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  • advertisement
    10
    Jan
    2012
    11:45am, EST

    Welcome to motherhood, Beyonce: Prepare to be judged

    By Jordana Horn

    Dear Beyonce,

    Congratulations on your new daughter, Blue Ivy Carter! I’m sure you’re over the moon right now, whether with joy, pain meds or some combination of both. But I wanted to send you a quick note just to share your joy, and to say welcome.

    Welcome to the club of moms. Life here in Momville is totally different from anything you’ve known before. Once people become mothers, many mysterious things happen. And while scientists haven’t yet pinpointed exactly why this is, for some reason, once you become a mother, you get your judge on.

    When you become a mother, something happens and you start judging other people and how they parent. You do it all the time. You do it in your head, and you do it out loud. “Why isn’t that poor baby wearing a hat?” “Why is that baby wearing a hat when it’s 102 degrees out?” “Why in God’s name did they pick THAT hat?” Look, you’ve been judged before. You’re a celebrity. Heck, magazine articles are written judging you and your clothes, your shape, your music, everything. And now, that’s going to happen even more frequently. Get ready.

    Related content: The Mom Judging Olympics: A competition nobody meant to enter

    So here’s the thing. I get it that you were trying to make your first kid’s birth a really special and private thing. Believe it or not, even we non-celebs feel that way about giving birth (though we may not be as concerned that paparazzi will disguise themselves as nurses in order to get pictures of our stretch marks). Having a baby is an incredibly special time for all of us – even though we don’t all have $1.3 million at our disposal to put a velvet rope in front of the maternity ward.

    Which, apparently, you do. It sounds like you guys went all out to protect your privacy at New York’s Lenox Hill Hospital – allegedly hiring special security guards, blocking out windows, and covering the hospital security cameras with paper. Apparently, you may even have caused some difficulties for families of other newborns who happened to be born at the same hospital as Blue Ivy – some say they had trouble getting in to see their newest family member and recuperating moms, and they’re pretty upset about it. People are judging you left and right, and it doesn’t look so good for you.

    Related content: "30 Rock" moms didn't get same treatment as Beyonce

    You have some PR repair work to do. Reaching out to the other people who had babies on the ward while you were there would be a great start. How about offering to cover their medical expenses as a gesture of goodwill and parenting solidarity? Every new mom and baby deserve VIP treatment, after all.

    Maybe the first lesson you can show you’ve learned as a parent is one that we should all learn. We should let parenting bring us together and emphasize what we have in common with one another: our love for our beautiful children. Good luck!

    Do you think Beyonce and Jay-Z went too far in their hospital security measures? Should they apologize to those who were inconvenienced?

    Parents at the hospital where Beyoncé and Jay-Z's baby was born have claimed the couple's security shut them out, but the hospital denies it.

    "Like" TODAY Moms on Facebook, and follow us @TodayMoms

    57 comments, including:

    They make me sick! Instead of paying a PUBLIC HOSPITAL for the whole floor. They should have paid to have a home birth! I would've been in jail if i wasn't allowed to see my baby because of their stupid above the world attitude.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: beyonce, delivery, pregnancy, featured
  • 15
    Nov
    2011
    11:35am, EST

    Garner: Rachel Zoe refuses to put me in maternity clothes

    Getty Images

    No maternity clothing here: Jennifer Garner at the "Butter" premiere on Sept. 13, 2011 in Toronto, Canada; Garner at the Motion Picture & Television Fund's "Reel Stories, Real Lives" on Nov. 5, 2011 in Los Angeles; Garner in Lanvin dress at the Butter premiere in November 2011.

    By Chiara Atik

    There is no better excuse than pregnancy for elastic waistbands and loose-fitting shirts. Unfortunately for Jennifer Garner, who is expecting her third child in February, stylist Rachel Zoe has something else in mind for her.

    “Rachel Zoe is so determined to not put me in maternity clothes,” the actress told InStyle recently. (Interestingly, Zoe declared Garner her celebrity mom style icon last month).

    Indeed, unlike fellow pregnant stars Beyonce or Jessica Simpson, who have lately taken to flaunting their baby bumps, Garner has been seen at events wearing dresses that non-pregnant starlets might also wear on the red carpet.

    At the AFI screening of Butter in Los Angeles on Nov. 7, Garner wore a loose, asymmetrical Lanvin mini-dress, paired with thick black heels and a whole lotta leg. The previous Saturday, she wore a tightly-fitted black lace dress with towering bronze heels and a black tuxedo jacket at The Hollywood Reporter's Annual Next Generation Reception.

    Live Poll

    Are maternity clothes a necessity?

    View Results
    • 167877
      Yes. You need them!
      57%
    • 167878
      No. They're horribly unflattering!
      43%

    VoteTotal Votes: 1757

    Of course, while Zoe may dictate Garner’s red carpet look, daytime is a different story. In the past few weeks, Garner has been repeatedly photographed out and about in Los Angeles, wearing comfortable clothing that much more closely resembles the wardrobe of an expectant mom: loose fitting jeans, leggings, flats, and maternity tops.

    And as for red carpet looks for the duration of her pregnancy, Garner hasn’t given up hope of maternity-wear.

