Surrendered Birth Stories: Your Christian Birth Story Podcast
Let’s explore the amazing world of birth together! Listen for inspiring birth stories and intriguing teachings to expand your knowledge surrounding pregnancy, childbirth, breastfeeding, and postpartum life. Each soul-stirring episode is full of heart, passion, and practicality. Join me in this diverse mix of teachings and interviews with real moms and professional birth workers as we seek to more fully understand how God has designed early motherhood and the beginning of life!
Surrendered Birth Stories: Your Christian Birth Story Podcast
043: Father's Day Special: Dad Takeover! (with Christopher Heeter and Paul Jordan)
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This week, Chris takes over the podcast along with guest Paul Jordan in a conversation on fatherhood, the husband's role in birth support, and the importance of fathers in society. So grab your hubby, and listen in!
As mentioned in this episode:
National Fatherhood Initiative
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Hi, and welcome to another episode of Surrendered Birth Stories. Birth Stories, Birth Education, and the pursuit of surrendering it all to God. Let's get started. Well, hello everyone, and I hope you are off to a great start with your week. Happy Monday, happy whatever day. I feel like I always say happy Monday, and then I realize, oh duh, just because it comes out on a Monday doesn't mean you're listening on a Monday. Anyways, how about this? Happy Father's Day. It was Father's Day this week, and I know we had a great time celebrating my husband, who is the best father in the world, and I know I'm a little biased, but still he is incredible. We celebrate the day before Father's Day, typically because on Father's Day he's at church um over half the day. So we started out opening um some gifts and some like little things that we had gotten him or thought of him for. And then I I always tell him kind of our gift to each other in this season of young, young children, is you can do whatever you want, basically for half a day or a day or something. Um me for Mother's Day and him for Father's Day. And so he what I found really funny is what he wanted to do, he wanted to work on a house project that he wanted to work on, not that I needed him to work on, which you know, ladies out there, there's a big difference between those two things. So it was fun for him to get to work on a house project that he actually wanted to work on, and he quite enjoyed himself. And then on the actual Father's Day, we ended up after church in the late afternoon. We decided to risk it and say, okay, no naps for the little ones, or at least, you know, napping on the go. And we met his very best friend um out in Hillsborough, which is like halfway between our two houses. They live in Holly Springs and we live in Greensboro. So we met in Hillsboro and did like a fun, I don't want to say epic hike, but but we did a fun, we called it a surprise adventure for the kids. We didn't tell them it was happening until we got there and they got to play with. We call them their cousins because they are very much like cousins because these are our very best friends. So we all call each other aunt and uncle and cousins. And we went and took all nine of our children combined to like this little path and then creek and then up this trail and to this cliff and look out and on these rocks, and just had an adventure with them, and it was really, really fun. And I know it was fun for my husband who got to see his best friend, even if it was only for a few hours. I know everyone seemed to have a great time, and we definitely wore all the kids all of the kids out for sure. If you haven't left a review yet for this show, I don't know how many times I'm gonna end up saying this. It does sound redundant to those who listen every week, but I know that there are several of you who do listen every week, but if you haven't, please go ahead and leave a review of this show. I promise that is like the most helpful thing you can do for this show is to just leave a review for it, a great review for it. Um, and that will help, you know, with all those algorithms and stuff, get it in front of more people. And so that is the goal. You can share it too, share it on your social medias or share it just with people that you know, people that you know who are pregnant, um, expecting, or maybe even um postpartum or thinking about getting pregnant. Any of those stages, this was just a great way for them to prepare their hearts and minds and and their spirits. Now, this week's episode is unlike any other episode we've done so far, because it's the very first episode that I am not actually in. I mean, other than this intro. My husband, Chris Heeter, plays host this week, and he is gonna be chatting with a husband of a fellow guest we've had in the past, Kristian Jordan. Um, she's been on the podcast a couple of times. She is also a local birth worker in the area with holistic heritage birth services. And her husband, Paul, is going to be chatting with my husband Chris today on all things fatherhood surrounding, you know, pregnancy birth, childbirth, postpartum, and then just being fathers and what that means in the light of the Lord and just in our society. They're gonna talk about all sorts of stuff. So I I have no idea though. I haven't gotten to hear it. So I'm I'm gonna listen right along with you, and I can't wait. So all the dads out there and all the moms, I'm sure you'll listen too. But this is an episode for the dads. Happy Father's Day.
ChrisWelcome to another episode of Surrendered Birth Stories. My name is Chris. You might notice I am not Kayla. I am the esteemed husband of Kayla, and uh, she has commissioned me to host this episode of Surrendered Birth Stories in honor of Father's Day. So happy Father's Day to all those fathers out there listening. Uh, today we are joined by uh one of my friends, Paul Jordan, who uh is not a stranger to the podcast uh vicariously through his wife. But uh Paul, if you would go ahead and just introduce yourself, uh, tell us some about your family, what you do, and uh what makes life tick for y'all.
PaulOh yeah. Well, so my wife is uh sort of an aficionado in the uh birth community, and she's well known and well loved. And um I and I get the the cool job of being, she she refers to me as the doodla. Uh so I get uh I get the opportunity to be that guy who uh listens in on the conversations, and I I uh it's it it's become uh it's become a real fun uh job to just be a part of it through extension, uh through her. Um but yeah, so we we've got three kids, and uh my wife's been working as a doula for a few years now, and uh I don't I don't even know how many years. I guess let's see, it's gotta be six, uh five or six now. Um and uh I'm telling you, it's uh it's a wonderful thing. And uh it's cool that we get to talk about motherhood and kids so much, and and uh we love our kids a lot, and uh it's our life sort of revolves around that. Um, so it's a beautiful thing, it really is.
