Top 33 Quotes & Sayings by Robin Lim

Explore popular quotes and sayings by Robin Lim.
Last updated on April 14, 2025.
Robin Lim

Robin Lim is a midwife and founder of Yayasan Bumi Sehat health clinics, which offer free prenatal care, birthing services and medical aid to anyone who needs it. She and her team have been working since 2003 to combat Indonesia's high maternal and infant mortality rates, and the Bumi Sehat birth centers serve many at-risk mothers. She was awarded the 2011 CNN Hero of the Year award by the CNN news network for helping thousands of low-income women in Indonesia with healthy pregnancy and birth services.

Born: 1956
I imagine a world in which all humans are born with an intact capacity to love, and I am willing to devote my life to making it happen.
The amazing heroic women in labor, they are the truest inspiration, and when they push their babies into the light... I am astonished every time.
As a midwife, I am immersed in Oxytocin day and night. — © Robin Lim
As a midwife, I am immersed in Oxytocin day and night.
I get crazy upset when I feel mothers or babies are not getting the loving care they need.
Like my sister, 981 women die every day on Earth from pregnancy and birth-related complications.
Research points to the fact that being born without trauma is the foundation for having an intact capacity to love and trust.
Oxytocin is the hormone of love. We share it when we have a good conversation, we share it when we make love, and when we hug, and BIRTH is the biggest brightest time of rich oxytocin-sharing.
Gentle birth, protecting mother and baby, is a solution that I believe will result in positive change for our society.
I became a passionate seeker of childbirth knowledge.
My sister had health insurance; she should have been warned by her doctors that she was at risk. But she was a minority. The doctors took little interest in her as an individual, and she fell through the cracks. And died.
I get happy very easily and very often.
There is a largely-ignored healthcare calamity in the United States that sees between two and three women die every day during pregnancy and childbirth.
Oxytocin rocks the world.
My sister and the baby she was carrying died in the United States of America. They died in the country that spends more money on pregnancy and birth technology than any other country in this world.
I came to the conclusion that bringing Humans to earth with an intact ability to LOVE is essential if we are to survive as a species.
Pregnant women who are at risk for suffering complications and even death are in the prime of their lives. The most affected populations are minorities, Native Americans, immigrants, and women living in poverty and who speak little or no English.
Women will always pay the price for love, that is why God makes us so much stronger than men.
I cry when I work in the garden, because the Sun, the rain, the wind and the Earth all work together to make us food and flowers. It just blows me away.
I learned that a healthy society is made up of loving, trusting individuals, and that these individuals in turn protect their environment, become stewards of our land, air and water, and they make peace, rather than war.
Childbirth being one's most significant life passage, those close to us when we open to birth a baby will never be forgotten.
I am just one of many many thousands of midwives, who are devoted to saving lives gently.
Every baby's first breath on Earth could be one of peace and love. Every mother should be healthy and strong. Every birth could be safe and loving. But our world is not there yet
Birthing is the most profound initiation to spirituality a woman can have.
I sing, I clean house, I write poetry. I cry. And I tell everyone I can, "I Believe in YOU."
I became a fierce advocate for gentle birth as a solution for the most pressing problems of our times - a solution that begins at the source. — © Robin Lim
I became a fierce advocate for gentle birth as a solution for the most pressing problems of our times - a solution that begins at the source.
In a nutshell, I am a mom, a grandma, and a midwife.
After disasters, reproductive healthcare falls by the wayside. Yet babies continue to be born. When all infrastructure falls apart, when the hospitals and all their technological equipment are destroyed, midwives come in handy. They can help women give birth with or without electricity, running water, equipment - even shelter is optional. When babies are ready, they come.
My passion for maternal and child health led me to continue my studies and pursue the path of midwifery. And here I am now... still catching babies.
Statistically, the United States rates number 39 in maternal mortality. This means that it is safer to be pregnant and to give birth in 38 other countries than the USA... and less expensive too.
The number of maternal deaths is significantly understated because of a lack of effective data collection both in the US and around the world.
I love to receive babies into this world, so crawling around on my knees in the birth room is my best place, and most often you can still find me there.
My first experience of having a baby was about as natural as birth can be, and though I didn't know it at the time, it set my feet on a path that eventually led me to become a childbirth author and a midwife.
I had amazing midwives when I first became a teen-aged mom, and each of the five times I gave birth.
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