Jessica Ramus Birth Services

Jessica Ramus Birth Services Birth Doula, 1:2:1 Hypnobirthing coach and Breastfeeding counsellor 💕

Tranquility Birthing provides Hypnobirthing Courses for expectant couples and is suitable from 14 weeks to birth. Hypnobirthing is a birthing technique used to calm and relax you and your baby before, during and after birth - and teaches you techniques that can be used long after labour too! Using Hypnobirthing can ensure a calm and relaxed labour no matter what type birth you have, or where you have your baby. It reduces rates of unnecessary medical intervention and will ease anxiety and stress that is so often common during labour. It will also help your partner to feel more involved, and strengthen your bond before babies arrival.

New Logo 💕
26/07/2023

New Logo 💕

I am currently working on rebranding Tranquility birthing, including a new name so please bear with me for the next week...
22/07/2023

I am currently working on rebranding Tranquility birthing, including a new name so please bear with me for the next week or so. I will of course be answering any DMs in this time 😊

How is Ada 3 months already?! Time is going way too fast for my liking 💕
30/06/2023

How is Ada 3 months already?! Time is going way too fast for my liking 💕

Had a few new followers and enquiries lately so thought it was time for an updated quick hello 👋🏼👋🏼 I’m Jess, mum of 4 (...
19/06/2023

Had a few new followers and enquiries lately so thought it was time for an updated quick hello 👋🏼👋🏼

I’m Jess, mum of 4 (16, 13, 11 and 3 months!!) currently living in Kenilworth. I’m a Birth Doula, Hypnobirthing teacher and Breastfeeding counsellor. I love all things Birth, dogs and tattoos!

If you’re wanting to book a free consultation to find out how I can support you and make your birth a more positive experience please head to my website (link in bio) or DM me here 😊💜

CONTACT ME to book your free Consultation now ⭐️ link to website in Bio 💜
29/12/2022

CONTACT ME to book your free Consultation now ⭐️ link to website in Bio 💜

Just re-reading some of the lovely reviews that I’ve had over the years so thought I would share a handful! 💜 absolutely...
20/09/2022

Just re-reading some of the lovely reviews that I’ve had over the years so thought I would share a handful! 💜 absolutely love doing what I do

09/09/2022

Good enough for a Queen.
Queen Elizabeth after her fourth homebirth.

Her Majesty was the first royal woman to have her husband accompany her at childbirth when she welcomed her fourth child Prince Edward with Prince Philip present.

"The Queen, by then aged 37, had asked him to be there; she'd been keenly reading women's magazines that stressed the importance of involving fathers in childbirth and had become fascinated by the idea. Thus Philip became the first royal father in modern history to witness the birth of his child.”
….
Like her mother, the Queen gave birth to her first child, Prince Charles, at home via caesarean, after a 30 hour labor, but went on to have three VBACs although with scopolamine.

Eventually Charles was born by a Caesarean section in a music room in Buckingham Palace which had been converted into a theatre. She was attended by Obstetricians Sir William Gilliatt and Sir John Peel, and also midwife Helen Rowe, who was thought to be present for all the births. Caesarean sections were also less common in the general public at that time; in the 1950s only around 3% were caesarean section. It would have been of some concern that the Queen required one.


The midwife Helen Rowe was known to be present as letters written to her by the Queen were discovered after her death. There is an irony in this as, in 1970, Sir John Peel, the queen’s obstetrician, was lead author of the report “Domiciliary midwifery and maternity bed needs”, which recommended 100% of births should be in a hospital.


There have been considerable changes that have taken place in maternity services since the births of the Queen’s children. The accessibility of research and information is only one thing! The Queen, in all her experiences as a woman and mother in the role, has paved the way for royal births to be different and opened the door for many of her subjects to challenge the status quo at the time. The importance of looking back in history to see how we have got to where we are should not be overlooked and I challenge others to investigate history of our profession over the past 70 years.

From Dr Jenny Hall

https://www.maternityandmidwifery.co.uk/queen-elizabeths-royal-births-transforming-the-monarchy/

So there’s a reason I’ve been super quiet on here the last couple of months… I’ve not wanted to give anything away 🤣 Fee...
08/09/2022

So there’s a reason I’ve been super quiet on here the last couple of months… I’ve not wanted to give anything away 🤣 Feels like we have been keeping this a secret for such a long time now…. But very happy to announce Baby Wright is doing perfectly and will be joining our little family in March 2023 🥰❤️ Doula work will continue as normal till Jan 2023 and then I will just be doing Hypnobirthing courses for a while 💜

21/07/2022

This week is Birth Trauma Awareness Week. Thousands of women and their partners suffer from the affects associated to a traumatic birth. Please don’t suffer in silence.
You are not alone.

SAVE THIS POST, thank me later!
13/07/2022

SAVE THIS POST, thank me later!

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Kenilworth

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