Postpartum Liberation

29 · The Futures Being Born (and an update from Danielle Lyles Barton)

23 min · I går
episode 29 · The Futures Being Born (and an update from Danielle Lyles Barton) cover

Beskrivelse

As we close the final episode of Season 1 (and the completion of our intentional nine-month journey together), we turn our attention toward the futures already taking shape in maternal and child health. What if postpartum care is no longer viewed as an afterthought, but as one of the most essential public health interventions of our time? In this episode, Danielle Lyles Barton shares her predictions for where maternal and child health is headed and why birthworkers, healthcare professionals, advocates, and families must prepare now. The future is already being born. We began this podcast and this season talking about the futures our ancestors prayed for. Today, we talk about the future being birthed in and through us. As Season 1 comes to a close, Danielle also enters her own season of postpartum with a three-month pause for rest, integration, and renewal before returning for Season 2 at the autumn equinox. Thank you for walking through these three trimesters; May these conversations continue to ripple through your homes, your communities, and your care. Until we meet again: stay rooted, stay rested, and stay free. The Postpartum Liberation Podcast and content posted by Danielle Lyles Barton is presented solely for general informational, educational, and entertainment purposes. The use of information on this podcast or materials linked from this podcast or website is at the user’s own risk. It is not intended as a substitute for the advice of a physician, professional coach, psychotherapist, or other qualified professional, diagnosis, or treatment. Users should not disregard or delay in obtaining medical advice for any medical or mental health condition they may have and should seek the assistance of their healthcare professionals for any such conditions.

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Alle episoder

38 Episoder

episode 29 · The Futures Being Born (and an update from Danielle Lyles Barton) cover

29 · The Futures Being Born (and an update from Danielle Lyles Barton)

As we close the final episode of Season 1 (and the completion of our intentional nine-month journey together), we turn our attention toward the futures already taking shape in maternal and child health. What if postpartum care is no longer viewed as an afterthought, but as one of the most essential public health interventions of our time? In this episode, Danielle Lyles Barton shares her predictions for where maternal and child health is headed and why birthworkers, healthcare professionals, advocates, and families must prepare now. The future is already being born. We began this podcast and this season talking about the futures our ancestors prayed for. Today, we talk about the future being birthed in and through us. As Season 1 comes to a close, Danielle also enters her own season of postpartum with a three-month pause for rest, integration, and renewal before returning for Season 2 at the autumn equinox. Thank you for walking through these three trimesters; May these conversations continue to ripple through your homes, your communities, and your care. Until we meet again: stay rooted, stay rested, and stay free. The Postpartum Liberation Podcast and content posted by Danielle Lyles Barton is presented solely for general informational, educational, and entertainment purposes. The use of information on this podcast or materials linked from this podcast or website is at the user’s own risk. It is not intended as a substitute for the advice of a physician, professional coach, psychotherapist, or other qualified professional, diagnosis, or treatment. Users should not disregard or delay in obtaining medical advice for any medical or mental health condition they may have and should seek the assistance of their healthcare professionals for any such conditions.

I går23 min
episode 28 · Your Grandmother Was Right About Postpartum cover

28 · Your Grandmother Was Right About Postpartum

If you've spent any time on postpartum TikTok, you've probably seen the frozen padsicles. What if one of the most popular postpartum "hacks" is actually working against the very healing you're hoping for? In this episode of Postpartum Liberation, Danielle invites us to rethink one of social media's favorite postpartum trends through the lens of ancestral wisdom, physiology, and true postpartum care. You'll learn why warmth (not cold) has been honored across cultures for generations, when cold can actually be appropriate, and how heat supports tissue repair, circulation, pain relief, and womb healing long after birth. Together we'll explore: * Why padsicles became so popular, and where they fall short * The science behind heat and tissue healing * What traditional postpartum cultures prioritize * When cold can be helpful (and when it isn't) * Which gentle alternatives can be useful * How birthworkers can confidently educate families beyond social media trends This episode is about expanding our understanding of postpartum healing so we can make informed choices rooted in wisdom rather than algorithms. Postpartum care isn't built on hacks. But is built on ceremony. The Postpartum Liberation Podcast and content posted by Danielle Lyles Barton is presented solely for general informational, educational, and entertainment purposes. The use of information on this podcast or materials linked from this podcast or website is at the user’s own risk. It is not intended as a substitute for the advice of a physician, professional coach, psychotherapist, or other qualified professional, diagnosis, or treatment. Users should not disregard or delay in obtaining medical advice for any medical or mental health condition they may have and should seek the assistance of their healthcare professionals for any such conditions.

