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Week 32: Mommy, you're HOT!

Fetal development in pregnancy week 32

~length
17 in | 43 cm
~weight
4 lbs | 1.8 kg

In the latest womb reports, your amazing baby has now developed sensitivity to temperature!

Which means you’re likely to get a swift kick if you put a hot pad or bag of ice on your ginormous belly.

For the Elton John lovers out there - baby’s got blue eyes.

Actually, even if you're too young to know who Elton is, all babies have blue eyes at this point.

This could easily change after birth (or even between now and labor), but for the time being, blue it is.

Thanks to their recently matured lungs and a strengthening immune system, over 90% of babies born in their 32nd week survive!

So - go ahead and throw a mini-party right now because it’s pretty much a done deal - you've got a human-bean that's going to make it!

That's not to say you actually want your wee womb-squatter to pack their bags and move out now, because they'd still end up in the ICU for a good while, rather than in your arms at home.

Babies are best when fully baked!

Share your baby's development on Facebook!

Only 8 more weeks to go
This week my baby weighs in at a whopping 4 lbs & 17 inches. The more my baby grows (and grows), the tighter their womb-studio space, restricting their mobility & causing a noticeable decline in movement... ...
Tuesday at 19:16 via Baby Gaga · Comment · Like

Leanne

Week 32 Calendar Girl

February 2012

Enter my photo!


And how's mom doing?

Choo choo... back on the same lame symptom train and the ride is ... well, let's just say you can count getting up to pee every 10 minutes as part of your daily exercise regime .let's be clear on one thing: your labor is your labor - it's not the doctor's, it's not your mother's, it's not even your partner's

Also, when you're getting up for your millionth potty-break, watch out for lightheadedness and get up nice-n-slow during these last weeks as your blood tends to pool in the lower limbs, resulting in low cranial blood pressure.

If you haven't yet started facing the elephant in the room, it's time to bite the bullet and talk about labor and birth.

Yes, labor isn't easy (hence the name "labor") and although contractions can be intensely painful if they're not properly managed, there are several easy and safe methods for making your contractions much more tolerable pain-wise.

To start: let's be clear on one thing: your labor is your labor - it's not the doctor's, it's not your mother's, it's not even your partner's, so it's time to start taking steps to prepare yourself for one of the most intense experiences of your life.

Labor and Birth 101

PHASE 1: EARLY LABOR:

Early labor is signaled by an increase in the rate and intensity of contractions (between 30 - 60 seconds; starting 20 minutes apart till they're 5 minutes apart), bloody show (loss of your cervical plug), water breaking (or not - it only happens to 20% of women at the onset of labor), and diarrhea is also common.

Please note that labor is not a linear process for every woman. Sometimes it starts and then recedes - the more active you are, the more you're going to encourage it to progress. The more you're relaxing horizontally and taking baths, the more slowly labor will progress.

The contractions you'll feel are powerful muscular waves of movement moving both down and across your uterine muscles, that first thin your cervix, and then begin to slowly press your baby out of the uterus and down towards the birth canal.

PHASE 2: ACTIVE LABOR:

Active labor occurs when your contractions become more intense in duration and rate. Active labor contractions last for 45 to 60 seconds, and are 3 to 5 minutes apart.

PHASE 3: TRANSITION:

Transition is what you're aiming for once you're in labor but it's also the point where your contractions are pretty much non-stop and as intense as they'll ever be because your baby's about ready to head out in the most literal sense of the expression.

If you're in the hospital, and decide to have an epidural, this is when it should be administered - and not sooner, to prevent interfering with labor.

PHASE 4: DELIVERY OF YOUR BABY:

This is an intense time when you push - in heaving intervals of groaning and bearing down like you're trying to take the most massive crap ever - in order to bring your baby out of the birth canal and into the world. This time may be marked by someone coaching you to push/bear down in intervals.

PHASE 5: DELIVERY OF THE PLACENTA:

After giving birth to your now-evicted womb resident, you should try to immediately breastfeed to help deliver the placenta as breastfeeding helps the uterus contract. The contractions you'll experience during this process will be a whimpering shadow of what you felt prior to delivering your baby.

So that's labor and birth in a quick nut-shell.

In the upcoming weeks, we'll cover the insider's view on how best to deal with labor, avoid a c-section, prevent tearing of your perineum, and loads of other surprising and disturbing facts about giving birth.

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Pregnancy Discussions

HeatherElaine postedQuestion for April Momma's3rd Feb
Jema_bowman postedAnyone due april 30th 2012?25th Jan
♥Prego with #3ϖ postedApril bellys17th Jan
I♥Tooey and KeeKee postedAmbien....while pregnant?21 min ago
Samanthaaaa ♥ postedHaven't felt baby move all day.33 min ago
LuvMyBump!!! postedTravel13 min ago

Will there be sex after the baby? Studies show that—on average, first-time parents have sex two to three times per month two months after the birth of their child. By the sixth month, they increase their rate to three to five times per month. Interestingly, parents with two or more children have sex an average of three to four times per month two months after delivery, and four to seven times per month at the six-month mark.

Of all the nerve!
by The Sarcastic Journalist

There’s a byproduct at the end of pregnancy that many women do not know about: sciatic nerve pain.

Your sciatic nerve is one really big nerve that goes from your butt down to your ankle. If you’re pregnant and feel a little nerve pain anywhere from your bottom all the way down your leg, congrats, that is your sciatic nerve going off.

For some reason I’ll never exactly understand, I decided to go to the mega-store IKEA while nearing the end of my second pregnancy. I was heavily pregnant, carrying a monster baby in my belly and decided to browse futons and twin beds along with the rest of my city.

By the time I left IKEA, I could not walk. To make a long story short, I would not walk “normally” again until three weeks after my baby was born. Basically, my child was laying in an odd position and was pressing on my nerve.

I tried everything: ice, heat, rubbing, stretching, laying on the opposite side. Nothing worked. It got to the point where I could not walk to the bathroom without wanting to collapse in tears.

The highlight of this experience would be heading to the local Target store to buy a few needed items. Normally, I’d stay in the car with my nerve pain, but I was bored and wanted out.

I made it about halfway through the store before it happened: I couldn’t take one more step. I was already huge, which drew enough attention as it was. Add in the fact that I had a major limp and sort of drug my leg behind me, and I was a walking circus act.

Women would come up to me and offer their condolences. “How much longer?” they’d ask. They’d always have a look of sadness when I told them the number of weeks left.

“You poor thing,” they’d mutter before walking off.

My husband finally came to my rescue and made me climb aboard the shopping cart, my big belly facing outwards, performing its own version of Titanic’s “I’m the king of the world!”

I’m pretty sure everyone steered clear of our cart, with my belly pointing out as one heck of a hood ornament on the end.

Recommended reading for week 32

rating 5.00/5

good reading for: Anyone who's ever had kids will appreciate the beautiful illustrations and inspirational prose. Expectant and new parents will want to share this with eachother. Buy it for yourself or as a gift for a pregnant friend or family member. >> read reviews

complete list of recommended books
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