Arms Wide Open: A Midwife's Journey
Arms Wide Open: A Midwife's Journey book cover

Arms Wide Open: A Midwife's Journey

Paperback – March 20, 2012

Price
$20.00
Format
Paperback
Pages
304
Publisher
Beacon Press
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0807001714
Dimensions
5.5 x 0.8 x 8.48 inches
Weight
13.2 ounces

Description

Praise for Arms Wide Open "There are more honest, revealing moments here than in many memoirs. Harman, whose prose is sparse but not simple, covers a span of decades, deftly revealing her own youthful struggles with identity through the children we witnessed her raising earlier in her book, revealing, in short, a full life." — Publishers Weekly “The heart of Arms Wide Open is birthing, but its soul is sustainable living and a spirit of environmentally friendly management of resources. Harman’s commitment to this theme permeates her book, and with similar focus on other contemporary issues, it is relevant for a vast array of readers.”— Rain Taxi “This new memoir is a peek at midwife Patsy Harman’s early hippie days, a world where idealism and compassion never cease to matter, where her commune mates struggle—sometimes successfully, sometimes not—against an unjust/unwinable war with a limitless sense of personal commitment and self-sacrifice. It’s good to hear these stories, good to remember the fervor against the Vietnam War and our collective voices raised in protest. It’s heartening to know that the indomitable Midwife Harman still carries on the legacy of those years with a message that is still vital and necessary all these years later.”—Carol Leonard, Midwife and author of Lady’s Hands, Lion’s Heart, a Midwife’s Saga “Patricia Harman’s unflinching honesty and soaring poetry unfold the dream and the reality of the rural communes, political activism, and urban counterculture in the 1970s, and what we, the veterans of that particular era of bohemian life, have become today. She weaves in the telling details—the songs we sang, the clothes we wore, the glories of nature we witnessed, and, most especially, the causes for which we organized and the austerities we endured willingly, for the sake of the earth and all her children.”—Alicia Bay Laurel, author and illustrator of Living on the Earth “A sparkling, vivid story of how a midwife is born—and survives. This story takes you places you never expect to go.”—Tina Cassidy, author of Birth: The Surprising History of How We Are Born Praise for The Blue Cotton Gown “This luminescent, ruthlessly authentic, humane, and brilliantly written account of a midwife in rough-hewn Appalachia, a passionate healer plying her art and struggling to live a life of spirit, stands as a model for all of us, doctors and patients alike, of how to offer good care.”—Samuel Shem, MD, author of The House of God, Mount Misery, and The Spirit of the Place “Harman has a gift for storytelling, and The Blue Cotton Gown is a moving, percipient book.”—Karen R. Long, Cleveland Plain Dealer “As the mother of seven children and veteran of eight pregnancy losses, I knew when I ran my bath that I would be unable to resist Patricia Harman’s memoir of midwifery, The Blue Cotton Gown. What I didn’t realize was that it would cause me, a sensible person, to get into her bath with one sock still on and rise from it when the candle was gone and the water cold. Utterly true and lyrical as any novel, Harman’s book should be a little classic.”—Jacquelyn Mitchard, author of The Deep End of the Ocean and Cage of Stars “ Arms Wide Open is more than a book about delivering babies and bringing new life into the world; it’s about the deterioration of the optimism once so prevalent in the cracks and crevices of this country. It’s about the human spirit, and the desire to do good unto others. But most importantly, it’s about Mother Earth, the time we spend here, the things we plant, the mark we leave and the power she has over all of us.”— Hippocampus Magazine Patricia Harman , CNM, has published in the Journal of Midwifery and Women's Health and the Journal of Nursing Scholarship, as well as in alternative publications. She is a regular presenter at national midwifery conferences. Her first book, The Blue Cotton Gown, was published to acclaim in 2008. Harman lives and works near Morgantown, West Virginia, and has three sons. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Prelude All the way down Route 119, past Gandeeville, Snake Hollow, and Wolf Run, I’m thinking about the baby that died. xa0 I wasn’t there, didn’t even know the family. It happened a few days ago, with another midwife, at a homebirth in Hardy County, on summer solstice, the longest day of the year. xa0 Word on the informal West Virginia midwives’ hotline is that the baby’s shoulders got stuck, a grave emergency. The midwife, Jade, tried everything, all the maneuvers she’d studied in textbooks and the special tricks she’d learned from other practitioners, but nothing worked. They rushed, by ambulance, to the nearest hospital thirty miles away, with the baby’s blue head sticking out of the mother, but it was too late. Of course it was too late. xa0 Homebirth midwives in West Virginia are legal, but just barely, and there’s no doubt the state coroner’s office will investigate. Jade is afraid. xa0 We are all afraid. xa0 We whip around another corner and