Meadow’s Blossoming Bellies

Meadow’s Blossoming Bellies Bring support, care, and empowerment to the birth experience.

Happy Birthday, Grandma Liz.I think about you all the time. I miss you so much.Meadow is getting so big. You would be so...
04/03/2026

Happy Birthday, Grandma Liz.

I think about you all the time. I miss you so much.

Meadow is getting so big. You would be so surprised by her. She has this way of noticing everything, animals especially. She loves everyone and everything with such an open heart. She is such a joy. The way she loves animals is such a beautiful thing to watch. She doesn’t just like them, she truly loves ALL animals. Every kind. Every shape. Every little creature she comes across. And she loves her reptiles the most. She lights up around them in a way that feels so natural for her, like she already understands them.

It always reminds me of you in a quiet way.

She is so smart, so kind, and the sweetest little soul. I know you are watching her grow each and every day in your own way.

I wish I could sit with you for a while and tell you everything in real time. Not just the highlights, but the messy middle too. I know you’d understand that part the most.

I love you.

Continuous external monitoring is something a lot of parents hear about… but don’t always fully understand what it means...
04/03/2026

Continuous external monitoring is something a lot of parents hear about… but don’t always fully understand what it means in real life.

It’s the two belts placed around your belly during labor.
One is tracking your baby’s heart rate.
The other is tracking your contractions.

And it stays on the whole time, sending a constant stream of information to a monitor.

Sometimes it’s used because there’s a specific reason—like an induction, certain medications, or concerns about how baby is doing.
Other times, it’s just part of routine hospital practice.

What people don’t always realize is how it can feel during labor.

Those belts can shift when you move.
They often need to be adjusted.
They can make it harder to move freely, especially if wireless options aren’t available.

And movement matters in labor.
Being able to change positions, get in the shower, sway, lean, or just follow what your body is asking for can make a big difference.

Continuous monitoring can be a helpful tool.
It gives ongoing information and can support decision-making when it’s needed.

But it’s still just one piece of the bigger picture.

Your body, your instincts, how labor is unfolding—those things matter too.

You deserve to understand what’s being recommended, why it’s being used, and what your options are within it.

Because informed support isn’t just about having the monitor on…
it’s about making sure you still feel supported, heard, and able to move through your labor in a way that works for you.

Homebirth gets misunderstood in a lot of ways.People picture something either overly idealized… or completely unsafe.Lik...
04/03/2026

Homebirth gets misunderstood in a lot of ways.

People picture something either overly idealized… or completely unsafe.
Like it’s either candles and calm the whole time, or reckless and risky.
The truth usually sits somewhere much more grounded than that.

Homebirth isn’t about chasing a perfect experience.
It’s not about proving anything or doing birth “better” than anyone else.

It’s about environment.
It’s about autonomy.
It’s about feeling safe in your own body, in your own space, with people you trust.

That doesn’t mean it’s easy.
Homebirth can be intense. It can be loud, quiet, slow, overwhelming, powerful—all in the same breath.
There are moments where doubt creeps in. Moments where things shift. Moments where decisions still have to be made.

Another big misunderstanding is that choosing homebirth means rejecting support or safety.
In reality, it often means being very intentional about both.

It means choosing a team carefully.
It means knowing your options.
It means understanding when things are flowing normally—and when they’re not.

And sometimes, it means plans change. Transfers happen. Support continues in a different space.

Homebirth isn’t one specific kind of birth.
It’s not one story, one look, or one outcome.

It’s a choice some families make because it feels right for them.
Not because it’s perfect—but because it aligns with what they need to feel supported, respected, and safe.

And that’s really what matters.

Grandparents can be such an important part of the postpartum space… but not all support actually feels supportive.Postpa...
04/02/2026

Grandparents can be such an important part of the postpartum space… but not all support actually feels supportive.

Postpartum is a time of healing, learning, and a complete shift in identity. Parents are recovering physically, navigating hormones, figuring out feeding, sleep, and how to care for a brand new human—all at once. The kind of support that surrounds them during this time matters more than most people realize.

What actually helps?

It’s the quiet, behind-the-scenes care.
Meals dropped off without needing direction.
Laundry folded, dishes done, trash taken out.
Letting the parent shower, nap, or just sit without being needed for a moment.
Asking “what do you need today?” and being open to whatever that answer is.
Listening without correcting, fixing, or comparing.

