Great article. I think I am more silky than crunchy, but I read this site because as a newly pregnant first time mom I want to get different perspectives, and while I may not agree with everything here I do appreciate that you are not judgmental, unlike many natural birth advocates.
Google’s Ads Fiasco May Cause More Headaches Than Anticipated
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Mostly, the thought of a needle going into my spine freaks me out way more than giving birth to a baby! Also, I know someone who had an epidural and it numbed the entire left side of her body. It was a medical emergency and she had to have a c section because of it. Scary stuff!
What about the fact that the epidural requires you to stay in a reclined state, which DEFINITELY does cause babies to flip posterior much more often than a laboring woman who is upright and moving around?
In the late 1950s and early 1960s, more than 10,000 children in 46 countries were born with deformities, such as phocomelia, as a consequence of thalidomide use.[72] The severity and location of the deformities depended on how many days into the pregnancy the mother was before beginning treatment, with the time sensitive window occurring approximately between day 20 and day 36 post-fertilisation.[73] Thalidomide taken on the 20th day of pregnancy caused central brain damage, day 21 would damage the eyes, day 22 the ears and face, day 24 the arms, and leg damage would occur if taken up to day 28.
Mary Todd Lincoln, the most criticized and misunderstood first lady, experienced more than her share of tragedy during her lifetime. From the time she was six, her life took a melancholy turn from which she never recovered. She suffered from depressive episodes and migraine headaches throughout her life and turned to squandering money on lavish gowns and frivolous accessories during the white house year in hopes of finding relief from the void deep within. During the Civil War, both North and South called her a traitor and seldom was a kind word printed about her by the press. If we examine her early years, her most impressionable years, we become enlightened and can find compassion for the woman who was the wife of the 16th president of the United States. Mary Ann Todd Lincoln was born the third child to Eliza Ann Parker Todd and Robert Smith Todd on December 13, 1818. Preceding her in birth was her eldest sister Elizabeth, followed by her sister Francis. The Todds lived in a quaint two story, nine-room L-shaped house on Short Street in Lexington, KY. At that time, Lexington was a rugged frontier town that had been founded by a handful of men that included Mary Ann's grandfathers Robert Parker and Levi Todd, as well as her great uncles Robert and John Todd. Her father, a Whig politician and storeowner, adequately provided for his family. In his early years, he'd studied to be a lawyer and was later admitted to the Kentucky bar; however, he never practiced law due to the fact there were already too many lawyers in Kentucky.
XY "Officer" is perhaps a very good (or very bad) choice here, because other than the commonly understood policing role, it more broadly designates a person with corporate responsibility. If this Code gives them none, it should be avoided. Crony Pony 2b (talk) 10:58, 18 August 2021 (UTC)Reply[reply] 2ff7e9595c
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