A Quote by Sandra Bullock

You don't have to give birth to someone to have a family. — © Sandra Bullock
You don't have to give birth to someone to have a family.
You don't have to give birth to someone to have a family. We're all family - an extended family.
I did not see any way that I could possibly give birth to someone else and also give birth to myself. Far from feeling guilty, it was the first time that I had taken responsibility for my own life.
I feel blessed that I could give a family and a home to one child, and give birth to another.
I had a home birth because I really believe in the body's natural ability to give birth. The medical profession has kind of warped women's minds into thinking we don't know how to birth and we need doctors and epidurals and Pitocin.
Birth mothers choose life, and a family, for their child. But this choice is rarely celebrated. Women routinely face family, friends and even health-care providers who think that adoption equals abandonment, according to researchers and conversations with birth mothers.
Humanizing birth means understanding that the woman giving birth is a human being, not a machine and not just a container for making babies. Showing women-half of all people-that they are inferior and inadequate by taking away their power to give birth is a tragedy for all society.
Because you give birth, because you impregnate someone, that does not automatically give you that title of mother or father. You earn the title.
The work I do when I'm not making music is very much about service, helping women give birth or aiding in family planning.
He allowed himself to be swayed by his conviction that human beings are not born once and for all on the day their mothers give birth to them, but that life obliges them over and over again to give birth to themselves.
Someone needs to give the Pope thirteen babies. Just for a week or so. See how he likes no birth control then.
Leaving home in a sense involves a kind of second birth in which we give birth to ourselves.
My giving birth was nothing when I think about all the people in Sri Lanka that have to give birth in a concentration camp.
Someone once told me that when you give birth to a daughter, you've just met the person whose hand you'll be holding the day you die.
Fathers' sharing in the birth experience can be a stimulus for men's freedom to nurture, and a sign of changing relationships between men and women. In the same way, women's freedom to give birth at home is a political decision, an assertion of determination to reclaim the experience of birth. Birth at home is about changing society.
Sometimes you give birth to something or you're part of a team that gives birth to an idea, and it grows and has a whole life of its own, and you feel grateful. It's just so humbling.
I don't think my relationship with the idea of womanhood is that attached to giving birth... like, I'm fully aware that I'll never give birth to a baby, and that's not something that I'm wrecked over.
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