Ridge Meadows Doula Services

Your experienced Doula Collective (Maple Ridge, Pitt Meadows and beyond!)

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Baby Showers

August 24, 2013

Tomorrow I’m co-hosting a baby shower for my best friend. Holy Pressure Batwoman! I mean, it’s completely my fault. I threw the worlds best bridal shower a year and a half ago… And I’ve either jinxed myself or have a lot to live up to.

Good thing I’m prepared. Not only did I win a Facebook bidding wars item (beautiful tissue paper pom-poms) but I also have a mix of sentimental moments planned likely to increase baby mama hormones (tears?! Maybe.) Also a fun competition game with yummy prizes! This is a dream job for me. Not only do I love babies and pregnancy but I’m also a facilitator at my other job— so wrangling tipsy friends and senile family members is a challenge I accept!

One of my favorite baby shower gifts to bring is body products from “Earth Mama Angel Baby”. The products are gentle, smell lovely and I am confident this product line will not cause some childhood diagnosis that is yet to be determined or a third eye because they are all natural and are organic. Above is a picture of my items including a bar of soap from “Savon Patrice”. This is made from a woman I work with and had all natural ingredients.

Bring it baby shower! I’m ready!

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Categories : Birthing, Life, Parenting Tagged : baby, doula, pregnant, Shower

10 things I miss about breastfeeding

July 31, 2013

 

To celebrate World Breastfeeding Week I thought I should blog…. But I wasn’t breastfeeding anymore?! What do I blog about? I miss breastfeeding…. Wait, I miss breastfeeding. Brilliant. It was hard for me to determine why or what parts of breastfeeding I miss because there were so many. So I compiled them into 10 points. Enjoy.

 

1) Convenience—– When your baby is hungry you want to feed them as soon as you can. With breast milk it is always there, always the right temperature. No sanitizing bottles at 3:30am, just roll over and feed. Awesome!

2) Milk Coma Smiles—– Have you ever looked down at a milk coma induced baby who is smiling at you, and not had your heart melt?! I doubt it.

3) Miracle Milk—–In our house diaper rash, pink eye, ear infection, nasal congestion, eczema and skin conditions were all healed with breast milk. ***Please remember I am not a doctor and you may want to consult with a medical professional***

4) Healthy Baby + a Happy Mama—– Mia was rarely sick. Breast feeding is known to build a strong immune systems in babies. This is because breast milk has natural antibodies that help babies develop immunity against illness and disease.

5) Educating People—– I had more conversations about birth and breastfeeding with single male friends than I would have ever thought. I educated them and my other friends as I was on my breastfeeding journey. I answered questions as to ” Why this long?” “Why is breast milk so healthy?” “How do you ever leave your baby?” and so on. We had respectful conversations and I shared the importance of breastfeeding with people that simply didn’t know.

6) Soothing baby—– If you don’t know what’s wrong 9 times out of 10 the baby wants to breastfeed. Whether they are hungry, want you close or need to soothe, the breast often works. A great piece of advice my midwife shared with me was “there are many parents bouncing a baby down the hall at 4am and what they really need is another 5 minutes on the breast”. Those words of wisdom saved me.

7) Naturally empowering—–My body can provide all the nutrients my daughter needs, as much as she needs and when she needed it. Supply and demand. A woman’s body is amazing, celebrate it ladies!

8) Saving Cash—– No bottles, no formula, no cost. Sure I spent money on a pump (that I should have rented because I didn’t need it after Mia was 6 weeks) and I bought washable breast pads for those leaky moments. Formula (low end of cost) is 0.12 cents an once., that is $1224.72 a year. (source- kellyMom) http://kellymom.com/pregnancy/bf-prep/bfcostbenefits/#formulacosts

9) I was more rested —–We chose to bed share in our house. Besides being attachment parents, it was convenient. When Mia woke, I rolled over and fed her. She barely woke at night, I barely woke, we were all in zombie type states and it worked for us. We did this for 2 years. At age 2 she had her own room and would walk down the hall for an early morning feeding. It was mutually agreed (my husband, myself and Mia) and it worked for us.

10) Cuddles —– Once Mia was mobile she was far too interested in exploring than cuddling. Still at 3.5, I get a few cuddles when she is hurt, but other than that she is on the move. When I was breastfeeding I got the added bonus of sneaking in the cuddle time without her knowing. She fed, I got a cuddle, we both were happy.

