
Your support begins with one prenatal visit where we will create a thoughtful postpartum plan and discuss:
7:00am to 7:00pm: Minimum shift: 4 hours
Daytime visits focus on helping your family adjust to life with a newborn while supporting rest, recovery, and confidence in caring for your baby.
Support may include:
• Emotional support and processing the birth experience
• Breast or bottle feeding guidance and troubleshooting
• Newborn care education and support
• Help with sibling adjustment
• Managing expectations with visitors and family members
• Light meal preparation
• Light housekeeping such as dishes, bottles, laundry, and basic tidying
• Babywearing education and support
• Assistance organizing your home to support comfort and efficiency
• Accompaniment to postpartum or pediatric appointments if needed
• Grocery shopping or small errands
• Trusted referrals to local postpartum care professionals
7:00pm to 7:00am: Minimum shift: 8 hours
Overnight care allows parents to get restorative sleep while knowing their baby is being lovingly cared for.
Support may include:
• Caring for and settling baby while you sleep
• Bottle feeding or bringing baby to you for breastfeeding and resettling afterward
• Soothing baby during nighttime wake periods
• Emotional support and reassurance during the early weeks
• Light housekeeping such as bottles, dishes, and laundry completed quietly overnight or before bedtime
• Guidance around feeding, sleep, and newborn care
• Daytime and overnight, in person support during postpartum hospital stays
• Food preparation and planning
• Animal care or small household tasks when helpful
• Local resource referrals for continued care
• Unlimited phone, text, and email support throughout your time working together
Not sure where to start? Our visual journey map can guide you through each trimester and postpartum phase with classes, groups, and services mapped to your timeline.
In the very first month, your body is already working hard, even before you see that positive test. Fatigue, emotional swings, and subtle symptoms are all part of these early days.
Though the world can’t see it, your body is changing rapidly. Nausea, fatigue, and food aversions are common as your baby begins to grow.
Your emotions may feel unpredictable, as joy, worry, excitement, and fear often overlap. These feelings are normal and valid.
Your belly starts to show, and your energy may begin to rebound. With these changes come new questions about your body and your baby.
Registry planning, baby names, and nursery ideas might feel exciting or overwhelming. Remember: this is your journey—do it your way.
You may look calm and glowing on the outside, but inside, you might be processing fears or pressures. That’s okay, space for both is allowed.
As the third trimester begins, your body feels heavier and sleep may get tricky. It’s okay to lean on others and ask for help.
Hospital bags, birth plans, and visitor lists grow, alongside worries about labor. You don’t have to carry it all yourself.
Every twinge makes you wonder if it’s time. Protect your peace and trust your body’s timing.
Healing takes time. Pain management, bleeding, and latch issues are common. Lean on your support network and ask questions.
You’re finding your rhythm. Feeding routines and return‑to‑work plans take shape.
Your baby is growing fast, and so are you as a parent. From first foods to CPR, these months bring milestones and new joys.
From first kicks to first steps, Beyond Birthing is where North Shore families turn for evidence-based care, a welcoming community, and a team that truly listens.
Explore prenatal preparation, postpartum support, 0-12 month workshops & early parenting classes led by pros who get it.
North Shore families rave about the support, care, and confidence they’ve found here.
Our team of trusted doulas, lactation consultants, mental health therapists, chiropractors, sleep consultants & so many more providers have your back every step of the way.



















Thinking about hiring a doula, but not sure what to expect? You’re not alone. Here are answers to some of the most common questions from new and expecting parents.
A doula is a trained professional who provides physical, emotional, and informational support during pregnancy, birth, and postpartum. Unlike a medical provider, a doula’s role is non-clinical. They’re there to advocate for you, comfort you, and help you feel informed and supported through every step.
A doula is a trained professional who provides physical, emotional, and informational support during pregnancy, birth, and postpartum. Unlike a medical provider, a doula’s role is non-clinical. They’re there to advocate for you, comfort you, and help you feel informed and supported through every step.
Doula services can include prenatal visits, continuous labor support, partner guidance, postpartum check-ins, feeding help, newborn care education, emotional support, and referrals to trusted resources. Our packages can be customized to fit your birth and postpartum goals.
A doula is not a nurse or medical provider. While some doulas may have backgrounds in healthcare, their primary role is non-medical. A doula works alongside your provider team to support you emotionally and physically without performing clinical tasks like cervical checks or fetal monitoring.
A birth doula supports you during pregnancy and labor, helping with comfort measures, breathing, movement, and decision-making. A postpartum doula helps you at home after birth, offering newborn care support, feeding guidance, emotional check-ins, and help with rest and recovery.
Monday – Friday
9:30am-5:00pm
Saturday & Sunday for classes & support groups as scheduled
Financial Assistance is always available to community and MassHealth members for our classes, groups and services. We are HSA/FSA eligible too.
Email: info@beyondbirthingvillage.com to inquire
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