
Hosted by Dr. Emily Spaeth · EN
The questions you're asking—answered.
These are the things nobody tells you about pregnancy, birth, and postpartum...
Treat your pregnancy, birth, and postpartum like grad school—because you deserve to be completely prepared.
On The Be Well Baby Podcast, we ask all the hard questions of your providers so you don't have to figure this out alone. Hosted by Dr. Emily Spaeth: a Doctor of Physical Therapy, Board Certified Lactation Consultant, and certified trauma-informed professional who trains other providers, this isn't your typical pregnancy podcast.
From posture in pregnancy to feeding your baby to baby development to postpartum recovery, pelvic floor health, sex after birth, and navigating your career and identity; we dive deep into the topics nobody talks about openly—until now.
You'll discover what high-achieving women actually need to know about pregnancy, birth, and the fourth trimester. No fluff. No surprises. Just the evidence-based information, honest conversations, and real preparation that helps you feel confident, capable, and genuinely ready for this pivotal season of your life.
Whether you just found out you're pregnant, you're planning to return to work, navigating matrescence, or managing the incredible changes ahead, this is your space to get prepared, feel supported, and maybe even know more than your doctor does.
Ready to approach this season with intention?

Have you ever fallen into bed completely exhausted — only to lie there wide awake, running through everything you forgot to do, respond to, or organize? That bone-tired exhaustion that doesn't let you rest? There's actually a name for what's happening, and this week's guest coined it.Stassi Chaillé, LPC is a therapist, educator, and founder of System-Keeping™ — the first framework to name the root cause of women's self-abandonment.With dual master's degrees from Columbia University in Culturally Oppressive Systems and Psychological Counseling, Stassi coined System-Keeping™ to describe the invisible, anticipatory labor women perform to keep families, workplaces, marriages, and entire economies functioning — labor that was never consented to, never credited, and designed to be impossible to stop.Through her monthly masterclass, private liberation container, and writing, Stassi works with high-functioning women who can't understand why burnout interventions keep failing — until they see that the system requiring their self-abandonment is still intact. System-Keeping™ is why.Once a woman understands she was conditioned into this, the question stops being what's wrong with me and becomes what was I trained to carry.By the end of our conversation, you'll see your life differently. We promise.We cover: What System-Keeping™ is — and why "mental load" doesn't tell the whole story The three-part triangle: conditioning, invisible contracts, and the nervous system loopHow System-Keeping™ shows up physically in your body — and what the research says The self-abandonment at the center of it all What one realistic first shift looks like when you're ready to start putting something downEvents mentioned:Stassi's System Keeping™ Masterclass on the last Thursday of every month → Sign Up HereBook a 1:1 30 minute consult with Stassi here!🪺Birth Prep. But Better. with Dr. Emily May 30th at New Mom School® → https://www.bewellbaby.org/birth-prep-but-better🎼 A Notion, A Scream! Choir Concert - May 31st in Portland! About Dr. Emily: Emily is on a mission to change the way we prepare for the chapter of welcoming a baby into our homes. Emily is a Doctor of Physical Therapy, International Board Certified Lactation Consultant, and the founder of Be Well Baby® — a multidisciplinary in-home practice in Portland, Oregon serving families from pregnancy through the early years with baby. She's also a mom of three, and creator of the online educational community the Beyond Birth Blueprint.

