Childbirth with PAIN?
The Bible teaches no such idea!
CHILDBIRTH WITHOUT FEAR by Grantly Dick-Read M.D. From the 5th edition (revised and edited) CHAPTER 9 The Influence of Memory Is it unreasonable that we should pause to consider the mental picture of labor within the mind of a woman? Is it not essential that we should create by education and instruction the true and natural happiness of motherhood within the vision of her mind? The mental picture of her anticipated experience should be the image of all that is beautiful in the fulfillment of her love. For the body is only a vehicle in which and from which a child is miraculously made and produced. It is the mind of woman that knows passion and desires the fulfillment of her biological purpose. It is the mind-its receptivity and its ability to integrate the fund of new thoughts and feeling that are the physiological visitations of love and pregnancy-that molds and fashions the child. It is the mind that bears the spiritual imprint of the newborn child and around it writes indelibly the mysterious circumscription of love. Francis Galton wrote much on the importance of the mind that has been overlooked in the modern teaching of medicine.' His investigations emphasize the vividness with which images, based upon thought and association, can be reproduced in the mind. Sights, sounds, and associations, real and imaginary, imprint themselves upon the human mind to mold and influence its reactions. As Pavlov points out in his important work on conditioned reflexes, the things that give the greatest pleasure will become conditioned causes of acute fear and hatred if continually offered with a terrifying accompaniment.' Both objective and subjective associations can condition stimuli that provoke fear reactions to labor. I know single women who, their natural longing for a child obliterated from their minds, shudder when childbirth is mentioned. Associations of pain and mental pictures of agony and death have become conditioned stimuli for such fear and abhorrence that these women seek permanent refuge in virginity and spinsterhood. There are some women who have had one baby who have been known to refuse all marital relations forever after for fear they should have to experience labor again. Even love for the child cannot override the fear and pain that its arrival occasioned. What devastation to homes, husbands, and children one ill-conducted labor can bring! Owing to the nature of Pavlov's experiments, the concept of the conditioned reflex is often associated only with salivating dogs, meat, and bells. But earlier writings, such as Galton's in 1883, made it apparent that the recurrent stimulus frequently arises within the mind. The memory, or even the visualization, of an incident may surround a natural and physiological function with an aura of pain or pleasure so vivid that normal reflexes are disturbed. Just as a colored light will produce defense reactions of pain in a dog who was hurt when the light appeared, so will the words "baby," "childbirth," "labor," or even "motherhood" produce emotional states and their physical manifestations in women who suffered in parturition, and every act that leads, in a normal sequence of events, to the association of painful childbirth will give impetus to the primitive instinct to escape. Fear of childbirth, then, becomes the great disturber of the neuromuscular harmony of labor. I do not wish it to be inferred that childbirth should be looked upon as a mental process. But obviously the mechanical efficiency of this function not only depends upon the structures and forces of the body but upon emotional stimuli, and upon the integrity of the influences to which the emotions are subjected. NEGATIVE INFLUENCES Many young women from the age of puberty and even before have inquiring minds, particularly in relation to childbirth. Few hear much that is encouraging from those of their own age, but since the temptation to seek information is not curbed, again and again, drawn as if by sirens, they satiate their greed for knowledge by listening to voices that capture the imagination but utterly distort or destroy the truth. The facts of childbirth may be withheld by the mother, the logical source, for the mother may have had such unpleasant experiences herself that she has no wish to communicate them to the daughter, who she believes will also suffer in childbirth. If, in a moment of confidence, she gives any information to her daughter, it is more likely to be fear producing than a stimulus to pleasant anticipation. Thus the influence of too many mothers upon their daughters, either through the subtlety of their information or through the mystery of their silence, is a serious factor in producing a feeling of fear in regard to childbirth. We must remember, also, the influence of the friends of a woman about to have a baby. Wherever women are gathered together and the subject of childbirth arises, someone may remark that childbirth is a kind of martyrdom, the suffering during which, though probably best forgotten, is satisfactorily recalled with obvious pride. Here it must not be overlooked that those who have suffered are justified in believing in suffering. There is no blame to be laid upon those who are honest in their opinions; neither was it their fault if they suffered. This does not, however, mitigate in any way the crime of their propaganda, for to produce alarm can never assist in the accomplishment of a task, however unimportant. The influence of husbands is another potential source of anxiety concerning childbirth, if the husband has formed his opinions upon hearsay. His ignorance leads to an understandable anxiety over the welfare of his wife. Unfortunately, he