Sarah Bregel
Sarah is a mother, writer, feminist, and deep-breather based in Baltimore, Maryland. She spends her days typing, changing diapers, and avoiding the laundry. She is an advocate for evidence-based maternity care and believes that maternal safety and well-being are undeniably linked to how women are treated during childbirth. Her writing has appeared on Vox, The Establishment, the Washington Post, Parents, Today, and more.
Being a Single Mother Made Me Embrace the Sex Drive I Thought Was Dead
Newly single moms can be horny as hell. I can testify.
It’s Fine to Be a Mom Who Uses Edibles, as Long as You’re White
The moms-who-microdose trend "reeks of white privilege."
Women Should Be Allowed to Wear Their Babies Everywhere
More science to back the benefits of skin-to-skin contact for new mothers.
Women Should Be Allowed to Wear Their Babies Everywhere
More science to back the benefits of skin-to-skin contact for new mothers.
How Doctors Cross the Line in the Delivery Room
The struggle to maintain bodily autonomy—rights to our own bodies during childbirth—is real.
When Motherhood Makes You Want to Run
I couldn’t run out the door, no matter how badly my body and my mind were screaming for a break, for fresh air or a shot of tequila.
Why '23 and Pregnant' is the New '16 and Pregnant'
My pregnancy at 23 swept me into a world I wasn't ready for.