Dear Friends:
Sam's post about the differences in the life of the cord pulsing after birth
reminded me of a story.
In another life, I was apprenticed to a midwife who did nothing but
homebirths. Most often, the cord would stop pulsing on its own within 5 minutes after
birth. Except this one time, when the baby just didn't start breathing for a
l o n g time, maybe 15 minutes (it felt longer). Skin to skin of course.
Massage, and talking to the open-eyed, stunned baby eventually brought him to
breathing. Meanwhile the cord stayed open, pumping and pulsing away.
When else in life do we have a double support system? This baby, as with
Sam's baby, stayed oxygenated as a result of that marvelous cord.
How many babies loose that support prematurely when the cord is cut right
away? Intervention as in assembly-line practice doesn't help with life passages.
warmly,
Nikki Lee RN, BSN, MS, Mother of 2, IBCLC, CCE, CIMI
craniosacral therapy practitioner
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