Bringing a new baby home is one of the biggest transitions your family will ever navigate — and that includes every member of your household, including your four-legged ones. In this episode, Emily sits down with McKenna Neale, certified veterinary technician, behavioral specialist, and fellow new mom, to talk about everything you need to know about preparing your pets for a new baby.Mckenna shares her own experience as a pit bull mom who delivered her daughter a month early and had to scramble to find care for her dog — and how that shaped the advice she now gives families every day through her work at Dove Lewis Emergency Medicine and the Oregon Humane Society.In this episode, we cover:Whether animals can actually sense pregnancy (and what the science says about their incredible sense of smell)Simple, low-effort ways to begin preparing your pet during pregnancy — starting as early as you wantWhy playing YouTube baby sounds might be the most underrated thing you can do right nowThe "place" command and other foundational training tips that will save your sanity postpartumHow to think about your home environment before baby arrives — baby gates, playpens, sleeping arrangements, and moreWhat a safe, low-stress baby introduction looks like for dogs (including McKenna's own story)Cat-specific guidance for a species that plays by entirely different rulesThe body language cues most pet owners completely miss — licking, whale eye, whisker position, tail tension, and moreThe emotional reality of postpartum pet relationships, including the grief of feeling disconnected from an animal you loveHow babies raised around pets benefit developmentally and immunologicallyThe beauty of watching your child and your pet grow up togetherResources mentioned:Oregon Humane Society community classes: oregonhumane.orgRover gift cards (registry idea!)Frozen Kongs and licky mats for enrichmentYouTube baby sounds for desensitization trainingConnect with Mckenna: Mckenna generously said you are welcome to email her any questions and she will try to send you in the right direction! Email her here: mdrasye@gmail.comYour HostEmily Spaeth is a Doctor of Physical Therapy, International Board Certified Lactation Consultant, and founder of Be Well Baby in Portland, Oregon. With extensive NICU experience and training in craniosacral therapy, she leads a team providing home-based health care for families navigating the tricky parts of pregnancy and postpartum. She also hosts the Beyond Birth Blueprint, an online birth and postpartum educational community available to families across the country—so no matter where you are, you have access to support, resources, and connection. Emily is also a mother of three and passionate about helping families move from surviving to thriving.Our mission is to fundamentally shift healthcare could look like for pregnancy, postpartum, and babies. Please help us spread the word by leaving a review! Every review matters!

What if the most powerful thing you could do for your new baby had nothing to do with a product, a schedule, or anything you saw on TikTok, and everything to do with a room full of other moms who just get it?Today I'm sitting down with Liberty Planck, owner of New Mom School® in Lake Oswego, Oregon and mom of three, who channeled her background in experience design and her own deeply isolating postpartum season into building something truly special for families. New Mom School® is a franchise with locations all over the country. We cover a lot of ground in this one — and honestly, it went places I didn't expect. Liberty is thoughtful, funny, and refreshingly honest about the gap between the village we think we're building and the one we actually have to show up for.We use "mom" and “mother” throughout this conversation because it reflects the language of our guest and her community, but we see and welcome every birthing person, non-binary parent, and family structure here, and so does New Mom School® Lake Oswego! In this episode, we talk about:Why isolation is one of the biggest risk factors for new moms and babies — and how New Mom School® was born out of Liberty's own pandemic postpartum experienceThe "education meets support meets community" model that makes New Mom School® different from just a mom groupHow to give parents real clinical information without undermining their confidence as caregiversWhat actually happens in a room full of postpartum women when a pelvic floor PT, lactation consultant, or infant development specialist walks inWhy the floor is the cheapest baby toy you own (and how Liberty's third baby became her most capable gross motor kid because of it)The hidden gift of the New Mom School® model — and why showing up to class doesn't automatically mean you have a villageWhat it really takes to build friendships as a new mom, and why the pandemic made all of this harderBirth as a great equalizer, and why age, background, and parenting philosophy don't matter as much as being in the same seasonThe beauty of alloparenting — and why your baby doesn't just need you, they need a whole cast of safe, loving adultsThis conversation is for you whether you're currently pregnant, postpartum, a provider who works with families, or just someone who cares deeply about how we support mothers in this culture.Resources mentioned:Find a New Mom School® near you: newmomschool.comLocal to Portland? New Mom School® Lake Oswego is right off the freeway and draws families from Vancouver, Happy Valley, Bethany, and beyond💸 Use code BEWELL50 for $50 off your first cohort🍼 Providers: reach out to Liberty directly to get pamphlets and referral cards for your patientsFollow New Mom School® Lake Oswego on InstagramYour Host: Emily Spaeth is a Doctor of Physical Therapy, International Board Certified Lactation Consultant, and founder of Be Well Baby® in Portland, Oregon. bewellbaby.org

