Thanks for the link, blanche. I looked into it, which gave some insight into some Iranian women's (14) childbirth. That is interesting, but to be more realistic and meaningful/relevant to us, it may help if we had studies from our cultures (and faith) or even case studies that may not be that easy to acquire (i'm not sure) from moms who esp. gave birth outside of hospitals who can and do give birth without anesthesia, even from other cultures. The authors saying that some mothers fear while on labor that their child may be a girl (and not boy as their husbands wanted) is trigger enough for tension, wc promotes pain at such critical time-- instead of the mother getting support and encouragement.
Managed to search, but it took a while to locate seoulsearch's thread on
Less known biblical gems she started in 2016. It was there i shared some, let me stress
notes from an old notebook, transcribed from abbreviated notes. I could copy some posts here, but hope others would take the time and effort to be unbiased in dealing with such an important matter in the life of women and mothers, but often set aside due to so much misleading 'history,' misinformation, and as some say, mistranslation. No, please dont think i'm saying you personally are biased, for we all learned and believed certain things as we grew up, thru the years... until the Lord gave/gives us understanding. I dont claim to be an expert either, as this is just one way God let me experience His love and goodness in childbirth and humbly share what the enemy does not want people to know about, or accept.
Link is
https://christianchat.com/christian-singles-forum/share-a-lesser-known-biblical-gem.131703/page-3
My post...
Feb 25, 2016
#52
Did you know that childbirth in Bible times ws so different from what we do and know now? I have to dig passages but this paragraph from a natural childbirth book first published in '64:
Samuel Zwener, an early missionary to the Arabs, says that Arab women didn’t have painful deliveries until after their society had been adversely affected by Western culture. Even when trekking across the desert, an ‘Arab woman simply dropped behind the caravan when her labor began. After giving birth to her infant…she would walk (sometimes for many hours) to overtake the caravan, carrying her baby. The experiences of the Heb. Women of the Pentateuch were surely similar to these, since they were of the same Semitic origin and culture.'
The Joy of Natural Childbirth by Helen Wessel — Reviews, Discussion, Bookclubs, Lists
Feb 25, 2016
#55
mar09 said:
Chap. 6, p/53
You feel pain in labor when the muscles of the abdominal wall are kept tense while the uterus is rising during contractions. When a mother does this-- usually w/o realizing she is doing it, the aching in these muscles increases with each contraction and soon spreads throughout the muscles of the pelvic area, making them ache, across the muscles of the lower back and hips, and even down into the thighs, so she literally 'aches all over' during labor, with increasing intensity...But if u learn to relax properly, letting all ur muscles become 'limp,' this brings miraculous relief, no matter how intense the contractions...
Indonesian women would just leave their work in the fields for an hour or so to bear their child, and shortly afterwards would be back at work again..they accept childbirth as a perfectly normal process.
Sarah, bearing a child when she was an old, old woman, who yet said, God hath made me to laugh, so that all that hear will laugh with me. (Gen. 21.6)
Margaret Mead, the anthropologist, says majority of women suffer severe pain in childbirth, or accept giving birth matter of factly, depending on the culture in which they live. She says that pain, when it occurs, isn’t due to the physiological birth process, but to the attitudes toward birth which a woman has ‘learned’ from her culture… it is perhaps not without significance that in those Polynesian societies where the male participates in his wife’s delivery as a husband… there is an extremely simple, uncomplicated attitude towards birth; the women don’t scream, but instead work…
There is nothing (in the Bible) which says that women are meant to suffer pain when they bear a child.
Incidentally it is we mothers who can really promote natural childbirth.