Sacred River Birth Services
Professional Birth Services including prenatal, labor and postpartum support and lactation counselin I am a Certified Lactation Counselor.
I am a professionally trained birth doula offering educational, informational and emotional support during pregnancy, labor and delivery and the 4th trimester postpartum period. I serve families in DuPage county and the immediate surrounding counties, willing to travel further on an as needed basis. For a list of services offered or pricing info, please inquire to: [email protected] or call 630-808-5197 between the hours of 9am and 7 pm.
So fascinating!
http://www.newyorker.com/tech/elements/breast-feeding-the-microbiome
Breast-Feeding the Microbiome - The New Yorker Why human milk is a scientific marvel.
Mother's Day gift certificates are available! Honor her with the gift of self care, peace and quiet!
Happy May Day!!
2016 Image Competition | IAPBP | birthphotographers.com Tweet Pin It Email The International Association of Professional Birth Photographers is pleased to announce our annual image competition. Each year, IAPBP recognizes excellence in birth photography. We hope you will join us in sharing beautiful images of birth with our members, our judges, friends,…
10 Women Catching Their Own Babies | Morag Hastings ~ Birth Photographer + Doula Vancouver, BC Women catching their own babies, what?!?! Are you nuts? That's impossible. Let me show you it's not. I was showing my girlfriend my recent slideshow
Pumping and Dumping Is Pointless. Drinking While Breast-Feeding Is Fine. The holidays are all about extended family, which means, by necessity, they’re also all about alcohol. But what if you’re a nursing mom? On the one hand, y
A good reminder.
The Size of Your Baby’s Stomach In the early days and weeks of breastfeeding, you might wonder if your baby is getting enough breastmilk.
These are so neat.
Swedish photographer Lennart Nilsson spent 12 years of his life taking pictures of the foetus Developing in the womb. These incredible photographs were taken with conventional cameras with macro lenses, an endoscope and scanning electron microscope. Nilsson used a magnification of hundreds of thousands and “worked” right in the womb. His first photo of the human foetus was taken in 1965.
Nurse on, mamas.
https://news.brown.edu/articles/2013/06/breastfeeding