    “I have four months to go," Garner said. "Sooner or later, [Zoe] is going to have to put me in a maternity dress. Eventually that is going to happen, but so far she has gotten her way.”

    How can one attempt Garner's chic wardrobe on a budget? Rosie Pope, maternity fashion designer and star of Bravo's "Pregnant In Heels," uses TODAY.com's Katie Quinn to showcase the best fall and winter trends for new moms and moms-to-be.

    Chiara Atik is a New York based writer who loves to watch 80s sitcoms and read Italian Vogue.

    More: Slideshow: Stars’ maternity style
    Rachel Zoe on parenting, style and beauty

    8 comments, including:

    She's lucky because for the average pregnant woman, it's hard to find sexy, trendy, affordable clothes that fit your body perfectly without either making you look like a floating trash bag, making you feel frumpy and unsexy, or looking like you're about to burst from the material clinging too tightl …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: fashion, hollywood, celebrities, pregnancy, jennifer-garner, parenting, featured, maternity, rachel-zoe
  • 19
    Oct
    2011
    1:01pm, EDT

    Should you get rid of your cat if you're pregnant?

    Michael Buckner / Getty Images

    Actors Chris Pratt and Anna Faris gave away their 19-year-old incontinent cat Bella because they were worried it would affect a future pregnancy.

    By Rita Rubin

    A lot of people had probably never heard of Chris Pratt until the recent “Cat-gate,” as one celebrity news website called it.

    Pratt plays doofus Andy Dwyer in the sitcom “Parks and Recreation.” But many animal-lovers now think Pratt’s the doofus for giving away Bella, his incontinent 19-year-old cat.

    It probably didn’t help that he broadcast his intentions to 56,000 followers on Twitter. Apparently stunned at the outcry, Pratt blogged “my wife (actress Anna Faris) and I want to start a family and we ABSOLUTELY CANNOT have an animal that sh*ts all over the house.”

    Pratt and Faris are far from the only couple to ditch a cat or dog because of concerns over how it would fit in with pregnancy and a baby.

    Stephanie Williams, a veterinary technician at the Animal Rescue League of Western Pennsylvania in Pittsburgh, sighs when asked how often she sees it happen. “Probably at least once a day. We try to talk people out of it, but usually they’re pretty set on what they want.”

    One common misconception is that it’s dangerous for pregnant women to live in the same house as a cat, which may have contributed to Pratt and Faris's decision to send Bella packing.

    It’s true that cats are the only animals that can transmit the rare parasitic disease toxoplasmosis through their feces. Toxoplasmosis usually doesn’t make cats or healthy humans sick, but infection in a pregnant woman can cause a miscarriage or birth defects.

    The thing is, you’re more likely to contract toxoplasmosis from eating undercooked meat or unwashed fruits or vegetables than you are from changing your cat’s litterbox, especially if your cat never goes outside.

    “To get toxoplasmosis from your cat requires a lot of things to happen,” explains internist Jeff Kravetz, an associate professor at Yale and self-described cat lover who’s had two since before his wife delivered their two children. “It has to eat a mouse or something else that’s living outdoors and actually has toxoplasmosis. If you have an indoor cat, there’s almost no risk at all, unless you have a mouse running around your house.”

    Plus, toxoplasmosis isn’t a chronic or recurring infection. If your cat happens to contract it, which usually occurs in the first year of life, not the 19th, it will excrete the parasite’s eggs in its feces for only a week Kravetz notes. After that, it’s immune for the rest of its life.

    In other words, the chance that Faris might have caught toxoplasmosis from Bella was vanishingly small.

    Several years ago, the Humane Society of the United States mailed out toxoplasmosis information packets to every member of the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology. The packet included a brief survey, which 1,500 doctors answered and returned, says Nancy Peterson, cat programs manager at the Humane Society.

    Of the 1,500, Peterson says, 42 said they would advise pregnant cat-owners to get rid of their cat or at least put it outside. While 42 might seem like a pretty small minority of ob-gyns, Peterson says, you have to figure that their patients are spreading the words to their friends. “That’s how this myth just goes on and on and on.”

    (For more information about pets and pregnancy and babies, check out the Humane Society’s website at humansociety.org)

    Rita Rubin, a contributing writer for msnbc.com and today.com, previously covered medicine for USA Today and U.S. News & World Report. She lives in suburban Washington, D.C., with her husband and two daughters.

    "Like" TODAY Moms on Facebook, and follow us @TodayMoms

    27 comments, including:

    I never for a moment even considered getting rid of my 11-year-old cat when I became pregnant in May 2010. I just gave litter box cleaning duty over to my mother during the duration of my pregnancy and resumed it after my son's February birth.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: pregnancy, pets
  • 10
    Oct
    2011
    3:44pm, EDT

    Woman gives birth 7 hours after finishing marathon

    A few hours after completing the 26.2-mile race, a suburban Chicago woman gave birth to her daughter. WMAQ reports.

    By Rita Rubin

    Amber Miller sounds almost apologetic when she says yes, she did have an epidural when she delivered daughter June at 10:29 p.m.  Sunday. She just didn’t think she had the strength to go without an epidural. Not surprising, considering she had completed the Bank of America Chicago Marathon seven hours earlier.

