Barefootmidwife

Barefootmidwife IG Lisa Marie supports families from pre-conception counseling, pregnancy, to postpartum and beyond.

Relationship building is the foundation to peaceful, joyful birthing experiences! Each birthing woman embarks on a Sacred Journey, creating a unique story all their own. Sacred Journey Midwifery strives to provide the care and creativity to support each of these journeys, functioning from a paradigm of a trauma-informed practice. Together, we build a trusting relationship as we gain wisdom that pregnancy and birthing have to offer.

Learning about the intricacies of waterbirth is not just for OB’s, nurses, and  other hospital professionals, but also f...
06/06/2026

Learning about the intricacies of waterbirth is not just for OB’s, nurses, and other hospital professionals, but also for families and midwives. Let’s keep learning !!

To “do” waterbirth is not the same thing as understanding waterbirth.The science behind physiologic waterbirth changes h...
05/19/2026

To “do” waterbirth is not the same thing as understanding waterbirth.

The science behind physiologic waterbirth changes how a provider moves, touches, watches, waits, and responds during the emergence of the baby.

If a baby is being rubbed immediately to stimulate breathing the moment they leave the water… if the baby is hastily pulled upward… if urgency and anxiety dominate the provider’s hands… then fear is still influencing the birth.

A provider who truly understands waterbirth physiology approaches the emergence with calm.

That provider understands neonatal transition. They respect the sequence of emergence. They trust the protective reflexes present in the healthy newborn while still remaining appropriately observant and clinically aware.

Waterbirth is not simply “delivering in a tub.” It is an entirely different framework of understanding birth physiology.

This is why education matters so deeply.

My mentor and friend, Barbara Harper, has spent decades teaching not merely how to attend a waterbirth, but how to truly understand it.

05/10/2026
05/08/2026

This makes my stomach hurt.

Happy International Day of the Midwife to all who have midwifed me in various ways over the years. This is a perfect opp...
05/06/2026

Happy International Day of the Midwife to all who have midwifed me in various ways over the years. This is a perfect opportunity to introduce my student, Breana , who spotted me during a birth and connected on multiple levels, sharing a mutual intention. She, along with La Kiesha round out our practice beautifully. You will be seeing more of her and Kiesha here!

As a  Aware Practitioner, I am keenly aware of the need for body work in pregnancy and postpartum. It is safe and suppor...
05/02/2026

As a Aware Practitioner, I am keenly aware of the need for body work in pregnancy and postpartum. It is safe and supportive when done by someone who is specifically trained to support the pregnant and freshly delivered state.

These are unique phases where the body needs a different kind of care—slower, more intentional, and responsive to the nervous system.

I’ve recently started referring some of my clients to Cameron, and it’s been really supportive to have someone I trust to send people to.

The work is gentle, attuned, and focused on helping the body settle—not just working on tension, but supporting regulation and recovery as a whole.

If you’re currently pregnant, or postpartum and feeling like your body could use more support, this is something worth exploring. If you’re a person supporting someone who is pregnant you may need some self care too! Cameron, like us, is a fully mobile practice.

You can connect with him here → .sd

Sometimes it is so hard being a midwife: the constant on-call, weird sleeping hours, to name two big ones. But at the fi...
02/05/2026

Sometimes it is so hard being a midwife: the constant on-call, weird sleeping hours, to name two big ones. But at the final visit when you see these happy babies it’s so worth it. When I witness a woman have a birth on her terms, her way, it reminds me of the value of sacrifice. This mama had her HBA1C and rocked it!

That Super Moon 🌕 lulled 9 babies out in 9 days, many early! These lovely twin sisters arrived quickly, one in the showe...
12/06/2025

That Super Moon 🌕 lulled 9 babies out in 9 days, many early! These lovely twin sisters arrived quickly, one in the shower and one in the birthing tub. More details to follow! Many thanks to my lovely friends and for their help and support!

12/01/2025

Martin Couney was never a doctor. He never held a license. He never set foot in a medical school. And yet, he saved over 7,000 lives.

