Calmic Birth Midwifery Services

Calmic Birth Midwifery Services I specialise in supporting women and families through their pregnancy, birth and postnatal journey.

I believe every woman should have a transformative birthing experience and to do this they must have all the information they require to make informed decisions about where and how they choose to birth. I trust in the physiology of birth and believe that holding space for women in pregnancy birth and in the postpartum period is essential to a smooth transition to motherhood. I work with a small number of clients only to ensure I can provide women centred, holistic care.

Sharing xx
20/02/2026

Sharing xx

PERTH
Calling all beautiful, late-pregnancy mamas!
We’re on the lookout for 8 volunteers for this coming Monday, 23rd February 2026 in Morley to be models for our pregnancy massage training, and it’s as lovely as it sounds.
If you’re 35+ weeks pregnant, and would love 2.5 hours of nurturing, hands-on pregnancy massage, this is your invitation to lie back, relax, and be truly cared for while our students learn this beautiful skill.
Session options:
• Morning: Arrive 8:45am to start at 9:00am – 11:30am
• Afternoon: Arrive at 12:15pm to start at 12:30pm – 3:00pm
These times can't be changed so you need to be available for the times shown. If this sounds like exactly what you and your pregnant body is craving, email me at [email protected] to secure a spot. These places always fill quickly 💜

20/01/2026

Great information

Long overdue and short notice but Friday coffee and a catch up with your midwife is on this Friday 0930 playground at Fl...
01/12/2025

Long overdue and short notice but Friday coffee and a catch up with your midwife is on this Friday 0930 playground at Floreat Beach next to the kiosk. I’d love to see you all. ❤️

So true. 🙌I’m seeing more and more women looking for a homebirth midwife with admitting rights to keep them safe from th...
14/11/2025

So true. 🙌

I’m seeing more and more women looking for a homebirth midwife with admitting rights to keep them safe from the system
In the case transfer is needed.

I however chose not to continue with admitting rights for a few different reasons.

The main one being a licensing agreement that I would have to sign with so many conditions I didn’t feel comfortable with but the main one was that I would follow their policies.

This was a big fat no for me. I won’t ever make women follow non evidence based guidelines which are designed for safety’.

Women choose what’s right for them and my job as their midwife is give them all the information that they need to make the decision that is best for them and their baby.

The other reason is if we are transferring in I choose to be with women rather than with paperwork.

At the end of the day women don’t need a private midwife to protect them from the system if they are educated and know that everything is a choice they can do whatever they like regardless of who is providing clinical care.

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Whether by government licensing bodies, a hospital CEO, a higher ranking OB or midwife, insurance companies, or a drug company, if your doctor, midwife, nurse, or doula answers to or gets paid by someone other than you, then they are also beholden to someone other than you.

This dynamic needs to be understood by every pregnant mother choosing to work within our current system.

It’s not always wrong for there to be oversight, of course. But it does mean their advice is not always what is actually in yours or your baby’s best interest.

A lot of us feel put in between a rock and a hard place when it comes to birth decisions. But whatever we choose, we need to recognize that if they answer to someone other than us, then their advice reflects this reality. Their arms may be tied as to what they can say or do without risking job, license, certification, paycheck, etc. What they are “allowed” to say might not actually be what’s best or healthiest for you and your baby.

***This doesn’t mean you can’t choose and do what you know is best. It just means this specific person might not be able or willing to recommend it or possibly be there for it.***

If you choose to work within that system, make choices that align first with what you know to be true about your body, your baby, your conscience, and what you want to live with and remember about your pregnancy and birth years down the line.

Most of these people will not remember you years later, but you and your baby are the ones who live with the consequences.

I don’t pretend to know the ideal way for it all to work. However, I’m 💯 certain that insurance executives, hospital boards, politicians, incentivized providers, licensing bodies, or bullied staff aren’t the ones that should be dictating whether or not you get to push your own baby out of your own body, go into spontaneous labor, how long you labor, what is put into you or your baby, or even have major surgery and its lifelong implications.

You may feel limited but in the end, we always have SOME sort of choice and it is up to each one of us to take empowered responsibility for our health and our births.

🤍

This is on this weekend in Scarborough. Some great exhibitors and speakers. Grab your free ticket now ❤️
07/11/2025

This is on this weekend in Scarborough. Some great exhibitors and speakers. Grab your free ticket now ❤️

Whether you are a first-time parent or an experienced one, this event is perfect for everyone to gather information and support.

More attempts at division between doulas and midwives and from our own professional body. 🤬🤬🤬🤬In bed with the obstetrici...
05/11/2025

More attempts at division between doulas and midwives and from our own professional body. 🤬🤬🤬🤬In bed with the obstetricians to erase women’s rights. What the actual f**k. Regulation is just another way to assert control over people and curtail their autonomy under the guise of safety. No woman should be told how, where and with whom she is allowed to birth.
😡😡😡😡

Lamaze Australia's response to the recent statement issued by RANZCOG and ACM regarding freebirths and doulas.

