Community Care Midwifery Leslie Gesner LM, CPM

Community Care Midwifery Leslie Gesner LM, CPM Community Care Midwifery is about the Midwives Model of Care, Home Birth, Waterbirth and more.

Beautiful.
08/03/2019

Beautiful.

“A mom’s love is universal.”

To all the amazing mamas and knitters of the world! This is a great article.
05/12/2019

To all the amazing mamas and knitters of the world! This is a great article.

Nearly a thousand dyed t-shirts have been used to create a giant placenta art installation at Warragul to celebrate the incredible, often hidden, things women do.

Pretty great article.
05/02/2019

Pretty great article.

Many expectant parents are choosing midwives to deliver their babies. It might be millennials bringing midwifery back in vogue.

So informative!!! Beautiful image captured ❤️
04/19/2019

So informative!!! Beautiful image captured ❤️

How’s this shot of a mumma using gravity and allow her body to open? The rhombus of Michaelis (sometimes called the quadrilateral of Michaelis) is a kite-shaped area that includes the three lower lumber vertebrae, the sacrum and that long ligament which reaches down from the base of the scull to the sacrum.

This wedge-shaped area of bone moves backwards during the second stage of labour and as it moves back it pushes the wings of the ilea out, increasing the diameters of the pelvis. We know it’s happening when the woman’s hands reach upwards (to find something to hold onto, her head goes back and her back arches.) It’s what Sheila Kitzinger was talking about when she recorded Jamaican midwives saying the baby will not be born ‘till the woman opens her back’. I’m sure that is what they mean by the ‘opening of the back’.



"The reason that the woman’s arms go up is to find something to hold onto as her pelvis is going to become destabilised. This happens as part of physiological second stage; it’s an integral part of an active normal birth. If you’re going to have a normal birth you need to allow the rhombus of Michaelis to move backwards to give the baby the maximum amount of space to turn his shoulders in. Although the rhombus appears high in the pelvis and the lower lumbar spine when it moves backwards, it has the effect of opening the outlet as well.

When women are leaning forward, upright, or on their hands and knees, you will see a lump appear on their back, at and below waist level. It’s much higher up than you might think; you don’t look for it near her buttocks, you look for it near her waist."

Text by .com



Image shared from Blissful Herbs - nurturing body & soul
Original photo from

So very beautiful.
02/07/2019

So very beautiful.

Photographers share stunning labor, delivery and postpartum images.

If I have ever been your midwife, assisted at your birth, given birth to you, or you support out-of-hospital/community b...
01/16/2019

If I have ever been your midwife, assisted at your birth, given birth to you, or you support out-of-hospital/community birth please consider signing and sharing this petition. Thanks so much.

Jay Inslee: Corrective action needed by the Washington State Department of Health

12/22/2017

So beautiful.

What?!
12/16/2017

What?!

Agency analysts are told to avoid these 7 banned words and phrases in budget documents

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