In the early 20th century, premature infants were widely considered "weak" or "errors of nature"—too frail to deserve a future.

At a time when eugenicists argued, "let them die," Couney offered a defiant response: “Let’s try to save them.”

He saw hope where the medical establishment saw only a lost cause. Lacking the support of major hospitals and official medicine, Couney did the unthinkable to fund his mission: he turned it into a spectacle.

The protagonist of this story, the "incubator doctor," was Martin Couney. Little is definitively known about him, though he was likely born in Germany around 1870.

It remains unclear where he studied—he claimed to have trained with an apprentice of the French obstetrician Stéphan Tarnier, who invented the first incubator—and there is no verified proof he was a medical doctor, despite what he declared and what was printed in his New York Times obituary.

Couney's revolutionary idea took shape after being inspired by the work of Tarnier, who had modeled the first infant incubator on a device used to hatch chicken eggs—a poultry brooder.

Couney took this concept and showcased it to the public at the Berlin World's Exposition in 1896.

He exhibited a new incubator model and, crucially, included premature babies inside them. This decision added a dramatic, realistic touch to the scientific demonstration, creating an exhibit called "Kinderbrutanstalt" ("Children's Hatchery").

This "Children's Hatchery" immediately became a massive popular attraction. Though conceived as a scientific demonstration, it quickly morphed into a highly profitable spectacle.

Couney was soon invited to present his exhibit, complete with nurses, midwives, and doctors, at fairs and amusement parks worldwide. Immediately after Berlin, he went to London, where his approach was surprisingly praised in an article by the prestigious medical journal, The Lancet.

Couney's spectacle eventually found a permanent home at the Coney Island Sideshow in New York. It was a bizarre, almost unbelievable sight: a medical exhibit presented as a sideshow.

He set up a pavilion at the heart of the world’s most famous amusement park—Coney Island. Right next to the Ferris wheels and the cotton candy vendors, he showcased premature babies housed inside revolutionary incubators.

Why this unorthodox approach? It was the only way to pay for the care.

While esteemed hospitals rejected the infants and official medicine ignored his methods, Couney provided meticulous care, warmth, and dedication.

He financed this lifesaving work solely through the admission tickets purchased by curious visitors. The exhibit was operational from 1903 to 1943.

Couney used state-of-the-art incubators imported from France, where neonatal care was far more advanced than in the US.

These glass and steel machines used a boiler to heat water that circulated through tubes beneath the baby's bedding, while filtered air was constantly brought in from outside.

Couney was masterful at manipulating public emotion. The large sign outside read, "All the World Loves Babies," and the tiny infants, often dressed in doll clothes that seemed overly large to emphasize their smallness, stirred sympathy.

While many exhibits of the era exploited people for profit, Couney’s sideshow fundamentally allowed the exposed babies to survive, as most would have died without this specialized care.

Babies generally came from poor families. The 25-cent entrance fee funded everything—costing about $15 per baby per day (about $405 today), a cost prohibitive for most families. For many parents, Couney's spectacle was the only chance to save their premature child.

His career was controversial; he was called an impostor and a charlatan, and the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children accused him of exploitation. Yet, Couney also championed progressive ideas like the critical importance of breast milk.

Over time, Couney's success began to draw the attention of leading US pediatricians. Some even personally brought premature babies to be placed in his incubators.

Julius Hess, considered the father of American neonatology, became a professional collaborator and friend. Developmental psychologist Arnold Gesell visited in 1939 to film the infants.

Couney died on March 2, 1950, just a few years after the first hospital-based premature baby units began appearing in US hospitals—nearly four decades after his Coney Island debut paved the way.

Martin Couney never had a title. But he had vision. He had courage. And above all, he had compassion for those the world had decided to forget.

>We Are Human Angels<
Authors
Awakening the Human Spirit
We are the authors of 'We Are Human Angels,' the book that has spread a new vision of the human experience and has been spontaneously translated into 14 languages by readers.
We hope our writing sparks something in you!




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