Meadow’s Blossoming Bellies

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

Ultrasounds are often treated like a required step in pregnancy care, but the reality is more nuanced than that.They’re ...
04/27/2026

Ultrasounds are often treated like a required step in pregnancy care, but the reality is more nuanced than that.

They’re a medical tool—useful for gathering information about a pregnancy, checking growth, estimating gestational age, and looking for certain conditions. For many people, they can offer reassurance or help guide decisions when something needs closer monitoring.

At the same time, they aren’t mandatory in every situation, and they aren’t the only way to understand what’s happening in a pregnancy. Like any tool in healthcare, they come with context, limitations, and the need for informed choice.

What often gets lost is that this is something you get to decide on. It’s up to you whether you want to have an ultrasound, how many you want, and what feels right for your body and your pregnancy. That choice should be part of your care conversation, not something assumed for you.

You can ask what the scan is for. You can ask what information it’s meant to provide. You can ask what would change based on the results. And you can take time to decide if it feels aligned for you before moving forward.

Pregnancy care works best when you’re included in the decision-making, not just following a set path without space to question it.

Your body. Your pregnancy. Your choice.

Mobility aids belong in birth spaces.They aren’t “extra.” They aren’t “special accommodations.” They are tools that supp...
04/26/2026

Mobility aids belong in birth spaces.

They aren’t “extra.” They aren’t “special accommodations.” They are tools that support comfort, safety, positioning, and autonomy—things every birthing person deserves, regardless of ability.

Too often, birth environments are set up with a very narrow idea of what movement is supposed to look like. That can quietly exclude people who use wheelchairs, walkers, canes, braces, or other supports—or make them feel like they have to leave part of themselves at the door in order to be “allowed” into the space.

But birth is already a physical experience that asks a lot from the body. Mobility aids can help someone conserve energy, reduce pain, shift positions safely, and stay grounded in their own control over what’s happening. They can also be part of what makes informed consent possible—because when someone can move, reposition, or rest in a way that works for them, they’re more present in their choices.

There’s also something important here about dignity. No one should have to justify why they need their body supported in the way it already lives day to day. Pregnancy and birth don’t erase disability—they often increase the need for support.

When birth spaces make room for mobility aids without hesitation or question, it sends a clear message: your body is not a barrier to care here. Your needs are not an inconvenience. You belong in this space fully, as you are.

And that shift matters more than people realize.

How lighting, sound, and texture shape birth experiencesBirth isn’t just physical.It’s sensory.What you see, hear, and f...
04/25/2026

How lighting, sound, and texture shape birth experiences

Birth isn’t just physical.
It’s sensory.

What you see, hear, and feel around you can either help your body settle into the work… or pull you out of it.

Lighting
Bright, harsh lights can make it harder to relax.
Dim, warm lighting can help your body feel safer, more private.

There’s a reason so many mammals seek out dark, quiet spaces to give birth. Your body isn’t separate from that.

Sound
Constant noise, beeping machines, people talking over each other — it can feel overwhelming fast.
On the other side, music you love, steady voices, or even silence can help you stay grounded.

Your nervous system is always listening.

Texture
This one gets overlooked, but it matters.
The feeling of a soft blanket, a familiar robe, warm water, a steady hand on your back — these things can bring comfort and connection when everything feels intense.

Even small physical details can shift how supported you feel.

What this really means
When your environment feels safe, your body is more likely to open.
When it feels tense or overstimulating, your body can tighten, hesitate, or disconnect.

This isn’t about creating a “perfect” birth space.
It’s about noticing what helps you feel more like yourself… and bringing that in where you can.

Because birth isn’t just something happening to your body.
It’s something your whole system is moving through.

Birth art holds a different kind of language than words do.As a birthkeeper, I’ve seen how much can live in a moment tha...
04/25/2026

Birth art holds a different kind of language than words do.

As a birthkeeper, I’ve seen how much can live in a moment that doesn’t get spoken out loud. Birth art gives that space somewhere to go. It can hold anticipation, fear, excitement, grief, hope—all the things that don’t always fit neatly into conversation, especially when someone is preparing for birth or moving through postpartum.

It doesn’t have to be “artistic” in the traditional sense. It can be paint, clay, collage, movement, even simple mark-making. What matters is that it becomes a place where someone can express what their body and mind are carrying without needing to explain it perfectly.

In birth spaces, this kind of expression can be grounding. It can help someone connect to their own instincts, process emotions that feel too big for words, or simply create something that reflects their experience in a way that feels honest. Sometimes it’s about release. Sometimes it’s about clarity. Sometimes it’s just about being witnessed through what they create.

There’s also something powerful about bringing birth art into postpartum. It can become a record of a transition that is often hard to put into language later. A reminder that their experience mattered, even in the moments that felt overwhelming or unclear.

For me, birth art isn’t about making something beautiful. It’s about making something true. Something that belongs to the person living the experience, not the system around them.

It’s another way of saying: your experience deserves space. Your feelings deserve form. Your story doesn’t have to stay unspoken to be real.