    Really, that last sentence should have a row of exclamation points after it.

    In a phone interview from her hospital room, Miller says she wasn’t sure until the last minute whether she was going to run the marathon, her eighth. Not because she didn’t think she could do it, but because it fell eight days before her due date.

    “I kind of was thinking it was likely I was going to have her before the race,” says Miller, 27, a stay-at-home mom who lives in the Chicago suburb of Westchester, Ill.  After all, son Caleb, now 19 months, was born 18 days before his due date.

    But “the night before, I’m still pregnant, I’m still feeling good. I figured I paid for it.”

    So what the heck, she thought, not planning on actually completing the whole 26.2 miles. “I thought it’s likely that the last few miles I’m going to get really, really tired.”

    On her doctor’s advice, she conserved her energy by alternating between running and walking every two miles. “Pregnancy-wise, I felt fine. The baby was still moving. I was drinking a lot, eating a lot.”

    And by mile 18 or 19, “I’m thinking: you know, I’m going to do this.”

    And she did, in six hours and 25 minutes.

    During the race, she experienced what she considered to be Braxton Hicks contractions, which she always felt when running while pregnant. “I didn’t know for sure if I was in labor yet right after the race finished.” She lay down in the grass for a little after the race to see if they would go away. They didn’t.

    As she and her husband, Joe, drove to a deli to grab a bit to eat (turkey rueben for her, in case you’re wondering how marathon moms fortify themselves), “I was still having the contractions. I kind of thought, well, maybe this is real labor.” She’s pretty certain her running triggered it. By the time she reached Central DuPage Hospital at 5:30 p.m., she was 5 centimeters dilated.

    Live Poll

    What do you think of a nine-months-pregnant woman completing a marathon?

    View Results
    • 163079
      Admirable!
      38%
    • 163080
      Crazy!
      62%

    VoteTotal Votes: 4512

    This wasn’t even Miller’s first marathon during this pregnancy. At 17 weeks, she finished the Wisconsin Marathon in Kenosha in four hours and 23 minutes. In that race, she walked only one mile for every three that she ran. And she ran the Indianapolis Marathon when she was 18 weeks pregnant with Caleb.

    Story: Marathon mom's win sparks excercise debate

    Miller, who ran practically every day during her pregnancy, says she did wonder whether any other woman has ever completed a marathon and given birth to a full-term baby on the same day. Still, she never expected the media attention she’s been getting.

    She’s more impressed with her husband’s achievement. Since she wanted to run, he felt he had to, too, “considering my situation,” even though he hadn’t trained at all. “We ran about half of it together, and then his knee gave out completely. He walked the rest of the way.” Still, he finished only 10 or 15 minutes behind her without any training.

    Miller says she’s looking forward to running more marathons. But not her husband. “He said that’s his first and last.”

    "Like" TODAY Moms on Facebook, and follow us @TodayMoms

    6 comments, including:

    I had 8 babies. The pregnancies where I exercised a bit or a lot MORE were the best and the healthiest ones. This woman had her baby only a few days early and it was HEALTHY.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: pregnancy, featured, showfront
  • 28
    Jul
    2011
    7:21am, EDT

    Is 'skinny-while-pregnant' a dangerous trend?

    When you see someone who is skinny while pregnant, are you:
    By Kavita Varma-White

    It used to be that when you’d see a pregnant woman, the  “oh, you’re eating for two” comment would be common place.

    That was until celebrities would show up in photos looking svelte days or weeks after having babies.

    The skinny-while-pregnant trend has hit some women who strive for barely-there bumps and are obsessed with a post-baby body, pronto.

     

    NBC's chief medical correspondent, Dr. Nancy Snyderman, and pregnancy expert Dr. Catherine Birndorf talk about the health risks of not gaining enough weight while expecting. NBC's Maria Schiavocampo reports.

    That some maternity clothing sites sell size zeros, and women are fed a mythic notion that they can be skinny while pregnant, has some experts concerned.

    “It absolutely can have a devastating effect on a woman who is very highly conscious about her weight,” says psychotherapist Robi Ludwig. “At its extreme, onlookers have created a buzzword for the trend: Mommy-rexia. Though not a medical diagnosis, doctors say if taken too far gaining too few pregnancy pounds can also be bad for the baby.”

    Babies whose growth are restricted at birth can be at an increased risk of developing long-term developmental issues, says Dr. Rebecca Brightman, a New York City ob-gyn.

    Discussing the subject on TODAY, NBC chief medical correspondent Dr. Nancy Snyderman says the biggest risk of not gaining enough weight is nothing but serious: “You’re starving your fetus,” Snyderman said, adding that both overeating and undereating are bad for pregnant woman.

    Snyderman says she finds the celebrity-fueled fixation for the perfect body before and after pregnancy absolutely disturbing. “At a time when we’re talking about Africa’s greatest famine in 60 years, I find this particularly vulgar…[the idea] that your body is deformed while you are pregnant.”

    She adds: “We have become cuckoo about hating our bodies, and this self loathing…pregnancy should be nine months of root beer floats and bliss, and deal with it afterwards. I think this is an Upper East Side, white girl, obnoxious problem."