communicates his anxiety to her. Apart from the more intimate sources of information about childbirth, women cannot escape the influence of the general trend of public and popular opinion. Constantly in contact with the mod ern foundations of both education and amusement, they read books, study papers, listen to radio and television broadcasts, and see motion pictures. In far too many of these the same atmosphere is found: childbirth is an ordeal, essentially painful and dangerous to the life of the mother. If the dramatist finds it necessary to increase the interest of the story by describing the events that occurred when one of the chief characters gave birth to a child, the incident is often fraught with poignancy and tension, drama, suffering, and possibly death. As a student of human nature, the dramatist well knows that nothing is more likely to gain the attention of the reader. Do we often read of a normal character experiencing any happiness in childbirth, or see such a presentation on the screen? Similarly, the tense anxiety of the husband gives the author or producer a wonderful opportunity for drama. Fortunately, this is sometimes so exaggerated as to become laughable. The daily papers are also printed in order to attract readers. The story of a straightforward birth is not news, unless it occurs in a taxicab or a telephone booth, but the story of a mother's death when a child is born is almost worthy of headlines. CULTURE VS. NATURAL LAW I have chosen the term "indigenous" below in reference to woman in her original condition, as opposed to "cultured" or "civilized." It is obvious that such a term requires explanation. I am using it to convey the idea of first or original, primary; that is, women whose tribal lives and traditional limitations of experience have not been affected by medieval and/or twentieth-century culture, compared to the "cultured" woman of today. There is very little evidence that modern woman is in any way less fitted to produce children painlessly than the woman without the influence of Western culture and civilization. Woman, indigenous or cultured, has before her no evidence suggesting that nature ever intended pregnancy to be an illness. The indigenous woman continues her work-in the harvest field, on trek, in the rubber plantation, or wherever she may be employed. The child develops while she herself lives a full and natural existence. Muscularly strong, physiologically efficient, her mechanism carries out its normal functions without discomfort, difficulty, or shame. The child then is born easily, small and firm fleshed. Among cultured women we see this too-the athletic young woman who continues her active life, who plays golf to the seventh month, who walks three or four miles a day to the full term of her pregnancy, who eats sensible food in a sensible way, who is not diverted from her normal routine by those who try to advertise special care, rest, diets, and enormous quantities of milk. Such exaggerated concern is an offense against nature; it is a presumption that natural methods require unnatural fortification, and to those of us who believe in nature it is little short of inducing a pathological state into a very perfect physiological function. Whichever of the many definitions of culture is adopted, one thing is certain, that culture is dependent primarily upon the activity of the mind. The greater the education, the more "cultured" the type. But, unquestionably, we have very largely lost many of the higher sensibilities that in the original state were essential to our personal survival. One has only to spend a few weeks with those who depend upon their wits for the supply of their food from natural surroundings to appreciate how soon we should die out if once again we were bereft of cultural attributes and were called upon to return to the original state! From this the question naturally follows: To what extent can the influences of culture have affected those functions that remain with us as natural physical functions, childbirth in particular? The mind has developed, and the enormous fund of stimulus that passes from the consciousness to the autonomic nervous system has to meet new conditions. The lives of the cultured have gradually changed as Western civilization has developed. With repression, emotions of varying intensity have found new means of expression. The physician of today looks to the emotions and sentiments of his patients when endeavoring to find the original cause for many of their physical complaints, practicing "psychosomatic medicine." Herein lies the fact of pain in childbirth. Modern woman is physically competent; modern childbirth is physically unaltered from earlier times, but our culture has brought to bear upon this function neuromuscular activities caused by intensifying certain emotions that inhibit the progress of the birth and thus create pain. Yet there is no reason why culture should be allowed to destroy all that is beautiful in the primitive. True culture should enhance original beauty and purify where contamination has crept in. If childbirth among indigenous people unaffected by Western culture still persists today as a relatively painless procedure, it is indeed a slur upon our utilization of culture that the most dramatic, the most beautiful, and the most essential of natural functions should be made unpleasant for so many. A woman may be conscious of uterine contractions for hours, but have no discomfort until she is told she is in labor. This verbal stimulus to her mental expectation alerts her attention and anxiety. Although she may appear to be quite calm, a woman in labor has an inborn alertness to danger, and evidence of anxiety, however