Why I hold space for all to come to my plant swapA plant swap, to me, has never just been about plants.It’s about people...
04/25/2026

Why I hold space for all to come to my plant swap

A plant swap, to me, has never just been about plants.

It’s about people showing up with what they have, what they’ve nurtured, what they’re ready to share, and what they’re hoping to receive in return. There’s something quietly powerful about that kind of exchange—it doesn’t require perfection, just participation.

I hold space for all to come because I don’t believe connection should have barriers in something like this. Plants don’t care what your life looks like, how much you know, or how long you’ve been doing this. They just respond to care, attention, and time. People deserve that same kind of space.

I also know how isolating life can feel sometimes. Even in a city full of people, it’s easy to feel like you’re on your own. Gatherings like this matter because they create something simple and grounding—shared tables, shared stories, shared starts and cuttings that turn into something new in someone else’s home.

There’s no pressure to show up a certain way. No expectation to bring “enough” or know “enough.” Just come as you are. Take what you need. Leave what you can. Let it be enough.

That’s the heart of it for me: reciprocity without judgment, community without conditions, and a space where something living is always being passed forward.

If this is something you feel called to be part of, the link is in my bio.

Medical bias toward disabled bodies is real, and it absolutely impacts the care people receive.It doesn’t always show up...
04/25/2026

Medical bias toward disabled bodies is real, and it absolutely impacts the care people receive.

It doesn’t always show up in obvious ways. Sometimes it’s the tone of a conversation. Sometimes it’s how quickly a symptom gets explained away. Sometimes it’s the way options get narrowed before a disabled person even gets a say in what their own body needs.

There’s a long history in healthcare of disabled bodies being treated as problems to work around instead of people to listen to. That can look like assumptions about pain, assumptions about capacity, or assumptions about what someone’s “quality of life” must be. And those assumptions can quietly shape decisions, even when no one means harm.

What gets missed in all of that is the simplest part: disabled people are the experts of their own lived experience. When that gets pushed aside, care becomes less accurate, less collaborative, and less safe.

This matters in every space of medicine, but it becomes especially visible in pregnancy, birth, and postpartum care—where communication, consent, and trust are already fragile for so many people. When bias enters the room, it can change how someone is heard, how they’re monitored, and how their choices are respected.

None of this is about individual providers being “bad.” It’s about systems that have trained people—often without realizing it—to prioritize assumptions over listening.

The shift isn’t complicated, but it does require intention: slow down, ask instead of assume, and treat disabled patients as full participants in their care, not exceptions to it.

Cats during pregnancy & postpartum 🐾Our pets are family. They’re part of the quiet moments, the hard days, the healing. ...
04/25/2026

Cats during pregnancy & postpartum 🐾

Our pets are family. They’re part of the quiet moments, the hard days, the healing. So when pregnancy or a new baby enters the picture, it can feel confusing trying to balance safety with love.

During pregnancy:
• Litter boxes matter — cat p**p can carry something called Toxoplasmosis. If you can, have someone else handle it. If not, gloves + handwashing go a long way.
• Indoor cats are lower risk than outdoor hunters, but the precaution still stands.
• Snuggles are okay. Your cat being close to you isn’t the concern — it’s the litter.

Preparing your cat for baby:
• Let them explore baby gear before baby arrives
• Start setting boundaries early (like bassinet + crib spaces)
• Bring home something with baby’s scent before you’re home, if you can

Postpartum life:
• Supervise early interactions — not because your cat is “bad,” but because everyone is adjusting
• Keep sleep spaces pet-free for safety
• Your cat might need time. Some become extra clingy, others keep their distance

The emotional side:
This part doesn’t get talked about enough.
Sometimes your capacity shifts after birth. The same cat you’ve loved forever might suddenly feel overwhelming when you’re touched out, healing, and running on no sleep.

That doesn’t make you a bad pet parent.

Give yourself space to adjust. Keep connection in small, doable ways.

You don’t have to choose between loving your baby and loving your pets. It’s about awareness, small precautions, and letting the transition unfold.

I’ve been feeling called to reintroduce myself here… not just what I do, but why I do it.I’m Kat, a birth, postpartum, a...
04/24/2026

I’ve been feeling called to reintroduce myself here… not just what I do, but why I do it.

I’m Kat, a birth, postpartum, and sibling doula behind Meadow’s Blossoming Bellies. My work didn’t come from a textbook—it came from living it.

My daughter, Meadow, was born early and spent time in the NICU. Our journey into parenthood was layered with fear, disconnection, learning curves, and moments that changed me deeply. There were times I felt lost in systems that weren’t built to truly see us. Times I needed more support than what was offered. That experience is what rooted me into this work.

I care so deeply about birth and postpartum because I know how much it matters to feel supported, informed, and not alone. I know what it’s like when that’s missing, and I know how powerful it is when it’s present.