    Ultimately, unrealistic weight-reduction expectations give lots of new moms the baby blues.

    So what do you do if you're desperate to get back into those skinny jeans? Relax.

    Doctors stress that a normal weight woman should gain between 25 and 35 pounds during pregnancy and expect to lose it a year after giving birth.

    What do you think? How do you feel when you see someone who is pregnant but skinny?

     

    Results
    Total of 9,306 votes

    23.7%
    Impressed, thinking, "Wow, she looks great"
    2,206 votes
    27.6%
    Envious, thinking, "How does she do it?"
    2,566 votes
    48.7%
    Horrified, thinking, "Why doesn' t she eat more?"
    4,534 votes

    "Like" TODAY Moms on Facebook, and follow us @TodayMoms

    Leave your comment

    Show more
    Explore related topics: pregnancy, featured
  • 22
    Jul
    2011
    9:17am, EDT

    Celeb mom crush of the week: Jenna Fischer

    By Dana Macario

    Our celebrity mom crush this week is on everybody's favorite co-worker, Jenna Fischer. Much has been made of the fact that The Office star revealed the sex of her baby (it's a boy!) to Jay Leno, which has, unfortunately, overshadowed the bigger message she was just bursting to share with the nation -- the need for women to end the practice of "hover and tinkle" in public restrooms. As she nears the end of her pregnancy, this funny gal, like all pregnant women, has found herself a frequent visitor to these facilities. On The Tonight Show, she threw down the gauntlet to women everywhere, proclaiming "We can do better!" before urging all women to just sit on the seat, already. Can we get an amen from the stalls?!

    Catch up on our previous celeb mom crushes:

    Tina Fey
    Jessica Alba
    Jennifer Garner
    Reese Witherspoon

    Nia Vardalos
    Maria Shriver
    Nicole Kidman
    Katie Holmes

    "Like" TODAY Moms on Facebook, and follow us @TodayMoms

    Leave your comment

    Show more
    Explore related topics: pregnancy, celebrity-mom-crush
  • 5
    Jul
    2011
    10:41am, EDT

    Will and Kate plus one? Stop the womb-watching madness!

    Live Poll

    What do you think of the Will and Kate baby fever?

    View Results
    • 152952
      Harmless. I'm interested to see when they'll start a family.
      15%
    • 152953
      Annoying. People should mind their own business.
      85%

    VoteTotal Votes: 1575

    By Rebecca Dube

    Lots of newly married women can relate to the life of Kate (aka Duchess Catherine of Cambridge): The jet-setting, the castles, the fabulous clothes and hair, the crowds of adoring fans... OK, maybe not. But the constant speculation about when she'll have a baby? THAT seems awfully familiar.

    "Yes, I hope to." Those four words, reportedly spoken by Kate to some random Canadian dude who wished her luck starting a family, have re-ignited the baby fever among royal watchers. She was probably just being polite, poor girl! And now everyone's all up in her business. Well, given her royal status, they've never really been down out of her business. Goes with the castles and other perquisites.

    But what about the rest of us? If you've got a mother or mother-in-law who is jonesing for a grandchild, you know their pointed questions and unsubtle "hints" can make the British tabloids look like models of restraint by comparison. If you take your time producing an heir -- either by choice, or because of fertility issues -- the constant womb-watching gets tiresome.

    At those times when you don't want to discuss your reproductive status, what's your best answer to the question, "So, when are you going to have a baby?" (Who knows, maybe you can give Kate some good snappy comebacks!) 

    

    "Like" TODAY Moms on Facebook, and follow us @TodayMoms

    Leave your comment

    Show more
    Explore related topics: pregnancy, showfront
  • 17
    Apr
    2011
    12:31pm, EDT

    Treating depression during pregnancy -- an uncomfortable dilemma

    Live Poll

    Did you suffer from depression during pregnancy?

    View Results
    • 145711
      Yes
      84%
    • 145712
      No
      16%

    VoteTotal Votes: 31

    By Kavita Varma-White

    Battling depression takes on a whole new meaning when you're pregnant, because there's an inherent Catch 22: Do you take medications, which could be hazardous for the baby? Or do you refuse drugs, which also has risks?

    Studies suggest that both antidepressants and major depression are associated with poor outcomes for newborns, a story by MyHealthNewsDaily reports, and researchers are trying to figure out which approach - treating or not treating - is actually best for the unborn child. 

    Regardless of the choice, health experts agree that women need to seek medical advice. 

    Kathryn Hirst, director of the Maternal Mental Health Clinic at the University of California, San Diego, told MHND:

    I think there's a myth out there that the medications are inherently bad during pregnancy, when the reality is that depression and anxiety can be bad and cause significant problems in pregnancy and postpartum. And so for the mom, she really needs to look at what's worse, being depressed or anxious, and how that impacts me and potentially the baby, or taking the medication. It really is a discussion a woman needs to have with an informed doctor or health care provider.

     Did you suffer from depression during pregnancy? Share your experiences.

    "Like" TODAY Moms on Facebook, and follow us @TodayMoms

    Leave your comment

    Show more
    Explore related topics: pregnancy, depression
  • 14
    Apr
    2011
    11:02am, EDT

    Broadcasting your pregnancy on YouTube: Is it TMI?

