Unboundblog



This blog exists to help you feel less alone as we all navigate what a life lived UNBOUND from the chains of mental illness. I’m a firm believer in Jesus, but everyone is welcome here. I will share the good, bad, and ugly of my own journey, and I hope you will keep in touch with me throughout your own story through the Contact page. Hopefully this will become a place of encouragement and a reminder that you are never alone!

This blog exists to help you feel less alone as we all navigate what a life lived UNBOUND through Jesus really looks like. I will share the good, bad, and ugly of my own journey along the way, and I hope you will keep in touch with me throughout your own story.

  • We are David and Roe Hiser, a husband and wife who always wanted to travel but were stuck because life and expenses kept getting in the way. We decided to do whatever it took to capture our.
  • Consumers seeking a mortgage have been more satisfied with their mortgage lenders in comparison to the previous year, based on research by J.D.

“Do not fear, for I have redeemed you; I have called you by your name; you are Mine. I will be with you when you pass through the waters, and when you pass through the rivers, they will not overwhelm you. You will not be scorched when you walk through the fire, and the flame will not burn you.”

Isaiah 43:1-2

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Necessity is the Mother of Invention

15/10/2018

How Nail Polish and Nipple Cream can Reduce Maternal Health Barriers in Rural Vietnam

Zoe Jackson & Rachel Morgan are promoting post-birth maternal healthcare education to new mothers in rural Vietnam.

​If you asked me to name a universal truth in this world, one that transcends race, religion, socioeconomic status and cultural context, it would be this: Motherhood is hard. Yes, it’s usually many other wonderful and rewarding things as well, but I’d be pretty hard-pressed to find a mother who could tell me unequivocally that her journey thus far has been nothing but smooth sailing. When I was a kid, my mother placed a magnet on our refrigerator that read: “Every mother is a working mother”.
As a child, I never fully grasped the wisdom of that simple statement, but as I moved into adulthood I gradually began to notice how so many women around me were tirelessly constructing their schedules, priorities, professional careers, and sometimes–it seemed– their very identities around motherhood, and it finally hit me just how much truth that fridge magnet carried with it.

In fact, that seemingly innocuous little magnet served to highlight another common thread of truth that ties mothers of all different backgrounds together: Often new mothers and their support networks are so busy focusing their energy on the baby’s needs that the mother’s physical, mental and social needs can go unidentified and unmet. Despite some increasing awareness of this issue in countries like Canada, Australia and the UK, there is still a long way to go in recognizing and addressing the multitude of potential post-birth challenges for women all around the world.