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Midwifery Mothering & Me

Touch

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Touch


Touch, it is our earliest and our most communal sense. Whether we are a tethered embryo, a tumbling toddler or an ancient tribal elder, we sense touch. Even if blind or deaf, we still perceive touch. If we are deprived of the sense of smell or taste, we know touch. From Bali, to Bahrain, to the Balkans, touch is regulated and sanctioned by every religion, by every culture. Of course, humans are not the only creatures that experience the giving and receiving of touch. Chimpanzees wrestling, parakeets grooming, dogs sharing a nose-to-neighbor greeting; the examples are endless. Touch is integral to the experience of all sentient beings. 


The ability to perceive touch begins early in prenatal development. By the time we were the size of a small lima bean, our nervous system was starting to relay information about touch. What is it like to be a pre-born and feel limbs bob away from your core, or fingers (your own) brush past your face? What is it like to feel a hand (Mother's? Big sister's?) pressing unto your womb-room? Think about it; we all experienced touch before we were born.


Of course touch is experienced by infants, children, teens and yes, even adults. The sexual aspect of touch is a source of endless haggling by different societies, municipalities and religions. But, without the politics, without the haggling, even without overtly sexual activity, touch between grown humans is still important. It can be healing, expansive, even sacred. Stephen Gaskin, husband of Ina Mae Gaskin, describes marriage as a relationship of "touch partners". What wonderful images this phrase 'touch partners' evokes, images of couples curious and trusting, exploring touch for a lifetime together.


Touch Is not just another's presence on our skin. It is also, maybe more importantly, our own experience within our own skin. Our most common experience of touch is our own body moving in and through space. With movement, skin tugs skin, muscle pulls bone, joints revolve and flex, hands swipe sweat from soft, moist cheeks. We are our own touch partner. 


For most of us, touch has been both pleasant and painful, playful and terrible, tender and cruel. As a midwife, a mother, a wife, a human, I have experienced touch in all these nuanced variations. Sometimes I have healed. Sometimes I have hurt.  To all I have touched, I offer these words from a Hawaiian prayer: I'm sorry. Please forgive me. I love you. Thank you.


~Michelle   

May all babies be born into loving hands


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I love the idea of a touch partner. Yes. That is so beautiful. Much better than "sexing friend", as a friend of mine used to say...

I added this article to my favorites and program to return to digest far more soon. It’s straightforward to read and understand as well as intelligent. I truly enjoyed my 1st read by way of of this article.

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Michelle Doyle

K. Michelle Doyle is a midwife, mother and a joyous middle-aged woman.

Called to midwifery as a small child, Michelle has worked in women's health for over three decades. Born in St Louis, MO, she moved to Southern California for college and stayed for love, marriage and mentoring. In Los Angeles, she was a midwife assistant, labor and delivery nurse, and perinatal bereavement counselor. in 1999, she became a Certified Nurse Midwife (CNM) and a NY Licensed Midwife (LM). Michelle has worked with multitudes of women and caught well over a thousand babies. After ten years of being employed by medical practices and attending births in Renesselaer County hospitals, Michelle started her own midwifery practice. Established in 2009, Local Care Midwifery was the first Capital District practice to offer home birth services with a licensed midwife. Through Local Care Midwifery, Michelle continues to answer the call of midwifery by providing quality women's health care and loving, attentive care for birthing families.

Michelle's three (now mostly grown) children were born at home with the loving support of a midwife. Along with her husband Kevin, these three are Michelle's very favorite people. Mothering them has changed (and improved) Michelle in ways that she is still figuring out. Entering her sixth decade, Michelle is a busy woman. She strives to balance parenting, marriage, career, physical health, emotional health, spiritual health, community service, creative expression, mentoring and still finding time to sit, breath, and simply enjoy the moment.

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