courageously suppressed, will forewarn her attendants of the special care she may need. In anxiety, the heart beats strongly and often rapidly, breathing is quicker and sometimes irregular, and is interspersed with a series of deep, sighing respirations. The nostrils may be widely dilated to facilitate the intake of air, and not infrequently the mouth is slightly open for the same reason. If women are to be taught to anticipate childbirth with relaxed confidence, it is necessary to eliminate the tension that gives rise to pain by removing the causes for fear. Those who seek to follow as closely as possible the natural law of childbirth should do everything possible to allay a young woman's anxieties and give her confidence by simple and truthful reiteration of the facts of natural childbirth. HISTORICAL AND RELIGIOUS INFLUENCES If we survey the history of childbirth in European civilization, we discover that suffering is often presumed, the minds of both men and women being conditioned to the idea of suffering as essential to childbirth. Since it is expected, it is thus caused and aggravated. For generations the necessity of pain has been accepted as a fact, even though the motivation for earlier stories and dramas may have been to concentrate on the negative in order to attract an audience, just as in our day. ANCIENT PRACTICES AND PAGAN RELIGIONS At the time of Hippocrates, four or five hundred years before Christ, we read of a different outlook. Even prior to his day, three thousand years before Christ, the priests among the Egyptians were called to assist women in labor. In many societies witchcraft was resorted to, often very successfully due to the power of suggestion, and old writings suggest that herbs and potions were used to help a woman give birth easily. In fact, it may be said with some accuracy that among the most primitive people of whom any record exists, help was given to women in labor according to the customs of the time. Hippocrates lived from 460 to 355 B.C. His aphorisms should be read by every medical man. It was he who realized that "our natures are the physicians of our diseases"; it was he who recognized in the routine care of human ailments that prevention was more important than cure. He emphasized that the daily discipline of a healthy person was to include diet, exercise, and fresh air. All the simple things of life to correct an illness were to be used before medicines, and last of all came surgery. It may seem strange to some of us that these things were written so long ago! Today in the United States, England, and many other countries, everyone who qualifies to be a doctor has to take the Hippocratic Oath, an oath of allegiance to our science. This oath is a magnificent concept, to which one who is accorded the privilege of attending patients should adhere, for it stands as fresh and noble as ever. It says in part: I will prescribe regimen for the good of my patients according to my ability and my judgment and never do harm to anyone. To please no one will I prescribe a deadly drug, nor give advice which may cause his death.... If I keep this oath faithfully, may I enjoy my life and practice my art, respected by all men and in all times; but if I swerve from it or violate it, may the reverse be my lot. Unfortunately, even today in my professional career, I have often seen only lip service paid to this oath and its tenets ignored. Yet it is upon the Hippocratic teaching that all modern medicine is based. If the principles of Hippocrates were reenacted today in all their simplicity and wisdom, they would undoubtedly alter the whole tone and tenor of our lives. Hippocrates made stern demands upon his pupils, but he always practiced what he preached. There is no authority but fact, Hippocrates taught, and deductions are to be made only from facts. Since observation, common sense, and clear reasoning are not compatible with the speculative practice of medicine, a physician should be persuaded by no influence that cannot be justified by accurate observation. True science begets knowledge, but opinion, ignorance. Hippocrates' teaching was largely based upon the laws of nature as they were understood in his time, that is, exploring the secrets of life, its origin, its maintenance, and its reproduction. He endeavored to organize and instruct midwives. He found no place for fear in childbirth except in the presence of abnormality, which may or may not have been caused by a faulty regimen in the life of the individual. Such confidence was placed in the ability of the natural law to carry out the work of reproduction that one statement was frequently impressed upon the students and doctors of that time: "We must refrain from meddlesome interference!" A statement particularly applicable to the care of women in childbirth. Indeed, it is important for us to realize that there is nothing new in the concept of natural childbirth. It is but a revitalizing and uncovering of that which conforms to the laws of nature. Aristotle (384-322 B.C.) went further, and in some of his writings we find accurate and very desirable observations upon childbirth. He was probably the first man who ever urged care of the mind for a woman having a baby. A great naturalist, he was the first investigator of the development of the chick within the egg. Followed by Aristotle and other great scientists, the Hippocratic and Grecian school of medicine held sway until after Soranus of Ephesus, who, living at the end of the first and the beginning of the second century after Christ, continued the emphasis upon the high level and humane principles of Grecian obstetrics. Writing a famous treatise on obstetrics in about A.D. 79, Soranus was quite possibly the