    The latest trend in maternity oversharing is happening on YouTube, TODAY Parenting reports. Slate has dubbed the phenomenon “WombTube” — expectant moms reveal their positive pregnancy tests in public video clips. And it doesn’t stop there. Many moms-to-be continue to vlog their pregnancy in weekly installments. From bump growth to cravings, it’s all out there.

    Read full story: The YouTube pregnancy.

    What do you think? Does broadcasting your pregnancy on YouTube cross the line into "too much information"?

    Results with 24 short comments
    Total of 3,547 votes - click on the "Display Comments" bar below to sort comments

    58.6%
    Yes. Some things should be private.
    2,077 votes
    22.6%
    No. It's healthy to share, and if you don't like it, don't watch it.
    802 votes
    18.8%
    Maybe a couple YouTube videos are OK, but don't go overboard with it.
    668 votes
    Display Comments:
    No. It's healthy to share, and if you don't like it, don't watch it.

    It's bothersome that if a girl with a "hot" flat belly showing off is great, but a baby bump is somehow "over sharing" or even "Gross".

    • 2 votes
    #1
     - CTrax
     - 12:24 pm EDT on Thu Apr 14, 2011
    Yes. Some things should be private.

    gross. exhibitionist. eww.. yes, i'm pregnant, but trust me, you don't need (or want) to know the details.

      #2
       - su-314019
       - 12:47 pm EDT on Thu Apr 14, 2011
      Yes. Some things should be private.

      Why do people think that everyone is interested in every aspect of their pathetic lives?

      • 1 vote
      #3
       - Tina-293371
       - 12:49 pm EDT on Thu Apr 14, 2011
      Maybe a couple YouTube videos are OK, but don't go overboard with it.

      There are certain things that I think are reasonable to share, but the line of decency and TMI is pretty vague and varies for each person.

        #4
         - Catalina
         - 1:01 pm EDT on Thu Apr 14, 2011
        Yes. Some things should be private.

        If you want to show your family, find another way to do it, im so paranoid i would think some crazy woman who cant have kids would take min

          #5
           - Kels-1677491
           - 1:15 pm EDT on Thu Apr 14, 2011
          Yes. Some things should be private.

          Unless you're a celebrity, I doubt perfect strangers care about your pregnancy test results,and those close to you should be told in person

          • 1 vote
          #6
           - Hot-in-Miami
           - 1:45 pm EDT on Thu Apr 14, 2011
          Yes. Some things should be private.

          Just weird. I'm preg right now and would never expose my unborn child on the net like that! Proud of my belly but not an attention seeker

            #7
             - justdontgetit-2670205
             - 2:22 pm EDT on Thu Apr 14, 2011
            Maybe a couple YouTube videos are OK, but don't go overboard with it.

            I can't believe anyone outside of family & friends wants to hear or see the minutiae of someone's pregnancy. Definitely TMI!

              #8
               - Surfercheryl
               - 4:45 pm EDT on Thu Apr 14, 2011
              Yes. Some things should be private.

              Pregnancy is a beautiful experience of intimacy between a man and a woman in marriage. It's also a celebration to come, so remain intimate.

                #9
                 - talk2me
                 - 10:29 pm EDT on Thu Apr 14, 2011
                No. It's healthy to share, and if you don't like it, don't watch it.

                Im pregnant, and watching these videos is usefull for me, it makes me feel less alone, less nervous about the whole pregancy thing

                • 2 votes
                #10
                 - Andrea Cassis
                 - 4:30 am EDT on Fri Apr 15, 2011
                No. It's healthy to share, and if you don't like it, don't watch it.

                if no one shared what it was like - how would new mommies know what to expect? books only say so much!

                • 1 vote
                #11
                 - duckduckgander
                 - 7:44 am EDT on Fri Apr 15, 2011
                Maybe a couple YouTube videos are OK, but don't go overboard with it.

                Pregnant Women are Smug

                  #12
                   - Protogenxl
                   - 8:13 am EDT on Fri Apr 15, 2011
                  No. It's healthy to share, and if you don't like it, don't watch it.

                  Where are all of the "we aren't pregnant and devastated" videos?

                    #13
                     - Christine Harper
                     - 8:14 am EDT on Fri Apr 15, 2011
                    Maybe a couple YouTube videos are OK, but don't go overboard with it.

                    People are living their lives in terms of "What will I post about this on Facebook/Twitter?" It's become an obsession. Get back to reality

                    • 1 vote
                    #14
                     - Cheryl-3325503
                     - 8:18 am EDT on Fri Apr 15, 2011
                    Yes. Some things should be private.

                    Why not advertise each night you had sex leading up to conception?

                      #15
                       - tonymaz
                       - 8:19 am EDT on Fri Apr 15, 2011
                      Maybe a couple YouTube videos are OK, but don't go overboard with it.

                      I didn't even know women were doing this on YouTube...I've just noticed it a LOT on Facebook lately.

                        #16
                         - Kristin-2942363
                         - 10:21 am EDT on Fri Apr 15, 2011
                        No. It's healthy to share, and if you don't like it, don't watch it.

