2021 – Effective Healing After C Section

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.

(See here) CLICK)

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

See also more here (CLICK)


C section defect (CLICK)


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.