
Robyn E. Weller, CNM, MSN was a member of Class 33 of Frontier Nursing University’s Community-based Nurse-midwifery Education Program (CNEP). She took that education and training and turned it into a remarkable career. She has worked as a certified nurse-midwife for Kaiser Permanente in southern California for over 20 years. She is a successful published author, and she is passionate about participating in medical missions. Somehow, she still found time to answer our questions and share her inspiring story with us.
Please describe your current practice and why you pursued a career in nursing.
I work in a large HMO setting in Southern California. We are full scope here and have a wonderful working relationship with our OBGYN/Perinatal colleagues.
I initially thought I wanted to be a physician and was a year shy of graduating with a degree in biology and getting ready to start applying to medical school when I had the good fortune to follow a friend’s mom who was a labor and delivery nurse. I saw my first birth and thought it was the absolute coolest and most mind-blowing thing ever! They introduced me to the person who caught the baby as a midwife. I had never even heard the word midwife. Once they explained what a midwife was, I literally went back to school and changed my major. Luckily my undergraduate happened to have a great nursing program too! Ironically in a true full circle moment the hospital that I saw my first birth at was the same hospital that I was hired at and still work at today.
What is a typical day for you now?
My typical day depends. It is sometimes in the clinic and sometimes in the hospital. It really is a nice mix of the two.
Please tell us about your book, Happy Mama Postpartum Self-Care — what led you to write it, and how has it been received?
One of my passions is taking care of postpartum moms and families. As a mom of four that experienced postpartum depression, I wanted to offer something a bit different than what I could just do alone at work. The idea of writing a book always lingered in the back of my head. COVID really brought the isolation that moms have to the fore front. It seemed like almost every postpartum person I saw was experiencing it! So, I just started the project. It really was a labor of love.
It is impossible to summarize a book in a few sentences, but how would you describe your book and what readers can expect to take away from it?
Much like a first pancake it is my first official book. I self-published it and just put it out to the world in hopes it would speak to someone. I wrote it with the idea of your very bestie being there for you, but that person also happens to have some medical knowledge and life experience.
There is some snark and humor and sadness and reality throughout the book. It is a book that I wish I had when I had my kids. I would describe it as a guidebook for the first 12 weeks of postpartum. The initial what to anticipate, both physically and emotionally, down to ideas on how to ask for help or gently guide people to help you would actually need.
While it is a drop in the ocean on the needs that our postpartum families have it was my way of starting the ripple.
What do you enjoy most about your job? What are the primary challenges?
What do I love about my job? Certainly, the patients and seeing families grow and change is what keeps me going. However, one of the best things is the people that I work with!
One of my very dearest friends – Mary Schroeder – was a fellow CNEP 33 classmate! We met at bound! She has been such a dear friend and now I can also — after 17 years of trying to get her to come to the HMO world – call her a coworker!
She and I have volunteered together for years also. From numerous breast cancer walks, marathons and now we both go to Sinaloa Mexico with the Flying Doctors of Mercy. The Mexico trips are a blast! We don’t work as midwives, however, and work in the OR with the general surgery team. Mary even assists on laparoscopic surgeries while I circulate! She’s super rad! She even drove me to the hospital (maybe speeding a little in the carpool lanes) with both of us laughing at the thought of an unplanned car delivery with two midwives.
What are your future goals and plans?
Maybe more books. I’ve been working on a menopause book too!
What else do you want to share with the FNU community?
I want to share my gratitude to the FNU community. I have gotten so much more out of being a midwife than I feel like I have put in and it all started with Frontier. You never know where this world will take you.





FNU Preceptor Cassandra Klakken Viramontes, ARNP, FNP, provides care for area residents at the Grand Coulee Clinic in Washington. The clinic provides comprehensive health care, including family medicine, preventative care, and disease management, and is part of Coulee Medical Center, a 25-bed critical access hospital.




In an ongoing effort to improve community health and increase healthcare awareness through engaging conversations, Frontier Nursing University (FNU) has launched a new podcast — 
This summer, Frontier Nursing University welcomed seven college students from across the country to its Courier Program Public Health Internship, a seven-week fully remote service-learning program with a rich and adventuresome history. The program is for college students with an interest in public health, healthcare, social work, or a related field.







Since stepping into her role as president of Frontier Nursing University last year, Dr. Brooke A. Flinders has prioritized connecting with the FNU community. In 2025, she kicked off a Presidential Tour in the southeast region of the United States and plans to travel across the country throughout the year to meet with FNU graduates who are transforming healthcare in their communities. Each stop offers an opportunity to witness firsthand the meaningful impact of our alumni in a variety of clinical settings.