
I've been a homebirth midwife for over thirty years in the small midwestern college town I came to for grad school, before jumping the tracks into my wild career. I'm reflecting back now, focusing on more ironic and unexpected aspects of the work.
| Platform | Pricing | Only free issues | Publishes | Weekly | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Issues | 5 | Subscribers | Read | maryhelenayres.substack.com |
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I have had my birth stool longer than I have been a practicing midwife. It was a gift given by a grateful father after his baby’s birth, back in the first year of my training, when I was going to births as a student and second assistant (re...
My friend the poet describes midwifery as a form of chosen invisibility, which I just love, because in saying that she incidentally names what I find so viscerally appealing about the work. For thirty years I’ve had a home birth practice, p...
An historic moment passed this week as obstetrician John Labban, MD, delivered his last baby in Bloomington, Indiana. For twenty-two years the man has been on call round the clock for his pregnant patients, while running a busy solo practic...
The coyotes were howling not too far away. Though I had been to this place a dozen times, it was always during the day, and I hadn’t reckoned on coyotes. Challenging enough that my clients lived deep in the woods, almost a mile from the clo...
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I've been a homebirth midwife for over thirty years in the midwestern college town I came to for grad school, before jumping the tracks into my wild career. I'll be writing about my work with a focus on the ironic and unexpected.
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