ChrisYeah, and I think that that's really uh unique that you bring that up because we talk about motherhood and Kayla talks a lot about motherhood on this podcast. But today we're gonna take an opportunity to kind of talk about fatherhood and what things in the birth world, even in the birth space, looks like for a father. And so we found that to be really appropriate considering that it's uh Father's Day. And what I'm really interested to know, Paul, is some of your experiences having been through you know three births, right? Of your three kids. Sure. And uh one of which was most recent, is that right? Yeah.
PaulOh yeah, oh yeah. Uh our our little LMA, she was born, uh, she's you'll see, she's going on four months, I think.
ChrisYeah, oh man. And I bet Rafa and Lorelai are just eating her up.
PaulUh oh yeah, they adore her, and and we're very grateful. You know, it it it could be a totally different dynamic, and we're so grateful they really they really love her a lot.
ChrisYeah, yeah. So um, so you have three kids. I I know that one of them was a home birth. The most recent was a home birth, right? Um, so what were what what setting were all of the births in?
PaulUh okay, so uh the first birth was Rafe. Um uh we had planned a home birth, and then uh just there were some things that came up that required us to move into a hospital setting. Kristian, uh she started developing pre-eclampsia, and uh there's several other concerns that were coming up. And so anyway, we had we had to move into a hospital setting for Rafe's birth. Um but with um Lorelai's birth, uh our second uh our uh our daughter, she's three now. Um we really wanted to try again to make the home birth happen, and it went off without a hitch. It was beautiful. She was born in the water, um, so we call her our mermaid baby, and uh, and then and then for the third baby, uh Kristian said, Well, we're doing a home birth again. And so um, both of our daughters were born uh in our bedroom, and and that's always going to be special to us.
ChrisYeah, so uh you have the opportunity, or rather, the perspective of what it looks like to have a hospital birth and a home birth. And so um it's really interesting because I have the same perspective because our first was born at a hospital, and uh our fourth and our fifth were born at home. I'd love to know a little bit about what your experience was comparing and contrasting the two, just from a dad's perspective or from a husband's perspective, because our highest priority in labor and delivery is the health and well-being and support of our spouse. Absolutely. And so I'm so curious to know what I mean, what was it like for you comparing and contrasting the two? And how did it affect your role as a support person uh for your for Kristian and either one, and or did it?
PaulYeah, absolutely. So uh for the uh as far as the birth went in the hospital, there was never a concern of a lack of safety as far as that was concerned. Uh, you know, we had a great staff, we were really, really grateful. The midwife that we had was very, very um involved and engaged, and she uh, you know, she presented me with the opportunity, like you know, she liked to catch the baby, and and I had the opportunity to catch my son, and uh, and that was so special for me to uh to participate in that way. But uh also, especially when it's your your first time being a father of uh of a baby who's being born, you're nervous as can be. You're up in stitches, just like, am I gonna do it right? Am I gonna handle this well? And and you know, you're worried about stuff like that. For me, the thought the whole time was, oh man, I don't want to drop the baby.
ChrisYeah.
PaulBut you you know, it it's so funny because now that I'm um I I've done this three times, I look back and I'm like, that was just it was so silly. You know, uh everything was fine. It was it was a healthy environment. That said, the the days following that, we had to be in the NICU and in the hospital for a while. We were we were there for uh uh I think a total of five days, I want to say, and um we were just so ready to be home, and um, and we were very grateful for the staff that we had, but you you get stir crazy a little bit um after several days being uh in those walls uh of the hospital. In contrast to that, the home birth environment, you you get this sense that there's a peace there, and there's um you know, you're surrounded by people who love you, and then not just the mom, but the dad too. You know, we're surrounded by people who care about us and who very much want the baby to be born too, and who are contributing in all the ways that they contribute. And it was so uh it was so peaceful and uh and moving. Um and so for uh for the second baby, uh, you know, and the first one born at home, I actually didn't catch uh Lorelei because uh we decided to have me in the tub with Kristian for the birth. Um but then for the third baby, you know, our second born at home, uh LMA, uh, I wanted to catch her again, and so I had the opportunity to do that. And uh that was just uh so special. And the fact that it was at home, uh, you know, Kristian was at peace, I was at peace, and there's something beautiful about it, and so and it feels so natural too. I mean, we're you're in a place where you rest and you breathe and you talk and you live life, and there you are doing something that is beautifully natural and supernatural. You're you're participating in the breath of life, you know, and that's you know, it's nothing like it in the whole world.
ChrisYeah, and hearing you kind of compare and contrast your experiences, you know, I'm thinking back on mine and looking back, because it was 10 years ago when Brinkley was born in the hospital. And man, like being in the hospital was exactly what both of us needed in that season of life because at that point, Kayla, I mean, birth birth work was nowhere on Kayla's radar. And for me, I just wanted everyone to be my my main concern was like safety. And so my thought was like, well, hospital's a great place to be safe in a you know, in terms of you know, medically speaking, I mean, it's probably one of the best places to be. Um, but then Kayla having gone through her birthwork renaissance and being able to see and understand more about how what birth is, what it looks like, and kind of debunking some of those, I mean, those fears that I had about what if something went wrong, you know, that kind of stuff. You know, and I I kind of got to the place where I was just when when we had true, which was our first home birth, he was our he's our fourth. And I got to the place where I was like, oh my goodness gracious. Like it feels right in this season of life to be in the place exactly like you said, Paul, where we rest, where we commune, where we do life, and we're integrating this moment into our life instead of outsourcing it, you know?
PaulAnd so that was Oh, that's that's well said, yeah, absolutely.
