When I first “cracked the code” on stabilizing and reversing prolapse, and wrote and published Saving the Whole Woman, I set up this forum. While I had finally gotten my own severe uterine prolapse under control with the knowledge I had gained, I didn’t actually know if I could teach other women to do for themselves what I had done for my condition.
So I just started teaching women on this forum. Within weeks, the women started writing back, “It’s working! I can feel the difference!”
From that moment on, the forum became the hub of the Whole Woman Community. Unfortunately, spammers also discovered the forum, along with the thousands of women we had been helping. The level of spamming became so intolerable and time-consuming, we regretfully took the forum down.
Technology never sleeps, however, and we have better tools today for controlling spam than we did just a few years ago. So I am very excited and pleased to bring the forum back online.
If you are already a registered user you may now log in and post. If you have lost your password, just click the request new password tab and follow the directions.
Please review and agree to the disclaimer and the forum rules. Our moderators will remove any posts that are promotional or otherwise fail to meet our guidelines and will block repeat offenders.
Remember, the forum is here for two reasons. First, to get your questions answered by other women who have knowledge and experience to share. Second, it is the place to share your results and successes. Your stories will help other women learn that Whole Woman is what they need.
Whether you’re an old friend or a new acquaintance, welcome! The Whole Woman forum is a place where you can make a difference in your own life and the lives of thousands of women around the world!
Best wishes,
Christine Kent
Founder
Whole Woman
JBee
July 20, 2006 - 7:41am
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Aconite and arnica.....
Nicola
First off, welcome to this wonderful forum of fabulous women. I'm sorry this has happened to you.
Second, it sounds as if you're in panic. This is completely normal after what's happened to you - we've all spoken about the same fear we've experienced upon finding a prolapse. You are worried about the baby too and so I'd suggest taking some aconite (homeopathic remedy for fear) and arnica (for shock) to calm you down a little. Get them in the 30c potency and if you want details of how to take them, shout. Bach's rescue remedy also brilliant and none of these will hurt the baby (I'm a homeopath).
Third - implement the posture immediately. I have different problems to you but it has helped me. I wish I could advise you on whether to do the exercises or not but I have no experience in this area - perhaps you could email Christine and ask if she would know. Try and lift as little as you can to prevent putting any additional pressure on you.
Hopefully things will begin to settle down. Try and get some help. I don't know about you but I'm terrible at asking for it but it sounds like you really need some right now, especially with your 22 month old. When someone calls you asking if they can help, say yes please could you pick up some shopping for me?
As for the birth - my consultant has told me that if I am able to go on and have another baby, a section might not be the best thing to do. They do advise a section following the prolapse surgery. But, he has said that the baby would probably "fall out" because my cervix is so low and that the labour would be "very easy". Every cloud has a silver lining perhaps. There are some wonderful women on this site who've given birth vaginally with a prolapse - check their stories out. They have given me a lot of help and advice and support and they show that it IS absolutely possible. If you want help with where to locate them, shout.
Finally, try and stay calm and get as much help, advice and support as you can.
Wishing you well and take care Jxx
JBee
July 20, 2006 - 7:46am
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Ps - quick one on posture and pregnancy
Nicola,
A quick one I've just thought of and a by the way......
I have no doubt that I'm suffering now because of my traumatic birth. But, I know that my posture wasn't the best during my pregnancy. I was really uncomfortable and I know I developed a slouch which perhaps didn't help things down there. If you implement that posture today - in terms of lift up and keep that back strong - you can hopefully encourage the cervix to go back. x
Christine
July 20, 2006 - 8:39am
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pregnancy induced prolapse
Dear Nicola,
Women have received scant information about pregnancy induced prolapse, but thankfully through the great equalizing power of the Internet, we are learning a lot about it from each other.
Of course keep an eye on the bleeding, but many bring pregnancy to term with intermittent spotting along the way. Your cervix should be completely raised out of your vagina by the beginning of the second trimester. However, if it persists your baby will continue to be completely safe inside.
I wouldn’t start any sort of new exercise program, including the one in the book. Perhaps a gentle prenatal yoga stretch class when things have stabilized a bit. Nicola, so much of this truly is about posture and I would slowly and calmly begin assimilating all the info we have here on the site.