greatest of all the ancient obstetric clinicians, and must be regarded as their leading authority upon childbirth and pediatrics. He denied the truth of certain superstitions about childbirth, and he stressed consideration of the feelings of the woman herself. He makes no mention of fear, and did not expect it to occur unless some abnormality disrupted the healthy function. His writings, as true today as nineteen hundred years ago, were collected by monks and, buried in the cellars of great monasteries, were soon forgotten, not to be rediscovered for many centuries. Pain in childbirth has been recognized as far back as we can go in the history of man, but only in the presence of something contrary to the natural or physiological law, which then gives rise to fear. Fear is an emotion that, emerging from the primitive instinct of survival, is the natural protective agent prompting the individual to escape from danger. There seems to be little doubt but that the unnatural, pathological, and destructive condition of fear in childbirth is found more intensely and frequently in the European civilization than in any other. Those of us who have traveled among groups who have not yet come into contact with European civilization have found that the presence of fear of childbirth affects only a small percentage of the population, confirming what we have read in the ancient writings, and those who do suffer from fear almost invariably have a reasonable cause. The general tendency is to pass quickly from the discussion of fear to that of pain. But the origins of fear are important, because the association between fear and pain is very close. Thus it is necessary to draw attention to the influences of superstitions and religious customs, and all those things which pertain to ethical conduct and beliefs among various peoples. Fear produced by religious beliefs becomes an offense to the mental or physical integrity of childbirth. Unnecessary fear is a pathological condition. Pagan religions demand an absolute belief in an outside controlling influence over the events of one's life. That control is exercised, directly or indirectly, by one's ancestors. All goes well with the individual, so long as he obeys the rules and does not offend his or her ancestors. It is the woman who carries, hidden in her mind, the knowledge of her disobedience of this law who becomes depressed and filled with fear during labor. She is anxious not only for her own life but also for the life and fitness of the child. Pain and suffering in childbirth then becomes the corollary to "the wages of sin is death," an idea common to all ethical teachings and religions. Thus if a dead or abnormal child is born, it is considered the reward of sin and disobedience of the law. We found that some tribes in Africa go to extraordinary lengths to appease the wrath of their forefathers or their gods. When trouble arises in labor, as it surely does in the presence of this sin-born fear, free confession overcomes the trouble of a delayed or prolonged labor. This form of pain relief in difficult labor is well recognized among many tribes. In the Congo we obtained first-hand evidence of the curative influence of confession as a means of palliating the angry ancestors or gods during labor; in the absence of abnormality, the baby was usually born soon after confession. Thus the ethical beliefs of an individual, and the consciousness of sin or disobedience in respect to these beliefs, do influence the course of labor, through the emotions. THE MIDDLE AGES It was about three hundred years after Christ that a big change in attitudes came about in Western civilization, due to a distortion of earlier Judeo-Christian teachings. It is generally accepted that the institutionalized Christian Church during this period, more than any other influence in the last two thousand years, retarded the progress of medicine and medical science. One of the principles of Christ's teachings is that we should visit the fatherless and the widows in their affliction, and heal the sick. But the priests of this middle period -interpreting any efforts on the part of man to heal the sick as being presumptuous, placing oneself on an equal with, or even preeminent over, the God of Christians - went back to pagan practices, where prayer and fastings were the total remedies. If medicines or potions were used at all, they came from the monasteries through the Church, and it was the special prerogative of the priests to prescribe and distribute them. To study and believe in the laws of nature became an offense against the authority of the Church, and all books on medicine that had been written, including those of Soranus, were seized and buried beneath the monasteries. When the Roman Empire fell, all medicine reverted to the lore of superstitions, legends, salves, poultices, and talismen. The sick were no longer healed; they either lived or died. With this as background, it is no wonder that the rites of paganism were relatively simple, pleasing, and acceptable when compared to some of the horrors to which women in medieval times were subjected, owing to the ignorance of those who were entitled to look after them in childbirth. During the thousand years up to 1520, the responsibility for childbirth was entirely usurped by the Church. No man was allowed to attend a woman in labor unless he was a shepherd or a man who looked after animals in sickness. Childbirth was considered the result of carnal sin, to be expiated by suffering in giving birth. Should the woman have trouble during labor, the Church, according to its ethics, demanded a live baby, whatever might happen to the woman in question. In fact, if a woman was dying it was not unusual