a "hands off" midwife than they are from an elective section is just so far over the top that it illustrates a complete lack of understanding about all things relating to the physiology of birth. The body was designed to do this with NO ONE ELSE around.
Thank you for your support. I know women who have birth stories almost identical to mine who have never told the midwife how traumatized they were and still are, out of fear of retaliation. I don't want ridiculous threats of bogus lawsuits keeping women from talking about what they've been through. We have a right to tell our stories. It won't change the past, but it can help change the future for other mothers and babies.
ReplyDeleteyes. you are inspiringly telling the truth, and that is wonderful. you are standing for women's rights, and that is also recommendable. i surely hope that any woman that has been a victim of ANY SORT of unprofessional behavior will follow up, if so necessary, so that these behaviors can stop. this applies to the world around. blessings, and yes, true and honest prayers to you and others.
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing your story and speaking out. I know of women who've experienced this abuse at home who can barely think of it, let alone speak of it. You help make the world a better place for birthing women when you speak this truth. Much love and gratitude.
ReplyDeleteI am shocked. Rarely at a loss for words as Carla can attest to, I have very little to say at this moment but will find my voice when I have fully absorbed the horror of what I have just read.
ReplyDeletePower Birth? WTF? What you have described is torture. The Midwives role is to EMPOWER Birth, not dominate, abuse and control our clients physically, mentally and spiritually.
Who are these adherents to this madness?
I am so sad and heartbroken that you and others were subjected to these violations masked as Midwifery.
Know that I will pray for your healing of both heart and body while in my daily meditations.
Sincerely,
Tai Carson.
I have been following your blog and I have been feeling sorry for your situation. I find it hard to believe that a midwife would treat a patient with such motives. I am hoping to have more children and I like to study BOTH sides before making decisions/judgements for myself. After doing some research on my own I found www.powerbirth.blogspot.com
ReplyDeleteI suggest that everyone read this before attacking anyone or passing judgement. All women and labors can/are different.
I am very interested in her techniques. They sound very helpful when I read about it from women who have been helped by them.
I am going to watch her DVD and read her manual. I will let you know what I decide when I finish studying both sides of the debate:)