The Doula’s Guide to Empowering Your Birth: A Complete Labor and Childbirth Companion for Parents to Be

Experienced doula, Linsey Bliss, shows you how to prepare physically and mentally for every element of having a child, from pregnancy to fourth trimester in The Doula's Guide to Empowering Your Birth. Lindsey Bliss, who has assisted as a doula at hundreds of births and is herself a mother of seven, reveals here all the wisdom and advice that doulas share with the new mothers who hire them. The Doula's Guide to Empowering Your Birth covers the period from pregnancy through labor and birth to fourth trimester healing. The focus, however, is on preparing for birth--including topics like how to pick the right childbirth class and the right birthing method. You’ll also see how to assemble the team of professionals, family members, and friends who will support you through labor and birth, and how to approach last-minute decisions about pain medications and cesarean sections. Bliss's tone throughout is at once authoritative and confident as well as warm and encouraging. Her concern in her practice as well as in these pages is to listen to and help secure each new mom's own personal vision of a birthing experience that is safe, fulfilling, and meaningful.

This is a truly wonderful book from a doula who really knows her stuff. Linsey Bliss has seven children. Six of those are biological and she has had two sets of twins. She has also assisted hundreds of births. This book tells you all you need to know about pregnancy, childbirth and even what happens after. This well-written book is enjoyable to read and is like having your own personal doula and best friend in one. Essential. 

Experienced doula, Linsey Bliss, shows you how to prepare physically and mentally for every element of having a child, from pregnancy to fourth trimester in The Doula’s Guide to Empowering Your Birth.

Lindsey Bliss, who has assisted as a doula at hundreds of births and is herself a mother of seven, reveals here all the wisdom and advice that doulas share with the new mothers who hire them.

The Doula’s Guide to Empowering Your Birth covers the period from pregnancy through labor and birth to fourth trimester healing. The focus, however, is on preparing for birth–including topics like how to pick the right childbirth class and the right birthing method. You’ll also see how to assemble the team of professionals, family members, and friends who will support youthrough labor and birth, and how to approach last-minute decisions about pain medications and cesarean sections.

Bliss’s tone throughout is at once authoritative and confident as well as warm and encouraging. Her concern in her practice as well as in these pages is to listen to and help secure each new mom’s own personal vision of a birthing experience that is safe, fulfilling, and meaningful.

The Doula’s Guide to Empowering Your Birth: A Complete Labor and Childbirth Companion for Parents to Be is available here.

 

Almost half of new mums suffer from frightening thoughts or hallucinations

By Gemma Francis

Almost half of new mums suffer from frightening thoughts or hallucinations – but two thirds of these hide how they feel for fear of being judged negatively or having their baby taken away, a study has found.

The images – which include thoughts of killing or harming their child – are still taboo among mums with just 37 per cent admitting to others how they feel.

The most common thought is a fear that ‘something dreadful will happen to my baby’, with 62 per cent vividly feeling this.

A further 44 per cent were plagued by the belief their baby might die, while 13 per cent have imagined killing or harming their own child.

The study by parenting site ChannelMum.com also found one in 50 even believed ‘my baby hated me’ while one per cent were convinced their mother-in-law was trying to take their baby,

Others had visions of their child being eaten by a crocodile or snatched by the Grim Reaper.

Two in five (39%) felt their child and partner would be ‘better off without me’ and 16 per cent considered suicide.

An additional 31 per cent admit to having an irrational fear that someone ‘will steal or harm my baby’, making it impossible for them to meet or talk to strangers.

Yet despite 43 per cent of mums suffering these extreme thoughts, 65 per cent of those were never told pregnancy and parenthood could affect their mental health.

As a result, one in five (19%) feared they were ‘going mad’ when they fell ill.

Half (49%) of the mums who suffered were also scared of being ‘judged negatively’.

Forty three per cent believed others will think they are a ‘bad parent’, while 26 per cent were ‘ashamed’ of being mentally ill.

The stigma is so great that a disturbing 17 per cent of mums who fall ill admitted they thought about self-harm to try to cope, with one in 20 going on to self-harm.

One of the biggest barriers to getting help is the fear your child will be taken into care.

One in five mums (19%) who suffered mental illness after birth reported refusing to access help in case their child was taken away.

Official NHS figures show just ten to 15 per cent of mums experience serious mental health issues.