As a doula, I support families through pregnancy, birth, and postpartum in ways that are flexible, real, and centered on your needs. That looks like emotional support, hands-on comfort, education, advocacy, and making space for your voice to stay at the center of your experience.

I also offer sibling support, because growing a family includes everyone.

And I’m a cannabis-informed doula. I hold space without judgment for families who choose to use cannabis during pregnancy or postpartum, offering education and support so people can make informed decisions that feel right for them.

Outside of this work, I’m a mom, a partner, and someone who loves deeply. I’m usually at home with my family, spending time with my cats, creating art, or listening to music that helps me feel grounded again. I’m someone who feels things fully, and that carries into the way I show up for others.

This work isn’t about having all the answers. It’s about being there. Sitting in the hard moments. Holding space for the good ones. Walking alongside you while you find your own way.

If you’re here, whether you’re pregnant, postpartum, supporting someone who is, or just feeling called to this space, I’m really glad you’re here.

Preparing for birth with a disability often means extra layers of planning that many people never see.It’s not just pick...
04/24/2026

Preparing for birth with a disability often means extra layers of planning that many people never see.

It’s not just picking a provider or packing a bag.

It can look like figuring out if the space is even accessible.
Asking questions others don’t have to think about.
Advocating—over and over again—for needs that should already be understood.

It might mean coordinating between multiple providers.
Making backup plans for flares, fatigue, or changing symptoms.
Thinking through mobility, positioning, pain management, sensory needs—on a deeper level.

It can mean bringing your own tools, your own supports, your own knowledge of your body into spaces that aren’t always built with you in mind.

And a lot of that work happens quietly.

Behind the scenes.
Before labor even begins.

It takes time. Energy. Emotional capacity.

Not because disabled people aren’t capable—but because the system often expects them to fit into spaces that weren’t designed for them.

That kind of preparation deserves to be seen.

It deserves to be respected.

And most of all, it deserves to be met with support—not resistance.

Disability and pregnancy can exist together.One does not cancel out the other.But so many people are made to feel like t...
04/24/2026

Disability and pregnancy can exist together.

One does not cancel out the other.

But so many people are made to feel like they’re not supposed to coexist. Like if you’re disabled, your body is automatically seen as incapable. Like your pregnancy becomes something to question instead of something to support.

The truth is—disabled bodies are not broken versions of pregnancy. They are their own experience.

Pregnancy doesn’t erase chronic pain, mobility needs, fatigue, or medical conditions. And disability doesn’t erase the desire to grow a family, to carry a baby, to parent.

What it often does mean is that support needs to look different.

It might mean more conversations.
More planning.
More advocacy in spaces that weren’t built with accessibility in mind.

It might mean navigating providers who don’t fully understand.
Or having to explain your body over and over again.

And that can be exhausting.

But needing different support doesn’t mean someone is less capable. It means the system needs to do better.

Disabled people deserve care that listens.
Care that adapts.
Care that doesn’t assume limitation before even asking.

They deserve to move through pregnancy, birth, and postpartum without having to fight to be taken seriously.

Both can exist at the same time.

And when we start honoring that—really honoring it—we create space for more people to feel safe, supported, and seen in their experience.

There’s something really special about a community plant swap.It’s not just about trading plants. It’s about people show...
04/23/2026

There’s something really special about a community plant swap.

It’s not just about trading plants. It’s about people showing up as they are, bringing a little piece of their home, their care, their time—and sharing it.

You get to watch connections happen in real time. Conversations start over a cutting or a pot of soil, and suddenly people are swapping stories, tips, and pieces of their lives. It breaks down that feeling of being strangers.

It makes plants more accessible, too. Not everyone has the extra money to build a collection, but a swap creates a way for people to grow their space without that barrier. One plant turns into many, and it keeps going.

There’s also something grounding about it. Being around plants, touching the soil, talking about growth—it slows things down in a really needed way.

And honestly, it builds community in a way that feels natural. No pressure, no expectations. Just people sharing what they have and leaving with something new.

It reminds you that community care can be simple.

Birth art isn’t just for the families we support.It’s for all of us who hold space in birth and postpartum.If you’ve eve...
04/23/2026

Birth art isn’t just for the families we support.

It’s for all of us who hold space in birth and postpartum.

If you’ve ever left a birth still feeling it in your body…
If you’ve ever sat with a moment that stayed with you longer than you expected…
If you’ve ever struggled to find the words for what you witnessed…

You’re not alone in that.

This work asks us to show up fully—for so many different stories, emotions, and outcomes. And a lot of it doesn’t have language. Not the kind that feels big enough, or honest enough, to hold it all.

Birth art creates a space where words aren’t required.

It gives us somewhere to put what we carry. The intensity. The beauty. The grief. The quiet moments that never get spoken out loud.

There’s no right way to do it. No expectation. Just a way to move through what lives in your body after supporting others.

For the families I work with, birth art can be a powerful way to process their experience.

And for those of us supporting birth and postpartum—it matters just as much.

Because we deserve space to process, too.

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://birth-stories-through-art.eventbrite.com/, https://Blo

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