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2011 - Talk Birth

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<strong>Birth</strong> & Breastfeeding in Unexpected Places (<strong>2011</strong>-03-09 14:53)<br />

No, I’m not talking about giving birth in the car, or breastfeeding in the rotunda at the Capitol, I’m talking<br />

about birth and breastfeeding showing up in unexpectedly positive ways in books and movies. I had two<br />

such occasions last week.<br />

In the animated children’s movie Ponyo, which we watched on Netflix, the two main character children<br />

encounter a father, mother, and baby floating in [1] a small<br />

boat in the flooded town. Ponyo attempts to give the baby a drink from her thermos and the mother says,<br />

”no, he gets his milk from me. I can drink it and make milk for the baby and he can get it that way.” The<br />

little boy then says, ”when I was little my mom made milk for me too.” Ponyo then tries to give the mother<br />

big stacks of sandwiches saying, ”for milk! For milk! Here, you can have this for milk!” It was really cute :)<br />

Then, I finished reading a novel called Medicus on my Kindle. It was a ”novel of the Roman Empire”<br />

about a military doctor in Britannia during the Roman occupation. It was a mystery book, but definitely<br />

not a traditional sort of mystery. The doctor ends up buying an enslaved girl to stop her from being abused<br />

and investigates the suspicious deaths of several prostitutes/slaves. It is noted several times that the girl<br />

has ”some skill in midwifery” and that she used to attend births with her mother. Towards the very end of<br />

the book, the doctor is called to attend a complicated birth in which the baby is transverse and everyone<br />

is pretty sure both mother and baby will die. She has been pushing for a long time and is all worn out.<br />

The doctor enters the room and has no idea what to do. He says, ”I’m only a medic. A surgeon. Where’s<br />

a midwife?” And, with a few dramatic twists, the slave girl with some midwifery knowledge is convinced to<br />

come help, turns the transverse baby, and saves the lives of both mother and baby who are later described<br />

as nursing happily (the mother ”pale, but alive”). <strong>Birth</strong> often makes a dramatic appearance in books and<br />

films, but the drama usually involves the baby, mother, or both then dying. So, this was a refreshing change<br />

as well as a nice plug for midwifery :)<br />

1. http://www.amazon.com/Ponyo-Noah-Lindsey-Cyrus/dp/B002ZTQVGQ/ref=sr_1_1?s=dvd&ie=UTF8&qid=1299699174&sr=<br />

1-1<br />

peacefulbeginnings (<strong>2011</strong>-03-09 15:08:44)<br />

Cool!<br />

69

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