Birthwares Newsletter>
Young Moms: Making Childbirth Ed. Relevant to Them

Young Moms: Making Childbirth Education Relevant to Them 
 
Okay – so you know young people, right? You’ve raised 
kids. You’re hip and up-to-date. Then why is it so hard 
to reach that 17-year-old student in prenatal class? 
 
1) She is tired. She is not used to having classes or 
meetings at nighttime. She has school tomorrow. She had 
school all day. Don’t waste any of her time. 
 
2) She is not thrilled about being a pregnant goddess. She 
feels fat, ungainly and ugly, not luminous and beaming with 
glorious motherhood. Even IF she is wearing hip, tight 
maternity clothing and looks fabulous to you. 
 
3) She was not trying to get pregnant. She may not have a 
supportive partner. She may be living at home with her 
parents. She may not have money for trendy baby gear. She 
probably feels isolated at school from her peers and 
definitely from her pregnant, suburban peers at prenatal 
class. 
 
4) She does not talk about “gross” intimate stuff with her 
boyfriend or anyone. Pooping while pushing, mucous plugs, 
breasts, vaginal exams, “discharge” will either make her 
giggle with embarrassment or wish she were dead. 
 
5) She thinks your carefully chosen, expensive videos and 
resources are hopelessly out of date and full of old, funny 
looking people. Sorry! 
 
So what can you do? 
 
Acknowledge the above points, in your approach, your 
language and your interaction with these moms. It is a 
fine line to navigate, but try to avoid the pitfalls of 
being either patronizing, preachy, or worse, painfully 
“hip” and with-it in your approach. You know what I mean. 
 
She doesn’t need to think you are cool. She probably won’t. 
You probably aren’t. It definitely doesn’t matter. You 
want to be the one who gave her non-judgmental support and 
information: about her body, her abilities and her power.  
That is what she’ll treasure you for.  
 
Acknowledge that the videos might be boring. Try to avoid 
the parts with long interviews with moms wearing those big 
80’s eyeglasses. Stick with the birth scenes themselves as 
much as you can. Try to have a few births with young 
looking moms. Women giving birth are timeless. 
 
Don’t expect her to participate in class or throw out 
questions or comments. She is used to a different kind of 
education. If you are friendly, non-threatening and 
willing to spend extra time, you just might find that she 
is one who lingers after class to chat. She might be the 
one who calls with her birth story. She might be the one 
who borrows the “Active Birth” book. And she’ll probably 
be the one that gives you the glowing evaluation. Maybe. 
 
 
copyright 2005 Sarah Hilbert-West