Changing Birth in the Indigenous Community with Marvene Young

Marvene Young is our guest today on the podcast. She is a Doula who serves the families of Chippewa County. Her own birth and postpartum experiences drove her to this work along with her background in nursing and a desire to heal generational trauma wounds in her community. 

Quote from Marvene

“I became a doula because with my second born, I wanted the pregnancy, but nobody supported me throughout it, except for my lactation consultant. That was a really lonely time in my life. I've come to realize how many women there are in that predicament, when really all they need is somebody to be there by their side, just to be a friend. I am a Native American. Anishinaabe, means original people. There's a lot of historical trauma that has been passed down through generations, like my grandparents, every single one of them were in a boarding school. In boarding schools, they would criticize, belittle, abuse, and neglect all of the children. They were not raised on love. They did not have any support. they went in from when they were infants until they were adults so they never got like that parental guidance that parental love they never learned trust because all their adults in their lives were not trustworthy. Many of them didn't even make it home. We're still missing out on children's bodies that we would like to get back to our hometown. This has impacted my parents because my parents were also raised in trauma because their parents didn't know how to parent and that's the struggle going on through many families that I see. My generation we're not directly affected by the boarding schools but we've lost our culture, we've lost our language, we didn't grow up with unconditional love because conditional love is very prominent among native families. It's very easy to be disowned from your family like I smoked weed when I was young and I got disowned. Pregnancies are not celebrated, especially young pregnancies, I had my first one when I was 17 and that was extremely frowned upon. I was a single mom and I have my second pregnancy completely frowned upon, and then I had my third my after I met this guy for three months and nobody ever like celebrated my pregnancies I was shamed for being pregnant and that's what a lot of young moms face around here so that's what I want to change.”

Meet Marvene Young:

I am a wife, mom of 3, home healthcare nurse, EMT and a full time doula. I was raised on an Indian reservation and had a sacred childhood filled with ceremonies and community. Not everyone had that experience due to boarding schools. Later on in my life I found out why my family is the way it is, laced with traumas, addictions and negative self talk because that’s how boarding schools taught them to be.  Find out how we are the generation that heals from historical trauma, it starts with our future- our children.

Connect with Marvene:

https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61561152279621


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Doula Tips and Tits is produced by Kaely Harrod of Harrod Doula Services

It is sponsored by The Doula Biz Blueprint Self-Paced Class for Doulas Launching Successful and Sustainable Businesses! 

Music by Madirfan: Hidden Place on Pixabay

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