But as a result, some experts now believe there could be a ‘hidden epidemic’ of maternal mental illness, as 64 per cent of mums who fall ill never try to get a formal diagnosis so are missed by official figures.

Overall, the survey showed the most common mental health ailment suffered by new mums is anxiety, experienced by 68 per cent of women after birth, alongside 48 per cent who undergo insomnia due to worry.

A further 35 per cent battle Post Natal Depression, a third (33%) become agoraphobic and 23 per cent are hit by panic attacks.

On average, women’s symptoms lasted three to six months, but 29 per cent felt mentally low for a year or longer.

Women were five times more likely to spot their own symptoms with 69 per cent realising themselves they were ill, compared to just 14 per cent whose partners detected they were unwell.

However, almost two in five mums who become ill (38%) never tell anybody how they feel and just a third confide in their GP (33%).

The most common way mums covered up their feelings was to pretend to be ‘fine’ when quizzed on how they felt, with 94 per cent admitting they lied about their feelings.

Lack of sleep was seen as the main trigger for mums falling ill, with 55 per cent believing this contributed to their condition.

A further 54 per cent said they felt ‘emotionally overwhelmed’ as a new parent, alongside 39 per cent who admitted they tried to ‘be the perfect parent’.

Two in five (41%) blamed hormonal changes while 14 per cent pinned the blame on ‘the pressure of living up to others on social media.

As a result, a resounding 80 per cent of mums want society to be more open about maternal mental health issues and the extreme thoughts mums can have.

Seven in ten (69%) want ‘society to realise it can happen to anyone’ while 55 per cent seek reassurances that their child will not automatically be taken into care if they come forward for treatment.

ChannelMum.com founder Siobhan Freegard said: “If your body is broken after birth, everyone understand and supports you.

“But when your mind is broken, mums still feel they have to keep it hidden.

“These thoughts are disturbing and terrifying – but very often they are part of becoming a mum.

“We need to talk about it, normalise it and make mums realise they are not alone. You are not different or ‘going mad’ just because you experience it – but you may need professional care and help.

“I suffered from post natal depression and visualised extreme images after the birth of my first child then tried to cover it up, so I know exactly what women are going through when they hide it.

“There is so much pressure to cope and be the perfect parent that when you are crying inside while everyone around you is smiling, it makes you feel you are failing your baby and your whole family.

“Mums need to know they will get the right support and their baby won’t be taken away.

“With care, compassion and the right treatment, you can get better quickly, bond with your baby and go on to be the parent you want to be.”

ChannelMum.com psychologist Emma Kenny added: “This research has highlighted the plight of large numbers of mums in the UK and evidences that even in 2018 post natal depression is still no closer to being effectively dealt with.

“Good maternal mental health is something that every woman deserves, but due to the lack of knowledge and support this simply isn’t the case, leaving women to deal with some of the most terrifying and debilitating feelings at a time when they should be enjoying their positive new beginnings.

“We need to address this subject openly, removing the shame and stigma so that mums no longer feel that they have to cope alone.”

EXTREME THOUGHTS MOTHERS HAVE EXPERIENCED:
I believed my baby hated me and was trying to kill me
I planned jumping off the balcony with my baby
I thought my flat was haunted and would stay outside from dawn til dusk until my husband got home
I thought my baby would die if I didn’t wash up before my microwave pinged
I saw the Grim Reaper outside my bedroom door
I thought my twins weren’t mine
I thought that my mother in law was planning to take my baby
I thought that baby would die because of germs. So I made everyone disinfect themselves before they could touch him. Someone touched my pram in a supermarket once and I couldn’t move due to fear of contamination. I stood in the cleaning isle vigorously disinfecting my pram.
I believed if I went to sleep, someone would break in and smother us all to death
I wanted to throw my daughter out of the window
I thought a crocodile was trying to eat my baby
I wanted to drive the car into a wall and kill my baby and myself
I cut all my hair off as I thought my baby was eating it and making himself ill
I thought everyone would be better off without me
I imagined an iron melting into my baby’s face
Just blackness, despair like being trapped in thick mud.

 

Dark in Death By J.D Robb | Recommended Reads

The latest book in the popular series. Perfect for fans of crime fiction. 

There’s always a reason for murder. But when a young actress is killed in a swift and violent attack at a cinema screening, that reason is hard to fathom – even for Lieutenant Eve Dallas and her team.

