EOnia Sacred Doula Services

EOnia Sacred Doula Services Hi, I am E’Onia Thomas, your birth doula. My passion is to support and guide you in creating your ideal family. I am here to amplify your voice and advocate.

I am here to provide physical, emotional, and informational support during and after birth.

RSVP Mommies!🤎💫
04/06/2026

RSVP Mommies!🤎💫

Happy Doula Week To All The Doulas Around!💫🤎🫶🏾
03/22/2026

Happy Doula Week To All The Doulas Around!💫🤎🫶🏾

Genesee County Baby Shower!💫
03/19/2026

Genesee County Baby Shower!💫

Good Morning.
Together, we’re lifting up growing families. Join us for our 10th annual community baby shower filled with gifts, resources, and caring support for parents and little ones who need it most. We will be holding this event on the 6th and 7th day of May from 10:30 A.M. to 12:30 P.M. We look forward to serving our community!

Questions? Contact Sister Carol Weber. Call: 810-239-8710.

Please scan the QR code or visit the link below to register today!
https://forms.gle/jzMZLA4g2TkzKRyP8

History didn’t carve her name into stone.But babies took their first breath because she showed up.And whole communities ...
02/04/2026

History didn’t carve her name into stone.
But babies took their first breath because she showed up.
And whole communities slept easier because they trusted her.

In the late 1800s, there was a woman known simply as Mrs. F. Lathers.

No grand biography.
No official records praising her work.
No photographs hanging in museums.

And yet—everyone knew her.

When labor pains started in the middle of the night.
When a mother cried out in fear.
When a baby decided not to wait for morning—

They sent for Mrs. Lathers.

She was a midwife in a time when Black women’s bodies were expected to endure pain quietly and die without ceremony. Doctors were scarce. Hospitals were distant—or closed to Black people altogether. Survival depended on community, and community depended on women like her.

Mrs. Lathers walked from house to house, often alone, carrying a small cloth bag worn soft with use. Inside were herbs she trusted, bandages she washed and reused, tools passed down through memory rather than textbooks. She carried knowledge that didn’t come from institutions—but from experience, observation, and care.

She was often paid in what people had.

A basket of eggs.
A sack of flour.
A warm meal.
A whispered “thank you.”

And sometimes—nothing at all.

She never turned anyone away.

Not when she was tired.
Not when she was sick.
Not when her own feet ached from walking miles in the dark.

Because for women like Mrs. Lathers, care was not a transaction.

It was a calling.

She wasn’t only there for births.

She sat with the elderly when families couldn’t.
She tended the sick when fear kept others away.
She stayed in quiet rooms where loneliness was heavier than illness.

People said her voice was gentle. That she hummed low songs while she worked—tunes without names, melodies meant only to steady breath and ease pain. Somehow, when she was there, panic softened. Shoulders relaxed. Hope returned.

That is a kind of power history rarely documents.

In an America that overlooked Black women, dismissed their intelligence, and denied their authority, Mrs. F. Lathers earned something far greater than recognition.

She earned trust.

And trust, in Black history, is sacred.

She lived in a time when Black women were expected to serve without rest and give without thanks. But her community saw her. They remembered her. They spoke her name with respect.

Even now, we may not know every detail of her life.

We don’t know where she was born.
We don’t know how many children she delivered.
We don’t know how many nights she walked alone beneath open skies.

But we know this:

She made life gentler in a hard world.
She brought babies safely into arms that loved them.
She gave comfort where institutions offered none.

Mrs. F. Lathers reminds us that Black history is not only made by those whose names are etched into books.

It is made by women who show up.
Who carry wisdom quietly.
Who hold communities together with steady hands and softer voices.

She may not be famous.

But entire generations lived because she was there.

And that is a legacy no silence can erase.

What is a doula you may ask? -The name DOULA comes from Greek term “a woman who serves”. A doula is a person who provide...
01/12/2026

What is a doula you may ask?
-
The name DOULA comes from Greek term “a woman who serves”. A doula is a person who provides emotional, physical, mental, and spiritual support during and after labor.
They are a non-medical support system that imparts resources and guidance while also (encouraging moms) to advocate & amplify their voice with confidence for themselves during the birth experience.

08/05/2025
The Moment You’ve Been Waiting For! All Mommies Deserve A Selfcare Day 🧖🏽‍♀️So This Is My Gift To My Doula Clients/New C...
08/05/2025

The Moment You’ve Been Waiting For! All Mommies Deserve A Selfcare Day 🧖🏽‍♀️So This Is My Gift To My Doula Clients/New Clients
This Must Be Used Before You Give Birth Betwen 30 - 40 Weeks!🤍
Any New Mommies For A Doula Please Text: 810-553-6114
EOnia Thomas

August 24th right here in flint come take advantage of this FREE event! Come stuff your bag with Free basic necessities,...
08/05/2025

August 24th right here in flint come take advantage of this FREE event! Come stuff your bag with Free basic necessities, baby products, and there will be school supplies! There will be raffles for free big ticket baby products

Free Community Giveaway Saturday, September 6th!🤍🤍🤍🤍
08/05/2025

Free Community Giveaway Saturday, September 6th!🤍🤍🤍🤍

Address

2425 South Linden Road
Flint, MI
48535

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