 

There were times when I thought I was done.  I wanted more freedom and I felt “touched-out”. This is when I knew I needed some alone time, my husband stepped in and I cared for myself. 2.5 years was a long time, but the percentage of my life I spent breastfeeding is minimal. Enjoy it while you can ladies, you won’t be breastfeeding forever.

Have you “liked” my Facebook Page? https://www.facebook.com/RidgeMeadowsDoulaServices

 

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Categories : breastfeeding, Life Tagged : babies, breastfeeding, doula, maple ridge, Maple Ridge Doula, mapleridge, Pitt meadows, pittmeadows

My Birth Story

July 23, 2013

As a doula, I look back on my birth and dream of what it could have been. I know my birth experience was the way it was for many reasons. The day it happened, the time of day, the reason I had a hospital birth and not a home birth and the people I had with me were all sequenced that way on purpose.

My birth story has many chapters, but today I will keep in short. One day I am sure I will dive into the details.

My daughter was due December 30th 2009, but fitting to Mia’s personality, she took her own sweet time and was encouraged (via Pitocin) to be born on January 11th. I chose this day because the midwife I was most connected with was on call and if I was going to have a hospital birth and not a home birth, I wanted people around me I was comfortable with. Along with Sylvia I had my husband, friend Jenn and my mother-in-law.

I was induced shortly after 8am, was able to walk around a short time and then things started moving around noon. My husband was on massage duty and was applying pressure to my hips (now trained as a doula I know he was applying a double hip squeeze) as I had a contraction. My support person had just birthed her 3rd child at home 6 months prior and knew exactly what I needed before I knew it. I had a cold cloth on my face, neck and forehead between waves and sips of water and “labour aide” given to my from a straw while I rested between contractions. PS- This really is only good cold! My mother-in-law was encouraging everyone to eat and making sure all the hospital staff were doing their best work, she demanded informed choices and for me to be part of the decision making process. My body just knew what to do. I pushed when I needed to push, I rested when I needed to rest. Not once was I checked by my midwife, she encouraged me to listen to my body. At around 2pm Sylvia (my midwife) told me I was already pushing… I had no idea, I was just in the zone. This is when I asked to be checked….. being a first time birther, I was starting to get nervous about pushing, anxious to birth and excited to meet my daughter. being an experienced midwife, Sylvia was right. I was 10cm dilated and ready to push. 4 hours later I was still pushing and still on Pitocin, baby was doing ok, but I was really beat.

This is where everything happened so fast, the pitocin machine was beeping, something strange was happening and it was not giving the proper dosage and my pushing was not as effective. Suddenly there was an OBGYN in the room with team. I consented to the vacuum. A large difference from the serene home birth I had planned. Being educated on the subject I knew the fact that I was essentially strapped to the bed and already having the intervention of Induction along with pushing for 4 hours the likelihood of the vacuum, forceps or caesarean were increasing. In moments, the vacuum was on, baby was born, the cord was cut (little delayed cord clamping) and the OBGYN flew out like a flash leaving Mia with me.

Mia was on my chest, I cried, Jonathan cried,my support person cried, the Midwife had a happy smirk and my mother-in-law was doing her best not to cry. Mia was born… healthy, alert and perfect. January 11th 2010.

I had a long amount of skin to skin with Mia as well as breastfeeding initiation within the first hour… 2 key points on the crumpled up, re-wrote birth plan I really wanted.

Are there things I would have changed, sure. But I made informed choices along the way… There was no coercion or fear. I knew my body was amazing and I knew by baby was coming out of my vagina.

Categories : Birthing, Life Tagged : babies, baby, birth, breastfeeding, Daughter, doula, maple ridge, Maple Ridge Doula, mapleridge, midwife, new mom, Nicole chambers, pittmeadows, ridge meadows

Business cards are in!

July 20, 2013

Woohoo! my business cards are in. Now to share with friends, co-workers and the local midwifery.