ChrisThat was a huge realization for me. And Kayla will tell you that that was her that was her favorite birth experience because it was, I think it was just because it was her first home birth, because we didn't have to drive anywhere, we didn't have to, you know, worry about traffic, any of that kind of stuff. Yeah, you don't have to worry about being at a certain place at a certain time or just call the midwife, tell her you're in labor, and you know, she'll show up at your house, you know. So anyway, I I feel so blessed by our home birth experience, but also in the same, I feel blessed by our hospital experience too, because like I said, it was what I needed uh during that time. So I talking about that a little bit, I know that both of our wives, you know, in pregnancy, Kristian and Kayla, I know historically have both gotten hyperemesis and got really bad morning sickness. Yeah, what does it look like for a husband to support his wife in pregnancy, especially when it doesn't look pretty like it does for our wives? What does it look like for you to support Kristian when she's like out of commission and can hardly do a single thing? And what's the reality of that for you and your family?
PaulYeah. The first reality is I learned that I don't do things as well as she does when it comes to taking care of the home. So so what I would say is there's uh there's three things uh you I guess that I consider um the most when I'm supporting my wife. Uh not just not just when she had HG, but also when she had uh which is that's the that's the um HG is of course the the shortened slang term for morning sickness constantly um and awful, you know, and and you hate that for them. Um not just supporting them in those ways though, but also supporting uh you know our wife through the birth and through the postpartum period. Um three things I always can considered were um her comfort, her level of rest, and um, and and also her nourishment. And and I mean they're all connected, they're all interconnected things, but comfort, you know, I tried to emphasize uh physical comfort for her as much as I could, but um also the home and and the role of the husband has to be a place that's safe for her to talk about her feelings about it. Providing her with uh an emotional um pillow to land on. That's been something that had I not tried to do that and worked at that, you know, it would have made the you know the struggle so much harder, you know, for her, you know, and and also would have made the the general process of birth, even a woman who's not having HG needs physical and emotional support. Um But that said, you know, I also tried to consider things like rest and uh not just for her, but like, you know, trying to keep myself rested be, you know, as much as possible, but you know, you gotta do what you gotta do. Um but the more rested she is, the more able her body is to prepare for the actual labor and to heal after the labor. And so for a mom who's going through it, rest is crucial. And then nourishment, considering nourishment, that's the third thing that I make a big deal out of. And um, you know, I really didn't have to do a whole lot of uh pushing, you know, in that regard. Kristian, she was doing all the heavy lifting of caring for her um her own nourishment, planning it out, making sure that she was doing everything. You know, she'd had HG before, especially with her third, she was aware of how much of a challenge that was going to be. And so she went into it swinging. I tell you that that girl, she worked hard to take care of her body and to try to fight off HG and keep it at bay. And you know, she still struggled, but she went into it, you know, bravely. And yeah and the any support that I gave her regarding nourishment was uh, you know, first of all, giving her what she wanted. Um, because when when you have HG, it's hard to even get the food down, it's hard to get anything in your system. And when she wanted something, you better believe I was going to make it happen. If she wanted a cookout uh sandwich, like a barbecue sandwich at uh at 11 o'clock at night, I was gonna find a way.
ChrisMan, we have frequented the cookout during pregnancy, first trimester pregnancy, more than any other time.
PaulUm, but you know, trying to encourage her to prioritize her um her own nutrition and nourishment, because the thing is she's still a mom. Like, especially after she already had our first and then our second, by the time she was pregnant with our third, she didn't feel like she could let go of her responsibilities. And telling her, and you know, not really, I don't want to say giving her permission because she doesn't need permission, but I think deep down she wanted me to be able to say, I've got this. You you need to rest, you need to, you need to relax, you need to try to find a comfortable way to sleep, and you need to eat um foods that make you happy, and let me let me do the heavy lifting as much as I can. And uh reminding her to do that and reminding her to emphasize her own well-being and let me take care of the other kids, that's that wasn't a challenge in any way for me, but it was something that I had to be pre had a you know presence of mind about and uh try to be involved in.
ChrisYeah, it's almost it's so interesting because to anyone who has experienced morning sickness, which is not exactly what HG is, but who anyone who's experienced anything close to what hyper emesis is, it's like if you're familiar with Maslow's hierarchy, it's like you have you automatically you shift down to just survival mode. Yes. And you get to the place where it's like, I need to just survive this season as the as the mom. You know, you're saying that as the mom. But my role is to get her through this. Yep. My role is to get her from the first day that she needs to spend in bed or the first moment that she takes to just take a breather. From this nausea that she's experiencing to the tail end where she can start functioning normally again or semi-normally, you know, and start showing her face. You know, because Kayla's experiences have been really intense. I remember with True's pregnancy, she was in the bed for I mean weeks and weeks and weeks. And so it was probably about eight weeks that she was just straight up in the bed. And that's what she needed. That's what she needed because that her I we're Enneagram savvy here. So she's she's an Enneagram seven, right? And Kristian's a two, right? Yeah, she's a good one. Is she a two? Oh yeah. Yeah. And so as a as a seven, like her big thing is I don't want to feel any pain, like anything to avoid pain, but like here's this thing that's absolutely inevitable. So her way of coping is just sleeping, yeah, as much as possible. And it helps that you're also very tired during that season, you know. But like I said, my job is just get her through. Like, what can I do to get her through? This is part of servant leadership, right? It's like, what can I do? And for me, that experience is it was very hard. You mentioned something that you said that it wasn't all that hard to take care of the kids. And so for me, that was the absolute hardest thing. The absolute hardest thing was managing the kids because um maybe it's just the volume of children, you know, yeah, or maybe it's just the lack of routine. I don't know. Maybe I just don't have enough routine in my life. But the truth is, the hardest part for me was absolutely just managing the kids while Kayla was out. And you said it earlier, and I totally resign with this. I realized when Kayla got sick uh and when she was out with HG that she is so much better at running this house than I am. I have to try to figure it out as I go along. You know what I mean?
PaulYes, absolutely.
