New Guide from Home Births to Hospitals: Better Birth
When you are expecting, you are totally overwhelmed about all the pregnancy books out there. Who to read, which ones are “your style?” Megan, who is a well-respected doula and Expert on this blog, reviews a new book called : Better Birth: The Ultimate Guide to Childbirth from Home Births to Hospitals. I was interested in reading her review as the book has received a big publicity blitz with celebrity names, (Ricki Lake, Donna Karan, Dr. Jacques Moritz, Olympia Dukakis). The website is lovely and the video on the home page is inspiring and moving. The book’s author, Denise Spatafora, is interested in empowering women in birth by using the combined strength of mind, body and spirit. So, Megan read this new book so that we can decide if it is a good one for our shelves. I always appreciate Megan’s practical and informed thoughts. I think you will find her ideas, interspersed throughout this in-depth book review, really helpful.
P.S. BIG NEWS FOR PREGNANT WOMEN! Megan is now the director elect of a doula coop (see below) that has doulas from $200-$1800 in all experience levels. Newer doulas have ongoing mentoring and professional training, so you get a great value for your money in my opinion!
http://nycdoulacoop.com
New Guide From Home Births To Hospitals

Megan Davidson
by Megan Davidson
Denise Spatafora, a mom of two, business/life coach, and creator of the BornClear childbirth education course, just released her new book, Better Birth: The Ultimate Guide to Childbirth from Home Births to Hospitals. In this book she details her approach to having an empowering and satisfying birth. In her introduction she states: “My gift is that I can feel, hear, and see all that is limiting a person and/or business as well as their gifts” and she reports that through coaching she helps people to “uncover and actualize their commitments and dreams” (4). She writes that she has both individual and global goals for this text, stating that she wants this book to be a comprehensive resource to help women become fully prepared for childbirth and also that she wants the book to help people to ‘grow personally’ (6). In addition to these individual goals, she states that her global goal is to change how people around the world are talking about and understanding childbirth, a goal she explains is “nothing short of creating a movement” (8).
In Better Birth, she lays out how she has approached this goal in her BornClear method, stating that the core values of this program are to prepare you for childbirth emotionally, intellectually, spiritually and physically through seven basic lessons. The text reads largely as an explanation of these seven lessons:
1. Understanding the mind-body connection and how it relates to pregnancy.
2. Determining what you deeply desire for you own birth experience.
3. Having tools (called “the BornClear toolbox”) to help you through conception, pregnancy and childbirth.
4. Connecting and aligning with your baby during pregnancy to create emotional, spiritual and health bonds that will last a lifetime.
5. Learning how your body works during pregnancy and childbirth.
6. Having the ability to plan ahead for every contingency.
7. Envisioning the first year after birth through learning your options.
(p. 6-7)
The chapters of her book largely follow this order, guiding parents-to-be through the seven basic lessons. For example, chapter four lays out a variety of options to experiment with including visualizations, meditations, affirmations, writing and art projects, breathing techniques, and physical and personal growth exercises. With pictures and descriptions, these sections offer a variety of methods that parents can try to find things that fit with their own needs.
In birth, I find that having a variety of options that you have tried out and found to work well for you is the most useful. I encourage parents to try out different techniques, positions, and options together so that they can discover, for example, that they hate visualizations but love massage and supportive words or that they find great relief from yoga positions but feel distracted by massage. Many of the relaxation techniques listed, such as feng shui, relaxation tapes, guided visualizations, candles and scents in your home, and collage making, are not those I found most useful as a pregnant and laboring woman, nor those I see most often in my own clients. That said, she offer options to pick and choose from, many of which I have found more useful, such as seeking acupressure or acupuncture, massage, yoga and movement, and breathing/relaxation techniques. By laying them all out, she offers a wide range such that parents-to-be can begin to personalize for their own pregnancy and in preparation for their birth experience.
