You are
thinking about getting pregnant!
If you are
thinking about getting pregnant again shortly after giving birth, moms» groups and old wives» tales may have you thinking it's impossible.
So, if you're
thinking about getting pregnant while you still have a toddler running around, please read this first.
If you're
thinking about getting pregnant, or if you're already trying, you may have read about lifestyle adjustments you can make in order to boost your fertility and odds of getting pregnant.
If you're pregnant or even
thinking about getting pregnant, don't drink alcohol.
If you are taking antidepressants and are
thinking about getting pregnant (or are already pregnant), talk to your doctor first, before stopping any medication.
News about a mysterious, tropical virus called Zika and its link to severe birth defects and newborn deaths abroad may be worrisome for many — especially pregnant women or those who are
thinking about getting pregnant.
The National Postdoctoral Association offers a number of tips for those who are pregnant and those who are
thinking about getting pregnant during a postdoctoral appointment.
Whole grains can help, but women who are pregnant or
thinking about getting pregnant need to take a multivitamin with 400 micrograms of folic acid a day.
And if you're
thinking about getting pregnant in the future, the test could potentially help protect your baby too.
However, if you are at risk for thyroid disease and are
thinking about getting pregnant, you should be tested.
If you're pregnant or
thinking about getting pregnant, you can protect your pelvic floor and your sexual health by having a pelvic floor check - up after your first trimester.
If you're
thinking about getting pregnant, visit a doctor for pre-pregnancy care.
If you're
thinking about getting pregnant soon, visit your doctor or your local Planned Parenthood health center for a preconception visit.
Not exact matches
It seemed powerful to me somehow — the image of a
pregnant woman preaching
about the Incarnation — and i
got to
thinking of all the women I needed to see in my life in order to step out into freedom and the post grew out of that.
When I
think about all the women I know who
got pregnant while they were teenagers and kept the child, probably 90 % found themselves stuck in bad situations.
About conceiving while nursing... we did not have a problem but I
think it is because we
got pregnant shortly after we dropped our night feedings — they say that if you nurse esp between midnight to five am that is the time your body is most likely to build up your supply and produce hormones that would keep you from
getting pregnant.
And in our society, that means we
get a lot of «your bed, you lie in it» and «should of
thought about that before you
got pregnant.»
After all, what would seem to be the best way to keep a teenager from
getting pregnant — asking them to use short - term birth control via condoms, taking the pill everyday, or ineffective pleas for abstinence, or would it be better to give them an IUD that they don't have to
think about and is 99 % effective for the next few years?
A stable financial environment, a home with plenty of room for another person, childcare, health insurance coverage and more are important things to
think about before
getting pregnant again.
One of the things I heard was, «my husband and I can
get pregnant the second we start
thinking about it!»
And lastly, one of the things you can do is talk to them
about their plans for their future, to help them make concrete what it is they want for themselves, and to raise questions that make them
think about how their life might be different if they were to
get pregnant as a teenager or if they were to contract the HIV virus.
Think about the images that we see of breastfeeding — almost always out the top of the shirt / buttoning down — this gives the impression to non-mothers and pregnant women that that's the only way to get boob out of clothing so they think they need to FLASH EVERYONE every time they go to feed the
Think about the images that we see of breastfeeding — almost always out the top of the shirt / buttoning down — this gives the impression to non-mothers and
pregnant women that that's the only way to
get boob out of clothing so they
think they need to FLASH EVERYONE every time they go to feed the
think they need to FLASH EVERYONE every time they go to feed the baby.
When my wife and I found out we were
pregnant, our minds began to race with
thoughts about all the newborn needs we would have to
get.
My boys, so my first two were boys, so my first son was
about six months and same thing really for my second son and I was really personally disappointed by that, that wasn't my plan, my plan was to breastfeed them a lot longer than that and just other things just kind of
got in the way and education and everything that probably could
get in the way and with my girls I just kind of was like and I
think what helped me too was knowing that the twins were my last plan pregnancy, like after that like, if I
get pregnant you know «Surprise» but we are not planning have any more kids and I
think knowing going into to it that I wasn't able to do what I wanted to do with my first two, really, really motivated me and knowing that these are my last babies that I'm planning to have so if I, it's now or never so it's kind of like putting a little bit of pressure on me I guess on that regard.
