No Greater Joy Doula Service

No Greater Joy Doula Service Your Body, Your Baby, Your Birth. Every woman deserves to have the birth that she wants, well supported, at a hospital or homebirth.

What is a Doula?
-A Doula is a professional who provides informational, physical, and emotional support for the expectant, laboring, or postpartum mother. Why hire a Doula?
-Proven Benefits of Doula Care:
* Reduces need for cesarean by 50%
* Reduces the need for forceps or vacuum extractor by 41%
* Reduces request for epidural by 60%
* Reduces dissatisfaction with birth by 33%
* Reduces induction/oxytocin use by 40%
* Reduces length of labor
6 weeks after birth, mothers who had doulas were:
* Less anxious and depressed
* Had more confidence with baby
* More satisfied with partner
* More likely to be breastfeeding

As your Doula, what will I offer you?
-Atleast two prenatal visits to discuss your desires/expectations for birth, define and understand our expectations of one another, and provide you with useful
tools and information for labor and birth.
-Assisting you in writing your birth plan, to help you clarify your preferences for birth and explain the options that are available to you.
-Access to my small lending library of books and videos, about pregnancy, birth and breastfeeding, to support you in educating yourself.
-Continuous physical, emotional, and informational support for you and your partner for the duration of labor and birth, to help you achieve the birth you desire.
-Breastfeeding support immediately after birth to help your baby latch on properly and encourage the establishment of breastfeeding.
-One postpartum follow-up visit to celebrate the birth of your baby, review your birth story, and answer any questions you may have. Joy Owens is a mother to 5 children, all born at home supported by her husband, and with a skilled midwife attending. After her first homebirth, Joy realized that birth was a beautiful, wonderful moment to experience, and was not the excruciating horror she had heard so many women speak of, Joy enjoyed her labor, and from that moment wanted other women to know they could enjoy it as well! Little did she know, that excitement lit a spark inside her... years later she is a Doula, supporting women in their pregnancy, labor, birth, and breastfeeding journey, giving them the tools they need to educate themselves, so that they too can have a positive birth story to tell. "I am honored to be a part of every birth I am asked to attend. I am very passionate about pregnancy, labor, birth, and breastfeeding, I offer non-judgmental care and services, my goal is to help women to have the birth that is best for them. Call or email to set up a time to meet, for pricing on Doula services, and other info.

11/25/2019

“PIC: Scrubbing for an unplanned c-section for a momma that had every intention to birth naturally, drug free. Reason: “failure to progress”

Here’s the thing, natural minded mommas:
I know you think that the hospital is the safest place to give birth. I know you think that the doctors are there to save you when something goes wrong. I know you believe that continuous fetal monitoring is a good thing, that pitocin is a good thing, that antibiotics are a good thing. I know you want to be in a hospital setting “just in case”. But what if I told you that kind of thinking is so backwards it’s not even funny?

What if I told you that homebirth isn’t only an option for low-risk moms, but it’s actually safer & has better outcomes? Lower c-section rates. Higher satisfaction rates. Lower maternal death rates. Lower infant death rates. Lower PPD rates. Higher breastfeeding rates.

What if I told you that going into labor on your own WILL happen & that going past your due date is actually normal & expected?

What if I told you that women all over the world birth big babies & having a c-section for a big baby isn’t indicated?

What if I told you that “failure to progress” is a made up term meaning “failure to wait”?

What if I told you that “failure to descend” is actually just a positioning problem, not a broken body problem.

What if I told you that all of that pitocin will lead to an epidural, which will lead to fetal distress, which will land you in the OR to have your baby saved from a problem that the system created?

I get that there are real emergencies that happen & that’s exactly what hospitals are for. But birth is not an emergency. Birth should not be treated as anything other than a normal physiological process.

It’s time we start taking birth into our own hands. It’s time we start leading the way back to better birth. Back to patient centered care. It’s time we get informed. It’s time we stop trusting the system & start trusting our own bodies. It’s time to change our mindset around childbirth & around pain.“ credit: allie woods

Amen to this. Your birth belongs to you!
07/10/2019

Amen to this. Your birth belongs to you!

Beautiful and accurate explanation. ❤️My last and 5th homebirth was a water born baby, and the most pleasant of all my b...
04/16/2019

Beautiful and accurate explanation. ❤️
My last and 5th homebirth was a water born baby, and the most pleasant of all my births.

❤️
03/24/2019

❤️

😍

Did you know...
10/15/2018

Did you know...

THIS 🙌🏼🙌🏼👇🏼I regret not listening to the woman that urged me to research vaccines. She came off strong. She scared me. S...
03/06/2017

THIS 🙌🏼🙌🏼👇🏼

I regret not listening to the woman that urged me to research vaccines.
She came off strong.
She scared me.
She threw the autism word at me, and I ignored her.
She saw vaccine injury with her own eyes and wanted to save my baby.
She gave me her cell phone number and told me to call her even being on vacation if I had any questions.
She told me everything I needed to know that no one else told me.
She urged me not to give my baby Tylenol.
She explained everything.
She messaged me making sure my son was okay after seeing that he was sick.
She did exactly what I'm doing on Facebook.
She cared. She still cares.

I deleted her on Facebook and never spoke of any of it again.
Not until 6 years later when I suddenly became an antivaxxer.
My eyes were opened and I couldn't sleep.
I had to thank her for trying to save my child.
I found her on Facebook, opened up messenger to shoot a thank you text.
Our messages were still there.
My heart was shattered.
I wished I would of listened.
My son was vaccine injured and had I listened, his life would have been easier.