It’s understanding that sometimes the parent doesn’t need advice—they need to feel seen.
It’s respecting feeding choices, sleep decisions, and boundaries, even if they look different than how things were done before.
It’s recognizing that recovery doesn’t end at six weeks, and continuing to show up in small ways over time.

What doesn’t help in the way people hope?

Holding the baby while the parent is still trying to manage everything else alone.
Jumping in with advice that wasn’t asked for, especially during vulnerable moments.
Expecting visits to feel like hosting.
Telling birth stories or “when I did it…” in a way that takes up space instead of offering support.
Minimizing exhaustion, anxiety, or overwhelm.

Support in postpartum isn’t about access to the baby—it’s about caring for the whole family.

Grandparents have the ability to be a steady, grounding presence in this season. Not by taking over, but by paying attention. By noticing what would actually lighten the load. By protecting the space instead of filling it.

Sometimes the most meaningful thing you can do is care for the parent… so they can care for their baby.

There was a moment at a birth that changed how I see this work.Things had gotten intense. The kind of intensity where th...
04/01/2026

There was a moment at a birth that changed how I see this work.

Things had gotten intense. The kind of intensity where the whole room feels it, even in the quiet. The birthing person was deep in it, moving inward, doing the work.

At one point, they looked at me and I could see it — the doubt, the overwhelm, the question of whether they could keep going.

My instinct was to step in more.
To do something.
To fix it.

But something in me paused.

Instead, I stayed where I was. I kept my voice low. I didn’t rush in to change anything. I just stayed steady with them.

And I watched them move through it.

Not because I directed it.
Not because I had the perfect words.

But because they found their own way through that moment.

That was the shift for me.

It made me realize that this work isn’t about doing more.

It’s about knowing when to do less.

Trusting the person in front of you.
Trusting the process.
And holding a space that feels safe enough for them to go all the way into it.

That moment changed how I show up at births.

Less urgency.
More trust.

And a deeper respect for how much people already carry within them. 🌼

Meadow makes animal friends everywhere she goes.It doesn’t matter where we are, the parks, sidewalks, random little stop...
03/31/2026

Meadow makes animal friends everywhere she goes.

It doesn’t matter where we are, the parks, sidewalks, random little stops. Animas just find her. Or maybe she finds them. There’s this quiet way she moves toward them, no fear, no rush, just curiosity and respect. And they feel it.

I swear she’s a little animal whisperer.

Watching her connect like that… it gets me every time. The way she softens, the way they soften back. It’s like they recognize something in her.

It’s one of those things that feels small from the outside, but it’s not. It’s who she is.

Something people don’t tell you about early labor…is how easy it is to question if it’s even real.Contractions might fee...
03/31/2026

Something people don’t tell you about early labor…

is how easy it is to question if it’s even real.

Contractions might feel mild at first. Irregular. You might be able to talk through them, walk around, even go about your day a little.

And because of that, a lot of people think,
“Is this it?”
“Am I actually in labor?”
“Am I overthinking this?”

Early labor doesn’t always look like the intense, obvious version people expect.

It can be slow.
It can start and stop.
It can build gradually over hours — sometimes longer.

Another thing people don’t talk about is how important this phase is.

Even though it can feel like “nothing is really happening yet,” your body is doing a lot of work. The cervix is softening, thinning, and beginning to open. Your baby is finding their position. Your body is setting the foundation for everything that comes next.

And often, the best thing you can do in early labor…

is not rush it.

Rest if you can.
Eat.
Stay in your space.
Move in ways that feel natural.

Because once labor picks up, you’ll want that energy.

Early labor isn’t the part that gets the most attention.

But it matters more than people realize. 🌼

What still surprises me about birth…is how different it is every single time.You can attend so many births, learn the pa...
03/30/2026

What still surprises me about birth…

is how different it is every single time.

You can attend so many births, learn the patterns, understand the flow… and still walk into a space that feels completely new.

No two people move through labor the same way.
No two rooms feel the same.
No two stories unfold the same.

And somehow, it still works.

I’m also still surprised by the moments that stay quiet.

The ones where everything slows down.
Where no one is talking.
Where the birthing person goes completely inward.

From the outside, it can look like nothing is happening.

But those are often the moments where everything is happening.

And I think what surprises me the most…

is the moment people say, “I can’t do this.”

How often that shows up.
How real it sounds.

And how often it’s followed by them doing it anyway.

No matter how many times I see it, it still gets me.

Because it’s such a raw, honest moment.

