Birth Works Midwifery, Robin Massey CPM

Birth Works Midwifery,  Robin Massey CPM Personalized care for your unique needs
*Personalized Midwifery
*VBAC
*Waterbirth
*Doula care
*Placenta Encapsulation

Childbirth Education, Placenta Encapsulation, Labor Doula,

What a beautiful story
01/28/2026

What a beautiful story

In 1951, a 14-year-old Australian boy named James Harrison woke up in a hospital bed with 100 stitches across his chest.
Doctors had just removed one of his lungs. To survive, he needed 13 units of donated blood from complete strangers—people whose names he would never know.
His father, Reg, sat beside him and said something that changed his life:
"You're only alive because people donated blood."
Right there, James made a promise. The moment he turned 18, he would donate blood. He would pay back the gift that saved him.
There was just one problem.
James was terrified of needles.
But in 1954, the day he became eligible, he walked into a blood donation center anyway. He sat in the chair, looked at the ceiling, and let the nurse insert the needle.
He never watched. Not once. Not in 64 years.
What James didn't know was that his blood was different.
After a few donations, doctors discovered something extraordinary. His plasma contained an incredibly rare antibody—likely developed from all those transfusions he received as a boy. This antibody could prevent a deadly condition called Rhesus disease.
Before this discovery, thousands of Australian babies were dying every year. When a pregnant woman with Rh-negative blood carried an Rh-positive baby, her body would attack the child's blood cells. Miscarriages. Stillbirths. Brain damage.
James's blood held the answer.
Doctors asked if he would switch to plasma donation. It meant longer sessions—90 minutes instead of 20. It meant coming in every few weeks for the rest of his life.
James thought about his fear.
Then he thought about the babies.
He said yes.
For 64 years, James Harrison never missed an appointment.
He donated through joy and heartbreak. He donated while working as a railway clerk. He donated after retiring. He continued even after his wife Barbara passed away in 2005—what he called his "darkest days."
Every single time—all 1,173 donations—he looked at the ceiling. He chatted with nurses. He studied the walls. Anything to avoid watching the needle.
The fear never left him. But he showed up anyway.
In a beautiful twist, his own daughter needed the very medication created from his blood when she became pregnant. His grandson Scott exists because of the choice his grandfather made decades earlier.
In May 2018, at age 81, Australian law required James to make his final donation.
The room was filled with mothers holding healthy babies—living proof of his quiet heroism. They thanked him through tears.
James sat in the chair one last time, looked away from his arm one last time, and gave his 1,173rd donation.
Over 3 million doses of Anti-D medication containing his blood have been issued since 1967. Scientists estimate his contributions helped save approximately 2.4 million babies in Australia alone.
When people called him a hero, he shrugged it off.
"I'm in a safe room, donating blood," he said. "They give me a cup of coffee and something to nibble on. And then I just go on my way. No problem, no hardship."
James Harrison died peacefully in his sleep on February 17, 2025. He was 88 years old.
We often search for heroes in movies or history books—people with superpowers, wealth, or fame.
But sometimes a hero is just someone who keeps a quiet promise for 64 years.
Someone who feels fear—deep, trembling fear—and does the right thing anyway.
Millions of people are alive today because one man decided his fear mattered less than their lives.
What small act of courage could you commit to, even when it scares you

Hello Beautiful 💓
01/24/2026

Hello Beautiful 💓

Knowledge is POWER
01/24/2026

Knowledge is POWER

Understanding Baby’s Position Before Birth: What Every Expecting Mother Should Know

Pregnancy comes with a thousand little thoughts that run through your mind, often quietly, late at night.
“Is my baby comfortable?”
“Will everything be okay during delivery?”
“Is my body doing what it’s supposed to do?”

If you’ve ever wondered how your baby is positioned inside your womb and why doctors talk about it so much near the end of pregnancy, you’re not alone. These questions are incredibly common, and they come from a place of love and care for your baby.

Let’s talk about it calmly, clearly, and without fear.

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What This Image Is Really Showing You

The image explains different positions a baby can be in inside the mother’s pelvis before birth. Doctors call this fetal presentation, but in simple terms, it just means which part of the baby is closest to the birth canal.