In Chapters 6 and 7 she details the signs and stages of labor, possible interventions or augmentations offered in hospitals, and an exhaustive series of questions to guide planning for every stage of labor in a variety of contexts. This provides a great foundation for understanding what is going on in your body during labor, what possible augmentations (like pitocin) could be suggested and how they work, and the types of preferences you might consider for labor itself. I disagree with Spatafora that all moms-to-be need to “not only create but expertly write out” their “new context” for birthing so that everyone knows exactly what they want and I also don’t think that partners must be “completely aligned” in order to get the birth you want. I do, however, think that planning for and consciously considering the available options, the possible constraints on those options, and the ideals for your birth are really helpful exercises. Her lists of questions about what you might or might not want for you birth are more comprehensive than I might consider necessary, but they provide a foundation for considering what you do or do not care about planning out in advance of your labor and birth.
As well, in this text Spatafora also describes what hospitals, birth centers, home births, OBs, midwives, and doulas have to offer, giving parents a clear perspective about the choices in childbirth they can make and how those choices impact the options available and the types of care they will receive. She includes lists such what to pack in your birth bag for the hospital, foods to consider having on hand for after the birth, things she wishes she had known before, and a list of what to buy for your baby. Like all of these sorts of lists, parents should take from them what is useful for themselves and not consider them as blueprints for parenting. I don’t agree, for example, that a crib, breastpump, bottles, stroller, highchair, two diaper bags, and a baby rocking chair are necessarily essential parenting gear that should be purchased by all. Instead, I typically encourage parents to state with the basic (clothing, a blanket for swaddling, some diapers, a sling or carrier of some sort, and a car seat) and then expand from there as they get to know their child and their child’s needs.
Spatafora’s new book, Better Birth, is a comprehensive text for new parents, covering all the basics about choices in childbirth, the processes in the body, techniques for labor, and preparing for a new baby, and as such, I think it is wonderful to have this new resource. Her own lovely homebirths are available as videos on her website and I think her preference for homebirths and midwifery models of care are apparent throughout the book. Her book reads to me like a self-help manual, with incredible focus on using pregnancy as a time for emotional and spiritual growth, and it might not surprise readers to know that this is not typically my style. That said, I support women and their partners through childbirth who come from a wide range of perspectives and who draw on the gamut of tools through their pregnancy, labor, and postpartum period and I do so without judgment about the types of support needed or the approaches taken for enjoying pregnancy, coping with childbirth, and adjusting in the postpartum period. For many women, this book might be incredibly useful, providing insights and options from conception and throughout the first year and for others, it might not be a good match for their personality or needs.
I think as birth professionals, we always walk a fine line between giving women information and tools that might be helpful and burdening people with guilt or unneeded pressure. It is not uncommon in my practice for women to worry that the stress they feel or their emotional state is having a negative impact on their baby. They have read and heard that they need to be relaxed, peaceful, clam, and filled with joy in order to have a healthy baby and a satisfying birth. And yet, I have been in prenatal appointments with women in tears, with partners who are fighting, and recently, in a house with a ceiling that had collapsed. These women all have beautiful, satisfying births and happy, healthy babies despite fears that their emotional states might wreck them. So, to the extent that this book empowers women to take control of their pregnancies and birth experiences, making choices that work for them and building trust in their bodies and in their birth partners, I applaud it. For women who are draw to books about personal growth, mind-body connection, and emotional and spiritual exploration, I think it is a wonderful match. Like all things in life, what works for some people is not the right answer for all people and the availability of options is key – thanks Denise for giving us one more option!
Megan Davidson, PhD, is a professionally trained labor and postpartum doula who works with new parents through pregnancy, childbirth, breastfeeding, and the early days of newborn care. She teaches babywearing and cloth diapering classes at several Brooklyn stores, as well as in-home consults, and has a passion for helping new parents master these practical parenting skills. Megan lives in Clinton Hill with her husband, Shawn Onsgard, a local piano teacher and composer, and their two children.
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