Sentences with phrase «birth experience in»

Additionally, after the fact, women who had supportive birth partners tend to view their birth experience in a more positive light, and some research even shows that they have less post-partum depression, and breastfeed easier.
Additionally, after the fact, women who had supportive birth partners tend to view their birth experience in a more positive light, and some research even shows that they...
Like you, my first birth experience in a hospital had more medical interventions than I would have liked.
Giving Austin Labor Support is an organization of dedicated volunteers who provide emotional, physical and informational support to those who are under - supported through their birth experience in order to improve birth outcomes and empower women and their families.
I think that it is possible to have a good birth experience in a hospital and that THIS SHOULD be promoted because many women have had bad experiences in hospitals and need to know that it doesn't HAVE to be one or the other.
Repeating phrases that settle your mind each day can help prepare mothers and alter the birth experience in a dramatic way.
I had a wonderful birth experience in the hospital, and that included the medical intervention I was given... I tested positive for strep B and was given antibiotics, which were neccessary for the health of my son.
Less is More:... But, after two birth experiences in hospitals, I believe I can honestly say that the circus - like atmosphere that occurs in a lot delivery rooms can be a real turn - off, and maybe even an impediment, for a woman in labor.
I've had 4 relatively pleasant birth experiences in Israel (had to be in the hallway after one, the midwives pretty much ignored me during my third) and successfully nursed all four subsequently.

