Welcome
There is much I can add to this. . . as a starter. A huge subject. This day we will focus on hands-on and how to use elementary pricklies plus all that has led you to here.
Choosing a C section as a birth?
Act in haste – repent in leisure.
And the ones leading the charge walk off and leave the one most affected – to it.
Who wonders about the actual healing? And how mum feels/lives in her body next?
A little bit to start you – stats – (CLICK Maybe also consider (CLICK)
This is the beginning in Yeppoon several month sag – before we went into watching the GW work on recipients who came by as demo models.
Prep for C sections – Yeppoon
- Beginning – scars and limitations. Comfrey ointment (cream – white) heals holes in the aura, normalises the skin and also heals bones when I was a Western herbalist we had tinctures – from whole plant, the root bark, the entire root, leaves, flowers alone and they all did different things.
- 2.30 – Reynauld’s syndrome – Stuck Liver Qi and Yang Qi depleted. Monica and her 3 children.
- 4.30 – The more they are ‘nice’, the more they are holding it all in.
- 5.20 – C section and necks – was over 25 years ago when I saw Jill – who had a C scar and a neck that was
- 6.20 – Not only cosmetic – is a huge energy blockage and the adhesions . ..
magically fixed when I repaired the scar. - 7.20– Whose reality are they holding true??
- 8.20 – May need to undo the script – what it means to them.
- 10 – Whose R.I.C.E. (CLICK)??
Nundah intro and cases (CLICK) (Zoe, Lenley and Yvonne were there).
HUGE PAGE of extras = resources and other pages of cases.
Clearing the ledge – how using pricklies adds to the hands-on (CLICK)
Redcliffe – intro before practical 31st August
#1 video NOT saved . .
Was all about surgery – what sets us up for.
Will have to use the other intros I have done for this.
Will add in my notes from here soon
Here is half of after morning break .
2.5 – As we were losing connection
After lunch
So many reasons to have a C section. Prevention (CLICK)
In times past – it was a life saver. Not a choice. it was genital herpes. NOT breech – such a waste of resources. Obstetricians were proficient in using forceps and in turning babies and dragging them out if needed. Instead we now have the ‘sunroof’ option.
BUT abdominal surgery is a gift that keeps on giving.
Especially if the recipient is stuck in emotional past – and has not ‘moved on’.
BABY
MUM – I ask – WHAT NEXT?
What set this up?
A form to play with . . Reason for surgery (CLICK)
Pre pregnancy body
During pregnancy
At birth
Operation
Post operative
Mothering challenges
Plus . . .
- What happened to directly influence the birth/date of operation?
- How did it feel?
- Expected/elective/’emergency’?
- Laboured for how long?
- Condition going into the operation
- Wound healing
- Support
- Safety
- Blood loss
- Complications
Breastfeeding
Health after
Actual scar – numb, itchy, gross, growing (keloiding)
- Loss of sensation around the area?
- Libido?
- Ability to orgasm?
- Neck problems?
- Back problems?
- Urinary challenges?
- Skin sensation now?
NOTE – after Gentling Work – usually – the adhesions are freed and the body is clearer.
Apparently after . .
- Infection. After a C-section, you might be at risk of developing an infection of the lining of the uterus (endometritis).
- Postpartum hemorrhage. … (Hemorrhage is the most frequent complication of the cesarean section during or after the surgical event. However, there is no consensus on the actual incidence, worldwide; it is estimated that around 75% of obstetric hemorrhages occur in cesarean section.)
- Reactions to anesthesia. …
- Blood clots. …
- Wound infection. …
- Surgical injury. …
- Increased risks during future pregnancies.
Many complications of cesarean delivery are unpredictable and very rare, but there are some things that make complications more likely. These risk factors include:
- obesity
- large infant size
- emergency complications that necessitate a cesarean delivery
- long labor or surgery
- having more than one baby
- allergies to anesthetics, drugs, or latex
- maternal inactivity
- low maternal blood cell count
- use of an epidural
- premature labor
- diabetes
Possible cesarean delivery complications
- post surgery infection or fever
- too much blood loss
- injury to organs
- emergency hysterectomy
- blood clot
- reaction to medication or anesthesia
- emotional difficulties
- scar tissue and difficulty with future deliveries
- death of the mother – more likely than in a natural birth
- harm to the baby
Subsequent births after C section
Risks of planned VBAC when compared with planned RCS include haemorrhage, need for blood transfusion, uterine rupture, and perinatal death (Guise et al. 2010). About 70% of women who had a previous caesarean section are good candidates for non-instrumental vaginal birth, with 70–87% who attempt succeeding (Frass & Harazi 2011; Potera 2010).
OR – we could fix them – so they were better than they were before. .
Wondering – who cares?
Research is only as good as the questions
AND – now after the push for the experimental medical device that plays havoc with immune system and blood clotting – all bets are off as to what next with any pregnancy.
(This is all as before 2019)
Nutrients – to allow the body to do what it does – renovate mum whilst pregnant.
Strengthen, repair, heal. Circulation – structure and all flows flowing . .
C Section ledge
Feeling the scar and adhesion breaking
Across the scar – like a railway track/sleepers
Pricklies above for below
This is decorations on the icing on the cake – we do not start here. Stuck Belly Blood is definitely a large part of this.