It’s only when bestselling crime writer Blaine DeLano arrives at the precinct that the shocking truth is revealed. Someone is recreating the murder scenes from her latest series, book by book. With six more novels left in the series, Eve now knows how the killer will strike next. But why has DeLano been targeted? Could her abusive husband be involved?

As fiction is transformed into bloody reality, Eve will need all her skill and experience to solve this unique case. Luckily for her, husband Roarke happens to be a fan of DeLano’s work. And he’s more than happy to work side by side with his brilliant wife – no matter how dark things become..

Dark in Death By J.D Robb is available here.

Freeze away your skin tags with NEW Cryotag

skin tags, get rid

Skin tags are annoying and embarrassing. I tried the innovative Cryotag and it worked well. I was impressed. I would recommend it to anyone who has skin tags. It is easy to use even for me who is rubbish at health stuff.

 

NEW INNOVATIVE TREATMENT AVAILABLE AT BOOTS

Highly Commended at The Beauty Awards 2017, in the Beauty Innovation of the Year category, Cryotag is the NEW fast and effective skin tag remover. Developed by world-leading innovators with 20 years’ experience in cryotherapy and skin tag removal.

Using technology trusted by doctors and dermatologists, Cryotag is a clinically proven new treatment. Within seconds of the applicator being applied to the skin tag the base will begin to turn white, signalling the skin tag has been frozen. This method will instantly freeze the core of the skin tag and the skin tag will fall off in as little as one treatment, usually within 2 weeks. No more expensive trips to the dermatologist, or risky or unpleasant DIY methods!

Skin tags affect up to half of the population, and are small pieces of soft skin raised or hanging off the skin. The skin tags often appear in areas of the body where clothing is likely to rub such as around your neck, chest and under arms. Even though skin tags are very common, they can be irritating and leave individuals feeling self-conscious.

Removing skin tags with Cryotag is a fast and easy 4 step process:

  1. Begin the treatment by firmly twisting the precision-tip applicator into the bottom of the cap.
  2. Insert the applicator and cap into the Cryotag canister. Press the cap down for 3 seconds and you will hear a hissing sound.
  3. Remove the applicator and cap and hold the tip facing down for 15 seconds to allow the applicator to reach the correct temperature.
  4. Grasp the skin tag with tweezers provided and gently pull it away for 40 seconds. Apply the applicator to the stalk of the skin tag.

Most skin tags will fall off within two weeks of the first application, leaving you with a healthy-looking skin.

The Cryotag skin tag remover is available in Boots stores and online at Boots.com.  Also available from Amazon.co.uk If your local Boots store doesn’t stock Cryotag, they can order it for next day delivery.

Cryotag RRP £21.95. Contains 12 applicators for up to 12 skin tag treatments

Cryotag is intended only for the removal of skin tags. If you are unsure whether it is a skin tag, always consult the GP first. There are also clear guidelines on the Cryotag website and packaging.

 

 

Here we go, some fabulous wines for Easter, but let’s not forget Mother’s Day

 

We’ve had a grand time tasting some of these wines – just for you. Well, someone has to do it.

Left Field Albarino 2017

This white wine is just right for spring, ,and yes, it is on the way: the days are getting longer, the sun is warmer… So buy in the daffodils and sip this wine, with its hint of citrus, melon and peach. It’s classy and will bring on the sunshine.

RRP: £14.55

Stockists: Wine Rack, Cambridge Wine Merchants, Vino Wines, Taurus Wines, Sissinghurst Wines, Campbell Moore, www.nzhouseofwine.co.uk

Also try:

Jean-Luc Colombo Collines de Laure Blanc 2016

This white wine is a lovely fusion of regions where the Provençal grape Rolle (aka Vermentino) joins three Rhône varieties in a textured,  with a good body and always elegant white.

It’s as fresh as spring, and we tasted just a hint of fennel, white peach and pear.

Try it with grilled white meats on Mother’s Day, which is a meal you could cook for mum.

RRP: £14.20

Stockists: Dalling & Co Wines, R Campbell and Sons, The Solent Cellar, Apero Wine Services, B J R Hanby

Hancock & Hancock Fiano 2017

We love a Fiano in the Frost office, because it oozes tropical climes somehow with its aroma of nectarine and lemon, but it has a dry and fresh palate. Really good as an aperitif on a lengthening spring evening, or would go well with Asian cuisine, spicy dishes or seafood.