Movement during pregnancy isn't just safe — it's one of the most powerful things you can do for yourself, your baby, and yes, even your grandchildren. In this episode, Dr. Emily dives deep into the science of exercise during pregnancy, habit formation, and the fascinating brain changes that make pregnancy one of the most important windows for building the identity you want to carry into parenthood.In this episode:The evidence-backed benefits of exercise during pregnancy, from reduced gestational diabetes risk to shorter active labor and faster postpartum recoveryHow your baby's cardiovascular development is influenced by your movementIntergenerational epigenetics — why the choices you make right now are part of your grandchildren's biological storyThe landmark 2016 Nature Neuroscience study on gray matter changes in pregnancy and what it actually means for your brainThe neuroscience of mental rehearsal and why visualizing your habit in vivid detail is not manifesting — it's motor learningImplementation intentions: why "I am someone who moves their body during pregnancy" outperforms "I want to exercise more" every timeAction step from this episode: Pick one movement. Make it small and doable. Put it on your calendar. Name yourself as someone who does it. That's the whole assignment.Resources mentioned:Episode 2 with Barb Buckner Suarez on mommy brain and gray matter changesEpisode 20 with Emily Sferra on matrescenceBeyond Birth Blueprint — bewellbaby.orgFlourish Center Friday sessions (Portland locals!)Ninni pacifier — use code BEWELLBABY for 10% offConnect with Be Well Baby: bewellbaby.org@bewellbabypdx on InstagramEmily Spaeth is a Doctor of Physical Therapy, International Board Certified Lactation Consultant, and founder of Be Well Baby in Portland, Oregon. With extensive NICU experience and training in craniosacral therapy, she leads a team providing home-based health care for families navigating the tricky parts of pregnancy and postpartum. She also hosts the Beyond Birth Blueprint, an online birth and postpartum educational community available to families across the country—so no matter where you are, you have access to support, resources, and connection. Emily is also a mother of three and passionate about helping families move from surviving to thriving.Our mission is to fundamentally shift healthcare could look like for pregnancy, postpartum, and babies. Please help us spread the word by leaving a review! Every review matters!

What does it feel like to give birth while still figuring out who you are? Malakai Benson (they/them) is a non-binary parent (“Baba”), Head Baker and Bread Manager at Moxie Bread Company, and a fierce advocate for queer visibility and representation, especially in birthing and parenting spaces.Through their lived experience navigating pregnancy, birth, and parenting outside of binary assumptions, Malakai challenges dominant narratives of connection, caregiving, and identity. Their work invites a more expansive, inclusive understanding of who birthing and parenting spaces are for—and how language can either reinforce exclusion or create belonging.In this deeply moving conversation, Dr. Emily (she/her) and Malakai talk about what it's really like to navigate pregnancy, birth, and parenting when the systems around you weren't built with you in mind.Malakai shares with honesty and grace what it was like to be pregnant while their identity was still unfolding, why they opted out of prenatal community spaces, and the jarring hospital lactation experience that shaped their entire feeding journey.They also dive into what becomes possible when we expand our definition of who gets to be a birthing person.In this episode:How pregnancy accelerated Malakai's non-binary identity journeyWhy they isolated during pregnancy, and what they wish had existedNavigating a binary medical system as a gender-diverse birthing personA lactation consultant experience that changed everythingWhy language matters so much in birthing and parenting spacesThe concept of "assumed connection" — on playgrounds, in hospitals, and beyondWhat to say when someone can't seem to get pronouns rightWhat Malakai's daughter taught them about being seenResources mentioned: Field Therapy (Colorado), queer birthing panels as a community resource.Inclusive Birth TerminologyIf this episode resonated with you, share it with a provider, a parent, or anyone who needs to hear that space is not finite.Connect with Be Well Baby: Oura Ring (10% off sleep and recovery tracking)Ninni Co. Pacifier (code: BEWELLBABY for 10% off)Be Well Baby WebsiteAbout Your Host Dr. EmilyEmily Spaeth is a Doctor of Physical Therapy, International Board Certified Lactation Consultant, and founder of Be Well Baby in Portland, Oregon. With extensive NICU experience and training in craniosacral therapy, she leads a team providing home-based health care for families navigating the tricky parts of pregnancy and postpartum. She also hosts the Beyond Birth Blueprint, an online birth and postpartum educational community available to families across the country. Emily is also a mother of three and passionate about helping families move from surviving to thriving.

