
That’s ok. That’s my job. But today it was nice to take a minute and look into the women’s faces.
Natalie, CleanBirth.org volunteer extraodinare, who oversaw the resupply of kits and attended a Village Volunteer training in December, sent this picture of 3 moms who used the kits we supplied.
Looking at the faces of these women, seeing the bundles wrapped safely in their arms, I remember that this is why I do what I do.
This is why so many people have gotten involved, through volunteering and donations.
These women are faced with real danger when they give birth. They have many older children depending on them. We need to give them education and supplies to make each birth as safe as we can.
That’s why we do what we do. That’s why you give what you can give. We thank you. They thank you!


I found this
I asked Mrs. Yad, who is taking care of her daugther Van, why it was necessary for her to lie over a bed of coals.
The fire must stay alight all the time until the mother has completed her recovery, at a date determined by her own mother. This is done because it is believed that the heat of the fire will heal the uterus and birth canal more quickly. ‘If a new mother doesn’t do this, she may develop backache and an aching waist,’ she explained.
During this time, Van will drink several litres of hot water every day, boiled in a cooking pot and containing herbs to ensure that she will produce enough milk to breastfeed her baby. She also has to shower three of four times a day, again using warm water with traditional herbs. This is the Lao way, and it is rigorously adhered to.