ChrisSo so uh I I think that we can both collectively say that we are absolutely blessed by our wives because we realized in those moments uh just how much they contribute, you know, and just uh to try to be in their shoes and be the you know the master of all trades while they're while they're out. It's just tough.
PaulSo I don't I don't know if like uh an analogy is suitable for it, but we're during that season, we're to be Sam wise. That we're we're supposed to be her Sam Wise for all the Tolkien fans out there, you know. So right. We're carrying her up you know as much as we can, you know, in as far as we're able, you know.
ChrisOh, that's good, man. That's so good. That's a great analogy. So we we kind of covered first trimester, but um, you know, second trimester for us is a little bit of a breeze um in terms of you know, you know, hormones level out, you know, she she Kayla feels good. Um, I don't know what it's like for y'all, but when third trimester hits, then you know, you kind of your body just kind of starts to shift around and um you start getting bigger and carrying that that big in our case, you know, the big 10-pound babies. Uh it gets hard, it gets really difficult. So just uh I'd be curious to know what does that look like for y'all? Uh what does that look like for you as far as supporting Kristian during that third trimester when she's just like, I'm I'm ready for this baby to be out. Yeah.
PaulI mean, yeah, I'm telling you, it's the second trimester is uh is definitely easier on her, I would say. But um, I mean, at that point you're coming in the home stretch, you know. And and yes, she does eventually, you know, she gets to the point where she says, any day now, any day would be great. And you know, this is this is a part of where the um the emotional vulnerability side of considering her comfort comes in on is you gotta have open ears and you remembering to listen and remembering to take the time to listen. And the the hardest part for me as a man is not offering solutions because we both know that there is no solution but one. There's only one way that her, that that this the season of struggle comes to a close, and that's when you're holding the baby. Yeah, and so not trying to tell her what she needs, just trying to hear what she needs. That's the that is something that it's hard to remember to do, but uh if if a husband can master it, then they'll have they'll have a great time at it.
ChrisYeah, I think this is just about a universal truth for men in general. I think I think so too. Yeah. When Kayla gets in third trimester, we are on so many walks, man. We are at the park, we are just about any which way. And so it's kind of interesting. Like our kids, uh, they're very familiar with Kayla doing the waddle, waddling up and down the asphalt or waddling up and down the trail. Um, you know, especially, you know, during the end when we're trying to, you know, just get the baby out, you know. Um, and uh, but for me, you know, it kind of comes back to a little bit. I mean, I guess this is a common thread through the whole pregnancy, but but when there's a need that Kayla has during pregnancy, I want to do everything that I can to fulfill that need. Yeah. You know, um, because the truth is she's doing a lot of legwork and bringing this baby into the world. And I need to do my part in order to make sure that she can do that. And that is, I see that as one of my biggest roles as a husband uh in pregnancy in general. So that is one of my big convictions for sure.
PaulWell, I think there's an instinct, uh, you know, we you mentioned earlier the instinct to uh care for the health and well-being, you know, the safety of mom and the baby. Like those are instincts for us. Another instinct is to provide. And if we don't feel like we're providing, then that that's hard for a man. And so it's not just, I would say, especially in the season of pregnancy and birth and postpartum period, not just needs but wants, whenever you can. Yeah, that's like something that you you feel yourself fighting for.
ChrisYeah, because that's what adds a little bit of spice to this mundane portion of life, you know? Yeah. So I mean, anytime you have to endure something, I mean, it's the it's the frilly stuff, it's the extra flavor that makes it, you know, tolerable more or more tolerable, you know. So um, in our case, it was you know, cookout milkshakes, you know, to to come back to that.
PaulYeah.
ChrisSo um, that was a pregnancy craving and something after the fact, you know, that we were just like, oh yeah, that that's just gonna make this moment better. So yeah.
PaulYou know, Kristian, she she went like as far as like for the immediately postpartum, so like right after the baby was born. Uh she went through through she went through so much planning. She wanted it to be right. She had a list for me of like uh like here's what you need to do that I that I really need you to do when you know on the day of the birth. And um, and then and then also she's a woman who likes plan B. She likes to have contingencies. And so she had a list for if we end up needing to go to the hospital, take this list with you. Here's what you're gonna need. She wanted to make sure that I didn't I didn't have any confusion about what my role was. She wanted me to know these things that I want. And you better believe I read that thing and then made sure.
ChrisYou know, oh when Kayla does that for me, she knows it's because I probably won't be thinking about any of these things.
PaulYeah, well, it's it's hard to keep it all in your head. I mean, I think I think for for my wife especially, like it's it's easy to keep all the keep these lists in her head. She knows, she knows what needs to happen. Yeah, and uh, and you know, I can only really focus on two maximum three things at once. And so there's a lot of there's a lot of multitasking involved.
ChrisYeah. Such is the male capacity, right? Yeah, no. I'm amazed at Kayla's ability to uh listen to more than one conversation at a time, to be holding a conversation and to eavesdrop at the same time. It's amazing. Uncanny. So obviously, after third trimester comes the baby, right? And uh you're our wives are both doulas by trade. And I wanted to just touch on this just for a second because I think it is important for for men to hear this, um, and women too alike, but particularly the men, because this is something that I've discovered uh after you know having five babies that I wasn't really clear about and wasn't sure about um the importance of the role of a doula. And so for me, thinking about what my capabilities and capacity is emotionally and physically during the labor and delivery process, man oh man, like it hits me like a ton of bricks every time when we are in the birth space and I am just as much in that moment as Kayla is. And there are so many moments where I find myself emotionally and even and oftentimes physically unable to get out of the moment enough to be able to operate as a coach. Yeah. Do you know what I mean? Yep. And so a great example of this is when Milo was born, when Kayla was uh she was laboring in the tub and they had to push away a lip of cervix. And during that moment, uh, we had been going through this. I mean, we'd been in labor for you know a couple hours at this point. And uh I could tell that she, and it was her first natural laborer. And uh when they did that, I could very clearly tell that Kayla was in pain. And I literally was so emotionally overwhelmed because I love my wife so much and I hate seeing her in pain, like in that moment, yeah, that I had to walk out of the room and recollect myself. Sure. And so it was in that moment that I realized that the birth support that we had for that birth was absolutely invaluable. Oh, yeah.
