This news flash from The Independent (UK)
Published: 20 March 2007
How to have a sensual, drug-free birth
Forget epidurals. Midwives say they can train women to have births that are not only drug-free, but pleasurable - and even orgasmic. Anastasia Stephens reports
For Katrina Caslake, giving birth was not the terrifying, painful ordeal most women experience. Far from it. The midwife, from Wallington, south London, says she found it blissful, even orgasmic. "I found giving birth very sensual," says Caslake, 44, who didn't take painkillers for the birth of either of her sons, Aaron and Tomas, now 18 and 17.
"All my erogenous zones were stimulated. I was making sounds very similar to a sexual climax. And it was a very definite climax. I was doing the most feminine thing a woman can do and it felt fantastic."
It's a sentiment with which Frederika Deera, a PR officer at John Lewis in London, would agree. She had a similar experience giving birth to her two-year-old daughter Delphine.
"Giving birth filled me with the most indescribable euphoria," says Deera, who gave birth at a midwife-led unit in Portsmouth. "Of course there was pain, but my overall sense was of peace and happiness. I was on a complete high, so much that even having a major suturing afterwards did not bother me at all."
It was her "pleasurable experience" that led Caslake to train as a midwife. "I knew I wasn't unique," says Caslake, who helps run Yours Maternally, an independent midwifery service. "By encouraging other women to trust and relax in their bodies, I felt I could help them experience less painful, more pleasurable births."
It's an approach that's also encouraged at the Birth Centre in south London where midwife Nathalie Mottershead actively encourages sensual birth.
"If couples are willing, nipple and clitoral massage can be used to bring on labour contractions, open the cervix and vagina and help with pain relief," she says.
More to the point, the approach is capable of transforming birth - perceived by most women to be terrifyingly painful - into a pleasurable, even, ecstatic experience. "We work closely with women so they can give birth at home, in intimate surroundings. If mothers-to-be are open to feeling sexy, labour can be pleasurable, not painful, and it sometimes builds up to a crescendo at birth."
It's not as if the techniques used at the Birth Centre are isolated or rare.
"If a woman is comfortable enough to do nipple or clitoral stimulation during birth, it's a useful trick for pain relief and inducing labour," says Andrya Prescott, spokesperson for the Independent Midwives Association.
A visit to the Unassisted Childbirth Organisation's US website confirms just how erotic childbirth can be. The site describes in graphic detail women's fantasies in which romantic and sexual union leads to "blissful waves of pleasure", and "cosmic orgasms" at the point of birth. More women, it seems, get turned on by birth than you'd think. When Ina May Gaskin, a US midwife, conducted a poll of 151 women, 32 reported experiencing at least one orgasmic birth. Admittedly, these were home births by women who were "open" to the experience. The plus points are pretty significant - a single orgasm is thought to be 22 times as relaxing as the average tranquilliser, while sexual arousal widens the vagina significantly.
"Women might think twice about having an epidural if they knew that, but nobody talk about these things," points out Gaskin, a natural childbirth pioneer who was the first midwife to openly acknowledge that women could climax at birth.
It almost sounds too good to be true: a touchy-feely labour followed by an earth-shattering orgasm at the moment of birth. Unfortunately, this is very far removed from most women's description of childbirth. A major hitch is that, as with any sexual activity, the amount of pleasure gained - for women at least - is closely related to the degree of relaxation, trust and safety she feels.
Most women anticipate with dread the "birth ordeal", a state of mind that will make muscles contract and adrenalin levels rise before it even begins. And then, most women can only feel sexy in intimate surroundings, with people they know well. Hospitals and doctors don't really do the trick.
"Adrenalin inhibits sex drive and labour contractions," says midwife Andrya Prescott. "You become tense and are more prone to feeling pain. It's why women can have trouble with labour and birth at hospital. Surrounded by strangers, their adrenalin levels are high. They can't relax. Even if they were open to getting aroused, at a hospital, they may as well forget it."
Part of the problem, it seems, is the way sexuality around childbirth has been denied. In her book, Ina May's Guide To Childbirth, Gaskin points out that doctors had to downplay female sexuality for medical men to be admitted to the birth chambers of women in the 18th and 19th centuries. This " denial" was later institutionalised when hospital births became routine.
Even today, it's a pretty taboo subject. "Lots of women would worry they'd be seen as abnormal or deviant if they admitted to feeling sexual at birth," says Carolyn Cowan, a yoga teacher and doula based in south London, who herself had an ecstatic birth. "It's something lots of women feel ashamed to talk about," she adds. "I run erotic dance classes for pregnant women to try to get rid of these inhibitions. I should know a thing or two - it took giving birth to my son to discover my G-spot."
The tide is clearly turning. A growing number of obstetricians and midwives point out what seems pretty obvious, yet has been somehow forgotten - that since sex leads to pregnancy and birth, they're pretty closely linked.
"When you look at sex, birth and lactation, the same hormones are involved," says Michel Odent, the obstetrician who pioneered the use of birthing pools in the Seventies. "It seems obvious that childbirth is a part of a woman's sexuality."
Many parents-to-be, for example, find that making love and nipple stimulation are one of the best ways to get labour going. That's because sexual arousal releases oxytocin, a love and bonding hormone, which triggers orgasmic and labour contractions in the uterus. Conveniently, this hormone is an endorphin, meaning it has an opiate-like effect - inducing pleasure while acting as a highly effective painkiller.
Aside from the pleasure and pain relief, the advantage of a sensual birth is less physical damage. "Women who are relaxed and feel good, undergo easier, smoother births, so suffer less tearing and bruising," says Caslake. "Fear makes a woman more tense and this holds the baby back."
