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hello everyone I'm Penny simkin and
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today I'd like to talk with you about
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birth trauma uh a rather dark subject
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but a very important one and uh I think
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if we know a little more about it uh we
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can reduce its severity um about one
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woman in four these days reports that
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her birth was
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traumatic and uh that's a lot and uh
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when we if if you do the math uh we do
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about 4 million births a year in the
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United States and one in four would be
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TW uh excuse me one in four would be a
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million women a year uh reporting that
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their births were traumatic so it's a
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big topic and it's an important one and
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we need to know more about it now what
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is birth trauma or what is traumatic
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birth you can look at it either way and
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uh it begins with the event itself which
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was the birth and it depends on how the
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woman herself perceives it so if the
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woman believed that she was in danger
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physically or emotionally that her baby
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was in dangered in some way
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physically uh and if she felt kind of O
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out of control helpless um abandoned or
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alone or disrespected all of those
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things can cause a woman to be
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traumatized I by the birth
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experience now as after the birth uh
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some women go on and actually develop
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the symptoms of post-traumatic stress
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disorder the same disorder that our
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veterans have come home from Afghanistan
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and Iraq with
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PTSD others who had a traumatic birth do
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not have as severe symptoms so let me
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just list some of the symptoms uh you
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may have gone through this yourself you
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may be in it yourself you may know
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somebody who has had a really tough
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birth so I think it's good to know what
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kinds of symptoms might be coming up um
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we talk about intrusion she may have
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flashbacks at times or nightmares of
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finding herself dwelling on or thinking
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about the experience um uh just out of
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the blue um she may have avoidance
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behavior some people don't want to talk
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about the birth uh because it just is so
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upsetting to them to be
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reminded they may not want to go back to
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their doctor for their postpartum
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checkup they may not want to get
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together with other friends who have
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babies um they may even avoid family if
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the family is not understanding of their
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feelings then um some some have uh they
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have a lot of blame they feel they were
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mistreated they feel a mistake was made
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um they feel that uh it should not have
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happened and uh so blame or other
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negative feelings about other people
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involved are common uh common feelings
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feelings and then we have uh
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hyperarousal uh
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irritability um uh finding themselves
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getting angry quickly um these some
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sleep disturbances finding that even
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when the baby's asleep and the whole
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household is asleep the woman can't
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sleep she's ruminating she's thinking
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about it so if a person has a certain
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number of these symptoms and it goes on
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for at least a month she's considered to
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have post-traumatic stress disorder so
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now what do we do with this uh whether
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you have all those symptoms or just a
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few of them it's serious and it should
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not be neglected and one of the biggest
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problems that people who have had a
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traumatic birth have is that when they
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try to talk about it to their Partners
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or their family members or friends they
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keep being told well look you've got a
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healthy baby what are you worrying about
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don't dwell on that forget about that
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part and focus on the positive think
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about the positive be grateful for what
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you
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have and then she feels even more
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misunderstood or abandoned than ever and
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she can't get it out of her mind so this
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is what uh a traumatic birth can do to
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someone in the early uh mothering period
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uh early parenting period some women are
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at greater risk than others um it may be
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uh that the a person who has a traumatic
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birth this won't be her first trauma it
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might be that in her childhood she
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suffered traumatic events sexual abuse
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physical abuse neglect uh she may have
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been uh shamed at times uh she she may
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have been in a serious accident or um
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been uh you know lost on a hike or
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something or gone through a disaster
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like a hurricane so previous trauma can
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kind of lower the threshold for future
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trauma and if it doesn't get
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resolved then she may be uh a candidate
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for
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PTSD so this is why I think we need to
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understand it but what what can be done
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about it knowing the risk factors
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knowing how it can play out what can can
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be done well first of all uh as a doula
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myself I I think I'm aware when a woman
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is going through a birth that is
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traumatizing to her I I know what she
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had wanted I know what her hopes and
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expectations were and I can see that
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they're not going uh in that direction
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that she's uh upset by it and at the
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moment as a du may be able to talk with
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her to boil it down and say this is a
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tough moment right now and what we must
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do right now is this and just focus her
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on the moment and getting through it and
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I feel that that sometimes can prevent
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that traumatic birth from developing all
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the symptoms later down the road and of
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course not only a doula can do that but
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a care provider could do that uh a nurse
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if they recognize that this is uh this
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has the makings for a traumatic birth uh
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the partner could also do it but
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sometimes the partner is caught up in
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the trauma himself or
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herself so so first of all if we can
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prevent it during the time but then
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afterwards uh taking these symptoms
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seriously possibly having a talk with
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the the care provider uh and asking
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questions you know what really happened
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why was this done um you know uh why
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didn't you recognize it and stop it
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whatever um but also uh taking good care
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of oneself
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uh you owe yourself enough sleep every
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day to get through the day and sometimes
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people get up in the morning before they
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really uh have gotten enough sleep it'
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be better to feed the baby and go back
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to bed and keep doing that until um
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until she's gotten enough sleep sleep is
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a A Healer for trauma um other things
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exercise uh sometimes during the day it
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would be so helpful if you could burn up
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some energy uh not just just internally
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uh eating having it eat away at you but
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get out put the baby in the stroller and
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rush you know walk briskly uh for
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several blocks and uh work some of that
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out uh that also helps us sleep at night
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um taking uh yoga uh uh yoga exercises
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or other types of uh physical exercise
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can can be helpful there and sometimes
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body work uh sometimes with good uh a
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good body worker can help a person
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process and and get rid of emotions that
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are um damaging emotions just through
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the body um we also uh I would recommend
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counseling uh trauma therapists really
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know their stuff when it comes to uh uh
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trauma and if you can find a trauma
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therapist who knows about
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birth they can help you work through
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many of these issues very very
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efficiently um so the treatments are
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possible and the good news is that as
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people start to feel better and you can
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expect to feel better you can expect to
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feel better taking some of these
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measures um your feelings toward the
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baby at first you might be feeling kind
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of like a caretaker uh not having enough
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to give for the baby in terms of love
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affection and feeling that Bond but as
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you start to feel better you begin to
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respond to your baby in a very different
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way one woman who had had quite a
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traumatic birth told me I remember the
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moment I fell in love with my
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baby he was 2 months old
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we were in the cookie aisle at Safeway
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and all of a sudden I felt this torrent
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of love for the baby I burst into tears
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and grabbed him and I felt differently
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I've been feeling like a babysitter
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until then but you see time and
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attention to your needs uh does result
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in healing and recovery and so that's
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what we're after and I want to just end
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with this term post-traumatic
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growth it's a rather new term because
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we've you know we've only been studying
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trauma for a few years in especially in
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relation to birth but now we recognize
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that when one has recovered from that
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trauma has resolved it the good news is
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that that person is stronger than ever
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before stronger more capable more
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confident than ever before so it isn't
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just a matter of getting over it it's a
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matter of getting above it resolving it
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and triumphing over it so it's
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definitely worth attending to this need
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and uh and uh with the great hope that
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you can move Beyond it and you're going
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to be better for it so thank you very
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much and I do want to tell you about an
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organization called patch uh p a t
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c I'd like to invite you to visit patch.
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org patch stands for prevention and
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treatment of traumatic childbirth there
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are many articles and resources on that
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website and information about
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conferences and things of that nature
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and you might want to visit there to
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learn a little bit more and uh uh be
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steered uh toward some very helpful
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resources so thank you for watching
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today and I'd like to invite you to uh
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contact me uh if you have any comments
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on this this presentation or any others
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or questions that you'd like me to
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address and I'd love suggestions for
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topics for the future if I'm capable
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I'll try to address them thank you very
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much
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