PaulWell, I mean, you know, the role of emotional support, you know, to some, I think to some men, it it sounds like, why do why do you need that? Like, but absolutely in the moment, she needs it. And and she needs you there, and she needs the duel there. And one of the reasons is that doula is so well trained, so experienced. Um, and not just as a professional, as a doula, but she most doulas that that we know are moms too. They're they can sympathize with your wife's feelings in a way that no matter how much you love and sympathize for your wife, you can't feel 100% what she's feeling. Yeah, and that's a hard thing to admit, you know, to have you know to have the realism to say, I'm not in your shoes. But the dual can't has been, oftentimes. And and she knows sometimes intuitively what your wife needs when you can't put it into words. Like you said, when you're so caught up in that moment, I mean, it's not like a normal moment that you'd get caught up in. There's something sacred happening there.
ChrisOh, yeah.
PaulAnd uh, and I don't think it's I don't think it's it would be healthy to not have a reaction to it. Of course, you're gonna get absorbed in it. And the dual between her training and experience as a as a duela and as a mom, she's there. She's there to make sure that you're a part of the process in the way that you're meant to be. Also, usually the duela is gonna be better rested than you at the point that she comes. You'll you'll have been on the edge of your seat for a few days sometimes, you know. Yeah. Gosh. And she's and she's cool, cool as can be. She knows what needs to happen, and she's gonna be there on time. Also, you know, I I I wanted to mention this. The phrase many hands make light work, you know, I think applies here. Oh, yes. With with our first labor, my role was not supremely physical. Uh, you know, I was there presently. Um, but this is my first time seeing a baby be born ever. Yeah, you know, I didn't know what to expect. It was a kind of a scary thing, you know, to admit that you don't you you're out of your depth in so many ways. And so my role was not as physical. With our second birth, though, my role was more physical. I was in the birth tub with her, I was providing her with as much physical support as I could as far as like, you know, trying to do counterpressure, trying to rub her shoulders, you know, trying to just do whatever I could to help, but it still was a new experience for me because it was our first home birth.
ChrisYeah.
PaulBy our third pregnancy, I was more physically involved than ever. Uh, I was providing a lot of the counterpressure because she wanted me to, and I and I wanted to do it. And you know, I had had some experience, I had had a couple births under my belt at the belt at this point. So I was like, oh, I got this. And so I was able to I was able to provide her counterpressure and rub her back, comfort her. I was there physically for her. And so with each birth, I've become more physically involved. But if you if you don't have a backup person there to also provide the physical comfort support, that'll wear you out. I mean, uh genuinely those those women are impressive that they can do what they do. Uh, you know, holding counterpressure for hours on end. I've now done it. That's tough. That's tough work. And uh it's it's wonderful to have that support, you know. Yes, it's invaluable.
ChrisYeah, but also to have somebody who's a little bit more emotionally removed from the situation is really helpful. Sure. Um, because I mean, like I mentioned before, like it can be so emotionally taxing as uh a husband to see, I mean, at least for me, it's it's very emotionally taxing to see Kayla go through uh labor and delivery, even if she's not having a poor experience, you know? Oh, yeah, absolutely. Um just the inten the intensity of the experience and this the use the word sacred. I love to use that term as as a descriptor of the birth space because it is absolutely sacred. There's something that happens in that space that is unreplicatable. But also in terms of having a doula, they're able to help be uh an advocate when I don't know about you, but there are moments where I'd because of my emotional state, I can't even advocate for what I thought our birth plan might be. You know, so for absolutely so for the mom to go through her birth plan with the doula, that is her voice when she is in a place where she's not able to see as clearly, or wherever she if she's in a place where um she's unable to even advocate for herself, which will happen nine times out of ten or more, the doula can be that advocate for the mom. And so, in my experiences, and it sounds like in yours, man, we need support too. Absolutely.
PaulWell, hey, and I wanted to ask you, you know, and you touched on uh, you know, the emotional investment of the moment. What what feelings are going through you when you're watching your wife labor? Like, what is that like?
ChrisYeah, so so for me personally, I very much am a feeler. I mean, you take a personality test, I'm all in the feeling side. I I live and exist in my feelings. I I I let my feelings drive a little bit too much sometimes, you know. Um, but the benefit of that, in my opinion, is that I can be fully emotionally present when needed. Um, and I can be in a situation with uh somebody that I care about, and I can be in their shoes with them in their moment uh of happiness, in their moment of pain or struggle, and it is absolutely accentuated with Kayla, of course. Um and so for me, it is a transcendent experience, most certainly, because my feelings in regards to my wife uh or my feelings are fully uh invested in what my wife is feeling. And my feelings are fully invested in what she's experiencing. And so for me, it's almost like I'm in labor too. It's the weirdest thing.
PaulOh, yeah, yeah, sure.
ChrisI I think that that is actually a strong point of us as a as a duo in labor because I am so fully emotionally present in that space. And it's really interesting because I also think that there is a lot of power in being that present with your spouse in labor because you pray differently. You pray differently for her than you would any other situation. You your prayers are different for your spouse than anyone else's, even even the doulas, even a support person, even a midwife if they're a believer, like your prayers matter in that space. And uh, and they are much I in my opinion, as a husband, and in my experience, being able to pray in that way, that I have a window into the experience because I'm almost in it with her, and I'm the most in it with her than anybody in the room from an emotional standpoint. I get a window into praying like nobody else in that room can. Oh, yeah, for sure. That's a jumbled up way of saying I use my emotional experience to my advantage in the in the prayer world uh during labor. But yeah, I as a believing man, uh, I'd be curious to know what prayer looks like for you in that space. Because describing it as sacred and describing it as something that is transcendent, you get that. So, what does prayer look like for you in the birth space? And it like, yeah, I'm just curious to know.