                        c'est votre choix

                          #17
                           - hamza-3326836
                           - 11:56 am EDT on Fri Apr 15, 2011
                          Yes. Some things should be private.

                          What's even worse is posting about the after-birth! I'm tired of reading Facebook posts about dirty diapers and vomiting babies. Who cares?

                            #18
                             - trdsp28
                             - 12:37 pm EDT on Fri Apr 15, 2011
                            Maybe a couple YouTube videos are OK, but don't go overboard with it.

                            Love it when a celebrtity does something,it's BIG news;women have been getting pregnant for a long time;social media now gives other option

                              #19
                               - Colette Sid
                               - 2:11 pm EDT on Fri Apr 15, 2011
                              No. It's healthy to share, and if you don't like it, don't watch it.

                              Its natural and to be very appreciated

                                #20
                                 - MOM's OPINION-3329590
                                 - 8:02 pm EDT on Fri Apr 15, 2011
                                No. It's healthy to share, and if you don't like it, don't watch it.

                                Its natural and to be very appreciated

                                  #21
                                   - MOM's OPINION-3329590
                                   - 8:02 pm EDT on Fri Apr 15, 2011
                                  Maybe a couple YouTube videos are OK, but don't go overboard with it.

                                  It's obnoxious....but, if someone doesn't like it don't watch it

                                    #22
                                     - zeusnc
                                     - 11:50 pm EDT on Sat Apr 16, 2011
                                    Yes. Some things should be private.

                                    yech.

                                      #23
                                       - overextended
                                       - 9:21 am EDT on Mon Apr 18, 2011
                                      Maybe a couple YouTube videos are OK, but don't go overboard with it.

                                      It's hard to say. I think people are using to gain attention, but if you are using it just to document, then why not?

                                        #24
                                         - ziegl087
                                         - 6:31 pm EDT on Thu May 12, 2011

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                                        6 comments, including:

                                        For those who think it's a great way to get questions answered ; you do realize that these "answers" may come from someone with misinformation, right? I have to clear up pregnancy confusion at least 30 times a day. It's my job, and I'm happy to answer questions.

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                                      • 15
                                        Oct
                                        2010
                                        2:50pm, EDT

                                        Back off, pregnancy police! I know what I'm doing

                                        BlogHer

                                        By Lisen Stromberg for BlogHer.com

                                        When I was six months pregnant with my third child, I had the honor of toasting one of my closest friends at her wedding. I stood, wine glass in hand, extolling the great gifts of a well-met marriage rubbing my expanding belly for emphasis. After I sat down, one of the men at our table took away my wine glass and said, “I know you know your baby doesn’t need this.” Now, it should be noted, I hadn’t taken a sip from the glass, but that was not the point. This guy was just another in a long line of well-meaning men (and the occasional woman) who felt compelled to tell me what to eat, drink, and generally do while I was pregnant. Funny thing is, my doctor had actually advised me (off the record) to have the occasional glass of red wine.

                                        You see, I have a malformed uterus. My condition holds a real risk to the fetus of preterm delivery. When other pregnant women begin having Braxton-Hicks contractions -- a perfectly normal means for the uterus to prepare for delivery -- I begin going into early labor. In my previous pregnancies, I had tried using terbutaline, but it made me jittery, and my doctor and I agreed we would only use it as a last ditch effort. As the contractions were still very mild and rare at this stage in my pregnancy, my doctor suggested that red wine could help ease my condition. In short, I was on doctor’s orders to imbibe when necessary.

                                        A woman’s decisions regarding her own health during pregnancy are already fraught with anxiety. We want what is best for our growing fetus all the while needing to balance out what is best for us. As Julia Moskin wrote in her essay on drinking during pregnancy, “our responsibility for minimizing risk through perfect behavior feels vast.” In the end, we must come to peace with the reality that these choices are weighed between the demands of the present and the future consequences we can live with.

                                        We are bombarded with frightening information on the risks of our decisions. We are told that if we eat soft cheese, sushi, deli meats, if we drink alcohol or unpasteurized fruit juices, if we dye our hair or get a pedicure, our child’s future will be compromised by low IQ, behavioral problems, and late-in-life heart disease, diabetes and so on. As Dr. Jerome Groopman recently wrote in his review of Anne Paul Murphy’s new book Origins, "the food the mother eats, the air she breathes, the water she drinks, the stress or trauma she experiences — all may affect her child, for better or worse, over the decades to come.”

                                        All of this is grist for maternal guilt and fuel for the womb police. For years, they have been focusing their efforts on whether women can choose to keep or terminate a pregnancy. Fetal rights have been used in numerous legal cases as a tool for the anti-choice movement. However, these efforts have not stood up in court. In 2001, the Supreme Court ruled in Ferguson vs. The City of Charleston that “the government of this country should not be permitted to police its pregnant citizens through their umbilical cord.” The unveiling (and controversial) research linking all manner of societal ills to gestation is giving new impetus to the fetal rights movement and a new opportunity to control women’s bodies.

