Author: thesheisproject

Val’s Story

Dear Mum, Its 45 years since we last spent Mothers Day together. After you died I found Mothers Day really hard, not Christmas, or even your birthday but Mothers Day. This is the day where I feel your absence most painfully. I know others are able to call someone else mum, whether it’s a friend’s mother, or maybe a mother in law, but that is something that I just couldn’t ever bring myself to do. …

Johanna’s Story

Dear Mum When I was small you were my everything. No other voice or touch could soothe or inspire like yours. No meal tasted as good as what you prepared, no other home was so lovely. You were my mum and because of that I walked tall into the world and always had a safe harbor when the world was unkind. Then I was not so small and my image of you wobbled. Learning to stand …

Julie’s Story

Dear Nanna, As I take the time to think about you I realize that you personified the stereotypical Nanna from my childhood storybooks. Although small in stature you were large in your love and care for your family and those blessed to be your friends. My memories of you Nanna are filled with perfect sponge cakes, endless cups of tea and relaxed conversation. Rarely seen outside your kitchen and without your signature, checked apron, you …

YOU ARE NEVER TOO OLD – MARION’S STORY

You Are Never Too Old – Marion’s Story

  Todays story is brought to you via short video from our friends at Find Yourself In the Story It is an inspiring insight into the life of a remarkable woman named Marion Fromm. Aged in her 60’s Marion, a mother and grandmother from Australia, relocated to Cambodia to establish a fruit preservation and processing plant that would train, employ and house those who had become disabled as a result of landmines. 16 years later …

Transition – Kath’s Story

Transition – Kath’s Story

As a midwife I became skilled at intuitively recognising when a women was entering the transition stage of labour. In some cases the established rhythm of contractions and rest would pause and the stillness brought a deeper rest or time to reposition and regroup in preparation for birth. In other cases a crescendo occurs that if not harnessed can lead to an unwanted, obstructed labour. It is meant to be a transitory stage – the …