PaulSo the there's a I don't I I hesitate to say the word myth, but there's there's a a way of thinking about what prayer is and about what the holiness of the moment is that that I think does it a disservice. Um, you know, people can get this image in their head of prayer is where you're you know you got your hands clasped and you're bowed, your head is bowed, you're in a contemplative and meditative state, and you're you know, you're you're talking with God. You know, it's just not realistic. It's just not the way that God operates, I don't think. I mean, and I'm sure he operates in that way too, but the reality is that God created everything, and when Jesus incarnated into matter, he changed matter, he changed what it is. And so holiness, sacredness, beauty, it's act out, it's it's lived. What I would say is um, in a way, in a way, when God enters time and space, because remember, he's outside of time, space, and matter. When he enters time and space, there is mystery involved, there's uncertainty, there's things that you don't know. I mean, in the Old Testament, God would descend as a cloud. You, you know, there were things that couldn't be seen. And he would enter the temple, he would be in this area, this holy space. And uh a lot of people don't know this when the when the high priest would enter in to conduct the ceremony that needed to be conducted, they would tie a rope around him because he could be struck dead in the moment, and they would need to pull him out. That's how special this moment is. He was entering into darkness and entering into something that he could not be sure of. All he knew is God was there. In the birth space, you're entering into something incredibly real. But what you're doing is you're not going into a trance, you're not going into a meditation, you're going into work, you're going into live and to be and to participate. And uh for me, the birth space is a space of work, first of all. It's a space where you're doing, you're acting, you're living, you're being, but you're also participating in a way that I I'm not sure that I can put into words properly. There is a certain mystery involved in that. And uh, I mean, life is being breathed. Right. I mean, right, there's nothing like it in the world and in the universe.
ChrisThere is a weightiness that cannot be denied, most certainly. And that for me, that creates a sense of urgency. It creates a sense of I need to be on my toes.
PaulI think we need to we need to treat it with that sort of respect, though. You know, it's it's it's a big deal. And we need to regard it with awe.
ChrisYes, right. Yeah, and you know, it's it's really interesting because, you know. Talking about this, there have been moments in history where fathers were not present at the birth. And there have been moments in history where, and even recent history, I mean, of course, you know, being fully caught up on call the midwife. Uh that you see it, you see it all the time. Yes. You see it all the time. Where it's like the dude just sitting outside and he's waiting for his baby to be born. And then he like reluctantly comes in and says, Are they born? Can I meet my baby now? And uh, and so it's just really it's it's interesting, but I when I think about that, it's almost like my heart breaks because there is an experience for dads uh within being present at the birth of your child that is unmatched. I'll I'll say, like, most certainly, you know, going back to like what I felt like when my wife was in labor and delivery, right? I will say to this day, the day that my daughter was born and the day that I became a dad tangibly was the best day of my life. Oh, yeah. And and I tell that to Kayla, and there's no like, well, what about our wedding day? It's like, it's like, yeah, that was like one of the best days of my life. When we both look back on that day that we became parents, that was the beginning of a new chapter that we're never going to close. And thinking about the moments in history where the man was not present. And I know that you and I have similar thoughts on what that even does for fatherhood in general, you know, and the effect that that's had on culture, the effect that it's had on even the perception of what a father or a dad is, or even a man.
PaulOh, yeah. Well, I I mean, I I want to know myself, what kind of an impact has it had on our society and on fatherhood in our culture that they've been discluded. I mean, I mean, and and it wasn't it wasn't like, I mean, I don't think there was this, there was this council of men who were asked their opinion on this, like, do I want to be uh present for the birth of my kid? I don't I don't think any of us were asked, you know. It's we inherit now a culture where it's normal, but for so many years, it wasn't. What what did those men miss out on? What a what an opportunity to experience something beyond them. Uh, you know, and like you said, yeah, how how sad that must be. But I I actually I actually read a statistic the other day uh from the National Fatherhood Institute, I think. And um I didn't know that was a thing. You're gonna have to enlighten me on what that is. It's a thing. They have a website, they have done a study. One in four children do not have a biological step or adoptive father living in the home in America. One in four. Fatherhood is it's crucial, it's special. The fact that it's been lost for a lot of kids is gonna have an impact on the way our culture grows and the way it develops and the relationships that they have. And uh, I don't know what the solution is to that problem, but I think that fathers having the opportunity to participate in the birth space. I think that it's part of the recipe to help cure some of that and heal some of that in our culture. And if you can cure the fatherhood problem, I think that you can cure many of our culture's problems.
ChrisOh, yes. Most certainly. I mean, I would argue most most certainly that fatherhood is one of the large building blocks, if not the cornerstone of a healthy, thriving society. But like I think about, and let's camp out here for a second, because I'd be I'd be curious to know what's your vision for fatherhood for you and your family. Oh man. What what does it look like? And I know that we're getting a little deep and we're getting a little bit off of birth, but I'd like to know what is it for you that when you think about this potential outcome for your family, or when you think about these things that you can improve even your own being and yourself in order to change the trajectory of your children's lives and your family's future? What does it look like in your head and in your and your mind uh to be a father that is uh shall I use a term that is so tab taboo to say patriarchal? Yeah.