Grief isn't just about death — and it doesn't have an endpoint. In this episode, Emily sits down with Portland-based Grief Guide and Ritualist Alyssa Rose to explore what grief actually is, why it shows up in parenthood in such surprising ways, and what becomes possible when we stop trying to get to the other side of it.Alyssa brings together somatic bodywork, ritual practice, and deep grief literacy to help individuals and communities move through loss in ways that build connection rather than isolation. This conversation will change how you think about grief — and maybe even how you hold it.In this episode:Why grief is so much bigger than death — and includes all change, even the good kindThe grief that lives inside new parenthood (identity, autonomy, birth stories, NICU experiences)What grief literacy actually looks likeHow to support a grieving person without saying the wrong thingClosing of the Bones: what it is and why every postpartum person deserves oneHow to bring ritual into your life — no religious background requiredAbout Alyssa Rose: Alyssa Rose walks with those navigating life's most profound changes — the most sorrowful and joyful. As a Grief Guide and Ritualist in Portland, Oregon, she bridges ancient ritual practices with modern somatic therapies to create sacred spaces for those facing loss, death, and deep change. Alyssa is passionate about building a grief-literate culture resilient enough to hold us through life's challenges — and connected enough to transform loneliness into belonging.Connect with Alyssa: Alyssa Rose Healing Arts Website Tedx Talkinstagram: @alyssarosehealingConnect with Be Well Baby: Oura Ring (10% off sleep and recovery tracking)Ninni Co. Pacifier (code: BEWELLBABY for 10% off)Be Well Baby Website bewellbaby.orgAbout Your Host Dr. EmilyEmily Spaeth is a Doctor of Physical Therapy, International Board Certified Lactation Consultant, and founder of Be Well Baby in Portland, Oregon. With extensive NICU experience and training in craniosacral therapy, she leads a team providing home-based health care for families navigating the tricky parts of pregnancy and postpartum. She also hosts the Beyond Birth Blueprint, an online birth and postpartum educational community available to families across the country—so no matter where you are, you have access to support, resources, and connection. Emily is also a mother of three and passionate about helping families move from surviving to thriving.Our mission is to fundamentally shift healthcare could look like for pregnancy, postpartum, and babies. Please help us spread the word by leaving a review! Every review matters!