You may not hear my screams.
You may block me, mock me, laugh at me, but you won't silence me. 👆

All up in my feels today. Not all bad, not all good. But if you're reading my posts and still vaccinating your kids, you might just end up with this post as yours one day. You don't have to thank me. I'm doing this for your child, my child, and the next child that walks by. These babies have no voice. Me and thousands of others are trying to be theirs. 💖 Take it for what it's worth and run with it.

-- Erica Parkin ❤❤❤

02/06/2017
Have you edited your birth or breastfeeding pics in the PicsArt app yet?? Share them in the comments! I'd love to see on...
12/20/2016

Have you edited your birth or breastfeeding pics in the PicsArt app yet?? Share them in the comments! I'd love to see one done with a beautiful large pregnant belly!

Pregnancy, childbirth, breastfeeding, parenting...These are the most important work as parents that we will ever do, so ...
12/02/2016

Pregnancy, childbirth, breastfeeding, parenting...
These are the most important work as parents that we will ever do, so learn all you can, from every angle, make educated informed decisions, and know why you made the choices you did.

11/24/2016

Reposting on alcohol and breastfeeding. It's more ok than you've been told!! Happy holidays all!!!

Since the holidays are imminent, even started, many of you may want to have a couple of alcoholic drinks. You do not have to "pump and dump" (a terrible expression) afterwards and you don't have to wait a certain time after your more recent drink in order to restart breastfeeding. The amount of alcohol that gets into the milk is tiny and will not hurt the baby.

Think of it this way, in most jurisdictions, you are too impaired to drive if you have 0.05% alcohol in your blood. Alcohol appears in the milk in the same concentration as in the blood. Thus if you have 0.05% alcohol in your blood you will have 0.05% alcohol in your milk and as it decreases in your blood, it will decrease in your milk. Even de-alcoholized beer sold in my local store has 0.6% alcohol, more than 10x more than the breastmilk will contain if it contains 0.05% alcohol.

I am not saying it's fine to get falling down drunk because if you are breastfeeding, you must not drop the baby, but the problem is your coordination not the amount of alcohol in the milk.

Also from last year:

The following is from a blog by a mother who tested her milk for alcohol. Not one of those useless kits that you can buy at various stores, but tested at a toxicology laboratory. I will copy from her blog the method she used and the results. I think this puts the lie to the notion that women should not drink while breastfeeding or need to "pump and dump" (an appalling term) after having even one drink. The following is an exact quote from her blog:

Method:
First I took a sample of my milk (about 1 mL) prior to drinking any alcoholic beverage. I expressed the milk mid-nursing session to ensure I had a goodly portion of fore & hind milk. After completing the nursing session, I mixed myself an alcoholic beverage consisting of 2 oz of 80 proof (40%) vodka in 10 oz of soda (Sprite). I proceeded to drink the entire 12 oz in about 30 minutes. About 30 minutes after finishing (1 hour after beginning to drink), I expressed some milk (about 1 mL) and labeled it 'immediate'. I then waited 1 hour and expressed more milk (about 1 mL) and labeled it '2 hours'. In the 2 hours (from the beginning), I did not drink any more alcoholic beverages, drink other beverages, or eat any other foods. Another day, 1/2 of a beer (4.3% alcohol) and 2-6 oz glasses of wine were consumed within 1.5 hours. About an hour from the beginning of the last drink, a milk sample (about 1 mL) was taken. This sample was labeled '1 hour - 3 drinks'. Another sample was taken about an hour after that (2 hours after the beginning of the last drink). This sample was labeled '2 hours - 3 drinks'.

The samples were stored in the refrigerator until processing. An Agilent headspace instrument was used to run the tests. Propanol and ethanol standards were also tested to ensure the instrument was within limits. The instrument is maintained by the KSP Lab Toxicology Section and used in forensic determinations of blood and urine alcohol content.

Results:
The sample labeled as 'immediate' registered as 0.1370 mg/mL which correlates to 0.01370% alcohol in the sample. The sample labeled '2 hours' registered as 0.0000 mg/ml which correlates to 0.0000%. The sample labeled '1 hour - 3 drinks' registered as 0.3749 mg/mL which correlates to 0.03749% alcohol in the sample. The sample labeled '2 hours - 3 drinks' registered as 0.0629 mg/mL which correlates to 0.00629% alcohol in the sample.

Conclusion:
The alcohol content in breast milk immediately after drinking is equivalent to a 0.0274 proof beverage. That's like mixing 1 oz of 80 proof vodka (one shot) with 2919 oz of mixer . By the way, 2919 oz is over 70 liters. Two hours after drinking one (strong) drink the alcohol has disappeared from the sample. Completely harmless to the nursing infant. Drinking about 3 drinks in 1.5 hours resulted in higher numbers, but still negligible amounts of alcohol would be transferred to the child. One hour after imbibing in 3 drinks, the milk was the equivalent of 0.07498 proof beverage. That would be like adding 1 oz of 80 proof vodka (one shot) to 1066 oz of mixer (1066 oz is over 26 liters). Two hours after imbibing in 3 drinks, the milk was 0.01258 proof. That would be like adding 1 oz of 80 proof vodka to 3179 oz of mixer (over almost 80 liters). So, even though an infant has much less body weight, any of these percentage of alcohol in breast milk is unlikely to adversely affect the baby.

Appointment today with a 2nd time amish mama, shes due in two weeks. It was nice to hear why she thought I was so necess...
11/02/2016

Appointment today with a 2nd time amish mama, shes due in two weeks. It was nice to hear why she thought I was so necessary to have again at her birth, and how it made such a difference the first time around.💜💜💜 Moms need support!! Do you agree?

I love what I do.

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Vermontville, MI
49096

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