PaulYou know, I think that how a child perceives their own father will inevitably impact the way they see their heavenly father. And what I what I'll say is how do I see it? Like what's the vision that I have? Probably a lot better than I'm doing it. I I there there is so much that I want for my kids. And I mean, and and I want so much for um, you know, we we have a son and two daughters. I want so much for all of them. But um with my own background, um, you know, my parents were divorced when I was four-ish. And um, and my mom and my stepdad, you know, they they didn't start seeing each other for a long time. Uh, and I have some I have some feelings about about this topic because it's it's so real to me to um the importance of being a present father. And uh and what I'll say is I want better for my son. I want him to have a loving relationship with me, and I don't want to lose that. And for me, everything else that I can do is in the spirit of making my kids' lives more wrapped up in mind as much as possible. I I want to be with them, I want to encourage them to be the very best that they can be in whatever it is they want to be, to be whoever it is they're going to become. And in fatherhood, that also means leading them in prayer. It means leading them in discipleship, and it means doing a lot of my own headwork too. I can't expect them to grow in ways that I'm not willing to grow, and I can't expect them to be inspired when I can't be inspired. Uh, I think that there's a whole lot of fatherhood that means the dad has to get to work, and I have to get to work on myself if I'm gonna have any hope of getting to work and uh helping them become the the wonderful people that they're going to be. And uh yeah, so I mean, the vision is uh there's a lot of work to be done.
ChrisYeah, no kidding. And you know, talking about fathers in the birth space, for me, my fatherhood journey started in that space, and so that was my launch pad for any future dream or desire I had for my family was the day I became a dad. And uh, yes, some would argue that your family was born the day you got married. Yes, I get that, but it's different when you start having children because there's a responsibility and a weightiness and a brand new understanding that you don't have it all together, dude. Yeah, you need to figure this thing out because if you don't figure this thing out, then your family's gonna look you you're responsible for people, like the upbringing of little humans. And it just was a it was a wild reality check for me in the most beautiful way when I became a dad. And seeing the birth of my daughter, it just it changed, it changed me. It changed my perspective. Now, there have been lots of perspective shifts and changes over that, you know, over those years. But I mean, for me, I desire for my children to be followers of Jesus. Yeah, I desire for my children to honor and respect and obey Kayla and I, assuming that that will translate and trusting that that will translate to their obedience and respect for the Lord. And that is a very long and ambiguous, sometimes bedrudging process. But I think that this journey of fatherhood and of course motherhood, but particularly fatherhood, is refining in a way that nothing else is.
PaulI mean, do we realize how much change it brings to us to have the weight of souls on our backs? Like do we realize that carrying that changes you? I mean, that just just the act of doing the work of loving your family alone, it changes you. God uses it to shape who you will become. I mean, that's and and by the and he uses it to save you, he uses it to to give you the holiness that he wants for you. You don't just it doesn't just magically happen, you know. It happens.
ChrisWell, parent parenting is so sanctifying, it's ridiculous. Oh, yeah. Uh, I am a much more patient person than I was 10 years ago, five years ago, you know, two years ago. Like, I'm a much more patient patient person. There's a book by a dude, his name is Ronald Rollheiser. He uh are you familiar with him? I don't believe so, no. So he's like this mystic uh that is an author, and he wrote a book called Domestic Monastery. And in this book, he describes this story of a woman who had many children, like many children. And one of her, one of her oldest boys got to age. He left and went and lived in a monastery for like, I don't know, years and years and years. And he left his family behind and uh just fully focused on pursuing the Lord or whatever monks do, you know, in a monastery. And he came back all these years later, and when he encountered his mom for the first time after he came back, he said, My mother, he said about his mother, he said, My mother has surpassed me tenfold in holiness. Yeah, because of the refinement of what motherhood caused within her.
PaulYeah.
ChrisSo I think it is absolutely crucial for us to understand and to let parenting be a sanctifying process because it will sanctify us, it will make us more holy. And in this case, it makes you it argues that it makes you more holy than if you were to go off to live in a monastery and devote, you know, years and years to the just the pursuit of silence and solitude with the Lord. Unbelievable. Oh yeah. This shows me, this shows me that it is a part of God's design to be a parent and to let this process be part of our sanctification. Unbelievable. Absolutely.
PaulYou know, uh we we're big fans of uh of Gary Thomas, and he um and he spends a lot of time talking about sacredness.
ChrisOh yeah, Gary Thomas.
PaulYeah, yeah. And we love his book, Sacred Marriage, but he has a book called Sacred Parenting, and it's exactly us on the on point, exactly on this. It's transformative.
ChrisOh man. So he's the guy that wrote Sacred Pathways. He uh he basically it's a person, it's kind of like a personality test of how you connect with God. Sure. It's awesome, really awesome. Well, as we wrap this up, um, I want to just ask you real quick, Paul, what what is a piece of advice that you would have for any dad uh that's listening to this podcast right now? Whether it be uh something that's related to birth or parenting or um kind of we were talking about earlier sanctification or just um even your relationship with the Lord, what advice do you have for these for these fellas that are listening?
PaulWhat I what I would say is um most of the solutions to our concerns uh about like our role in birth or how things are gonna go with the birth, you know, how uh how our wife will do, all of these things that we inevitably think about at some point, most of them can be solved in the same way that men solve almost all their problems. Is it it starts with try to keep yourself physically strong. It will help you feel emotionally strong, and it will help you think well. So maintaining strength. What I would also say is uh try not to live in fear. There's you know, especially in the home birth world, men feel fear, men feel like this is out of our control, you know what you know what's gonna happen. A woman who feels loved and cared for and supported has so many more times a chance of having a peaceful and life-changingly happy birth. She needs to feel that you love her and that you support her and that you care for her. And if you can if you can nail that, then you've got it. So that's good. I think it starts, I think it starts with caring for yourself, um, trying to do the headwork and the prayer work that you need to in advance. Keeping yourself physically strong is a good way to do that. But remember, focus on the prize, and the prize is your wife's joy and the baby. Yeah. That's for for me, that's that's been that's been the best thing that I can do personally. That's good, man.