I lose my supper out the side window. Who do I think I am taking on this kind of responsibility? Why am I risking my life to get to a homebirth of people I hardly know? What am I doing in this Ford station wagon being whipped back and forth as we careen through the night? I awake sick with grief, my heart pounding. I’m lying on a pillow-padded king-size bed with floral sheets. A man I hardly recognize sleeps next to me. This is Tom, I remind myself: my husband of thirty-three years, a person whose body and mind are as familiar to me as my own. I prop myself up on an elbow, inspecting his broad shoulders, smooth face, straight nose and full lips, his short silver hair, in the silver moonlight. One hairy leg sticks out of the covers. One arm, with the wide hand and sensitive surgeon’s fingers, circles his pillow. It’s 3:45, summer solstice morning. xa0 When I rise and pull on my long white terry robe, I stand for a moment, getting my bearings, then open the bedroom door that squeaks and pad across the carpeted living room. Outside the tall corner windows, the trees dance in the dark. Once I called myself Trillium Stone. That was my pen name when I lived in rural communes, wrote for our political rag, The Wild Currents , taught the first natural-childbirth classes, and started doing homebirths. xa0 Now I’m a nurse-midwife with short graying hair, who no longer delivers babies, living with an ob-gyn in this lakefront home, so far from where I ever thought I would live, so far from where I ever wanted to live. I search the photographs on the piano of my three handsome sons, now men. Do I wake? Do I sleep? xa0 OK, my life has been a wild ride, I’ll admit it, but the image of this hippie chick lurching through the night, on her way to a homebirth, with only a thick copy of Varney’s Midwifery as a guide, disturbs me. What did she think she was doing? Where did she get the balls? xa0 xa0 xa0 On the highest shelf in the back of our clothes closet, a stack of journals gathers dust. For seventeen years I carried them in a backpack from commune to commune. They’ve moved with me across the country three times, through midwifery school, Tom’s medical school and his ob-gyn residency. I can’t get the diaries out of my mind, a mute witness to my life . . . xa0 I slip back through the bedroom. Tom snores on. By the dim closet light, I find a stepladder and struggle to bring down the shabby container. The journals have been closed for twenty-five years; pages stick together and smell faintly of mold. xa0 I’m on a mission now, trying to understand, but I’m surprised to find that I started each entry with only the day and the month, no year. This is going to take a while. It seems I never expected anyone would want to reconstruct my life, not even me. I’m an archaeologist digging through my own past. xa0 With narrowed eyes, I flip through notebook after notebook, daring that flower child to show her face. When the alarm goes off, Tom, dressed in blue scrubs for the OR, finds me asleep in the white canvas chair, with a red journal open, over my heart. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • The author of
  • The
  • Blue Cotton Gown
  • recounts living free and naturally against all odds—and discovering her true calling as a midwife—in this deeply moving memoir
  • In her first, highly praised memoir, Patricia Harman told us the stories patients brought into her exam room, and her own story of struggling to help women as a nurse-midwife in medical practice with her husband—an OB/GYN—in Appalachia. Now, Patsy reaches back to the 1960s and 1970s, recounting how she learned to deliver babies and her youthful experiments with living a fully sustainable, natural life.Drawing heavily on her journals,
  • Arms Wide Open
  • goes back to a time of counter-culture idealism that the boomer generation remembers well. Patsy opens with stories of living in the wilds of Minnesota in a log cabin she and her lover build with their own hands, the only running water being the nearby streams. They set up beehives and give chase to a bear competing for the honey. Patsy gives birth and learns to help her friends deliver as naturally as possible.Weary of the cold and isolation, Patsy moves to a commune in West Virginia, where she becomes a self-taught midwife delivering babies in cabins and homes. Her stories sparkle with drama and intensity, but she wants to help more women than healthy hippie homesteaders. After a ten-year sojourn for professional training, Patsy and her husband return to Appalachia, where they set up a women's health practice. They deliver babies together—this time in hospitals—and care for a wide variety of gyn patients. They live in a lakeside contemporary home, though their hearts are still firmly implanted in nature. The obstetrical climate is changing. The Harmans' family is changing. The earth is changing—but Patsy's arms remain wide open to life and all it offers.Her memoir of living free and sustainably against all odds will be especially embraced by anyone who lived through the Vietnam War and commune era, and all those involved in the back-to-nature and natural-childbirth movements.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(135)
★★★★
25%
(113)
★★★
15%
(68)
★★
7%
(32)
23%
(103)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Five Stars

