a boy’s doula

In the spring and summer leading up to Caemon’s diagnosis, I was training to become a birth doula.* It was a brand new path for me, far from my former life in academia, yet so close to my heart, and in the weeks leading up to that awful day in August, I had put together my doula business website, printed and distributed business cards, and had begun volunteering with a doula service for our local community clinic. I was so very ready to help women through the challenges of labor and to pursue this new path for myself.

Needless to say, when Caemon’s diagnosis came, I shelved all of that. Instead of spending time in hospital labor and delivery rooms, I would be spending my days in the pediatric oncology unit. My heart sunk when, during Caemon’s first night of chemotherapy, I received my first call from a mom in labor, and it sunk again and again when I would see laboring women making their way up to the birthing center here at Caemon’s hospital.

On several different occasions when people here learned I was a doula, they commented that while I might have to put the career on hold, I would certainly be putting some of my skills to use here. I wasn’t sure I understood. Yes, there is a certain amount of patience one learns, and a certain ability to ask questions, even a bit of knowledge of anatomy and medical procedures, but more often than not, I didn’t see it. I suppose I hadn’t gotten far enough into this journey yet because now–today–I understand.

This morning when I arrived at the hospital after my turn to stay at the family guest house, I walked in to find Caemon napping. Jodi told me he had been in a fair amount of pain earlier, so he had been given a bolus of morphine and had gone to sleep. Moments later, Caemon began to stir, and as he did, he began clutching his belly, his mouth, his throat, and screaming. He writhed around until I picked him up, but he was in horrible pain. Our nurse was ready to get him more pain medication, and she grabbed the doctors who were on their way to do rounds with us anyway. As they were here discussing our options, Caemon was out of his mind in pain. His eyes were darting around the room, and he cried and cried, standing up, lying across me, lying on the bed–doing anything he could to find a way to feel better. He was terrified. The doctor started suggesting we give him a drug to calm him down, that his pain may be worsened by the fear and anxiety he was experiencing. Suddenly a switch flipped in my brain from mommy to doula, as I worked to capture Caemon’s attention, ground him by getting him to focus on me and my hands, getting him to breathe easier. We did this as he was receiving another bolus of medication. He began to relax a little into the bed as he stared into my eyes, and soon, very soon, he was more comfortable. What Caemon needed in that moment was not another drug coursing through his body. He needed control and to know he could make it through that moment, as painful as it was.

As Caemon slept much of the day away, I sat here realizing that I  was using my doula training, and I was so sad that to have to put it to use here. But what it really boils down to is that I have become my son’s doula, which feels like such an odd idea, yet somehow it fits. While we have put his life in the hands of medicine, we don’t have to forget what the mind–even the three-year-old mind–is capable of doing to handle scary moments of pain, so long as one has a little help. It turns out that I am indeed going to need to pull from my training, that it is relevant here.

I have assigned so many different metaphors to my son’s experience at this point, and maybe that is because this takes on innumerable forms and feelings that are so foreign to us that we tend to grasp at anything that will make them more familiar. We came into this transplant thinking of it as a transformation, as a metamorphosis, and, yes, as a rebirth. Of course this is appropriate. He is going through a painful, challenging journey, and at the end of that journey is life.

For our small altar space in Caemon’s room, I brought a carving of Ixchel, the Mayan goddess of midwifery and medicine. Looking at her tonight, I am no longer saddened that I had to take a path away from my doula work because I know that the heart that brought me to that work is right where it needs to be, right here with my boy. Today, when what I really wanted to do was sob and sob because my baby was in pain, I could finally do something to help. Yes, I am indeed my son’s doula, and I am proud, proud, proud to be of service.

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*The word “doula” comes from ancient Greek and means “a woman who serves.” Now it is used to refer to a trained professional who provides support to a woman in labor. (Visit DONA International for more information.)

9 thoughts on “a boy’s doula

  1. I am sobbing reading this remembering your energy when you came to my side when I was in labor. You are a gentle person and I am so glad your boy has you and Jodi as parents. He chose well.

  2. You are the best doula a boy could have! Your gifts are being used in the best way imaginable. Love and blessings to you all!

  3. Beautiful post. How heart wrenching to see your baby in so much pain. And how incredible that you can use your gifts to help him through it.

  4. I always stand amazed at how often we are given a strength, tool, or skill before we know how it will be used. Then, in the using, we learn so much more that will be used again, at a later time. Just sharing your experience here will give a gift to someone you may not ever meet or hear of in your lifetime. I am grateful you were able to help Caemon gain some control over this awful pain. I pray all the time that this will pass quickly and your little man will soon be his funny loving self again. Thank you for your post Timaree.

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