And what comes after it is something really powerful.

I don’t think I’ll ever stop being surprised by that. 🌼

Birth has taught me a lot about people.Not the polished, put-together version we show the world.The real version.The one...
03/29/2026

Birth has taught me a lot about people.

Not the polished, put-together version we show the world.

The real version.

The one that comes out when things are intense, vulnerable, and completely outside of control.

I’ve watched people go to the edge of what they think they can handle…
and then stay.

I’ve seen fear and strength exist in the same breath.
Doubt and determination right next to each other.

I’ve learned that people don’t need to be perfect to be powerful.

They just need space to be human in it.

Birth has also shown me how deeply people want to feel safe.

Not just physically — but emotionally.
To be heard.
To not be rushed.
To not be dismissed.

And when they have that…

they open in a completely different way.

I’ve seen how much trust matters.
How much words matter.
How much presence matters.

And I’ve learned that strength doesn’t always look the way we expect it to.

Sometimes it’s loud.

But a lot of the time, it’s quiet.
It’s someone shaking, breathing through something hard, saying “I don’t know if I can”…

and doing it anyway.

Birth strips everything down.

And what’s left is something really honest.

And honestly… it’s one of the most powerful things I’ve ever witnessed. 🌼

Support doesn’t always look like movement or noise.Sometimes it looks like a quiet room.No constant talking.No rushing.N...
03/28/2026

Support doesn’t always look like movement or noise.

Sometimes it looks like a quiet room.

No constant talking.
No rushing.
No one trying to fill the space.

Just presence.

In those moments, I’m not trying to lead or take over. I’m paying attention.

The way someone is breathing.
The way their body is moving through a contraction.
Whether they need a hand to hold… or space to go inward.

Sometimes support is a gentle reminder:
“Relax your shoulders.”
“Breathe.”

Sometimes it’s eye contact.

Sometimes it’s sitting nearby so they don’t feel alone, even in the quiet.

There are births where the room gets really still. The kind of stillness where everything important is happening beneath the surface.

That quiet isn’t empty.

It’s focused.
It’s intentional.
It’s where a lot of the work is happening.

And support in that space isn’t about doing more.

It’s about knowing when to do less.

Holding the room.
Protecting the calm.
Trusting the process that’s unfolding.

Because sometimes the most powerful support doesn’t need to be loud to be felt. 🌼

Belly binding is a traditional postpartum practice used to support the body after birth.It involves wrapping the abdomen...
03/28/2026

Belly binding is a traditional postpartum practice used to support the body after birth.

It involves wrapping the abdomen with a long piece of fabric — most commonly in the Bengkung style, which uses a continuous wrap from the hips up to the ribcage.

At its core, belly binding is about support and grounding.

After birth, the body has just gone through a major shift. The uterus is shrinking, organs are moving back into place, muscles are adjusting, and everything can feel a little unstable or “open.”

Binding provides gentle, consistent compression that can help the body feel more held together during that transition.

Why people find it helpful

Physical support
Binding can help support the core and lower back, especially in the early postpartum days when muscles are still recovering. Many people say it helps them feel more stable when standing, walking, or feeding their baby.

Posture awareness
With a newborn, there’s a lot of leaning, hunching, and holding. Belly binding can act as a reminder to bring awareness back to posture and alignment.

Comfort during healing
Some people find that the gentle pressure helps reduce the heavy or “empty” feeling in the abdomen after birth.

A sense of being held
This is something that often gets overlooked. Beyond the physical benefits, many parents describe belly binding as emotionally grounding. After everything the body has just experienced, that feeling of being wrapped and supported can be deeply regulating.

What it’s not

Belly binding is not about “snapping back.”
It’s not about shrinking your body or changing how it looks.

It’s about supporting recovery.

A gentle note

Binding should feel comfortable, not restrictive. You should still be able to breathe fully, move, and rest easily. It’s also important to wait until the body is ready, especially depending on how birth went (like after a caesarean birth).

Like most postpartum practices, it’s not one-size-fits-all.

But for many, it becomes a simple, intentional way to support both the body and the nervous system in those early weeks after birth. 🌼

Address

Arvada, CO
80004

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 8pm
Tuesday 9am - 8pm
Wednesday 9am - 8pm
Thursday 9am - 8pm
Friday 9am - 8pm
Saturday 10am - 3pm
Sunday 10am - 3pm

Website

https://blossomingbelliesd.wixsite.com/meadowsblossoming

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