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Eileen Nyholt

by Ellen C. Warren, photograph by Peter DiAntoni
When Eileen Nyholt meets a person
for the first time, it’s often the very
first time that person is meeting
anyone. These are very small people
and it is her hands that guide them
into a strange new world of loud
noises, bright lights and brand new
ideas. Like breathing. Relying on
techniques and wisdom, much of it
passed down through the ages, she
uses her skill to ease the journey
and make the transition of birth as
trauma-free as possible.
Eileen is a professional midwife. She’s
been “catching babies,” as she likes to
call it, for a long time now. And she
loves it. “This is absolutely a calling
for me,” she exclaims. “I have to do
this!”
During her years at UWM School
of Nursing Eileen decided to pursue
midwifery because she felt a need to
serve her community. A year after
graduating, Eileen spent six weeks
catching babies in Kenya under the
tutelage of one of her mentors, a
midwife and missionary who’d worked
for 15 years in war-torn Sierra Leone.
With few of the tools or medicines
Western hospitals and clinics have at
their disposal, nurses in Kenya taught
Eileen “how to use my hands instead
of technology. That was a big lesson,”
she emphasizes.
These days Eileen works at Sinai
Hospital. She has worked in all the
Milwaukee hospitals and chose Sinai
because “women have the most
choices there.” This, she says, is due to
the influence of the midwives. Sinai
has one of the longest-running and
largest midwife practices in the area.
In its approximately 19 years, the staff
has gone from one to 10 midwives.
The high quality of care, nurturing
treatment of the whole family (“It’s
not just the woman who’s pregnant.”)
and very large amount of time spent
in consultation and labor (compared
to a doctor’s delivery) attracts many
nurses, doctors and their partners
to the midwives at Sinai for their
personal deliveries, in addition to the
mostly low-income population the
hospital generally serves.
Eileen’s decision to become a midwife
was jelled in her early hospital
exposure to how women in birthing
situations were sometimes treated.
Often it seemed the women’s own
physical realities would be invalidated
by doctors who’d respond with words
like, “No, that doesn’t hurt.” Eileen
found herself thinking, “You know,
I could do this a lot better, and a lot
more respectfully.” She is, however,
quick to point out that there are many
really good doctors.
Eileen crossed from the Eastside into
Riverwest more than seventeen years
ago “for the parking,” she says with a
big laugh. She lived seven years in the
house where her daughter Lily, who’s
now nine and a half years old, was
born at home. Her next and final move
was kitty-corner into a rental house,
which, when asked, the landlord was
willing to sell.
She’s always been very happy with
her neighborhood. Besides liking
the “nice mix of individuals with
different lifestyles, colors and creeds,”
her neighbors have also proven to be
highly supportive of their community.
Eileen has seen big changes take place
as a result. She tells the story about
the building which Hotcakes Gallery
now occupies at 3379 N. Pierce
St. Once, she recalls, it was a drug
house with prostitution. The whole
neighborhood – people from Pierce,
Fratney, Townsend – came together
and took the landlord to task, bringing
the police and alderman into play.
Eventually they were successful in
closing the drug house down. They
continue to have a good block watch,
and Eileen is one of the captains.
In an interesting twist, that former
drug house is now the place where
Eileen teaches a weekly yoga class
every Tuesday from 6 to 7:30 pm.
From an early interest in yoga in her
teens she went on to study for several
years and was eventually asked to
teach by her teacher, “a woman,” Eileen
says, “who had a lot of wisdom.” She
started her teaching at UWM.
“My whole life I’ve been intrigued by
mindfulness,” remarks Eileen. “The
breath work helps to open all the
levels. Yoga brings the body and the
mind together.” She explains that the
practitioner of yoga has occasional
“Aha! moments. Things are revealed
to you as you spend time with them.
They’re revealed to you because you’re
paying attention.”
In her practice Eileen encourages the
birth mother to pay attention to her
own body, and to get as comfortable
as possible. Eileen tells her clients,
“We need a safe nest to go into labor.
[The midwife’s] job is to make sure
you feel like you have a safe nest so
you can do the work you need to do.”
The success of midwife-assisted
births is backed up with some pretty
impressive statistics. The percent of
women requiring epidurals at Sinai
is 36%, compared to 80-90% at other
hospitals. Episiotomies are only
needed 1% of the time, and even Csections
take place at a very low 9%.
(Midwives do not perform C-sections
or use forceps.)
And then there’s the thrilling “sacred
moment” of birth with Eileen’s hands
(sometimes accompanied by the
father’s hands) guiding the baby out
and to its next resting place on the
mother’s abdomen.
Eileen sums it up: “I am so honored
that someone would allow me to be
present at this miracle, at this lifechanging
moment.
“And it happens every day.
“It’s an every-day miracle!”
Riverwest Currents online edition - March, 2006
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