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How to Embrace Pain and Give Birth to Your Dreams

How to Embrace Pain and Give Birth to Your Dreams by Stacey Curnow | #AspireMag

Are you willing to embrace change in the face of great pain? Receiving the messages in pain – whether that pain is physical or spiritual — is one of life’s greatest challenges, and running away from it is one of life’s greatest temptations.

Stay open, and you will receive the exact insights you need to live your best life.

If you know a time more resplendent with change than pregnancy, please tell me. As a former nurse-midwife, it’s hard for me to imagine anything matching it. (Note: The photo in this post was taken moments after my son was born at home.)

Pregnancy, labor and birth are intensely spiritual and physical all at once. As such, they are also apt metaphors for life.

For anyone reading this who is not pregnant, consider that you are gestating ideas and dreams all the time, and it may take a midwife (read here, a trusted friend or mentor) to help you give birth to them.

Here’s the thing: Most of the instructions given to pregnant women (and anyone gestating big dreams) are inadequate – not least because they encourage women to focus on the little things related to their pregnancy and miss the big picture.

When I’m in clinic, I spend most of my time talking with pregnant women about what’s normal and what’s not. I also try to give them a bigger message: pregnancy is the “new normal.” When you’re not pregnant it’s not normal to feel nauseated, dizzy, and, most of all, in pain. But when you’re pregnant it often is. That’s the bottom line, and it’s unlikely to change.

Notice that I said pain and not something else, like discomfort. I remember when I was pregnant thinking that if I hadn’t known that such multifaceted pain was normal, I would have gone to the ER and presented my complaints with a hope for a cure. But there is no cure. There is simply the will to bear it. You either have the will to dig in and prepare for more or not.

That may sound frightening, but what I mean is that women are strong, incredibly strong. And yet even in a world full of amazing women athletes, entrepreneurs, and even astronauts (not to mention billions of mothers), most of us don’t know how strong we are until we gestate another human being.

Maybe if more of us knew our strength ahead of time, we would prepare more and become even stronger. Ideally, we would behave like people in training—Olympic athletes, or serious applicants for the space program.

And yet, even for those who have trained for years, actually performing – whether in a stadium or on the space shuttle – remains the ultimate challenge, achieved under unique and unpredictable circumstances.

My best suggestion for anyone is to go into birth with a clear vision of what you want, and surround yourself with people who support your vision.

I chose to have a homebirth with my midwife, a dear friend, attending me. As we talked about preparing for the birth she asked me what my greatest fear was.

I told her that I was haunted by the story of one of my fellow students in midwifery school: She too had planned a homebirth with a midwife, but after many hours of labor at home she ended up in the hospital with an epidural and forceps delivery.

Long after the birth I asked my friend about her birth experience. She offered that if she could have changed anything it would have been to listen to her midwife more.

She remembers having been almost paralyzed by the pain of labor and only able to sit and rock on the floor as her midwife implored her to move and try other positions.

I told my midwife, with my husband and doula and best friend in attendance, that I was afraid I would also suffer the same fate.

However, since there is a lot of anecdotal evidence to suggest that the more a person states what she doesn’t want, the more likely it is to happen, I kept my birth plan simple.

“I know what I want. My support team knows what I want. I will do what my midwife says.” That was it.

Was it any surprise that I came up against my greatest fear? After a fairly short labor (12 hours) I was fully dilated, but then, after pushing strenuously for two hours, I didn’t make much progress.

So far everything had gone according to plan, but absent any more progress I knew I would soon be taking that ride to the hospital.

At this point my midwife told me to get into a squatting position. In my exhaustion, I told her, “After the next contraction.” When the next contraction came and I said that again, I glanced up just at the moment when all of my support people looked at each other as if to say, “Here it is: the thing she feared.”

And then the vision I had for my homebirth, the one they had supported me in, took hold.

In the next moment they had taken me in their arms to support me in a squat. I found the position better for pushing, and although it took another hour, my baby was finally born.

Instead of fearing the pain and running from it I heard what it was telling me – this way isn’t working, you must make a change.

If your mind and body are prepared, the pain you feel in labor – and the effort to embrace it, move toward it, and work with it – can be transmuted into a gift that informs the rest of your life.

It takes enormous courage to stay with pain long enough to hear what it has to say.

Usually it will ask you to make big changes in your life. This can be scary, and yet, if you can do it, you’ll tap into something profound and magical that reminds you of your true power.

Tap into it and you’ll achieve your vision for your best life.

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About the author 

Stacey Curnow

Stacey Curnow is a sought-after purpose and success coach who recently left behind a 20-year career in nurse-midwifery – helping women give birth to babies – to help women give birth to their BIG dreams.

Stacey is the founder of Midwife for Your Life – a website, blog and series of signature coaching programs – and serves clients all over the world. She is also the Life Purpose Expert for Aspire Magazine.

She published a best-selling children’s book, Ravenna, is a contributing author of Inspiration for a Woman’s Soul: Choosing Happiness (coming in February of 2015), and is currently writing Pain Body Proof: How to Transform Your Negative Thoughts, Improve All Your Relationships and Enjoy More Happiness

You can sample her work by reading The Purpose and Passion Guidebook: 6 Steps to Doing Good, Feeling Good and Achieving Your Dreams. It will inspire you to tap into your deepest desires, claim your true value and identify your soul’s work in order to live your best life.

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  • You just made me want to give actual birth again. I had a home birth with my 2nd child and it was the most empowering experience I have ever had! x

  • Peggy Nolan says:

    what a great metaphor! My first pregnancy was pain free but labor intensive (off the charts intensive), my 2nd pregnancy was nothing but pain from month 5 til I pushed that baby out. Labor was a piece of cake with #2 🙂 And the same may go with giving birth to your dreams. Pregnancy may be difficult with a nearly effortless delivery or vice versa.

    • My sentiments exactly, Peggy! What I know for sure is that you never know what you’re going to get, but if you show up with curiosity and the willingness to learn the lessons from whatever comes, you will benefit. xxoo

  • Chara Armon says:

    I love how resonant this birth metaphor is (and hooray for natural birthing, literally and in other arenas of our lives!). You are right about the courage needed to face pain, and the big rewards that follow.

    • Thanks so much for letting me know you resonate so strongly with this posts and its messages! xxoo

  • Lisa Marie Rosati says:

    So beautiful Stacey! I have always admire you and LOVE the birth metaphor you used. Love to you!

  • Nadia Shana Krauss says:

    What a powerful post. I love how you have taken your experience of birth and have turned it into an analogy for life. I am not a mum and have never gone through a birth but could understand all you have written very well thank you!

  • Sheila Callaham says:

    What a wonderful, heartfelt post Stacey! And, while I am confident I won’t be birthing any more babies I plan to gestate ideas and dreams until my last breath!

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