All animals carry their pelvic organs very close to their lower abdominal wall. We stood up, yet continue to have an essentially horizontal spine! I know that sounds crazy, but our sacrum is completely horizontal and the rest of our spine did this marvelous contortion that allowed our upper body to remain vertical. Our pelvic “floor” is more vertical than horizontal, a reality doctors have completely missed due to their WRONG VIEW, which has consisted of looking at us in the lithotomy position for hundreds of years. In that position it looks like a floor. If you reach around to your backside, it becomes obvious the pelvic outlet is more like a wall than a floor.
Human females have a remarkable feat to accomplish: stand up, yet continue to keep the pelvic organs in the hollow of the lower belly just like our furry friends. This is made possible over the course of seventeen or eighteen years as the spinal and pelvic musculoskeleton and connective tissue supports all pull together into a miraculous self-locking system that keeps everything in place.
Through a lifetime of living in ways that keep our spine in flexion (tailbone tucked, lumbar curve flattened, upper spine humped) the organs move back from their positions near the lower belly to fall against the vaginal walls. The practice of gynecology, when considering causes of prolapse, just takes the scenario from there, focusing on stretched ligaments and vaginal wall “defects” through which the organs bulge. Very downstream thinking, but it has served them well.
So…what we must do is rotate our pelvis back into its correct position. There are descriptions of the posture in the FAQ section, and every aspect of it is essential. Don’t be afraid to walk – in fact mindful walking is the best way to incorporate the posture. It will take a while to assimilate, so just take it easy and alternate with lots of rest and good food. While lifting your toddler, keep your head in the same long line as the rest of your spine, bend down deeply with your knees over your toes (second position in ballet), stick your bottom out, and contract your pelvic “floor”. We have a very stable horizontal platform from which to move that is perfectly adapted to keep all our organs in place, we just don’t utilize it.
Wishing you well,
Christine
Christine
July 20, 2006 - 1:55pm
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oversight
sorry Nicola...I read your post very quickly this a.m. and missed that you are well into the second trimester. Hopefully the rest applies...:-)
nicola
July 20, 2006 - 4:44pm
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Thank you and calming down alittle
Thank you for replies.
I have calmed down alot, its just everyone I saw said that they have either never seen it in pregnancy or it will just go away. But gave no information how to deal with it. I was so uncomfortable my back ached, I felt I horrible feeling when standing up that everything in the pelvic region was pulling down and I could feel it. I cannot find really any information what to do with a prolaspe starting when pregnant, I felt so alone. It has been so hard to enjoy this pregnancy as I feel so different now. It hard to have time to read everything as I have a small son and work. Doctors have been no help. There doesn't seem any help in Australia I can find
Mentally I am just so scared of the labour thing now, I will scared if it is tramatic or I will be thinking about is what it is doing to me pelvic region. I am just not sure how to mentally get over this.
nicola
July 20, 2006 - 4:52pm
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Prolapse and Pregnancy
Can I please verify a few things.
I was going to do yoga as I did when I was pregnant the first time, is there things I should avoid or look for when choosing the pregnancy yoga class?
It is o.k. to do the posture when pregnant, but will I be able to do them throughout the whole pregnancy?
Do you know many women who have has Pregnancy Prolapse and it " has just gone away"?
I will research the whole site when I can, it has been a saviour so far. I just get confused because I am pregnant I don't know if everything applies or what I shouldn't do while pregnant. Any other publications you can recommend to help through this pregnancy.
Hope you can help. And thank you. Nicola
Christine
July 20, 2006 - 6:30pm
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Hi Nicola,I'm not an expert
Hi Nicola,
I'm not an expert in this area, although I plan to be in the not-too-distant-future, as I'm seeking to become a certified childbirth educator.
I can't imagine anything in a prenatal yoga class that would be detrimental to you. Of course let your instructor know of your condition.
Yes, I would begin to incorporate the posture now. As you grow very large you probably won't be able to control much below your waist. I think it will be very helpful for you, though, to have learned the upper body posture and trained your feet to point straight ahead when you walk.
I hope you hear from others who either have experienced or support a gentle vaginal birth concept. I guess the first place to begin easing your mind is in contemplating the fact that the cervix does not push down, but rather pulls UP as the baby slides out.
I've been thinking today what a terrible thing it is that the very concept or even the term "PUSH" was ever applied to the birthing scenario. Everyone knows that "straining" is always a bad thing when it comes to bowels. I can't imagine who decided it was okay for birthing women.
I sent you an email...please let me know if you don't receive it.
:-) Christine
annaf
July 20, 2006 - 6:33pm
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Hi Nicola,
Hi Nicola,
I was in the same situation that you are in right now. I was about 14-15 weeks pregnant when I noticed something is bulging down there. It improved over night and it came back during the day. The doctor told me to rest a lot with a pillow under my knees, and she also told me it would go away later, when the uteres got bigger, she said “the baby would lift it”.