for the baby to be taken from her through the wall of the abdomen, for which purpose men accustomed to castrating animals, usually hog-gelders, were employed. THE SIXTEENTH AND SEVENTEENTH CENTURIES It was not until 1513 that a German, Eucharius Roesslin, discovered the hidden writings of Soranus and others. He wrote the first obstetric book in nearly fifteen hundred years, gleaning his manu script from the works of those ancient, astute physicians, profound philosophers, and most accurate clinical observers the world has ever known. The book of Eucharius Roesslin stood as a monument upon the high road of the development of care in childbirth. Nine years after its publication a doctor in Hamburg, thinking that too little was known about childbirth except through books, decided to observe the birth of a baby. Since no man was allowed to attend a woman in childbirth and the law was extremely rigid, he dressed as a midwife and joined the midwives at a birth. His observations were invaluable. Success in midwifery had begun to be established once more, but then he was deceived by a personal acquaintance and reported to the authorities. For that crime, that heresy, Dr. Weiss of Hamburg was burned at the stake. Only four hundred years ago! It was not until 1580 that shepherds and herdsmen were prevented by law from attending women in labor, though physicians were still not permitted to assist midwives. Two hundred and fifty years ago physicians took over the work in certain cases, and later surgeons applied their skill, but even then little consideration was shown for the woman's feelings. In the so-called ages of religious faith, the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries in England, if there was any difficulty in labor it was the custom to baptize the child before it was born so that its soul might be saved, the holy water being introduced onto the unborn child by use of a special instrument. The fact that the mother died still called for no remark. The most important of all historical writings, and the most likely to be read, is the Bible. It is still the world's best-selling book. Many women read and study their Bibles-and many have been influenced to believe that childbirth is a grievous and painful experience because of passages in the King James Version like Genesis 3:16, which quotes the Lord as having said to Eve: "I will greatly multiply thy sorrow and thy conception; in sorrow thou shalt bring forth children." This passage has been known as the "curse of Eve," with its assumption that misery, pain, and sorrow automatically accompany every birth. Thus many still are of the opinion today that the teaching of natural childbirth is contrary to the Bible. Nothing could be further from the truth! For those who believe the translators and others who compiled the various editions of the Bible were under divine guidance no argument will be of any avail, but if the Bible had divine inspiration, it is likely that the writers of the original manuscripts were inspired, and not the translators of the various editions in different languages. Biblical scholars have carefully reexamined the Hebrew and Greek manuscripts from which much of the Bible was translated, and have concluded that the words referring to childbirth do not signify pain, but refer to "labor," or to "a woman in childbirth." Being interested in this subject myself for many years, I have acquired in my library a considerable collection of ancient Bibles, and find that some of the translations differ from those of the great King James Version, which was started in 1604 and completed in 1611, in the reign of James 1. Take, for example, Isaiah 21:3. I turned this up in my copy of the Geneva Bible, first published in 1560, and find that the words "pain" and "pangs" were not used, but "sorrow" was repeated three times. In my copy of the Bishop's Bible, however, first published in 1568, the words "pain" and "pangs" appear, and since the King James Version was largely a revision of the Bishop's Bible and not the Geneva Bible, the same terms have been repeated by the translators. This matter was referred to Hebrew scholars, one of whom, the Reverend B. D. Glass, spent much time investigating this subject and wrote to me as follows: Quote One thing, however, that puzzled me was why the Bible referred to childbirth as such a painful and dangerous ordeal. That is how I was taught, and later on taught my pupils. After studying your book, Revelation of Childbirth,' I felt I had to search the Bible more thoroughly to find the deeper meaning concerning expressions about childbirth. I was very pleased when I read the first sentence of Genesis 3:16, where the Hebrew word "etzev" which is usually translated as sorrow and pain, has obviously been misconstrued. The words of pain in Hebrew are "keiv" (pain) "tzaar" (sorrow) "yesurim" (anguish). At no time would any Hebrew scholar use the word "etzev" as an expression of pain. The meanings of "etzev" are manyfold, i.e., labour (Gen. 5:29, referring to Noah: "The same shall comfort us concerning our labour and toil of our hands"). In Proverbs 14:13, "etzev" is used as expressing labour, e.g., "that in all labour there is profit." "Etzev" can also mean "concerned" or "anxious" as is mentioned in Genesis 6:6, where the word "grieved" is not used in its proper sense - "displeased," or "concerned" would have been more in keeping. In chapter 45 para. 5 although "etzev" is again translated as "grieved," it is used in a wrong sense, "displeased" would have suited the expression better. Again in King 11:6, the correct translation of "etzev" is given, namely, "displeased"--"and his father had not displeased him," etc. "Etzev" has yet another