Joy of Birth

Joy of Birth I provide caring education, information, healing and support through out the childbearing year.

01/04/2026

For the first time in human history, scientists witnessed the precise instant human development initiates. What they observed wasn't biological randomness, it was orchestrated precision.

At fertilization's exact moment, a coordinated biochemical wave erupts across the egg's surface. This isn't gradual activation. It's an instantaneous "on switch", a cascading molecular signal that transforms a dormant cell into the blueprint for an entire human being.

Time zero. Life's starting gun.

What stunned MIT researchers wasn't just that this happens, but how it happens. The activation wave moves in rhythmic, structured patterns following mathematical proportions found throughout nature, the same ratios governing spiral galaxies, nautilus shells, sunflower seed arrangements, and hurricane formations.

The Golden Ratio. Fibonacci sequences. Universal mathematical constants appearing at life's very first moment.

This suggests something profound: organization precedes consciousness. Order exists before brain, before nervous system, before any structure capable of creating order. The instructions for building complexity are embedded at the origin point itself.

We've always known fertilization starts development. But seeing it reveals life doesn't "stumble" into existence through chemical accidents gradually organizing. It ignites with purpose, structured signals executing a predetermined biological program with geometric precision.

This challenges purely mechanistic views of life's origins. Random molecular collisions don't produce mathematical elegance. Yet here it is, visible under microscopes, following patterns woven into the universe's fabric.

Life's first instant looks less like chance and more like code executing.

Time zero isn't chaos becoming order. It's order beginning.

Mom brain is so much more then science once believed.
01/04/2026

Mom brain is so much more then science once believed.

She Proved Women’s Brains Change During Motherhood, Permanently.
They told her motherhood was instinct.
Hormones.
Emotion.

Something soft. Temporary. Something you went back from once the baby slept through the night.

Then she put mothers in an MRI machine—and proved something far more radical.

Motherhood doesn’t just change your life.
It rewires your brain.

Permanently.

Her name is Pilyoung Kim, and her work changed how science understands motherhood—not as a phase, but as a neurological transformation on par with adolescence.

For most of modern medical history, the maternal brain was treated as an afterthought. Pregnancy research focused on the fetus. Postpartum research focused on pathology—depression, anxiety, breakdown. Motherhood itself was framed as something women handled, not something their brains actively adapted to.

Pilyoung Kim suspected that assumption was wrong.

She noticed a contradiction that wouldn’t let go.

Mothers routinely perform feats of attention, endurance, emotional regulation, threat detection, and multitasking that would overwhelm most people. They read micro-expressions. They wake instantly to subtle sounds. They anticipate needs before they’re expressed.

Yet culturally, motherhood was described as cognitive decline. “Mom brain.” Fog. Forgetfulness. Loss.

Kim asked a different question.

What if the maternal brain isn’t deteriorating—
what if it’s specializing?

Using high-resolution neuroimaging, she began studying women before pregnancy, during pregnancy, and after childbirth. What she found stunned even seasoned neuroscientists.

The brain didn’t just change.

It reorganized.

Regions associated with emotional processing, empathy, motivation, threat detection, and executive function showed measurable structural and functional shifts. Gray matter volume changed. Neural networks strengthened. Sensitivity to social cues increased.

This wasn’t damage.

It was adaptation.

Just as adolescent brains rewire for independence, maternal brains rewire for caregiving. The changes weren’t random. They were targeted. Purposeful. Evolutionary.

Most striking of all?

These changes persisted.

Years later, mothers’ brains still showed patterns distinct from women who had never given birth. The maternal brain did not “snap back.” There was no reset button.

Motherhood left a lasting neurological signature.

This explained something millions of women had felt but couldn’t articulate.

Why they sensed danger before it appeared.
Why they could hold an entire household’s emotional state in mind.
Why they felt both more vulnerable and more powerful than ever before.

It also explained why early motherhood feels so overwhelming.

A brain undergoing structural reorganization is not broken—it’s busy.

Imagine learning a new language while running a marathon while never sleeping fully while being responsible for another human’s survival.

That’s not weakness.

That’s neuroplasticity under pressure.

Kim’s research reframed postpartum struggle in a way many women had never been offered.

You are not failing to cope.
Your brain is actively remodeling itself for care.

