About My Practice

The Womb. The Heart. The Essence.

Woven Mission..

I am growing into the sacred rite of homebirth midwifery—

rooted in ancient wisdom, intuitive knowing, and cultural remembering.

I serve as a bridge between womb and world, between body and spirit,

between the breath of birth and the quiet integration of postpartum.

My mission is simple :

To walk with women. To tend their bodies, their transitions, and their stories.

To mother the mother—so she may move through birth held, seen, and sovereign.

Sacred Ethics..

I walk in reverence for the teachings and traditions of Indigenous women across the world.

These ways are not mine to claim, but to honor with humility and care.

I walk beside, not ahead. This path asks continual listening, unlearning, and remembering—again and again.

I am committed to practicing with integrity: honoring lineage without appropriation, speaking less and listening more, and allowing this work to remain relational rather than extractive.

This is a living ethic—one shaped by responsibility, reverence, and ongoing self-reflection.

To serve the sacred, I remain humble. To mother others, I continue to mother myself.

A Note on Lineage & Community Care

This work is rooted in tradition. Lineage. Ancestry

Historically, midwives were deeply integrated into village and community life — feeding, protecting, and supporting families as part of a living network of care. Birth and postpartum were not isolated events, but woven into daily life, ritual, and communal responsibility. Knowledge was passed through mentorship, lived experience, and shared wisdom rather than formal institutions, honoring both the body and the lineage of care that has carried generations.Midwifery and birth work have always lived within Black, Brown, and Indigenous communities—held through relationship, reciprocity, and shared responsibility.

It matters deeply to me that BlPOC women feel welcomed, seen, and supported in this space, and that care is offered in ways that honor both history and lived experience.

My practice reflects the depth of care, and energetic devotion this work requires..

A Note on Accessibility, and Integrity

My work exists outside of insurance-based and MassHealth-covered doula models. This is an intentional choice—not because access is unimportant to me, but because the care I offer cannot be held within standardized billing structures, volume-based expectations, or time-limited encounters.

I work with a very small number of families each season so care can remain slow, present, and deeply relational. Prenatals are unhurried. On-call presence is wholehearted. Support extends beyond logistics into emotional holding, nervous-system regulation, education, ceremony, and integration. This level of devotion requires spaciousness, sustainability, and clear boundaries.

I recognize that this model is not accessible to everyone, and I hold that truth with care. The families meant to walk with me will feel aligned in reciprocity and devotion.

If you are seeking presence, intimacy, reverence, and a guide who walks fully alongside you—through birth and the threshold it represents—we may be well aligned.

This work is about devotion.

And it is meant to be received by those who already recognize its value.

A Note on Fit

I am most aligned with families who value relationship, move with intention, spirituality and understand this care is layered, deeply intentional and full of wisdom from all over the world. Who undertand that this is lineage based work that honors culture, accessibility, reciprocity and that care is something we co-create.

If you feel drawn to this work and unsure about access, I welcome a conversation. You are not expected to arrive with certainty or perfect language—only sincerity, truth and the right to be human. A human who deserves sacred, woman led care.

I work with women who want to feel held, informed, and deeply supported through pregnancy, birth, and postpartum as a rite of passage.

My care blends evidence-based birth support with ceremony, touch, nervous-system regulation, and emotional integration. This work is grounded in ancestral wisdom, spiritual presence, and deep remembering.

I intentionally take a limited number of families each season so that every birth receives my full presence.

The Rhythm of My Practice

I practice in seasons, not year-round.

This rhythm allows me to offer grounded, fully resourced care during active birth seasons, and to step away during integration seasons for rest, study, and continued training with traditional birth workers.

This way of working protects my body, my presence, and the integrity of the care I offer. When we work together, you are not sharing me with many others. You are met with intention, availability, and focused presence.

These boundaries are not limitations — they are part of the medicine.

Philosophy of Care

I offer birth work rooted in the traditional ancestral ways — relational, intuitive, and deeply present — while held with clear, intentional containers. My care is not a service alone, but a shared tending: a rhythm formed between us over time, shaped by trust, responsibility, and mutual commitment.

I walk alongside you through pregnancy, birth, and postpartum, offering not only skill, but presence. This work lives in the liminal spaces of women’s wellness and requires slowness, continuity, and devoted attention. It is guided by intuition, tradition, sacred remembrance, and grounded in the understanding that depth cannot be rushed.

This care remembers the village way — women showing up for women — while honoring that true village care is built through reciprocity, clarity, and respect for boundaries. In this work, trust flows both ways.Presence is sustained through clear agreements, shared responsibility, and reverence for the energy required to hold birth well. Women offering what they carry and receiving what they need. It is shaped through real connection.

A space to name what is true and to find the path that supports us both.

This is conscious care.

This is the woman’s way.

This is the sacred way.

Who This Work Is For

This work is for women who:

• value depth, slowness, and reverence, and understand that birth cannot be rushed, optimized, or reduced

• desire emotional, physical, and nervous-system support before, during, and after birth

• understand birth as a sacred life threshold — a rite of passage deserving presence and care

• respect clear containers and mutual responsibility, knowing that trust flows both ways

• recognize doula and midwifery care as lineage-based, village-held work, not a transactional service

• understand the time, devotion, and unseen labor required to support birth and postpartum integration

• have already been investing in themselves, their healing, and their well-being, and can feel the difference between surface-level support and embodied care

⸻.