16. juni 202616 min
episode 27 · Holding the Container: The Art & Anatomy of a Postpartum Appointment cover

27 · Holding the Container: The Art & Anatomy of a Postpartum Appointment

Most postpartum doulas were taught what support looks like, while few were taught how to actually structure it. That gap matters more than most people realize because when your visits feel scattered, rushed, or unclear, it's harder to build trust, provide transformational care, and leave families feeling deeply held. In this episode of Postpartum Liberation, Danielle is pulling back the curtain and walking you through exactly how she structures her postpartum doula appointments: from the moment I arrive to the moment I walk back out the door (and more). You'll learn: * The framework she uses to create appointments that feel both flexible and grounded * How to assess what a family truly needs without turning the visit into a checklist * The balance between practical support, emotional support, and education * How to avoid common mistakes that leave doulas feeling overwhelmed or ineffective * Why structure creates more freedom, confidence, and deeper care, rather than less Whether you're a new doula wondering what to do during visits or an experienced birthworker ready to strengthen your postpartum practice, this episode will help you create appointments that are intentional, impactful, and rooted in the needs of the family in front of you. The Postpartum Liberation Podcast and content posted by Danielle Lyles Barton is presented solely for general informational, educational, and entertainment purposes. The use of information on this podcast or materials linked from this podcast or website is at the user’s own risk. It is not intended as a substitute for the advice of a physician, professional coach, psychotherapist, or other qualified professional, diagnosis, or treatment. Users should not disregard or delay in obtaining medical advice for any medical or mental health condition they may have and should seek the assistance of their healthcare professionals for any such conditions.

9. juni 202631 min
episode 26 · What Most Doulas Get Wrong About Postpartum Care cover

26 · What Most Doulas Get Wrong About Postpartum Care

If you're a postpartum doula, chances are you've made at least one of these mistakes. In this episode, Danielle Lyles Barton pulls back the curtain on some of the most common mistakes postpartum doulas make, and how to avoid them. We're talking about the patterns that can quietly undermine your confidence, effectiveness, and sustainability as a birthworker. This conversation is an invitation to deepen your postpartum skills, strengthen your practice, and better support families during one of the most vulnerable and transformative seasons of life. Whether you're newly trained, considering becoming a postpartum doula, or have been supporting families for years, you'll walk away with practical insights and a fresh perspective on what excellent postpartum care really requires. Inside this episode, we'll explore: * Common postpartum doula mistakes and how to avoid them * Boundaries, burnout, and the hidden costs of overgiving * Why relationship-building matters more than checking tasks off a list * Essential postpartum support skills many doulas overlook * How to provide more effective, family-centered postpartum care * The difference between being helpful and being impactful Postpartum support is about knowing how to see what a family needs, respond with skill, and help create the conditions for healing, rest, and thriving. The Postpartum Liberation Podcast and content posted by Danielle Lyles Barton is presented solely for general informational, educational, and entertainment purposes. The use of information on this podcast or materials linked from this podcast or website is at the user’s own risk. It is not intended as a substitute for the advice of a physician, professional coach, psychotherapist, or other qualified professional, diagnosis, or treatment. Users should not disregard or delay in obtaining medical advice for any medical or mental health condition they may have and should seek the assistance of their healthcare professionals for any such conditions.

2. juni 202628 min
episode Rewind · Babies Know, Birthworkers Forget cover

Rewind · Babies Know, Birthworkers Forget

What do babies know that birth workers too often forget? In this episode, we explore a truth that lives beneath technique, protocols, and performance: babies already know how they want to be born—and birth work is not about control, but listening. This conversation dives deep into the spiritual, emotional, and embodied dimensions of birth, womb wisdom, and transitional care. We talk about intuition as a skill, the womb as a living archive that keeps count of trauma and tenderness, and why not every doula is meant to practice the same way... or even practice in every season. You’ll hear reflections on: * Why birth is fundamentally spirit work, whether we name it or not * How trauma, surrender, and intuition shape labor and birth outcomes * The responsibility birth workers hold in protecting energetic thresholds * Why rest is not a luxury, but a requirement for sustainability * How birth work extends far beyond the delivery room into grief, menopause, rebirth, and life transitions This episode is for doulas, midwives, birth workers, healers, and families who are ready to move beyond surface-level care and into deeper listening—of the body, the womb, and Spirit. If you’re navigating burnout, transition, or the in-between spaces of life and work, this conversation is an invitation to pause, rest, and remember what you already know. Because sometimes the most powerful thing you can do… is listen. The Postpartum Liberation Podcast and content posted by Danielle Lyles Barton is presented solely for general informational, educational, and entertainment purposes. The use of information on this podcast or materials linked from this podcast or website is at the user’s own risk. It is not intended as a substitute for the advice of a physician, professional coach, psychotherapist, or other qualified professional, diagnosis, or treatment. Users should not disregard or delay in obtaining medical advice for any medical or mental health condition they may have and should seek the assistance of their healthcare professionals for any such conditions.

27. mai 202653 min