As your pregnancy moves closer to delivery, your baby naturally settles into a position. Most of the time, this happens on its own. Sometimes, babies choose a slightly different position, and that’s what the image is helping you understand.

This topic matters because the baby’s position can influence how labor and delivery are planned, not because something is “wrong,” but because every pregnancy is unique.

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Step-by-Step Explanation of the Positions

Let’s break this down in the simplest way possible.

1. Normal (Head-Down) Position

This is the most common position near delivery.
The baby’s head is facing downward, ready to come out first.

This position usually allows labor to progress smoothly. Most babies naturally move into this position in the final weeks of pregnancy.

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2. Shoulder / Transverse Position

Here, the baby is lying sideways instead of head-down or bottom-down.

This can happen earlier in pregnancy and often corrects itself as the baby grows and moves. If it continues close to delivery, doctors simply keep a closer watch and guide the safest plan forward.

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3. Face / Brow Position

In this position, the baby’s head is down, but the face or forehead is leading instead of the top of the head.

It sounds unusual, but it’s just a variation in how the neck and head are positioned. Sometimes it changes naturally during labor, and sometimes doctors step in to support a safe birth.

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4. Breech Positions (Bottom First)

Breech means the baby’s bottom or feet are closest to the birth canal.

There are different types:

Complete breech – baby is sitting cross-legged

Footling breech – one or both feet are pointing down

Frank breech – baby’s legs are straight up, feet near the head

Many babies are breech earlier in pregnancy and turn on their own before delivery. When a baby remains breech later on, healthcare providers calmly discuss options to keep both mother and baby safe.

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A Human, Reassuring Truth

Many expecting mothers ask this during pregnancy, and that’s completely normal.
“Why hasn’t my baby turned yet?”
“Did I do something wrong?”

The answer is almost always no. Baby position is influenced by many natural factors like uterine shape, baby movements, and timing. It is not something you caused.

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Safety, Awareness, and When Doctors Get Involved

This information is meant to educate, not diagnose. Only your healthcare provider can assess your individual situation.

Doctors usually check baby position through routine exams or ultrasound, especially in the later weeks. If a baby stays in a certain position, the goal is never to scare you, but to plan the safest possible delivery.

Medical guidance is about preparation, not panic.

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Keeping a Balanced Mindset

Your body and your baby are working together every day.
Most babies move, stretch, twist, and settle naturally as pregnancy progresses.

Understanding these positions helps you feel informed, not anxious. Knowledge can reduce fear because you know what your doctor is observing and why.

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Key Takeaways to Remember

Baby position inside the womb can vary and often changes naturally

Many positions seen in the image are common during pregnancy

Doctors monitor positioning to plan safe deliveries, not because something is automatically wrong

You did nothing to cause your baby’s position

Awareness helps you feel confident and prepared

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A Gentle Call-To-Action

If this article helped you feel more informed or calm, consider saving or bookmarking it for later.
Share it with another expecting mother who might be silently worrying.
And follow this platform for clear, trustworthy pregnancy education that supports women at every stage.

01/20/2026
Thanks for being a top engager and making it on to my weekly engagement list! 🎉Jalisa Newswanger, Kim Hodge, Brittany El...
01/20/2026

Thanks for being a top engager and making it on to my weekly engagement list! 🎉

Jalisa Newswanger, Kim Hodge, Brittany Ellis

01/19/2026

Love this 💪

THE BIRTH SLING is dedicated to supporting women through pregnancy, birth and beyond. It is a new take on an ancient birthing tool designed to support upright and active labour positions which have been shown to reduce the risk of intervention.

💪
01/15/2026

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A consistent chiropractic routine:
✔ Reduces long-term stress
✔ Improves joint function
✔ Makes daily movement easier

Let’s build healthy habits that actually stick in 2026.

Learn more about why you should add chiropractic care to your routine: https://loom.ly/RumPKM4

Loosing a night sleep to get to welcome a new little one … no problem 👣😘 Started off at 2 am with a light sweater Home n...
01/14/2026

Loosing a night sleep to get to welcome a new little one … no problem 👣😘
Started off at 2 am with a light sweater
Home now with a warm fire 🔥 going

Gotta love this crazy winter.

🥰
01/14/2026

🥰

Address

Tipton, MO

Opening Hours

Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

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+16604418818

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