This episode is for anyone who has ever been dismissed by a provider, told their pain was "just pregnancy," or suspected something was going on with their connective tissue and couldn't get anyone to take it seriously.Hypermobile EDS may affect as many as 1 in 500 people — but most have never been diagnosed, and provider knowledge is lagging far behind. Today we're changing that.Whether you have a formal diagnosis, a strong suspicion, or you just know your body moves a little differently than most, this is the conversation you've been waiting to have.Dr. Emily covers:How EDS and hypermobility show up during pregnancy, including pelvic girdle pain, SI joint instability, and rib and hip painThe connection between hypermobile EDS and POTS, and how pregnancy amplifies dysautonomia symptomsGI considerations and why electrolyte absorption matters more than you thinkPain management in labor, why epidurals may work differently, and what to discuss with your anesthesiologist ahead of timePositioning in labor and pushing strategies that protect hypermobile joints and your pelvic floorCesarean considerations, wound healing, and adhesion carePostpartum pelvic floor recovery — and why more kegels is not usually the answerReturning to exercise with EDS: why the slow build is the smart buildWhat to watch for developmentally if your baby may have inherited hypermobility or low muscle toneThe latest research on EDS in perinatal care, and what the data says about provider knowledge gapsThe research is clear: when people with EDS have informed, prepared care teams and go into their pregnancy and postpartum experience with real knowledge, outcomes are better. This episode is your starting point.Resources mentioned:Jellybend compression and support garments. https://jelliebend.com/products/Be Well Baby podcast episode with Dr. Sara Reardon on pushing techniques: Episode 21Beyond Birth Blueprint membership: www.bewellbaby.org/beyond-birth-blueprintPelvic floor PT: Book with our team at bewellbaby.orgNinni Co. Pacifier 10% off Code: BEWELLBABY Emily Spaeth is a Doctor of Physical Therapy, International Board Certified Lactation Consultant, and founder of Be Well Baby in Portland, Oregon. With extensive NICU experience and training in craniosacral therapy, she leads a team providing home-based health care for families navigating the tricky parts of pregnancy and postpartum. She also hosts the Beyond Birth Blueprint, an online birth and postpartum educational community available to families across the country—so no matter where you are, you have access to support, resources, and connection. Emily is also a mother of three and passionate about helping families move from surviving to thriving.

If your baby has a head turn preference, a flat spot, or trouble latching, this episode might explain why — and what you can do about it.Carol Gray has been a therapeutic bodyworker for 36 years, specializing in craniosacral therapy for pregnant, birthing, and postpartum parents and infants. A doula for 35 years and home birth midwife for 12, Carol has spent decades developing hands-on, movement, and strengthening techniques to give babies more room to develop, grow, and get born — and post-birth, to help them fine-tune their optimal development. She is a leader in Craniosacral Therapy. Health professionals from all over the world travel to study perinatal and infant CST with Carol.In this episode, Carol and Dr. Emily unpack fetal constraint: how limited movement in the womb shapes a baby's body, birth, and development in ways that are subtle but significant. And, most importantly, what you can do about it. In this episode:What craniosacral therapy is and how it developedFetal constraint: what it is and why it mattersParental, fetal, and cultural factors that limit baby's movement in uteroWhy engagement isn't always good newsThe signs of constraint in a newborn — head turn preference, C-curve, asymmetrical face, flat spotsWhy "my baby dropped" might not be cause for celebrationInfant constraint: swaddling, containers, and freedom to moveHow CST is uniquely suited to address the subtleties of constraintWhy tummy time starts at birthResources:Carol's website and private practice: carolgray.comCarol's free infant clinics and pregnancy/postpartum clinicsSubtle Hands-On Skills prerequisite training for providersSNOO episodeContainer episodeYour Host: Emily Spaeth is a Doctor of Physical Therapy, International Board Certified Lactation Consultant, and founder of Be Well Baby in Portland, Oregon. With extensive NICU experience and training in Craniosacral therapy, she leads a team providing home-based health care for families navigating the tricky parts of pregnancy and postpartum. She also hosts the Beyond Birth Blueprint, an online birth and postpartum educational community available to families across the country—so no matter where you are, you have access to support, resources, and connection. Emily is also a mother of three and passionate about helping families move from surviving to thriving.Our mission is to fundamentally shift what healthcare could look like for pregnancy, postpartum, and babies. Please help us spread the word by leaving a review! Every review matters!