RRP: £14.80

Stockists: Luvians Bottleshop, The Wine Reserve, Vino Wines, Wine Utopia

Try these too:

Cune Barrel Fermented Blanco 2016

A friend loves a good white Rioja so this is one for her. 100% Viura with fresh citrus flavours and toasty richness. Transport yourself to the Spanish sun pairing this with delicious fish or shellfish.

RRP: £10.15

Stockists: Co-op, Sissinghurst Wines, Ellies Cellar, Winestore Distribution, Aitken Wines, B J R Hanby

 Kleine Zalze Vineyard Selection Chenin Blanc 2017

A rich Chenin with a gently tropical nose of honeysuckle, guava and pineapple with fresh green apple and quince. The palate is dry yet rich with tropical fruits and subtle oak and the acidity keeps it all fresh and balanced.

Pair this elegant wine with goat’s cheese or smoked fish for a great spring match.

RRP: £10.60

Stockists: Roberts & Speight, Mitchells Vintners, Fenwick, Vino Wines

Villa Maria Cellar Selection Sauvignon Blanc 2017

A Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc bursting with aromas of passionfruit, melon, nettles and fresh herbs. The palate is powerful, displaying vibrant grapefruit notes.

Rustle up some salmon and salads to go with the wine for a delicious spring supper.

RRP: £13.85

Stockists: Majestic Wine, Margiotta, Village Wines, Holborns, North and South Wines, Hoults Wine Merchants, Hailsham Cellars, www.nzhouseofwine.co.uk

REBORN SURVIVOR: WHAT SIX YEARS IN A CHRISTIAN CULT TAUGHT ME

Rhys Hagan was drawn into an alleged Christian cult which left him broke and alienated from friends and family. He finally cut ties and rebuilt his life after surviving six “long years of hell” but the emotional scars remain. Here, he explains how it feels to be brainwashed and warns of the destruction that cults can cause. His new book, Sovereignty, is out now.

When most people hear the word cult their minds’ probably jump to a scene from a movie of hooded figures chanting around a cauldron, not a small Baptist church with singing and a potluck. While that first scene would most definitely depict a cult, the second can be just as likely a culprit. Don’t get me wrong, there are plenty of community churches which provide a support network that’s healthy and beneficial for all, but there are those—tucked away in a remote part of town—masquerading as a harmless, almost apathetic congregation which dismiss the wellbeing of its members for the sake of power and wealth.

Only a few years ago I was a member and youth leader in one such church, but once my family and I witnessed the leader physically attack a small boy, we were forced to confront the nature of what we’d become a part of. In the coming years, the rehabilitation I underwent set me on a path of critical thought and independent living which has resulting in me writing my novel, Sovereignty.

While I managed to fit my most valuable philosophies into my novel, I could write volumes on the lessons I took away from my time in the church, but they all have a common theme. It’s that theme I’d like to share with you now. And it’s a tale as old as time, or at least as old as John Dalberg-Acton: Power corrupts.

To have power over your own life is self-control. To have power over another’s is oppression. Now, I’m not saying you should go to your boss and tell them to stick their authority up their holiest of holies; after all, they don’t have power over your life, only your work. No, the power I’m talking about is the power for one person to dictate what another will believe. The power to insist a child stop associating with their parent or for a parent to kick their child to the streets for not conforming to the leader’s demands. The power to make a single statement and say it means one thing while also meaning the opposite (a principle called ‘doublethink’ by George Orwell in 1984).

When someone establishes this kind of control, or even desires to, a group crosses the line from being a community gathering to a cult. How do you tell? In a fair community anyone can challenge anything and anyone if they choose without formal consequence. In a cult, any criticism of the leader(s) or the ideals they uphold ends in reprisal or excommunication.

I know, it sounds confusing, as if I’m suggesting you be involved in your community while being sceptical of everyone in it. But, like monitoring what you eat, it’s important to have balance. A healthy level of scepticism goes a long way and, if you’re ever unsure about whether or not someone in your circle is healthy or radical, just remember what the bible says, “Judge a tree by its fruit.”

Sovereignty by Rhys Hagan is out now in print and as an eBook priced £11.97 and £4.79. It is available from Amazon . For more information about Rhys’s story, go to www.rhyshagan.com/

 

The Academic Archers’ Conference 2018 by Michael Rowan

 

‘And this? asked the tall broad security guard, clearly more used to checking bags at Nightclubs than at the third Academic Archer’s Conference.