                                        Even well-meaning liberals are getting on the band wagon. In the New York Times recently, Nicholas Kristof wrote that “early childhood education may be a bit late as a way to break the cycles of poverty.” He went on to quote Anne Murphy Paul who said, “given the odds stacked against poor women and their fetuses, the most effective antipoverty program might be one that starts before birth." Dr. Darshak Sanghavi, a pediatric cardiologist, disagrees. He argues that “pinning complex public-health problems, like childhood obesity (or poverty), on failed gestation has a blame-the-victim undercurrent." The research itself is not always reliable. In an oft quoted Swedish study linking behavior problems to moderate alcohol consumption, you’ll discover that “despite that fact that four of the eight studies did not indicate a link between alcohol consumption while pregnant and behavioral problems the institute maintains that the evidence is sufficient to support its recommendation.” I don’t know about you, but this sounds like an agenda to me.

                                        I worry about the implication of all of this. Are we steps away from governmental intervention on our choices during gestation? Will this become yet another class issue in which poor and disenfranchised women are told what to do in order to control their progeny? Or worse, does our future look frighteningly like the subjugated state-controlled breeders in Margaret Atwood's Handmaid’s Tale? (If you haven’t read it, run, don’t walk to your nearest independent bookstore to buy this one now.) At the very least, most pregnant women would agree with Julia Moskins when she says, “the public seems to seriously doubt whether pregnant women can be trusted to make responsible decisions on their own.”

                                        All of this comes back to that singular glass of wine. To celebrate the occasion of my friend’s wedding and to slow the mild contractions I was experiencing, I did drink it. And, when my son does not get into Harvard, I can tell him what Dr. Sanghavi said, “at some point you have to stop blaming your issues on your mother's uterus.”

                                        Bloggers Weigh In

                                        • Blogger Gillie Easdon of Off Beat Mama writes that “a pregnant woman’s body is everybody’s business.”
                                        • Writesasrain is a parent of two adopted children who suffer from Fetal Alcohol Syndrome asks "is it worth the risk? If we understand that permanent damage can be done … then, does it really matter how much damage, or what kind of damage? It can NOT be undone. The damage is for life."
                                        • BlogHer Rita Arens of Surrender Dorothy says after speaking with friends and doing the research, “If I were to put another bun in my oven (don't hold your breath), I think I'd be less conservative about drinking”

                                        What do you think? Is it worth the risk?

                                        Photo Credit: Brett L via Flickr

                                        Gloria Steinem once said, "The first problem for all of us, women and men, is not to learn but to unlearn." I am working on unlearning each and every day. How about you? Lisen www.prismwork.com

                                        Reaching more than 20 million women each month, BlogHer is the leading participatory news, entertainment and information network for women online with a publishing network of more than 2,500 blogs. BlogHer adds unique voices of women bloggers to the TODAY community. Read more at www.blogher.com -- and sign up for our newsletters to get the best of BlogHer in your inbox.

                                         


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                                        201 comments, including:

                                        I agree with Alexander, this is not what the article was about at all. This article was about the millions of women who do become pregnant and CHOOSE to go through with their pregnancy.

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                                        Explore related topics: pregnancy
                                      • 14
                                        Oct
                                        2010
                                        12:21pm, EDT

                                        Is it safe to run while pregnant?

                                        Most experts say pregnant women can continue running, if they do it right. WNBC's Glenn Zimmerman reports.

                                        When it comes to pregnancy, there are a lot of myths and misconceptions. Popular wisdom dictates that a lot of workaday activities are best avoided, but often without citing any viable, concrete reasons. Last month, Time Magazine’s Healthland blog posted an interesting item called 5 Pregnancy Taboos Explained (or Debunked) that got to the bottom of certain pregnancy no-no’s like coffee and air travel. Even with the support and empirical evidence from the medical community, however, some expectant mothers are reluctant to deviate from the age-old guidelines.

                                        Not all women agree, however. WNBC’s Glenn Zimmerman went to Central Park to meet an expectant mother and former marathon runner who is intent on keeping with her active running regimen, even while seven-months-pregnant. And she’s not alone.

                                        What do you think? Do believe running and pregnancy mix? Watch the video and share your thoughts in the comment section.

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                                        36 comments, including:

                                        There is no reason to exercise so vigorously during pregnancy!  Exercise moderately yes - running - no! There is absolutely nothing that is worth risking that precious baby's life and if you have to give up running for 9 months then so be it.  How do you know whether or not you have any kind of c …

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                                        Explore related topics: exercise, pregnancy, featured
                                      • 30
                                        Jun
                                        2010
                                        6:25pm, EDT

                                        Would you induce labor in the final weeks of pregnancy?

                                        A recent report in the American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology says that the number of American moms who have had labor induced nearly doubled between 1002 and 2003. Would consider having labor induced in the 37th or 38th week of pregnancy?

                                        Results with 15 short comments
                                        Total of 525 votes - click on the "Display Comments" bar below to sort comments

                                        16.2%
                                        Yes. The 37th or 38th week may be slightly short of the traditional 40 weeks, but it’s hardly premature.
                                        85 votes
                                        57.9%
                                        No. Up until the 42nd week, baby and Mother Nature know best!
                                        304 votes
                                        25.9%
                                        I’m not sure. It would depend on how I’m feeling and what my doctor thinks.
                                        136 votes
                                        Display Comments:
                                        Yes. The 37th or 38th week may be slightly short of the traditional 40 weeks, but it’s hardly premature.