meaning - that "of being perturbed," as it is expressed in Samuel I 20:3, "Lest he be perturbed." I find that throughout the Bible the word "etzev" is used approximately sixteen times, and not once does it convey the meaning of pain as we are made to believe. "Etzev" can assume different shades of meaning, regarding the sense in which it is used. I think that is why the translators of the Bible in the olden times, believing in the ordeal of pain and anguish in connection with childbirth, translated the word "etzev" to imply such. None of the prophets ever used this word in their expressions regarding childbirth. They used the words "tzirim" (hinges) and "vchavalim" (threads) which mean hinges and threads, or nerves. Not being a medical man it is hard for me to explain these terms. I can, however, explain "vchavalim," which means the contractions or stretching of the muscles and fibres. In all your quotations from the Bible, the above two words were expressed and they do not really signify pain. It is only because "yeloda," which means "a woman in childbirth" is always used in conjunction with these same two words in question that the translators added on their own behalf these words as meaning "pain and travail." End Quote If we put ourselves in the place of those brilliant classical scholars of the time of James I, from A.D. 1604 to 1611, the years occupied by them in completing this translation, we can see why their negative thoughts on childbirth were expressed in their translations. They used the word "pain" because they had no reason to believe any other term was applicable. During this era, obstetrics was at a low ebb. Anesthetics and antiseptics were not discovered until two hundred fifty years later. The first English book on midwifery had been published only fifty years earlier, and although several manuscripts appeared, mainly for private circulation, they demonstrated little advance upon the works of Soranus, who flourished in second century A.D. Women died in large numbers in maternity hospitals, and the appalling conditions of the Hotel de Dieu in Paris due to epidemics of childbed fever were found to some extent in English institutions as well. Surely it was reasonable that the translators used the word "pain" in keeping with the accepted belief and experience of their time. It was not until the nineteenth century that the foundations of our present knowledge of antiseptics were laid, and there were no antibiotics for infections until the mid-twentieth century. We tend to overlook the fact that until 1847 anesthetics or pain-relievers were not even known, so that when a labor was abnormal the suffering was appalling. An investigation by Herr Ernst Burkhardt, who translated Childbirth Without Fear into German, states that the German word "Wehen" (pain) was not found in German writings before the Middle Ages: I enclose an article of mine, published recently by Die Neue Zeitung. Professor Joseph De Lee (in the preface of his Principles and Practice of Obstetrics, 1947 edition) says that since unthinkable times all races understood contractions in labour as a painful experience and accordingly spoke either of pains, dolores, dolori, douleurs or (in German) Wehen. There is no evidence for this assertion. On the contrary, it seems to be sure that these termini developed only with civilization. Our German word "Wehen" cannot be traced beyond the Middle Ages. Our frequently used painsuggesting word, "Wehmutter" ["midwife," literally, "mother of woe"], I found, had a definite artificial origin. Dr. Martin Luther invented it when translating the Bible. It does not exist before the year 1540. Dr. Rudolf Hellman of Hamburg, in his paper "Schmerz oder Erlebnis der Entbindung" (January 1959), gives additional consideration from the German Bible translations: Quote Dick-Read maintains that the underlying Hebrew word "Etzev" should not be translated as "pain" but as "toil, trouble, distress and labour." It is all a question of a predominant psychic understanding. H. Adler and other investigators I have questioned have moreover come to the conclusion that there is here no command of the Lord. Several years ago Dick-Read showed that a confinement, as a natural event, need not be, and should not be, associated with violent pains. He is convinced that it could not have been the will and intention of the Creator. In the Bible we also find references to easy deliveries, just as today they are happening in "natural births." In the Second Book of Moses (Exodus) 1:15, the King of Egypt commanded the He brew midwives Siphra and Pua to kill the sons immediately on the stools (here no doubt the reference is to the birth-stools which were in use in Luther's time). The midwives referred, however, to the easy deliveries of the Hebrew women with the words: "They have been born before the arrival of the midwife." This expression is recognized as sound. Luther, who liked to associate the birth with pain, probably invented the painful-sounding "Mother of Woe," a translation which was only discarded after 1540. Graf Wittgenstein, in his book Man Before Delivery, translated after Gunkel: "Much will I prepare your toils and groans; in labor wilt thou bear children..." Archaic, inaccurate explanations and translations were learned, in good faith, by clerics and teachers, and by children and grown-ups true to the words of books and letters. End Quote Wittgenstein also mentions in this excellent contribution that the Greeks called pain the "barking watchdog of health," and that pain occupies an important place in the extensive system of warning and protection of the organs: "...it seems to us rather senseless that it should be the alarm signal of delivery as at the same