04/28/2026
True indeed…
“We don’t let moms go past 40 weeks.”
Not “we recommend induction.” Not “let’s discuss options.”
“We DON’T LET.”
Let me be very clear: They don’t OWN your body.
Your due date is an ESTIMATE. Your baby doesn’t have an expiration date. And no provider gets to decide when your pregnancy ends unless there’s a medical indication.
Listen to the language providers use:
“We don’t let…”
“We don’t allow…”
“Our policy doesn’t permit…”
“You can’t…”
These are control words. Not medical advice. Control.
They’re telling you what they will or won’t “allow” you to do with your own body. As if you need their permission. As if they have authority over your autonomous medical decisions.
“Policy” is not a medical indication.
Low amniotic fluid? Reduced movement? High blood pressure? Actual concerns? Those are medical indications to discuss intervention.
But “you reached an arbitrary date on a calendar”? That’s not medical. That’s convenience.
Here’s what informed consent looks like:
“You’re at 40 weeks. Baby looks great on monitoring. Fluid levels are good. Everything is healthy. Some providers recommend induction around now, but research shows that for truly low-risk pregnancies, waiting until 41 or even 42 weeks with appropriate monitoring is safe. What would you like to do?”
Here’s what coercion looks like:
“We don’t let moms go past 40 weeks.”
“We don’t allow our patients to refuse induction.”
“Our policy doesn’t permit going past your due date.”
You are not a child who needs to be “let” or “allowed” to do things with your own body.
You are an autonomous human being with the right to make informed decisions about your pregnancy and birth.
When a provider uses language like “don’t let” or “don’t allow,” they’re revealing how they see you:
Not as a partner in your care. Not as an autonomous decision-maker. But as someone who needs to be managed and controlled.
Here’s something important to remember:
YOU hired your provider. YOU (or your insurance) are paying THEM. Not the other way around.
They work for you. You don’t answer to them.
And that means you can fire them.
Even at 38 weeks. Even if you’ve been seeing them your whole pregnancy.
You are not stuck. You are not obligated to stay with a provider who uses controlling language, dismisses your concerns, or treats policy as more important than your autonomy.
You deserve providers who believe in your body’s ability to birth, practice informed consent, and provide evidence-based care.
Your body. Your baby. Your choice. Your provider works for YOU.
You deserve respect, not control.