My prolapse really improved later during the pregnancy. In 20th - 24th week of pregnancy and until the end of my pregnancy it was imperceptible. I delivered my baby naturaly (I avoided lithotomy birth position and episiotomy). C-section didn't even cross my mind. However the prolaps came back after the delivery and it wasn't worse than I experienced during the first trimester of my pregnancy.
I didn't get satisfactory information and advice from the doctors, so I ended up searching on the internet and luckily I found this wonderful website and Christine's brliliant work. Saving the whole woman gave me all the answers I needed and precious advice on managing my prolapse. The most valuable thing for me is that these women here gave me a good mind to live a full-feature life, I have gotten the emotional support that I couldn't find anywhere else.
Wishing you well and take care.
louiseds
July 21, 2006 - 12:02am
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Another Ozi Mum
Hi Nicola
Welcome to the site. So glad you persevered with your searching. There are a few women from Oz who use this site (I'm in York, WA). If you click on my username at the top of this posting you will be taken to my profile. You can email me from there, then I can tell you the little I know of who we all are. Or else change your profile so you can accept emails, and I'll email you. Whatever you like. It sounds like you were able to buy Saving the Wholewoman reasonably easily. Maybe it is becoming more available in Oz? Gotta be good news if it is. So glad you have had a few quick replies on the Forum. Hopefully you are a little more reassured now.
Cheers
Louise
nicola
July 21, 2006 - 6:24am
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Hi louise
Hi thanks for you reply, it is good to know there are other Aussie Mums on this site. I am from Melbourne. You profile has no email address.
It's funny that about the book, I was looking at this site, the next day I went on a mission to get a copy of book as desparate to find more about this condition, I rang books shops none had it in stock, but a couple could order it in, but didn't want to wait. I had to go to the library and I thought I would look for it there, thinking it wouldn't be there and it was at another branch 10 mins from home. I jumped in the car and got it.
Andrea
nicola
July 21, 2006 - 6:31am
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Hi Annaf, very interested
Hopefully you can reply again. But I would like to know with your case, how quick the prolaspe occured after the birth. And how you managed with prolaspe and new baby, that scares my alittle. mine is so bad it is effecting me everyday, it bulges sometimes so badly it is really uncomfortable, I don't like moving around. Living with it worries so much with 2 small children.
You also take care and thanks for you reply
nicola
July 21, 2006 - 6:36am
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Pushing Prolaspe back, pregnancy
Hi
I know I am asking alot, this site is magic. I just wondering if prolasped cervix is uncomfortably sticking out can you push it up alittle or can this damage something? Or is there a way to gently move it into a correct position??
How wonderful it is to ask such a question without been totally embrassed!!!! :)
Thanks again for all the replies - Nicola
louiseds
July 21, 2006 - 8:46am
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OOPs
Sorry, now you can email me. I must see if I can order it for our local library.
Louise
HT
July 22, 2006 - 6:19am
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Nicola,i am also in Oz -
Nicola,
i am also in Oz - Perth and I had the same problem with my second pregnancy. Dont push your cervix back in, it will rise the bigger your uterus gets through the pregnancy. I stopped lifting my first son at 2 - I wasnt pregnant - sorry, everyone, had just had repairs (wont be going there again) but my uterus went up around 20 weeks and I felt better for a while. I only say a while because I had severe pelvic seperation but most women feel good once that uterus and cervix have moved up.
Hope this helps,
H
Christine
July 22, 2006 - 9:25am
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thanks!
Thanks SO much for posting! Are you managing the aftermath of your suspension okay?
HT
July 23, 2006 - 2:58am
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Christine,By suspension I
Christine,
By suspension I assume you mean burch? I did not have a uterine suspension/colpopexy. But I do suffer urgency from the burch. I use tens to calm the bladder irritability and that works for a couple of years and then i repeat the process. I just manage my prolapse and life in the best way I know how to - I cant change the past, so like all the women on this site, Im trying to get along with the prolapse and look after my two boys.
But there arent many of us from Oz so its nice (well, you know what I mean!!!) when they arrive here. I have lurked on the site for a long time and never posted - until recently. But this site is well suited to my current mindset about my prolapse, if that makes sense.
Thanks, Christine.