ChrisYeah, I think the the advice that I would have is actually very practical because I haven't heard it spoken about a a ton uh in all the episodes maybe that we've we've done. I think this will be episode 43, and so I feel like this might be useful. The advice that I would have to any dad out there is to go out of your way to make your wife feel beautiful during pregnancy, during postpartum.
PaulAbsolutely.
ChrisUh, when she's feeling insecure, of course, if she lends herself, generally speaking, to feeling insecure, but do whatever you can to make your wife feel beautiful and show her that you love her and that you're thinking of her and that you're attracted to her and that that your heart is with her during this time of transition and change. Yeah. Uh, because that's gonna help her feel solid on a foundation. Because as the husbands and and and the fathers, it is my conviction that we are the foundation of our family, and even our wives stand on that foundation. And so it's important, I think, for us to approach it from even that angle that when our wife feels cherished and when our wives feel beautiful, and when they feel loved, they feel secure. I mean, for some reason, it just comes out of me. I Kayla will she'll she'll say over and over and over again to anybody else, like, Chris, just he keeps telling me how beautiful I am, and I don't always feel it. It just comes out of my mouth. Maybe I'm just a really affirming person, but it's also because I think it's true.
PaulI nope, I get that. I do it too.
ChrisYep. It's like I I really just do I do think that. I I think that she's really beautiful, and I like telling her that she's beautiful, you know. Partially my my love language is you know, words of affirmation, and so I'm that's of course how I might naturally choose to dish it out, but I never try to miss an opportunity to make sure that Kayla feels secure in her body, even during this time of pregnancy and postpartum when things are just different, and uh and even now, and and even now, like five babies later, like she's not really postpartum anymore. I mean, Indy, Indy is seven months old at this point, eight months old. And it's important for me that to still make her feel like I really love the way you're put together. And this is the way that I put it sometimes is that that belly right there, that belly that I see, it is living proof that there were five babies that lived in that belly, and you brought all of our five babies into the world. It is the most valuable thing that you could have provided for our family, other than your best self, of course. But I'm so I'm just really thankful. Yeah, I'm just really thankful that that she put her body through that five times so that we can have the family that we have. And her her tummy is living proof. When I look at it, it's living proof that our babies are here and that they live.
PaulThere's then there's there's there's an elegance to a mother. There's there's a there's a a warmth and a softness that every man appreciates. It it pours out of the way they speak, and it pours out of the way that they live too. And and that the beauty, you know, the beauty is physical and the beauty is lived. And that there's there's nothing, there's nothing more wonderful. I mean, at least, at least in my experience, there's nothing more wonderful than watching my wife, who was a newlywed, who was a wife to me for so long, fill our home. The other day, okay, so the other day we uh we had our van in the shop. It was um it had needed to have some work on it. And so we were using the car that I drive to work um for a little bit. We had all the in it's a small car, and we had all of the car seats in the back, and uh, and so it like the back seat was full, it was full as full. And I and I told her, I looked at her and I said, You filled my back seat. I said, Thank you, you know, and you you just you can't you can't lose sight of how wonderful it is uh to watch your wife become a mother. It's there's nothing in the world like it, and you feel it every day. It's and that's the cool thing, is like this isn't something that you just you know, it's not like birth is is this single moment, it's it becomes a lifetime of experiences. You know, you talk about changing chapters, it's a whole book in itself, and you get to read it right. It's awesome.
ChrisRight. Oh man, absolutely. Yeah, and uh it's funny, and I'll just mention this real quick. We have in our house, and guys, you can kind of take note of this. In our house, we have a day, it comes around once a year. It's a holiday in our family, it's called Bump Day, and it was a randomly chosen day that is in March. We don't have any babies born in March. There's not a lot going on in March in our in our house, and it's the third Friday in March every year. It's bump day, and it is the day to celebrate the fact that Kayla has brought four babies and now five. We bump day was invented after our fourth, but she has brought all those babies into our house, and it's a it's a day that's that's so cute. It's kind of like Mother's Day V2, but it's specifically for like celebrating the fact that she put her body through that because it's so tough for her, you know. And that's that's so great, it's really funny. So, but we enjoy it. I got her uh an espresso machine the first bump day because I never got her, you know. I I didn't know of the term push present. Yeah, that's a thing. I didn't know that was a thing until someone said it after she gave birth to true, and uh, so I gave her a big one present just to cover the all four. So I got her an espresso machine. Yeah, there you go. But uh it was slightly selfish, I will say. We have good coffee at our house. Y'all come over. Yeah, it is good, it's delicious. Oh, yeah, yeah. So uh, but anyway, Paul, I appreciate it, man. This is really fun, and uh, I really appreciate your wisdom. You got a lot of really um, really profound, really uh good things to say that that'll have these guys think in. And um, so really appreciate you, man. And um, we'll have to have you back on for another one. I can't wait.
PaulI'm looking forward to it. Thank you so much.
KaylaThanks again for joining us today. You can reach me at Surrendered Birth Services on Instagram or email me at contact at Surrendered Birth Services.com. Be sure not to miss an episode by hitting subscribe. Also, we'd love for you to leave a review of the show so that more people like you can hear more stories like these. If you really enjoyed this episode in particular, please take a screenshot and post it to your Instagram story tagging Surrendered Birth Services. If you're interested in taking my childbirth classes, birth consultations, or having me as your birth doula, please click on the link in the show notes to take you to my website for online and in person options. Just as a reminder, this show is not giving medical advice. So please continue to see your personal care provider as needs arise. Also, if you'd like to be a guest on the Surrendered Birth Stories podcast, please click the link in the episode show notes to get in touch with me. We hope you have a great week. And remember, learn all that you can, make the best plans, and then leave it in God's hands.