time it hinders the mother in her activities." It is forgivable that the translators of nearly four hundred years ago should interpret as they did, but I find it difficult to understand how these obviously controversial translations can continue to be accepted by many modern scholars of the classics, who copy and even intensify the mistakes, although they have many more manuscripts and advantages from which to deduce the significance of the words. But that is not all, for a woman's fears are supported by the Prayer Book, in which there had been no substantial alteration, until recently, since A.D. 1662. There was a special service known as "The Churching of Women" which was supposed to be a thanksgiving after childbirth, which ends: "Oh, Almighty God, we give Thee humble thanks for that Thou hast vouchsafed to deliver this woman, Thy servant, from the great pain and peril of childbirth." Could we still expect women to believe childbirth was to be painless, that it could be a moment of transcendental joy? When I was discussing this service with a girl of twenty-three, she said: "But you would not expect the most wonderful gift of God to come unpleasantly." Is the pride of possession and accomplishment that fills the heart of every young mother when she first sees her baby unworthy to be recalled? Is a lame apology for gratitude adequate thanks to the Almighty for the gift of a child? Yet the Church has asked her to say: "Thank you very much for having allowed ME to come through all that frightfulness unscathed; it is so nice to be alive in spite of having performed the greatest of all natural functions for which You especially built me, although You did make it dangerous and painful for me." What a travesty of the truth!!! It is not for the escape from pain and danger that women thank God. In my experience mothers are not made like that. They give thanks for their child. The Church must once again teach the beauty of childbirth and encourage confidence in normal, natural function, which is in harmony with the basic teachings of the Bible. We must not forget the significance of Christmas or the manger in the stable of a wayside inn. Millions of Catholics honor the Madonna and Child, and Protestants also recognize the spiritual implications of childbirth. In the meantime, let us assume as historical necessity the teachings of the past that emphasized the negative aspects of childbearing, keeping in mind that there can be no more horrible stigma upon civilization than the history of childbirth. THE LAST HUNDRED YEARS In 1847 a brighter picture began to emerge for women in childbirth, with James Young Simpson's discovery of chloroform, creating the beginning of the era of pain relief. Simpson was harshly criticized by the Church for giving women anesthesia in abnormal labor. A dignitary of the Church wrote in condemnation of his work: "Chloroform is the decoy of Satan, apparently offering itself to bless women but in the end it will harden society and rob God of the deep cries which arise in time of trouble." That in my father's time! But anesthesia had come to stay-and to such an extent that it was used in all labors, abnormal or not. Why always anesthesia, when in the natural state it is unnecessary? It has always been easier to utilize the pain-relieving discoveries of science than to investigate the complicated causes of pain. Since 1850 a hundred ways and means have been discovered to rid our women of the pain that has invariably attacked them, even when they most deserved the natural joy of their supreme accomplishment. Nevertheless, anesthesia has been of the greatest service to women, and an important step forward in the development of humane care during childbirth. In 1854 Florence Nightingale became the first person to make it widely known that cleanliness and fresh air were fundamental necessities of nursing. It was largely because of her work during the Crimean War that the standards of both the training and practice of nursing were raised. The gin-drinking, reprobate doctors who were found in great numbers at births both in hospitals and at home began to disappear. With their exodus, childbed fever occurred less frequently in maternity cases, but even so, women were still dying in hospitals at the rate of 12 to 15 percent of all normal labors. This means that one in every eight perfectly healthy women admitted died through childbed fever! About this same time, Ignaz Philip Semmelweis, a nervous young man who was a physician at the Maternity Hospital in Vienna, came to the conclusion that the cause might be due to something arising within the hospital. He therefore made his students wash their hands in a solution of chloride of lime before attending women in childbirth. In one year, 1858, the death rate in his wards tumbled to 3 percent and soon afterward to 1 percent. This was the first great step toward preventing the attendant from taking death to the patient; for Semmelweis had discovered what the ancients had always preached, that to interfere with the law of nature was to invite the hand of death. For his success in saving lives Semmelweis was asked, for some made-up reason, to leave the staff of the hospital. He was told he had no right to require this washing, and was sent away. He returned to his home and died, a broken man. Until 1866 there was no knowledge of asepsis. Hospitals were originally organized by priests whose humane intention was to move people from the hovels in which they lived to be cared for by doctors in hospitals. In the homes a certain number died; those who went to the hospital for safety and good treatment died in much greater numbers. It is difficult to visualize the state of affairs that prevailed