I couldn't put this book down!
1 people found this helpful
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Five Stars

Excellent read!
1 people found this helpful
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Five Stars

Great book.
1 people found this helpful
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Empowering

I enjoyed Arms Wide Open to the fullest. Patsy has managed to inspire and empower women as well as men to live an authentic and meaningful existence in a world that is ever changing and evolving. This book is not just for the Mom-to-be or Midwife, though this segment of the population will greatly cherish this book. Her gritty and very real and honest way of portraying herself and those she shares her path with, encourages all of us to explore the core of who we really are as well as to express ourselves in ways that we may not have given ourselves permission to. Patsy's courage and determination to walk lightly on earth and to bring freedom and empowerment to women (and so men) encourages a joyful revolution where babes are born in joy and without trauma and lives are lived in peace and harmony with our own true selves.

As a Sacred Childbirth with Reiki Practitioner, who also empowers women to experience the birth of their dreams as well as to clear any and all past trauma including birth trauma- so to live a meaningful life in a body that feels safe, I am most happy to wholeheartedly suggest this book to everyone who wishes to go on a journey of self exploration or to just enjoy the stories. I took such pleaseure in the way she has woven the prose with such detail and candor. Patsy includes intimate details of her choices, her births and her relationships/marriage and so much more all in a way that has one laughing and sometimes pausing to reflect. This book is all at once entertaining, thought provoking and motivating.

Amy Widmer
Morgantown, WV
1 people found this helpful
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Empowering

I enjoyed Arms Wide Open to the fullest. Patsy has managed to inspire and empower women as well as men to live an authentic and meaningful existence in a world that is ever changing and evolving. This book is not just for the Mom-to-be or Midwife, though this segment of the population will greatly cherish this book. Her gritty and very real and honest way of portraying herself and those she shares her path with, encourages all of us to explore the core of who we really are as well as to express ourselves in ways that we may not have given ourselves permission to. Patsy's courage and determination to walk lightly on earth and to bring freedom and empowerment to women (and so men) encourages a joyful revolution where babes are born in joy and without trauma and lives are lived in peace and harmony with our own true selves.

As a Sacred Childbirth with Reiki Practitioner, who also empowers women to experience the birth of their dreams as well as to clear any and all past trauma including birth trauma- so to live a meaningful life in a body that feels safe, I am most happy to wholeheartedly suggest this book to everyone who wishes to go on a journey of self exploration or to just enjoy the stories. I took such pleaseure in the way she has woven the prose with such detail and candor. Patsy includes intimate details of her choices, her births and her relationships/marriage and so much more all in a way that has one laughing and sometimes pausing to reflect. This book is all at once entertaining, thought provoking and motivating.

Amy Widmer
Morgantown, WV
1 people found this helpful
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Three Stars

not quite up to the others in series
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Great read

Every midwife will love this book. Actually all women and doulas also. Touching and exciting all in one. The majesty of birth and the dedication of midwives.
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Good book

Thank you very much.
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Love this book.

Just finished this book. So happy Patsy has shared so much of her life with us. Love her stories she's my favorite hippie. When you're done with this read "Midwife of Hope River" you'll love that too.
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Wonderful, honest memoir of a true midwife

I just finished this book. I must say, after reading every book, fiction and non-fiction, about midwifery, I held off on getting this one. I read Harmon's first book, The Blue Cotton Gown, and was a little bit disappointed with the lack of birth stories in it. It was a good read, overall, but not what I expected. So, having read that this book was more about the author's hippie background than her midwifery career, I guess I was just afraid that I would once again be disappointed with a book that didn't have much birth in it. -I couldn't have been more wrong! What a wonderful surprise this book was! I am a new CNM (Certified Nurse Midwife) myself, and although I have learned about the history of midwifery in the U.S. and abroad, I really didn't "get" why there was this hippie label attached to midwives in general. I was born in the early 70s, so the 80s were my era and I don't know much about the whole hippie era. Well, now I feel like I understand that era and the advent of the hippie midwife much better. This book left me wistful for a time-period that I never got to experience. So much in healthcare and in our world has changed for the worse since then...
I could not put this book down and even found myself dreaming about Patsy's experiences as I slept. Thank you, Patsy, for sharing your experiences so honestly and beautifully! I would love to actually know you, but after reading this book, feel like I do, in a way.