The experience of pain during labour is a complex, individual and multifaceted response to sensory stimuli generated during childbirth. Despite the fact that labour is painful for most women, a powerful myth of painless childbirth still prevails. Many alternative methods of pain relief are available that are safe and inexpensive. One of them is water birth. Water birth is the process of giving birth in a tub of warm water. The theory behind water birth is that the baby has been in the amniotic sac for nine months and birthing into a similar environment is gentler for the baby and less stressful for the mother. Adolescence is the time to prepare for understanding great responsibilities, a time for exploration and widening horizons, and a time to ensure healthy all round development. Puberty is also a time of behavioural changes when the reproductive capacities get established. Midwives are ‘with woman’, providing the family with supportive and helpful relationships as they share the deep and profound experiences of childbirth. To become skilled helpers nursing students need to develop reflective skills and valid midwifery knowledge grounded in their personal experiences and practice.