when limbs were amputated, abdomens opened, and cesarean sections performed without any anesthesia and with an almost sure supervention of sepsis, giving rise to a high percentage of mortality in the simplest operations. Probably all of us, if we are wise, pause to think sometimes how much harm we do in our efforts to do good, and how much trouble we cause when conscientiously endeavoring to prevent it! In 1866, long after my parents were born, Joseph Lister first practiced aseptic surgery, and he continued to use antiseptics in spite of the opposition and ridicule of his colleagues. Then Pasteur discov ered fermentation and inoculation and Koch discovered bacteria, the two men becoming co-founders of the science of bacteriology. This is all recent change and innovation! The care of women in childbirth benefited by the advance of these other branches of medical science, but in obstetrics itself little happened. At the beginning of the twentieth century the death rate from childbirth was lower, and severe pain was relieved, but still childbirth was an ordeal for a woman to face. Much pain still remained, pain that was unexplained and could only be obliterated by unconsciousness, which carried its own dangers. Was unconsciousness safe for mother and baby? It is incredible how pain was and still is accepted by many doctors and scholars as an inevitable accompaniment of childbirth. I cannot understand anyone who says women in childbirth should not be afraid, for who among us would not have some qualms about entering into an experience that we desired above all else, but that we believed must occasion severe pain, danger, possible mutilation, and even death to either ourself or our child? We know of only a few who have no fears: there are a number of women who faithfully believe in the rightness of their God and the sanctity of their bodies, and in my opinion there are also women who have an inborn belief in the laws of nature, not by formulating them to themselves, but because they are natural in their outlook and experience. The extent and magnificence of the medical discoveries made during the last hundred and fifty years is beyond both praise and gratitude. Gradually truth has been discovered, and the safety of women in childbirth has been made an object of investigation, with results that would have been unbelievable when the mothers and grandmothers of many of us were born. But now that many of the troubles and dangers have been overcome, we must move on-not only to save more lives, but actually to bring happiness to replace the agony of fear. For although the consciousness or sensations of a woman's discomfort can now be dispelled, it is only at a price, for with it goes the awareness of birth and the joyful sensations and emotions that should accompany it. Now we must bring a fuller life, truer to natural law, to the women who are called upon to reproduce our species. It is not only that we want to bring about an easy labor, without risk of injury to the mother or the child; we must go further. We must understand that childbirth is fundamentally a spiritual as well as a physical achievement and throughout this book it must be understood that the birth of a child is the ultimate perfection of human love, the culmination of the love between a man and a woman. In the Christian ethic we teach that God is love. The blessing of sexual necessity and pleasure is but an essential part of the love God has given to man and woman. It may be that in time scientists will be able to give such complete proof of the rightness of materialism that religion will become a weapon in the hands of the psychiatrists and the Church will be replaced by the clinic. But my close association with the birth of a child has led me to believe there is a limitation to science and that the extending boundaries of human knowledge have only reached the foothills of the towering mountains of Omniscience. This philosophy of childbirth is written, therefore, in terms of a belief in God. For my own part, I stand in awe and utter humility before a woman with her newborn babe. There is so much to see and learn in their presence, so much that I am unable to understand or to explain, so much that makes me aware of the limitations of my own ability. It may be that among my colleagues there are those who feel the same. Obstetrics must be approached as a science demanding the most profound respect. One woman who had feared, because of all the accepted causes, the arrival of her child, gained confidence and understanding before her baby was due; she had a natural and happy birth. Toward the end of the labor that produced her second, and much larger, child, she worked with tireless energy. "How many more?" she asked me excitedly, as she rested between the contractions. "It will soon be here," I replied. "Why do you ask so anxiously? I hope you are not too weary." "No, no, not that - but this brings back to me so clearly John's arrival. I can hear his cry and see his fat pink body in my hands. I'm longing for that heavenly feeling again - I simply can't describe it to you. It won't be long now, will it?" Could we wish to blot out the memory of her first experience? In the natural state the emotional experience of childbirth raises a woman to such delight and thankfulness that her mind turns to spiritual and metaphysical associations to express her gratitude and joy. Materialism and atheism are not included in the makeup of motherhood; neither can a robot lead a blind man across the road. ............... AMEN to Grantly Dick-Read and to the CORRECT understanding from the Bible on the wonderful subject of natural childbirth. Keith Hunt |
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