                                        I was induced 2 days before my due date, for convenience. I wouldn't have done it much before that, though.

                                          #25
                                           - Melanie-1631910
                                           - 10:41 pm EDT on Wed Jun 30, 2010
                                          No. Up until the 42nd week, baby and Mother Nature know best!

                                          It would be good to know what percentage of these occur after 40 weeks or when the baby's or mother's health was an issue. Relevant data.

                                            #26
                                             - Stephanie-1941501
                                             - 10:54 pm EDT on Wed Jun 30, 2010
                                            No. Up until the 42nd week, baby and Mother Nature know best!

                                            my child had serious problems and had to be induced. shame on anyone who gets induced because of convenience or uncomfortablity. your luck

                                              #27
                                               - maddogmomma
                                               - 11:00 pm EDT on Wed Jun 30, 2010
                                              Yes. The 37th or 38th week may be slightly short of the traditional 40 weeks, but it’s hardly premature.

                                              I was induced the day after my due date! And she was 10lbs

                                                #28
                                                 - Savannah-1945602
                                                 - 3:32 pm EDT on Thu Jul 1, 2010
                                                No. Up until the 42nd week, baby and Mother Nature know best!

                                                Don't you want your baby to have the best chance at a healthy beginning. Most women I know only do it for their convinence.

                                                  #29
                                                   - deb-1946278
                                                   - 5:06 pm EDT on Thu Jul 1, 2010
                                                  Yes. The 37th or 38th week may be slightly short of the traditional 40 weeks, but it’s hardly premature.

                                                  My second grandson was induced at exactly 39 wks as my daughter was having a situation the Dr was concerned abt.

                                                    #30
                                                     - Wise Grandmom
                                                     - 8:41 am EDT on Fri Jul 2, 2010
                                                    No. Up until the 42nd week, baby and Mother Nature know best!

                                                    Both of my children were induced at 42 weeks and a day. I would have liked to wait for nature, but it wasn't a viable option.

                                                      #31
                                                       - Teresa-1949899
                                                       - 11:15 am EDT on Fri Jul 2, 2010
                                                      No. Up until the 42nd week, baby and Mother Nature know best!

                                                      I WISH my baby had those 40 weeks. He was a 24 week 15oz preemie who now has a lifetime of medical issues! Induce for Convenience? SHAME!!

                                                        #32
                                                         - smilingdee
                                                         - 3:58 pm EDT on Fri Jul 2, 2010
                                                        Yes. The 37th or 38th week may be slightly short of the traditional 40 weeks, but it’s hardly premature.

                                                        Yes, and I did. I was huge, miserable, and emotional. I was ready for him to come out and I knew between 37 and 38 weeks it was safe.

                                                          #33
                                                           - supa21
                                                           - 3:31 am EDT on Sat Jul 3, 2010
                                                          I’m not sure. It would depend on how I’m feeling and what my doctor thinks.

                                                          For medical reasons only, I think it is fine, such as in my case where my water broke but I was having no contractions.

                                                            #34
                                                             - Booklover73
                                                             - 4:49 am EDT on Sat Jul 3, 2010
                                                            No. Up until the 42nd week, baby and Mother Nature know best!

                                                            Those last few weeks are rough, but you shouldn't cut it short.

                                                              #35
                                                               - Prometheus22
                                                               - 10:16 am EDT on Sat Jul 3, 2010
                                                              No. Up until the 42nd week, baby and Mother Nature know best!

                                                              My 1st: induced @ 35wks - hlth reasons. 2nd: Dr wanted to for HIS convenience @ 40wks. Didn't. Went 43 wks. Now 15&13. Both perfectly hlthy

                                                                #36
                                                                 - Short Fuse
                                                                 - 2:42 pm EDT on Sun Jul 4, 2010
                                                                No. Up until the 42nd week, baby and Mother Nature know best!

                                                                Induction leads to an increased risk of interventions! Trust that your body knows best!

                                                                  #37
                                                                   - Michelle-1966143
                                                                   - 10:46 am EDT on Tue Jul 6, 2010
                                                                  No. Up until the 42nd week, baby and Mother Nature know best!

                                                                  My Doctor encouraged me to have a c-section at 38 weeks due to the size of my baby. Amnio said her lungs were not ready. Glad I waited.

                                                                    #38
                                                                     - Austinrox
                                                                     - 12:39 pm EDT on Mon Jul 26, 2010
                                                                    I’m not sure. It would depend on how I’m feeling and what my doctor thinks.

                                                                    my 2nd labor was only 45 min, now pregnant w/twins, will probably induce rather than risk not making it to hospital.

                                                                      #39
                                                                       - cc-1203273
                                                                       - 7:57 pm EST on Sun Feb 20, 2011

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                                                                      8 comments, including:

                                                                      Sometimes, doctors guess the due date wrong. If there were a compelling need, such as to protect the life of the mom or baby, a life clearly in danger, there would be reason to induce labor. Otherwise, trust nature. I've had two children and they were born when I went into labor naturally.

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                                                                      Explore related topics: pregnancy, showfront, inducing-labor, preterm-babies
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