The awe in this discovery is quiet but profound.

Motherhood is one of the few experiences that alters the adult brain at a structural level. Not temporarily. Not symbolically.

Physically.

And yet society treats it as invisible labor. Expected. Unremarkable. Something women should endure gracefully without recognition.

Science now tells a different story.

The maternal brain is more attuned, not less.
More responsive, not diminished.
More complex, not compromised.

That doesn’t mean motherhood is easy.
It means it is serious.

It deserves respect—not platitudes.

Dr. Pilyoung Kim didn’t romanticize motherhood. She measured it. And what she found replaced shame with pride.

The fog? A side effect of reorganization.
The intensity? A recalibrated threat system.
The emotional depth? Expanded neural connectivity.

Nothing about this is accidental.

Motherhood leaves a mark because it matters.

And once you see it that way, something shifts.

Exhaustion becomes evidence of work being done.
Sensitivity becomes skill.
Change becomes achievement.

The maternal brain is not a loss of self.

It is an expansion.

One that science finally learned to recognize.

If you value this work and would like to support the time, research, and care it takes to preserve and share women’s history, you can Buy Me a Coffee. Every contribution helps keep these stories alive and accessible, told with respect and truth.
Thank you for being here.
Thank you for remembering.
And thank you for honoring the women who came before us—and the legacy they continue to build.

https://buymeacoffee.com/ancientpathfb

09/19/2023

Paced bottle feeding mimics a baby's experience at the breast. Here are the benefits to this way of feeding your baby and the way to do it.

I don’t know how accurate this is but boy is it funny!
04/13/2023

I don’t know how accurate this is but boy is it funny!

Posted by u/demonslayer14codm - 26,406 votes and 962 comments

03/30/2023

The Abdominal Lift and Tuck is one of the most effective early labor techniques for engaging the baby in the pelvis. This technique is to help the baby into the pelvis and through the pelvic brim (the baby may be -3 or -2 station).

The Abdominal Lift was introduced by Janie McCoy King, a Texas Engineer who wrote Back Labor No More. I learned it from Penny Simkin at her Birth Doula Training. I added the words “and tuck” to remind the user to tuck their pelvis. By this, I mean do a standing Posterior Pelvic Tilt (flatten the lower back).

Note: The Abdominal Lift and Tuck must be done during a contraction. You will want to move into position as soon as—but not before—the contraction starts. If you start too late it will be uncomfortable, so just wait to start with the following contraction.

As a contraction begins, link your fingers and lift your belly about two inches.
Bring your belly in (towards your spine) by one or two inches, depending on your size. Try to be as comfortable as possible.
At the same time, flatten your lower back. Your knees should be bent. Bending the knees, even just a little, is necessary to do a Posterior Pelvic Tilt.
Hold your belly up through the entire contraction. It’s okay to sway or rock a little on your legs during the contraction, but hold your belly in one place to avoid being uncomfortable.
When the contraction ends, lean forward slightly and slowly let go of your abdomen. Move your legs to encourage circulation.
Repeat the Abdominal Lift for ten contractions in a row, resting in between and circling your wrists and ankles for circulation.

Want to learn more? Head to the link: https://www.spinningbabies.com/pregnancy-birth/techniques/abdominal-lift-tuck/

I met this fine woman once. She’s such an inspiration. Happy Birthday Ina May Gaskin
03/08/2023

I met this fine woman once. She’s such an inspiration. Happy Birthday Ina May Gaskin

Happiest of Birthdays to The One and Only!🌷You are so loved. -Sarah

Love this. And so true. 💕
02/22/2023

Love this. And so true. 💕

Nurtured Nurslings Lactation Consulting LLC - Kelly Slattery IBCLC, RLC

Several of you have mentioned that this doesn’t apply to you because baby likes to keep a hand on the breast either way. Note: look at what baby is doing with his/her hand. Making a fist = hungry baby. Open, relaxed hand = full.

Wanna know why it’s so important to delay cord clamping? 👇🏼
02/22/2023

Wanna know why it’s so important to delay cord clamping? 👇🏼

So true!
02/05/2023

So true!

Long labors can result when there is a misunderstanding of human physiology. Our birthing body may be designed for birth, but modern life is not.

–Gail Tully

02/05/2023

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