Faith Samaan is a lactation consultant with over 17 years of experience, both in the hospital system, where she sees virtually every feeding situation imaginable, and now doing home visits with Be Well Baby families.In this episode, Faith shares the story of how her own painful, unsupported postpartum experience led her to become the straight answer she could never find.We talk about what to actually expect in the first 24–72 hours, the real truth about bottle flow rates, triple feeding and its impact on mental health, and Faith's rapid-fire takes on silverettes, pacifiers, and nipple shields. Plus: the one product she wishes every parent would throw away.In this episode, we cover:How Faith's own postpartum experience with nipple trauma and zero support became the catalyst for her career in lactationWhat's actually normal in the first 24–72 hours — the sleepy phase, cluster feeding, and why colostrum is milkWhy generational myths (like "you don't have any milk yet") can be so hard to override, even when you can see the colostrum with your own eyesThe truth about bottle flow rates — why "Level 1" doesn't mean slow, what to look for in a nipple shape, and why your baby can stay on preemie flow indefinitelySigns that flow is too fast (choking, gulping, watery eyes, messy feeding) and too slow (taking forever, not finishing the bottle)What triple feeding actually is, why it's so hard on mental health, and how Faith approaches it with families in a way that preserves connectionWhat systemic change could actually look like for feeding families — and what partners and bosses need to understand about what breastfeeding really takesResources mentioned:Ninni pacifier: use code BEWELLBABY for 10% offFlange sizing episode: We Are Not Cows!Book a home visit with Faith or our Be Well Baby team: bewellbaby.orgYour Host: Emily Spaeth is a Doctor of Physical Therapy, International Board Certified Lactation Consultant, and founder of Be Well Baby in Portland, Oregon. With extensive NICU experience and training in craniosacral therapy, she leads a team providing home-based health care for families navigating the tricky parts of pregnancy and postpartum. She also hosts the Beyond Birth Blueprint, an online birth and postpartum educational community available to families across the country—so no matter where you are, you have access to support, resources, and connection. Emily is also a mother of three and passionate about helping families move from surviving to thriving.Our mission is to fundamentally shift what healthcare could look like for pregnancy, postpartum, and babies. Please help us spread the word by leaving a review! Every review matters!

Dr. Emily sits down with her friend and colleague Dr. Daniella Sinay, a physical therapist who works both in the hospital setting and for Be Well Baby, for one of the most honest conversations this podcast has ever had. Daniella shares her journey through multiple miscarriages, a twin pregnancy, and how surviving it completely transformed the way she shows up for her patients and their families.Before becoming a mom, Daniella thought she understood what her patients were going through. She was empathetic, skilled, and thorough. But walking through her own fertility loss, a preeclampsia diagnosis at 37 weeks, an emergency C-section, a postpartum hemorrhage, and all complications of her postpartum experience: the lived experience of being the patient.In this episode, Daniella and Emily talk about:What it really feels like to "just know" something is wrong in your body — and why that's a clinical sign worth taking seriouslyThe moment Daniella underwent surgery with minimal sedation just to get back to her twins fasterWhy being medically literate in your own birth can actually work against youTriple feeding twins for 12 weeks postpartum — and what finally gave her permission to let goThe one thing she now says to every single family she meets in the hospitalWhy family-centered care isn't just a buzzword — it's the whole pointNormalizing formula, traumatic births, and the long road of processing an experience that didn't look anything like you plannedThis one is raw, real, and full of the kind of wisdom that only comes from having lived it. Whether you're a clinician, a parent who's been through something hard, or someone who just needs to hear that healing takes time — this episode is for you.Resources: Postpartum Support International (PSI)Perinatal mental health therapyBaby Blues ConnectionBe Well Baby Support Group (in person support in Portland)Beyond Birth Blueprint (online support)Your Host: Emily Spaeth is a Doctor of Physical Therapy, International Board Certified Lactation Consultant, and founder of Be Well Baby in Portland, Oregon. With extensive NICU experience and training in craniosacral therapy, she leads a team providing home-based health care for families navigating the tricky parts of pregnancy and postpartum. She also hosts the Beyond Birth Blueprint, an online birth and postpartum educational community available to families across the country—so no matter where you are, you have access to support, resources, and connection. Emily is also a mother of three and passionate about helping families move from surviving to thriving.Our mission is to fundamentally shift what healthcare could look like for pregnancy, postpartum, and babies. Please help us spread the word by leaving a review! Every review matters!