Women on Common Ground: Series of naturalist - led programs for women who love the outdoors but whose concern for personal safety keeps them from enjoying local parks.
Not exact matches
The Obama administration announced its first round of grants from a new fund aimed at helping pregnant
women and parenting teens
on Wednesday, a move the White House framed as part of its «
common ground» approach to abortion.
Insightful is his exploration of the (limited)
common ground inhabited by both traditionalists and feminists, whose focus
on women demands that it at least take seriously questions of child rearing.
Though our eating styles vastly differed when we first met (I focused mainly
on a plant - based, gluten free diet and Stacey being Paleo) I loved how we were able to see through our differences and find the
common ground: The fact that we were two
women seeking health for our individual bodies, able to appreciate a lifestyle different of our own.
The resulting 9
Common Ground Statements describe a maternity care environment that respects a
woman's autonomy, reduces health disparities, supports cross-professional collaboration and communication, promotes physiologic birth, expands research that includes the
woman in defining the elements of «safety», and accurately assesses the effects of birth place
on outcomes and experience.
this is not neutral
ground, this is an incredibly loaded subject dealing with
women,
women's bodies, medicine, motherhood, etc, etc. and i find it incredibly irresponsible to present «orgasmic birth» somehow as yet another new way of going through childbirth (while implicitly laying the blame of not achieving this
on the mother) when it's obviously first of all, not «orgasmic» in the commonly understood sense of the word, nor is it something that is at all
common or controlled by the mother.
Displayed
on this
common ground, Constantin Brancusi's The First Cry (1917) dissolves the human form into elliptical shapes, and Alberto Giacometti's Femme Debout (1957) elongates a
woman's body into abstraction.