WHAT'S NEW...
We have a fabulous new online forum for our Mentors and Doulas. If you are in one of our certification
programs and have not yet joined our forum, do it soon!
Our new mailing address is:
Birthing From Within
PO Box 60259
Santa Barbara, CA 93160-0259
Our new fax number: 805-880-1570
Our phone and email are the same: contact@birthingfromwithin.com
805.964.6611
SALE: Through January 31, 2008, Pam England's beautiful, inspiring
life-changing "Inanna Journal" is on sale for only $12 (usual price is $18). This illustrated journal, with
thick drawing paper and journaling prompts for inner exploration, allows us to delve deeper into our own Hero's Journey, as told through the
Great Story of the Descent of Inanna.
More info and order
now!
Mentors from Spain and Croatia connect and learn at our
London workshop last month!
BIRTHING FROM
WITHIN
Workshop
Schedule
See also:
Workshop
Schedule
(which has up-to-date info, prices and registration info)
--------------------------------
Pam
England's
Workshops &
Talks
Pam England will be traveling throughout the Fall
and Winter presenting:
Birth
as a Hero's JourneyTM
Vancouver, BC, Canada
Nov. 10 & 11
Two-day workshop
Los
Angeles (Studio City), CA
Nov. 13
Evening talk
Santa Barbara, CA
Nov. 14
Evening talk
Check our website for
complete description, dates, and locations! Be sure to read her article this month about "Birth as a Hero's Journey."
If you would like to bring
Pam England to your community, contact our office.
----------------------------------
"Introduction to
Birthing From
Within"
&
"Doula From Within" Workshops
Orlando, Florida
November 9-11, 2007
(Britta Bushnell & Virginia
Bobro)
click here for PDF
flier
Los Angeles, CA
January 18-20,
2008
(Britta Bushnell & Virginia
Bobro)
click here for PDF flier and more info
Planned for 2008:
April 10-12: The Farm in Tennessee
Tentatively* Planned for
2008:
New York City
Seattle
Minneapolis
Boulder
*Would you like to help us find a workshop space in one of these
cities?
We hope you will join us at one of our inspiring, life-changing
workshops!
In traveling the path with
heart
a warrior must remain fluid,
and the warrior's fluidity is greatly
aided by engaging the world as a mystery.
Should the warrior become solid in
her perceptions, actions or thinking, she will operate solely from habit and will become stuck at that point.
She will think she has found the
"right" answer...
This is the end of the path with
heart...
Warriors seldom have anything to do
with war...
they are actually seekers of
peace...
~Robert L. Spencer
The Craft of the Warrior (2nd
ed.)
Thank you for
being a part of
Birthing From Within!
We welcome your feedback, stories
and ideas.
Love,
~ Pam England (Creative
Director)
~ Virginia Bobro (Managing
Director)
~ Britta Bushnell (Mentor Progam Director)
~ Deborah Kiffe (Office
Manager)
|
|
Birthing From Within
Newsletter
October 2007
Welcome!
We hope you enjoy this newsletter. Please feel free to forward it to your friends
and to birth professionals. If they like it, they can join our mailing list too. We want to share with you some of Pam England's thoughts about
"Birth
as
a Hero's Journey"...
Birth as a Hero's
Journey:
The Birth Warrior's Journey
into her Deepest Heart
by Pam England
Human beings share a love of myth and storytelling. In particular we are drawn to the "hero's
journey". Why is that? Perhaps it is because the child-hero in each of us feeds on the hero's model: first of being afraid and lost, and then
mustering up raw courage and determination against all odds. Another universal appeal is that every one (and every society) is spiritually
dependent on the hero's return. When a hero answers the call to Love, she is agreeing to sacrifice her comfort, and even her life, in order to bring
back knowledge, freedom, or some form of treasure--not for herself--but for the benefit of others.
Not every life or birth will be a hero's journey. Yet every life--and every new mother
preparing for birth, or trying to find her way back--can be guided by the mythic journey of the birth hero (or heroine, if you prefer).
What
determines whether a mother experiences her birth as a hero's journey?
Hint: It is neither about achieving a desired outcome in birth, nor
surviving a harrowing ordeal in labor.
The hero's journey is a personal, solitary, all-consuming immersion into her deepest heart. It is so
deep that it seems at times that she is drowning in grief, love, or ecstasy, and there is no one to save her. She scarcely knows the journey has
begun; when she is lost and abandoned in the midst of it, she thinks it will never end. The further she descends into the narrowing passages, the
more difficult the tests and trials become. But in crossing each gate, she meets, sees, expresses or accepts a part of herself that she has not known
or allowed before.
A soul journey like this is frequently physically demanding, symptomatic and exhausting, possibly even life-threatening.
And yet, the heroine's journey is really about the descent into the unconscious and the Dark Feminine; it is a complete
immersion into the
Heart.
This journey requires spiritual hunger, perseverance and deep surrender. The more Gates that are passed through,
the greater the
resistance-- resistance to letting go of old Agreements, beliefs, fears, and habits. Those of you who know birth, have seen or experienced this
descent into Laborland. You know very well the struggle a woman experiences, not just with pain or fear, but also within her core, within her raw
inner self.
She holds on desperately to the very thing she intended to let go of. It is a great struggle; old Agreements fight like hooked
fish that do not want to be caught or taken out of the water. This struggle, doubt, and near surrender is often equated with the "transition phase"
of labor.
Finally, as we find in all great myths, the hero or heroine dies. She is hung, dismembered, swallowed, or
drowned.
Now inquire:
Who dies here? What
dies?
The hero, on her knees, collapsed, symbolically hangs between two worlds; she cannot
escape. She is helpless, completely surrendered, yet is more alive than she has ever been, although it doesn't seem so from the outside. She is in
the phase of incubation or transfiguration. New agreements are gestating and growing stronger. Her nervous system is recovering from the shock of
seeing her new self, and perhaps the death of her Maiden self, now that she sees herself as a Mother. And there are many other countless powerful
realizations during the childbearing year. The hero is resting, in withdrawal and introspection, while her whole being re-wires itself to adapt to
her new power and her new knowing.
In due time, there is a psychic labor and birth. It may be precipitous and sudden, or it may take a great
effort to express the new life, the new agreements and newly found power. This hero is spent, on her knees, exhausted and in a state of hopelessness
and confusion. Her complete surrender is rewarded with the arrival of Allies: angels, ancestors or spirit animals who give her final guidance,
protection and spiritual food to sustain and grow the newly-born Love Warrior.
The journey is almost over. Too often we are relieved that the
"baby" is born and the moaning is over. But to complete the heroine's journey, the hero must answer the last Call. She must integrate the clarity and
power she went into the journey to find. That is not enough--she must also bring it back to the world in a form so that it can be a gift to others.
Perhaps it manifests as words, images, or some other way. What she has gained she must give to others.
Remember, the hero made the journey, not for herself, but for others. She must
integrate her
learning, blending the non-verbal, soulful images and knowing with the language of the world. When the world, her community, is ready to greet her as
a returning Birth-Love Warrior, then the circle is made whole. The journey is complete.
Copyright 2007 by Pam England and
Birthing From Within.
May not be reproduced in any form
without written permission.
|