HT
Christine
July 24, 2006 - 9:40am
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burch
Oh H, you're in the same boat as me. :-( That it was ever deemed okay to use that horrendous operation on healthy women is just incomprehensible. I'll never forget the words of my surgeon when he talked to me the morning following my surgery and said he'd tucked my bladder up "real good." Peeing has been a fight ever since. God bless you!
annaf
July 26, 2006 - 10:32pm
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Sorry for my late reply
Hi Nicole,
I love this site too. I have found a lot of helpful advice.
My prolapse accured about 3-4 weeks after the birth of my third child. Then I waited for my PP appointment with my doctor. It was hard to accept the reality. I had cried for weeks. I was urged to undergo the surgery. The doctor told me to stop breastfeeding than wait 3-4 months and set up the surgery. But I wanted to nurse my baby so I decided to postpone the surgery at least one year. About 3 months after the birth of my baby I'v got a pessary. It was very hard to manage everything around the baby and house, but my husband and two older kids have helped me with everything that should effect my prolaps.
A woman's organism experiences many changes during a pregnancy and after the birth. Those changes effect prolapse. I had felt the symptoms of prolapse worse and also I hadn't felt comfortable with the pessary while I was nursing. I stoped nursing when my baby was 14 months old, and I had waited for 7 months for improvement of my symptoms. But nothing vigorous happend. About that time I found Christine's book and her web site. I began to exercise, I'v changed my diet, I'v watched my posture more, I'v paid special attention to keep regular BM. I felt improvement within two months. My “bad days” are period days now and the rest of the month is pretty manageable. I avoid heavy lifting and activities that make my prolapse worse, like moping, heavy lifting, vacuming (It doesn't meen I don't do them anymore.If my husband can't help me I clean the floor on my four better than with the mop, and I pay attention to my posture). If I am going to have a busy day I wear the pessary. I usualy wear the pessary during the day, never at night. I always take the pessary out before BM. During calm and quiet days I don't wear it at all.
A prolapse changes every woman. There are always restrictions for a woman with a prolapse. But I believe that prolapse is manageable in some way, it requires discipline, changing life style and daily routine, and following certain principles. I believe this way I can live more valuable life filled with more activities then I would live after reconstructive surgery with lifelong after surgery restrictions, complications and mysterious risks. The process of learning how to live with the prolapse maybe is lengthy, but is better for my body (and spirit too) than the reconstructive surgery.
Take care.
nicola
July 27, 2006 - 11:52pm
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Prolaspe pretty much gone..
Thanks for the comments, I cannot believe how much this prolaspe has effected me, I have been totally consumed by it, and worried my stress will rub off on my beautiful unborn child.
I have appreciated everday as for the last 5 days, as doctor said my proplaspe has gone, it made me realise how much I have taken for granted, I feel blessed to feel so good again, but scared of what the future has to hold. Sometimes after a long day it feels abit bulky down below. I saw my doctor today as I was starting to think that mentally I will not be able to have a natural birth with that pushing and all, I know there is no proven fact that this will stop anymore damage. My doctor told me this also and said that a ceaseran can cause just as much damage, we discussed a birth plan, as I said I was terrified of forceps and a vacumn birth etc and talked how I wanted to have a real active birth and not deliver laying on my back, he was very helpful and understood. He is still postive that after I have my bubs that it will all be o.k. As he has treated five women and there prolaspes did not occur again after the birth. I am doing my pelvic floors, watching my posture and sending my body lots of love and baby. I still am lifting my son too much I think but I seem to not able to help this.
I will see how I go, but I really am mentally going to struggle with the pending birth.
Christine
July 28, 2006 - 12:00pm
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Yeah!
Hi Nicola,
I'm so glad your symptoms have vanished! Your doctor speaks the truth...your lower abdominal wall is part of your pelvic organ support system through which c-section creates permanent damage. I hope you will buy the book "Birthing From Within" by Pam England. It is a marvelous resource for women just like you.
:-) Christine
nicola
July 29, 2006 - 10:26pm
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Thanks
I was trying to find a book so I will try and get this one. My doctor is being very suportive. My concern now is an action plan for my birth and what plan to have if the birth is going wrong ie, reading some stuff I will certainly be worried about the use of forceps etc, the baby health is more important. Not sure on this one.
Thanks for your support
norab
January 2, 2018 - 3:40pm
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Burch?
Is Burch the same as "uterine suspension/colpopexy"? And what was the reason for the "Burch" you had? What kind of prolapse is yours?
What is a Burch or what was your particular Burch for? Sorry I am just confused.
And what are "tens" you used to calm the bladder irritability?
Thanks, NoraB