The Positive Birth2 reviews
This score is based on 2 genuine reviews submitted via BritainReviews since 2026.
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it slowly stopped irritating me and started to feel like a real help. The breathing exercises sit nicely in your chest, they’re easy to follow while lying on the sofa, and the guided visualisations actually change how tense your shoulders feel. It’s the practical bits I used most — partner cues, where to press on your lower back, how to reposition on a birthing ball — small, direct tips you can try straight away. Some of the inclusive wording took a while to get used to; I stumbled over phrases at first and rolled my eyes, but you can ignore the terminology and still get loads out of it. The speakers are calm, not overly polished, which makes it feel human rather than staged. I also liked that I could play a session at night and it didn’t sound like an advert, just someone talking you through breathing. Price felt a bit steep until I noticed how much we replayed the tracks and how confident it made my partner feel in the delivery room. Would I tell others? Yes — I tipped a pregnant mate and she liked it too. So, sceptical at the start, pleasantly satisfied in the end.
Good course, awkward politics
the course content is genuinely useful, but the way they handle gender and inclusivity nearly put me off. I say that up front because it colours the whole experience, even though the lessons themselves are solid. The practical parts — routines, positions, explanations — are really well put together and the main instructor is calm, clear and gets into the detail you actually need (not patronising, which was a relief). The second instructor, though, rubbed me up the wrong way — a bit flat and repetitive — so it’s not perfect. What bugged me most was the early messaging about “birthing people”, “chest feeding” and the little intros where tutors list pronouns. I get that some organisations are being inclusive on purpose, and I’ve had mixed experiences elsewhere with that sort of language, but here it felt tacked on and distracting. It almost made me request a refund — I really had to decide whether the content outweighed the rhetoric. In the end it did, because the information is evidence-based and practical, but I stayed sceptical for a while. If you’re particularly sensitive to this sort of phrasing, be warned, because they don’t just nod to it, they foreground it. If you can look past that, you’ll probably appreciate the course — it’s thorough and, for the most part, professionally delivered. A couple of rough edges: some sections need tighter editing and one trainer could do with more energy. Compared to other providers I’ve tried (some are dry and clinical, others overly salesy), this sits in the middle: better than most in substance, less polished in tone. Overall: useful, worth the money if you prioritise content over corporate language.
About The Positive Birth
The Positive Birth is a maternity education and wellbeing business focused on pregnancy, childbirth and early parenting. It provides antenatal preparation resources and classes aimed at expectant parents and those supporting them. Services typically cover labour and birth education, practical birth preparation and related guidance for the perinatal period. The business operates under its own name and is associated with maternity education rather than clinical maternity care.
This information is based on publicly available data and is provided for orientation purposes only.
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Categories The Positive Birth
Diet and Health | Dietary Advice Reviews & Experiences
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Last update: April 2026
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Good course, awkward politics
the course content is genuinely useful, but the way they handle gender and inclusivity nearly put me off. I say that up front because it colours the whole experience, even thoug... Read onBy: H. Kennedy