The slow discovery of a woman’s body is breaking down previously held assumptions.

We now know that the vagina is no passive receiver but a muscular organ lined with billions of microbes that have likely evolved with humans over millenniums. Recent research has shown that the egg is no patient damsel but a dynamic cell that undergoes brutal competition and draws flailing sperm into its orbit. The clitoris is no pea-size nub but a richly innervated structure that extends deep into the pelvis.

These discoveries suggest that the female body may be more resilient, dynamic and expansive than science has historically considered it. To rethink the ovary is to open the door to questioning a whole host of things that everybody knows are “true” about the female body. It is to reimagine how the female body works — and rethink what all bodies are capable of.

Read more: Ovaries Are Prone to ‘Exhaustion’ and ‘Fatigue.’ Or Are They? — By Rachel E. Gross — www.nytimes.com/2022/03/29/opinion/ovaries-stem-cells-fertility.html?fbclid=IwAR2SnZZ6AnQ2Dqvnppk4inWCSd1EOiPm8usww6D31-qjRMHy2gR2aVn8MMY

 
 

Remembering India

It was an honour to be interviewed by this amazing organisation and relive the memories of my time in India from 2015 to 2017.
https://pluseducation.org/2022/06/21/40k-globe-alumni-interview-where-are-they-now-abby-holmes/?fbclid=IwAR1m_OtX7Up9hJysabmmAQ9MxMhYcLTocAkw6CxJlYYN6ZAXExtx4Qwqjrc

In what years did you participate in the 40K program? — My time spanned almost two years! I first interned as a Glober in December 2015 (and became hooked). Then I was invited back as a Team Leader, first in July 2016 with a group of six, and again in December 2016 with a group of ten. I concluded my 40K adventures as a Group Leader of the January 2017 cohort (from memory I think 120+ people, the biggest cohort 40K ever had in India).

Why did you choose to participate in the program? — I had been dreaming of going to India for years. I was a year into my Bachelor of Global Studies degree, doing a whole lot of writing and talking about social impact but feeling increasingly frustrated on how to actually put any of it into practice. I was sitting in my dorm room when the program application email came through. I remember telling my friend “this is exactly what I have been looking for”. I applied right then and there, and with a financial help loan was able to afford the trip. I didn’t know anyone else going and I certainly had no idea that this ‘month’-long program would become two years of the most formative experiences of my life.

What memories stand out most about your experiences? — My passion has always been maternal and child health, so my teams and I lead the Baby Bag initiative, which supplied kits containing basic hygiene products and nutrition education to women in the villages in the hope to make growing, birthing and nourishing their babies a little easier. So many of my beautiful memories are getting to meet and talk with pregnant women, mothers and babies every day in the streets. I learned so much about the way they live, and how hard living is without basic access to clean drinking water, fruit and vegetables, midwives and doctors, or proximity to a hospital. I have so many warm memories of families trusting us with their life stories, inviting us into their sacred spaces to provide education and run workshops.

How did your experience help you in your career? — 40K not only solidified my desire to become a midwife, it gave me the self-esteem and confidence to actually do it. Before joining 40K I wouldn’t have identified as a leader in a million years. I had very little self-efficacy or voice. 40K leadership training completely redefined me and awakened me to what I was actually capable of. I mean it when I say I owe my career to 40K training. In particular, my mentors Mitch and Erin, who saw something in me from the beginning that I never saw in myself.

How has it impacted on your life and outlook? — My world absolutely flourished once 40K came into my life. My friends are the biggest gift of all. There’s nothing like months living in India for creating impenetrable, lifelong bonds. It is hard to describe to anyone else how unsettling it is to leave months in India and come back to our privileged lives. We held each other through this transition shock, and have supported one another through many more life experiences in the seven years since then.40K has also shaped the impact I hope to make in the world as a midwife. I dream of working with birthing communities in outback Australia, and I hope to join Médecins Sans Frontières in assisting childbirth overseas in poverty and conflict zones. I eventually want to lead my own business as a private midwife outside of the system. 40K gave me both the skills and the community that allow me to dream this big.
If it weren’t for the Globe experience, I wouldn’t have a group of lifelong friends by my side. I wouldn’t be going to work every day doing a job that I truly believe in. And I wouldn’t have the self-worth of knowing that I can actually make a positive social impact in this world. 40K is a part of me!

What would happen if sex was interfered with the way birth is interfered with?

Oxytocin is the ‘love’ hormone produced during intimacy, during labour and during birth. This single hormone is the most important guy behind the normal physiological functions of all three.
Oxytocin is directly inhibited by stressful conditions and situations of feeling observed/judged.

Can you imagine if sex was interfered with the same way birth is being interfered with?
Is it any wonder labour stalls or becomes harder to bear in environments where we feel uncomfortable?

Is Infant Sleep a 'Skill'?

The sleep of babies and toddlers and young children is qualitatively different from adult sleep. They have shorter sleep cycles, they spend more time in lighter sleep, and they have a more historical sleep rhythm thus are inclined towards biphasic sleep.

These things add together to mean that our younger ones wake more frequently and after shorter periods and may even have longer awake periods during the night. Completely, 100% normal.

You cannot and do not need to ‘teach’ or ‘train’ your child anything to do with sleep, just provide them with the right environment and let biology do the rest.

Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HxU2WVnBhJ...

Evidence: Midwife-led continuity of care is the gold standard. WHO agrees.

In midwife-led care, women are less likely to give birth prematurely or lose their babies.
Women have fewer epidurals, fewer assisted births, and fewer episiotomies.
Above all, women report being happier with the care they received.

The partnership between woman and midwife — having the same professional they know and trust present throughout the pregnancy, birth and postpartum continuum — allows mothers to feel comfortable and confident during labour which in turn is much better for the baby.

The perception that in order to get the highest quality of care, women must be cared for by a senior clinician, is fundamentally misaligned to the facts and what women are telling us.