Hi, I am Neram…

… Doula, birthworker, birthkeeper?


These are titles. Sometimes helpful. Sometimes just marketing names.

What matters more is who I am - and how I walk alongside you.

I accompany you with love, presence, and deep trust in your inner knowing.
I welcome all of you: your strength and your vulnerability, your light and your shadow, your joy, your pain - and everything in between.

My work is full-spectrum support before, during, and after birth.
It is authentic, trauma-informed, and culturally sensitive.

Not about fixing or guiding you -
but about holding a space where you can meet yourself fully.

For the womb.
And for what unfolds beyond it.

Born to a German mother and a Chadian father, I spent part of my early life in Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso, before growing up in the north of Germany.

Interculturality has never been a concept for me - it has been lived reality. It shaped how I listen, how I move through the world, and how I meet people in their complexity.

I’ve lived in five different countries, speak four languages, and am raising four wonderfully curly and not-so-curly children in Bogotá, Colombia.

Living across cultures has taught me to look beyond black-and-white answers. I meet each story on its own terms - case by case, body by body, context by context.

This way of seeing informs everything I do:
how I parent, how I accompany others, and how I understand medicine and healing - as something relational, nuanced, and deeply human.

What means full spectrum ?


Quite simply: everything is connected.

Pregnancy, birth, and postpartum don’t exist in isolation.
They are deeply intertwined with womb and body health, emotions, spirit, life - and death.

Full spectrum care means meeting you in the whole of your experience, not just in one phase or one role.

My path led me to Central and South America, where I had the privilege of learning from generous mentors and becoming a partera - a midwife rooted in relational, traditional knowledge.

Through this work, I’ve accompanied people not only through conception, pregnancy, birth, and postpartum, but also through caring for womb and breast health, working with fibroids, the absence of menstrual bleeding, navigating loss, and tending to the stories the body carries.

With every woman, every person, every family I’ve walked alongside, my understanding has deepened -
of bodies, of medicine, of healing.

Again and again, the same truth reveals itself:

We are not fragmented.
We are not a collection of disconnected symptoms.
We are whole.

And your whole self is welcome here.

Neram,
please tell me more!

I have given birth in a hospital, at home with midwives, and freely, without medical assistance. Each one was powerful, humbling, and permanently cured me of black-and-white thinking.

I’m a curious, multi-passionate, rabbit-hole kind of human. When something captures my interest, I don’t skim - I study. I read, cross-reference, question, and, whenever possible, live it!

I rather put coffee on my skin than drinking it. I’m your tea girl!

I love soups. If possible, already for breakfast!

I love books and big libraries. I find them sexy - that much knowledge and history in one place does things to me.

I believe that we all have and need feminine and masculine energy in us. None is better, none is worse. What we need is union and balance.

I’m a recovering perfectionist, proudly giving fewer fucks every year.

Earth-bound Virgo, with Sagittarius and Aries fire. Oh, and Man-Gen. IYKYK.

I once thought I wanted to work in forensic medicine because I preferred the death.
Plot twist: now I accompany both life and death - turns out they’re closer than we think.

Want to meet me 1:1 ?

The meaning of “Neram”

Neram means “my destiny” in N’gambaye - my father’s language from Chad.

And in many ways, that has always been mine:
to search for roots and connections, to move between countries and cultures, and to listen closely to how people live, relate, and communicate.

Over the past 20 years, I’ve lived abroad in France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Panama, and Colombia. I speak German, French, English, and Spanish, with a touch of Dutch - and I’ve also learned that some of the deepest communication happens without sharing the same language at all.

I’ve accompanied women and couples from many cultural and ethnic backgrounds, in all of these languages. I love adapting to the specific needs, contexts, and rhythms of those who seek my companionship.

Because real care requires cultural listening.