The baby gets a pleasure hit too - bathed in "feel-good" hormones, they're more likely to come out feeling relaxed and content.
www.michelodent.com (for more info on love hormones); www.unassistedchildbirth.com (for more info on sensual birth); www.birthcentre.com (020-7820 6661); www.independentmidwives.org.uk; for sensual prenatal exercises contact Carolyn Cowan (020-7701 3845; www.mooncycles.co.uk); Yours Maternally Independent Midwives, Wallington, south London ( www.yoursmaternally.co.uk; 020-8401 9501)
How to have a pleasurable birth
Why some women achieve a "birth climax" while others endure excruciating pain is likely to be due to differences in environment, genetics, expectations, and psychological factors. Trust and the level of emotional support you feel from your partner or midwife is critical in inducing a feeling of safety and relaxation needed to get the "pleasure hormones" going.
Women are generally more likely to have sensual birth experiences during home deliveries in an intimate environment. Midwives who have witnessed women who've been physically aroused during childbirth believe the following techniques could make the experience more likely:
* Before and during childbirth, become intimate with your body. Look at yourself naked in the mirror, noticing any areas that trigger uncomfortable emotions. Send loving thoughts to that area until the difficult feelings pass. Ask your partner to look at your body and compliment you.
* If you feel comfortable with it, aim for a home birth.
* Work closely with a doula or midwife to build up a sense of trust with her, in your body and in the birth process.
* Ask yourself if you can believe that your body will be doing the right thing, to the best of its ability, to give birth successfully. The more you can believe this, the more you'll be able to trust yourself and relax.
* Pick a special room or area where you want to give birth. Light candles to create atmosphere and evaporate lavender essential oil in an oil burner to induce relaxation.
* Learn a relaxation method such as abdominal breathing or self-hypnosis to use during childbirth to curb the release of stress hormones.
* Create the expectation that childbirth could be pleasurable, even if there is pain: while pregnant, spend time imagining how it could trigger warm tingling sensations in your body along with feelings of love.
* If you feel it is appropriate, ask your partner to kiss you, stroke you gently or even caress your nipples as labour contractions come on.
6 comments:
The idea of orgasmic labor is entirely fabricated by homebirth and natural childbirth advocates. If "orgasmic" labor were a real phenomenon, we would expect it to occur in all races, in all cultures and throughout history. That's not what we find at all.
There is literally no mention of "orgasmic" birth in any language, in any culture, and at any time prior to approximately the 1960s. Moreover, "orgasmic" labor has only been "reported" by white, Western, well-educated and relatively well off women. More to the point, all those white, Western women are advocates of natural childbirth.
Claims of "orgasmic" labor are the inevitable consequence of the natural childbirth culture where women compete at tolerating labor. It is only two short steps from claiming that labor is easily managed with natural childbirth techniques, to claiming that labor is painless, to claiming that labor is "orgasmic".
Many natural childbirth advocates are not honest about the pain of labor. This is just the most outrageous example of the dishonesty.
Ina May Gaskin's books have photos of women who are clearly having a very pleasurable experience during their unmedicated births. I hesitate to question the validity of any person's labor experience and expect that there must be a range of experiences, as great as the range of human beings to have those experiences.
Ina May Gaskin's books have photos of women who are clearly having a very pleasurable experience during their unmedicated births. I hesitate to question the validity of any person's labor experience and expect that there must be a range of experiences, as great as the range of human beings to have those experiences.
I have not had an orgasmic birth. I have however had two homebirths and will be having my third any day. Amy Tuteur is the problem with todays births. Of course you can manage your own pain. Women don't get to manage their own anything under the "care" of doctors like Ms. Tuteur. The doctor tells them how much it hurts and pushes induction drugs and pain drugs and often c-sections. No woman could possibly manage to feel comfortable with a situation like that. Shame on her for taking that beautiful experience from other women. Labor is a beautiful, natural thing. I was completely comfortable in my own home and totally relaxed. I had control over what went on in my own birth experience. No drugs, no needles, no strangers poking or prodding me. And no one took my babies when they came out. They were born into my husbands hands in a birth pool with a midwife in attendance. I nursed them and then took them to bed with me. It was a wonderful experience. Furthermore, it was OUR experience, not a procedure! Homebirthers are not "competing" for anything. We're just having our babies the way we feel is right for us! But I suppose you need SOME way to justify your terrible treatment of birthing women...
I actually had an orgasmic birth, in a hospital, on my back, with my legs up in stirrups. But I'm sure the doctor and the nurses thought I was in pain because I screamed when my daughter emerged. As soon as I started pushing all pain ended and pleasure began.
On the historic front, I don't think the absence of "orgasmic birth" in the records proves anything at all. There are probably lots of human experiences that never got recorded or discussed. One obvious point is that women (as Jane Austen pointed out in Persuasion) didn't usually hold the pen. Another is the usefulness of suffering in childbirth for women. The guilt trips they could lay on men...
Finally, with the intense danger of childbirth for most women throughout history, it seems unlikely that women would be able to relax and enjoy it. Amy actually makes that case in pointing out that the women who describe orgasmic birth start doing so in the 1960s. Childbirth in advanced countries had become fairly safe at that point. It had also become possible to openly discuss sexual feelings and experiences.
Personally, I find any recourse to the historical record to prove that people are lying about their direct, immediate experiences to be totally bogus. My experience didn't occur because there is no record of the phenomena? Okay. I'll rewrite my memories to fit the dogma!
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