Hi, I’m @adrianazehbrauskas, a documentary photographer based in Mexico City. Today I’ll be sharing photos and stories about what it is to become a father. Earlier this year I traveled to five countries across the world, visiting hospitals in big cities and rural areas, to capture one of the most intimate - and sometimes most painful moments of a person’s life: the birth of their child. What I thought would be a fairly common thing to see, men in the delivering room with their partners, turned out to be a very rare event to witness: giving birth is still largely considered to be a woman’s affair. When I arrived in Bula, a small village not very far from Bissau, the capital city of Guinea-Bissau, Juelmo, 31, was sitting outside the maternity ward with his relatives and visibly nervous. It was around midday and his wife, 28-year-old Cadi, had been in labour since 10 pm the night before. Inside the maternity ward, Cadi wasn’t too relaxed either: her cries of pain and the suffocating heat filled the near empty room. Outside, Juelmo switched between pacing around impatiently, checking on the status of his wife with the nurses, or sitting under the shade of a big tree, always holding his two cell phones tightly. He had briefly gone home for a few hours the night before, returning at 5 am that morning. By the end of the afternoon, he finally got the call he had desperately been waiting for: Cadi was delivering their first son. Tap link in bio for more info. © UNICEF/UN0209079/Zehbrauskas #EarlyMomentsMatter #FathersDay #EarlyChildhoodDevelopment #SuperDad #InstagramTakeover

unicefさん(@unicef)が投稿した動画 -

unicefのインスタグラム(unicef) - 6月13日 21時00分


Hi, I’m @adrianazehbrauskas, a documentary photographer based in Mexico City. Today I’ll be sharing photos and stories about what it is to become a father. Earlier this year I traveled to five countries across the world, visiting hospitals in big cities and rural areas, to capture one of the most intimate - and sometimes most painful moments of a person’s life: the birth of their child. What I thought would be a fairly common thing to see, men in the delivering room with their partners, turned out to be a very rare event to witness: giving birth is still largely considered to be a woman’s affair. When I arrived in Bula, a small village not very far from Bissau, the capital city of Guinea-Bissau, Juelmo, 31, was sitting outside the maternity ward with his relatives and visibly nervous. It was around midday and his wife, 28-year-old Cadi, had been in labour since 10 pm the night before. Inside the maternity ward, Cadi wasn’t too relaxed either: her cries of pain and the suffocating heat filled the near empty room. Outside, Juelmo switched between pacing around impatiently, checking on the status of his wife with the nurses, or sitting under the shade of a big tree, always holding his two cell phones tightly. He had briefly gone home for a few hours the night before, returning at 5 am that morning. By the end of the afternoon, he finally got the call he had desperately been waiting for: Cadi was delivering their first son. Tap link in bio for more info. © UNICEF/UN0209079/Zehbrauskas

#EarlyMomentsMatter #FathersDay #EarlyChildhoodDevelopment #SuperDad #InstagramTakeover


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