Not exact matches

Knowing what to do in a modern office requires a college degree or experience, and anyone in the birth order can attain that.
The United States Postal Service is the latest victim in a long list of organizations to have recently experienced a data breach, saying it believes more than 800,000 employees» personal data — including Social Security numbers, names, dates of birth, addresses among other information — may have been compromised, the Washington Post reports.
By reading the Ninth Amendment as creating a general right to privacy, Black and Stewart suggested, the unelected justices of the Supreme Court had subst - ituted their own subjective notions of justice, liberty, and reasonableness for the wisdom and experience of the elected representatives in the Connecticut state legislature who were responsible for passing the birth control regulation.
I understand your article Kerry and how family can be and should be a support in birth, in living and in death, however so many people on this earth do not get to experience that... so many times families are torn apart or kids are abandoned and marriages ruined by one thing or another, so we must realize who gave us life, what purpose he gave us life for!
This Bible teaches Repentence, Baptism in Jesus Name and receiving the Holy Ghost or the New Birth experience (being born again).
And in the process he appeals regularly to what is required by logic and reason, as well as to themes of a sort of natural theology in which he makes analogies to the experiences of birth and death.
The result is basically a «convertive piety» with its call to self conscious conversion, the experience of the «new birth,» and a life of «holiness» that is demonstrably and empirically distinct from the rest of the world in its expression of «actual righteousness.»
In other words, have you ever heard someone blame God for the pain that women experience in giving birtIn other words, have you ever heard someone blame God for the pain that women experience in giving birtin giving birth?
It makes me wonder how much pressure we feel to sanitize our stories so that they don't make people uncomfortable, how we anecdote our experience with the lightness or the healing or birth or new life alone in order to make it acceptable.
I wrote my second book during a surprise later - in - life fourth baby pregnancy that was difficult, a traumatic birth experience, and a level of sleep deprivation that meant I probably shouldn't have been allowed to operate heavy machinery like our minivan.
I had turned my son's birth story into an anecdote and in so doing, I had lessened the power of our experience.
In Indonesia, persons who do not identify with one of the six official religions (Islam, Cathoilc, Protestant, Confucian, Buddhism, Hindu), including people with no religion, to experience official discrimination in the context ofcivil registration of marriages and births and other situation involving family laIn Indonesia, persons who do not identify with one of the six official religions (Islam, Cathoilc, Protestant, Confucian, Buddhism, Hindu), including people with no religion, to experience official discrimination in the context ofcivil registration of marriages and births and other situation involving family lain the context ofcivil registration of marriages and births and other situation involving family law.
But my basic convictions about them were derived not from these philosophers but partly from my being surrounded from birth with the reality in question; partly from Emerson's essays and the works of James and Royce; partly from the poems of Shelley and Wordsworth (which similarly influenced Whitehead); and most of all from my own experience, reflected upon especially during my two years in the army medical corps, when I had considerable leisure to think about life and death and other fundamental questions.
Before starting birth control, her monthly periods (which exacerbate the chronic pain she experiences, especially while in «flare») were so unbearably painful that she couldn't even walk.
He has experienced awe, the religious passion, during the dark vision between the sacrificial pieces; he has enacted the new covenant marked by (self --RRB- circumcision — a symbolic act of «partial sacrifice,» betokening dedication to God's ways; he has been God's partner in the judgment on Sodom and Gomorrah, and in his own heart has accepted responsibility for (what he thought was) the «death» of Lot; he has beheld the wondrous birth of Isaac and endured the banishment of Ishmael.
The ethical and emotional crises that we experience today in relation to the thresholds of birth and death, the uncertainty as to where «personal» value may be located and anchored, and the resultant confusion in the realm of public policy and law are symptoms of the fundamental intellectual crisis of modern humanity.
Atheists have never experienced birth otherwise there is no way they could not believe in GOD.
In this essay the word «person» will refer to a particular series of experiences extending from physical birth to physical death considered as a whole.
The two acts (new birth and faith) are so closely connected that in experience we can not distinguish them.
Lately I've been interested in what sort of difference could be made if «dialogue» became less focused on understanding why someone believes what they do (in light of the way I belief) and more about understanding the way those beliefs are held in the context of the experiences that helped birth them.
Most of us have been strongly influenced by these since birth and have great difficulty in finding freedom we have not yet experienced the necessary renewing of mind.
Although they will in their future life be confronted with handicaps, sometimes very severe, their future prospects and their actual experienced quality of life can not be predicted with such certainty at birth that their lives can be regarded as hopeless or meaningless («quality of life judgments» as such being unacceptable in this decision making).
Paul, who surely had little if any firsthand experience with the wondrous process of human birth, tells us that all of creation — which means all of humankind, all of us — is groaning in the pangs of childbirth.
Needless to say, the West has not experienced a new birth of religious commitment, though one could argue that such is happening in the growth of Christianity in Africa and the resurgence of Islam.
If a person went to school and got a degree from say, BC, and it's well known that they are jesuit and don't believe in birth control, all the hospital needs to do is reject them based on experience and not religion and they'll find a more qualified candidate for the job.
The fall of Adam and Eve, the covenants with Israel and its deliverance from bondage, its falling away and punishment through new sufferings, the speaking of the divine word through the prophets, the birth of Christ in human flesh, the life and death of Jesus, the experience of the resurrection, and the history of the Church, the expectation of the final events and the established reign of God in love and peace — all this is the Biblical understanding of what God has done, is doing, and will continue to do for the judgment and redemption of the world.
No theologian or experience can take away from what I know in my heart of hearts now, what many mothers the world over know in their heart of hearts about birth and raising babies and real transformation.
This was because the focus shifted from participation in Christendom (by virtue of birth) to personal experience and belief (by active choice).
Positive stories shared by women who have had wonderful childbirth experiences are an irreplaceable way to transmit knowledge of a woman's true capacities in pregnancy and birth
The more I experience pregnancy and birth in all its mess and glory, loss and life, the more I uncover the devout links between how we as women experience birth and how the Holy Spirit often «gives birth» in our souls.
I'll tell you about how learning to let my body lead me gave me beautiful experiences in birth.
But we want no one to misunderstand our basic position: we are committed to a Gospel which has at its heart a demand for, and a provision of, an experience of new birth - an experience offered to all, and effective for those who receive the good news in Christ.
Pregnancy and birth can be a faithing experience, one that makes women aware of what they hold in common with the greater human family.
In particular, the experience of being pregnant and giving birth, while never easy, became the great metaphor for how I encountered God.
Just as every woman knows her experience in birth is her experience, hers alone, only she knows the intricacies, unduplicated, a birth is unique.
The more I experienced pregnancy and birth in all its mess and glory, loss and life, the more I uncovered the devout parallels between how women experience birth and how the Holy Spirit often «gives birth» in our souls.
After encountering Him, they joyfully told everyone about their experience until everyone in the Judean countryside heard about the birth of the Messiah.
As the first Incarnation was, you say, imperfect, we have to wait for the Holy Ghost to produce a second birth and this in fact is described in the Book of Revelation: «Ever since John, the apocalyptist, experienced for the first time (perhaps unconsciously) that conflict into which Christianity inevitably leads, mankind has groaned under this burden: God wanted to become man, and still wants to.
It means finding God in all the experiences and relationships of our lives; in our «world making»; in creative occasions of giving birth to a child, to a painting, to a poem, to a sermon, in sustaining events of eating a meal, cleaning a house, recycling our refuse, providing jobs, maintaining friendships; in experiences of judgment because of our reliance upon destructive weapons, because of our loss of integrity; and in redemptive relationships wherein we experience forgiveness, renewal, and peace.
That is probably why John experienced in his vision a second birth of a son from the mother Sophia, a divine birth which was characterized by a coniunctio oppositorum and which anticipated the filius sapientiae, the essence of the individuation process.»
But if we really experience the Nativity we are faced with the heartache and suffering embedded deep in the nature of the event: No decent place for his birth, the fear of discovery by the wrong people, all the children who died because he was born, the anxious flight into a foreign country.
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