I’m not in love with them but they are good for a first timer business owner. next time I’d likely make the font a bit bigger and lose the grey (hard to read). The positives are my logo rocks! Who wants one?

doula

Categories : Doula Tagged : baby, birth, breastfeeding, doula, maple ridge, Maple Ridge Doula, mapleridge, new mom, Pitt meadows, pittmeadows, postpartum, ridge meadows

Getting Healthy After Baby—–Guest Blogger Kali

July 6, 2013

A double stroller overloaded with an almost 2 year old, a just turned 4 year old, myriad bags, blankets and backpacks proved to be my post baby haze wake up call. Last February, I was fortunate enough to bring my children to Disneyland with my parents, sister and husband to celebrate my son’s second birthday and my nephew’s fifth birthday. While we were there, I used my ‘Baby Limo’ (aka a Graco Duo double stroller) to lug everything that we might need for a day in the park, plus my two kids… and occasionally my nephew piled in, as well. It was heavy. I was huffing and I was puffing and my back was killing me. Suddenly, on my son’s second birthday, it occurred to me that I needed to do something about this. Yes, a heavily overloaded stroller is an extreme, not something I actually dealt with every day, but I SHOULD have been able to do it.

My closest friend had set herself on a journey to lose her baby weight and get fit several months before this, and I (with lots of self-conscious laughing) thought “I don’t need to do that! I did ballet until I was 18. I’m a fit, healthy woman”… regardless of the fact that I was now 29, had not laced up my ballet slippers in 11 years, and had discovered that Ben and Jerry’s was a wonderful replacement for ballet.

When I got home from Disneyland, I knew that doing drop in yoga once a week was no longer enough. This wasn’t about losing weight or wearing smaller clothes, or even a particular health issue. This was about me. I did not feel good. I did not feel like myself. In my mind, I was a ‘healthy and fit woman’, but I couldn’t handle the stroller?? I wasn’t sure where to start. I knew that I didn’t really want to go back to ballet, as I wanted an affordable thing that I could squeeze in when I could (ie nap time, ballet time, preschool…) so I downloaded Zen Labs Couch to 5K on my iPhone and laced up my (very cheap) pair of Costco Adidas runners and went for my first run. It sucked. The first day of C25K starts with merely 60 seconds of jogging. I’m pretty sure I checked my phone 60 times wondering why the minute wasn’t up yet. I thought I was going to die. That’s right – the ‘fit and healthy woman’ could not manage to jog for 60 seconds without feeling like my heart was going to explode. But I kept fitting it in. I would drop my daughter off at her 45 minute ballet class, put my son in the jogging stroller, and turn on my app. I would put the kids to bed, and as soon as my husband got home, I would go out for a run. I ran when it was nice out, I ran when it was cold and raining. And I got better. I would come home and report my milestones to my friend who was hard at work on her fitness goals (I thought she was crazy – she decided to train for a 10K and then a Half Marathon!!), I would tell my sister in law, I would tell my husband. I got up to 10 minutes of straight running, 15 minutes, 20 minutes, and then finally 30 minutes, which meant that I had completed my app and could now run 5 kilometres. It was incredible! I felt so proud of myself. I kept running, and I found that in place of the dread that I felt when I would be talking myself into a run, it was replaced with a desire to be out there. I used running last year to help me deal with my Grampa’s diagnosis of pancreatic cancer, to deal with a hard day with my kids, a fight with my husband, a low mood, and eventually, my Grampa’s passing when he succumbed to the disease. Running changed my life. It wasn’t always easy to ‘fit it in’, but it became important, when something is important, we always find a way. It is important to take care of myself. It is important to give myself some time alone, some head space. I find that a lot of moms feel selfish when they take this time away. I don’t think they should. I find it much easier to be a mom to my kids now that I actually AM a ‘fit and healthy’ woman. I feel happier, more energized and I feel like a good example for my kids. I love it when my daughter says ‘did you have a good run, Mommy? When I’m big, I’m going to run all the races with you’. My Mother’s Day gift was a FuelBelt water belt, which my kids proudly picked out for me for my runs. I hear so often ‘you’re much more motivated than me, I just don’t have the time or the energy’, and the thing is, I’m not more motivated than them, nor do I have more time, but I do have more energy, because I make the time to run. It’s actually a cycle – don’t expend energy = don’t have energy; expend energy = gain energy. Once I get going, regardless of whether it is 5AM on a cold dark morning, I feel motivated to go just a bit farther and just a bit longer than yesterday, and it is worth it. I have now completed two 5km races, an 8km and a 10km race, and am just over a month away from my first Half Marathon, and until I hit that goal, when I need the extra motivation, I just think of the eternal words of Dory the Blue Tang, and ‘just keep swimming’.

 

 

Categories : Life Tagged : baby, Disneyland, doula, exercise, Healthy, maple ridge, ridge meadows, running, stroller

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