Skip to main content

why I think "Call the Midwife" is the best show on tv

photocredit

All I'm going to talk about today, is why you should be watching Call the Midwife.

Call the Midwife is another BBC drama series that you can watch on pbs.org, with 55 minute episodes, and only 6-7 per season. I fell in love after episode 1 and watched all of Season 1 and part of Season 2 in just two days. I've always had a thing for historical fiction, but tell me it's a true story and I'm almost guaranteed to love it. This is one of the only shows I've watched in my life-time where I find myself tearing up or crying (ugly-crying at that) with every episode. Sometimes out of sadness, sometimes out of encouragement and the hope it shows.

***

The story revolves around a group of community nurse-midwives and an order of nuns who share a home called Nonnatus House, and care for the poor community of Poplar in post-WWII England. Each character on the show is not only charming, but sincere and gentle (in their own, sometimes blunt ways) in caring for all types of difficult situations. These women truly care for the families they are helping, and the acting is really well done. The external and narrational dialogue is good, too.

In every episode, there is a main story of a baby being born, and that includes a subplot of what that family's challenges, relationship, and triumphs are. Alongside that are the main characters' (the nuns and the midwives themselves) own personal struggles, life changes, and development. You grow to love all the nuns and the midwives for their personalities as well as their aid to the community. They all love the women and children they serve, even though some have to overcome huge mental limits and social norms to get there.

There aren't many shows on tv with characters that are worth rooting for. Admit it, just glancing at hulu.com or netflix, all I see are tv characters that are greedy, manipulative, naive, or just plain annoying and stupid. These women, nuns or nurse, don't consider social status, race, or religion; they're the helpers. Even better, it actually happened. In a time and place where there are school shootings, massive natural disasters, explosions, and death all over the news, this is a refreshing and much needed hopeful expression of care and life's fragility-at the beginning, middle, and end.

These women, the ones who actually lived and held the experiences back in England in the 50's, are an inspiration. The characters on the tv show are just a representation of what patient care, and the Good Samaritan look like, and that is equally inspiring. Most honest to me, is how everyday life is held onto with a subtle undertone of faith (and not so subtle for the nuns) and perseverance through hard times for the characters and the families. There are episodes with seemingly unending tragedy, and at times, controversy, but the nuns and midwives press on to find solutions to medical emergencies, to give hope and kindness in poverty, sickness.

 It's about life. Tragedy, hope, joy. It's about that.

Comments

Kaitlyn said…
Glad you wrote about this. I added this to my queue on Netflix. I am just debating whether or not to watch it while I am pregnant or wait until I am done. I don't want to be getting myself all worked up about delivery and all right now. What do you think? Glad everything seems to be going great for you in WA. I am happy for you that you are making the best out of it all and are showing your kids how to "adventure" properly. You are a good mama. Keep up the good work.
Diane Bennett said…
This is my favourite show! So sad we have already finished Season 2 in Australia
Tina said…
I've heard of this show but never took the time to watch it. Thanks for the heads up!
Claire Printz said…
I love the honesty of this show. Sometimes it is almost agonizing to watch, but you're right, it is so full of hope. Someday I want to read the books that the show is based on.

Popular posts from this blog

Home School Activities: Board Games We Love

My children have recently become enthralled in the world of board games. I was never a board game player. Sure, I remember long summer hours (days? it seemed like it..) spent around a Monopoly board, but I was never one to suggest to get out the cards, or a game. As my children have grown and they are now able to do activities with me, I started noticing that they really took to puzzles (when done all together) and the one or two board games I happened to have kept in the storage room. They were always asking to play Candy Land and so I figured I should branch off a bit. Over the course of the last year, I have found GREAT games, even ones that I love to play alongside them. The amount of 'teaching' they have gotten through games is jaw-dropping. Counting, team-playing, math related patterning, are just some of the skills I've watched develop. I asked before Christmas on facebook what my friends and their own kids loved and I was thrilled with the response. We have found ov

July Reads

Birch Bay Sunset, rainbow hues July has been hot out here. When you live in the top story of an apartment building, and there's no air conditioning, it can feel just over the needle of uncomfortably warm when the day is above 76 degrees. We've kept blinds shut, windows open, and a fan continually blowing as it's perched in our living room window well. Just about the only thing I feel like doing after a long day is laying on the couch straight in the fan's air circulation path, and read a good book. I had some unique picks this month. * #GIRLBOSS by Sophia Amoruso  This book was just plain fun to read. Amoruso developed the iconic ebay store NastyGal way back when vintage selling on ebay was a thing. Now she's a millionaire with a kicking website that she started from scratch and didn't owe a dime to anyone else for. It's a great 200 pager with stories on dumpster diving for daily food, entrepreneurship tips, and being the backwards kid that no one t

Top 10 Books of 2017

early sunset in Ft Langley  I love reading all these "Top 10" lists of favorite books read throughout the year, so I'm adding my two cents.  I'm involved in a Book Club that I love with women from our church, a small group that meets every week and goes through a book every few months, my own list, books I'm reading aloud to the kids and  books I'm reading for educational purposes (think professional development). I took a look at all of those combined and this is what I got, in no particular order:  *  The Problem of God  by Mark Clark - I loved going through this academic apologetic book with my friends from church. It led us to great discussion, and good food for thought. I listen to Clark's sermons every week and so knew I'd probably love his writing style, too. If you have objections to Christianity, or are feeling confused about what to believe, this is a great primer.  * You're Smarter Than You Think  by Dr. Thomas Armstron