I
think often mothers are concerned
about getting pregnant again, no matter the age.
I actually came to this blog before I
got pregnant, and the way that you personally attack other people & try to denigrate anything associated with NCB (like the anti-elimination communication post, personal nasty things said
about TFB, etc) made me
think you weren't trust worthy as a source of information
about childbirth.
I never really
thought about how long until I
got pregnant.
When I
got pregnant again, made it to 33 weeks, and then delivered a stillborn boy, I
thought about abortion again.
I
thought I wanted to write
about getting through the holidays while
pregnant after loss or the first holiday season with our subsequent baby.
When you first
get pregnant or even
think about having babies, it always crosses any woman's mind as to how in the heck the baby is going to
get out of our bodies!
Teens who
get pregnant while still in high school have a lot to
think about.
With
getting pregnant and staying
pregnant out of the way, it's time to
think about having the baby.
When you are trying to
get pregnant you need to know all sorts of things which you probably never
thought about before.
Considering how long it may take some people to conceive, my first
thought was that you could end up taking them for a long time before
getting pregnant, but you're right
about potentially not even knowing you're
pregnant until a few weeks into the pregnancy, so when that's the case I can definitely see the benefit of already having been taking these vitamins.
That's what conceiving via intrauterine insemination (IUI) will
get you —
thinking about nothing but
getting pregnant every minute of the day from the moment you decided you were «ready» to have a baby 2 years ago (those of who have been through infertility can understand this new kind of crazy).
Please be sensitive this April Fool's Day and
think about the moms struggling to
get pregnant or the ones who have been
pregnant and miscarried.
I wouldn't, however, approach a
pregnant woman and ask her any personal details
about her breasts or reproductive organs or most personal
thoughts, hopes, and fears
about childbirth unless I would feel comfortable
getting to that level of discussion with her if she was not currently with child.
However, the time for mothers to
think about their fertility is before or right after delivery due to misconceptions that exist around
getting pregnant while breastfeeding.
I'm sure there are reports of many
pregnant women, or adrenalin junkies, who didn't
think twice
about getting on that ride, but it probably wasn't their wisest move.
With being
pregnant again, it obviously becomes more of a focus, and now I am heading into the second trimester, I hope to have more energy to
get out and
about, and will also to restart my yoga habit — although I
think this will be exclusivey YouTube based, as the
thought of going to an actual pregnancy yoga class doesn't induce calming
thoughts in me.
I know what you mean
about having a hard time letting go — I
think I would have continued for longer if I hadn't
gotten pregnant again.
If possible, seek health care early — when you first
think about trying to
get pregnant — so your doctor can evaluate your risk of gestational diabetes as part of your overall childbearing wellness plan.
I've spent a lot of time
thinking about this birth over the past few years, certainly when I
got pregnant for the second time.
Many women do not
think about the type of prenatal care they want before they
get pregnant; however, when the time comes to make a decision, it should be well
thought out.
I felt I was at implantation, i paid close attention and believe it or not i felt a few minor cramps and said «yep that's the egg» lol but i still wasn't sure then the lower back pains came, and I took a test
about 4 days before my period and the test gave me a veeeery faint positive to the point where I said «i
think it's negative» then
about 4 or 5 days after my missed period i
got a digital test and it says «
pregnant» so I
think it's very positive to tell if you are
pregnant before your missed period, or it could have been coincidence who knows
«High school students are very sexually active and
getting pregnant so we don't have that luxury to
think that they are too young to be engaged in conversations
about contraception and sexual education,» Quinn told WCBS 880.
S: When you
think about a T. rex
getting pregnant and then dying while producing eggs and then
getting fossilized and then being found by a paleontologist — that conjunction of events is extremely rare, although that's not to say that it wouldn't happen again.
Many of us don't
think about fertility before we start trying to
get pregnant, and once we are trying, the tips we do
get can be confusing or entirely technical.
Until I
got pregnant, I
think the longest period of time I spent «off the mat» was
about two weeks.