(https://midwives.org.au/Web/News-media-releases/Articles/2025/03_November/Jooint_Call_Health_Ministers_End_Freebirth_Deaths.aspx?fbclid=IwdGRjcAN1T0xleHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHgHeqS3NVt6yc3hUxY2oE_ZzIWPR3RQRUJ6czjfQrApSZDdCTGbMLstCrI0C_aem_Wp82Fuwdc37aBYOtg_QJTg)

When Women Die in Childbirth, Blame Fails Us. Listening Might Save Lives.

The recent tragic deaths of several Australian women and babies following freebirths have rightly ignited grief and concern across the nation. Any maternal or neonatal death is heartbreaking, and communities affected by these losses deserve compassion and support.

However, calls to criminalise doulas or restrict freebirth represent a deeply troubling response. They threaten to undermine women’s reproductive autonomy, fail to address the systemic drivers pushing some women away from mainstream maternity care, and risk repeating a historic pattern: when women suffer, the instinct is to police them rather than listen to them.

Women’s Autonomy Is Not Optional

Whether one agrees with freebirth or not is immaterial. At the heart of this issue lies a fundamental principle: women have the right to bodily autonomy. This includes the right to decide where, how, and with whom they give birth. Restricting this right leads us onto dangerous ground, eroding sexual and reproductive health and rights enshrined in international law, including the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR).

Attempts to limit women’s legal rights around childbirth should alarm us all. History teaches that reproductive control rarely stops at one point of intervention.

The Difficult Question Too Few Are Asking: Why?

Critics have rushed to blame social media influencers and so-called “birth keepers” for these deaths. This simplistic narrative dismisses the real motivations driving women’s decisions and insults their intelligence. Women do not reject the healthcare system on a whim; they do so because, in their experiences or in the experiences of those they trust, it has already rejected them.

Each year about 300,000 women give birth in Australia. Approximately 97 percent do so in hospital; around 1.8 percent in birth centres; and 0.3 percent at home, mostly through regulated midwifery models. Freebirth accounts for a tiny fraction of births. There is no evidence of a sudden surge; what has increased is public attention.

What also continues to rise is birth trauma. One in three women in Australia report their birth as traumatic, and around 10 percent develop symptoms consistent with post-traumatic stress disorder. This is not fringe rhetoric. These figures come from large-scale Australian research and government-commissioned reports.
We also operate in a highly medicalised maternity environment. Induction rates for first-time mothers are close to 50 percent, and caesarean births approach 40 percent. This escalation in intervention has not corresponded with improved clinical outcomes, but it has contributed to increasing morbidity and psychological distress.

Associate Professor Vinay Rane recently noted that hospitals “can feel quite clinical and too bright, too busy,” and must work to become more inclusive and accessible. This understatement gestures toward a far deeper truth: women are telling us they do not always feel safe, respected, or seen in our maternity system. Dismissing that reality drives them further away.

Doulas Are Not the Problem

Doulas have become convenient scapegoats in this debate. In reality, they are trained providers of emotional, physical, and informational support. They do not perform clinical tasks or replace midwives or doctors. Decades of international and Australian evidence show that continuous non-clinical labour support reduces intervention rates, caesarean births, instrumental delivery, epidural use, and improves maternal emotional outcomes.

In a system where fewer than 10 percent of Australian women receive continuity of midwifery care, doulas fill a vital gap. Restricting them would remove one of the few evidence-based supports women can reliably access.

What Women Are Telling Us

Women are not turning away from maternity services because they are naïve or reckless. They are turning away because they are frightened of being silenced, coerced, disrespected, or traumatised.
Women tell us this in surveys, inquiries, patient complaints, advocacy forums, and public submissions. Silencing them will not make them safer. Listening to them might.

The Real Work Ahead

If we want to prevent further tragedies, we must move beyond regulation and toward reform:
• Expand access to continuity-of-midwifery-care models
• Embed trauma-informed, culturally safe care across all services
• Strengthen community-based childbirth education
• Protect and integrate doulas into collaborative maternity care pathways
• Address systemic obstetric violence, coercion, and racism
• Centre women’s experiences in policy, practice, and evaluation

The Bottom Line

Doulas are not to blame. Women are not to blame. The system has been broken for decades and women are simply doing whatever they can to ensure that they birth surrounded by people who will protect them and care for them throughout one of life’s most vulnerable moments. It is time to turn the spotlight on the real culprit: our maternity care system. Fixing it is not optional; it is overdue. Women deserve safety, dignity, and respect in childbirth, and they will keep seeking it wherever they can find it.

Today, Calmic Birth celebrates its 14th birthday and with that the beginning of a new chapter. As of now, Calmic will no...
05/08/2025

Today, Calmic Birth celebrates its 14th birthday and with that the beginning of a new chapter.

As of now, Calmic will no longer be accepting new clients, and I will be transitioning out of the birth space by the end of the year.

It has been an incredible 14-year journey, and I am deeply grateful to have had the privilege of supporting numerous remarkable women and their families.

Thanks to all the beautiful midwives who have supported me to serve homebirthing women during this time.

My heart is full. ❤️🥰❤️

Some great recipe ideas here. 🥰
17/06/2025

Some great recipe ideas here. 🥰

Thinking of preparing freezer meals before baby arrives? Get 50+ recipes for real food postpartum recovery meals, freezer tips, and the rationale for postpartum nutrient repletion in this post.

Address

Perth, WA
6019

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

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