‘It’s a crochet hook’ said the woman in front of me in the queue with a small sigh of exasperation.

The security guard locked eyes with me, having already let in a variety of knitting needles, pinking scissors and even a Voodoo Doll.

The typical Archers’ listener is female, University educated, over 50 and according to the market research, resolutely middleclass.

The men form a smaller group and are clearly incapable of listening to the conference papers and knitting, crocheting and embroidering unlike the women who multi task throughout the day. In fact, one woman not only listened and knitted, but even ran up and down the aisle with a roving microphone.

 

We were at the British Library where an audience of over 200 people had converged and an almost messianic fervour is palpable in the room.

 

The Archers is the world’s longest running radio soap opera piloted in 1950, with a remit to educate agriculturists and which still performs this role today, though with much more dramatic tension.

One speaker explained that in the mid- 1970s audience levels had dwindled and the BBC was considering cancelling the show. The advent of a woman producer and women writers gave the Archers a much-needed boost and the show has continued to increase its audience ever since.

Our worth as fans is measured in how long we have been listening and at thirty- six years I have only just shed my newcomer status.

Speakers who have only listened for a few years begin with an apology to the all forgiving audience.

The bond between fans is strong and the Speakers – all academics are all fans themselves and clearly relishing the opportunity to impart their, not insignificant knowledge with fellow devotees.

The highlight of the day takes place when one of the show’s actors, Charlotte Martin, took the platform for a wide -ranging discussion. Her character is that of a social climbing busy body that we all love to hate, but by the end of the debate we had agreed that she was in fact the Greek chorus and we sneered because she was an older working- class woman. Food for thought indeed.

The papers covered a variety of Archer related topics, the most surreal about how the featured village would fair if a revolution took place. What appeared on paper to be a whimsical piece had the audience on the edge of their seats as the speaker worked for NATO and had served in Afghanistan. Suddenly this cosy soap was not quite so cosy and yet the delivery had us roaring with laughter.

Michael Rowan and Charlotte Martin

In jokes are shared and before we know it the day has passed and many more new friends have been made.

Last year’s conference has all the papers featured in a book entitled Custard Culverts and Cake and is still available to fans and none fans alike.

I leave with a kindly looking lady who could easily be typecast as the perfect grannie, white hair, glasses and a kindly smile. As we leave she reaches into her bag to remove the voodoo doll she has made of one of the characters in the Archers whom she hates with a passion.

She waves the doll at the Security Guard who again locks eyes with me.

I merely shrug, before waving my companion goodbye and arranging to meet up again next year.

 

A Healthy Alternative to Easter Eggs by Dr Kathleen Thompson

 

 

Easter eggs are delicious, I cannot lie, but sometimes our kids get just too many, don’t you think? So maybe they would prefer an ‘eggy’ themed game, instead of at least some of the chocolate this Easter?

First established in 1919, the family-owned company, Gibsons, use well-known artists and illustrators to produce high quality traditional games and jigsaws. These are something to treasure and make a welcome change from computer-based games (Yes, I am showing my age, and proud of it).

In fact Gibsons’ fun card game, Chicken Out! won the Indoor Toys & Games Creative Play Award 2017. For 2-6 players, aged 7+ it is beautifully illustrated by Clare Elsom. Players aim to reach 21, but cheeky fox cards can sabotage chances of winning. The chicken and egg theme makes it perfect for Easter.

 

The Easter Egg Hunt 500-piece jigsaw is also great for older children, or even adults who are watching their waist line.

 

 

But their large collection of beautifully-illustrated jigsaws are not confined to Easter. In fact I was given the ‘Keep on Dancing’ jigsaw myself for Christmas. It is a fabulous scene of dancers at The Blackpool Tower, home of ballroom dancing – and it certainly challenged the old grey matter as I tried to sort the sequins from chandeliers.

Gibsons also produce accessories for jigsaw enthusiasts and other games. So why not re-experience the pleasure of traditional games and remind ourselves how great they can be this Easter?

 

By Dr K Thompson, author of From Both Ends of the Stethoscope: Getting through breast cancer – by a doctor who knows

http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B01A7DM42Q http://www.amazon.com/dp/B01A7DM42Q

http://faitobooks.co,uk

 

Note: These articles express personal views. No warranty is made as to the accuracy or completeness of information given and you should always consult a doctor if you need medical advice