My Birth Trauma Helped Me to Become a Doula

After months of meeting with Pam I was doing good.  We shifted into more mentoring for creating the life I wanted, than dealing with my past.

I thought, I am over all this birth stuff NOW!

Then I went to a birth, that was mostly good.

But there was a part that was really hard for ME.  Mom was fine about it, but I was NOT.  I was very agitated about it the 2 weeks before I could see Pam.

I did all I could think of releasing my tension about it.  I talked to a fellow doula about it.  I wrote out the experience.  I prayed.  I did the Emotion Code.  But I just couldn’t let it all go.

So when I talked about it with Pam and she asks, “Can you think of an experience in your life that was similar to this?”

IMG_8574This mom had a vaginal birth, so I never connected it to T1′s birth.  But after sitting there for a minute or so, it clicked.  T1′s birth was similar to this moment in this moms birth.  Again, this mom was fine with what happened.  But it was SO hard for me.

I realized that my emotions were all stemming from what I had felt as an observer, which was connected very strongly emotionally into my experience 14 years before as T1 came into this world.

I had moved down to take some pictures for her and a situation occured where, to me, she looked helpless and abandoned.  I put down the camera and moved back to her and talked her through it and kept her centered (which is probably why she didn’t feel traumatized by it.)

Pam pointed out that my “career” means I have chosen to run certain patterns.

Birth is a pattern for me.  I said, “Does this mean I shouldn’t do it???”  But she reassured me that many time the patterns we run, actually become our gifts.  I was able to help this mom feel connected and she wasn’t abandoned.  That it is now my GIFT!

I thought that was amazing and beautiful.  I know a lot of moms who experience Birth Trauma go into birth professions.  I don’t know if we all know why, but it was eye opening to see it!

Are you a birth worker?  Did you have a birth trauma that inspired you to work in this field?