Soon, I will tell the Real, Authorized Adventure of the Pork Roast (unabridged).



Soon, I will tell the Real, Authorized Adventure of the Pork Roast (unabridged).



Sarah Palin made a number of proclamations when she was governor, but some of them don’t apply to her at all. This post is going to highlight only the proclamations concerning childbirth issues. There are other proclamations that conflict with the quitter governor’s attitudes and I’ll talk about them in a future post.
Trisomy Awareness Month February 25, 2009
WHEREAS, trisomy pregnancies can present unusual complications and can be more at-risk than non-trisomy pregnancies.
Prematurity Awareness Month October 10, 2007
WHEREAS, premature babies are at increased risk for newborn health complications, as well as lasting disabilities, such as mental retardation, cerebral palsy, lung and gastrointestinal problems, vision and hearing loss, and even death.
Congenital Heart Defect Awareness Week January 30, 2007
Cardiovascular birth defects are the most frequently reported major congenital anomalies in Alaska, with congenital heart defects affecting two percent of Alaska live births annually during 1996-2002. Low birth weight Alaskan infants were seven times more likely to have a congenital heart defect than a normal weight infant.
Two out of these three proclamations were made before Trig’s birth, so on April 17, 2008, Sarah Palin was aware of the risks of prematurity and heart defects affecting newborn babies, but chose to have her labour/not labour while leaking/not leaking aboard an aeroplane.
That’s why the pregnancy and the labour stories ring false to Trig Truthers. The laws of nature only apply to other people. Sarah Palin’s tight abs prevented the growth of a pregnancy bump while very fit celebrities have failed in that respect, with abs that were shamefully not tight enough so they actually looked very pregnant.
The same goes for high risk pregnancies. Only other people have to worry about taking certain steps to ensure the safe delivery of their babies. Sarah can leak, give speeches, fly for hours on end and that’s perfectly OK.
Whereas a governor of state who lies for political gain is not to be trusted.
Whereas not everybody is stupid and gullible.
Whereas the laws of nature apply to all members of the human species.
I hereby proclaim Sarah Palin a bare faced liar and a hypocrite.
(Trig doesn’t look premature in the banner above…)
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BALTIMORE, MD, Sept. 8 /Christian Newswire/ — Care Net will celebrate its 26th National Pregnancy Center Conference on Sept. 9-12, 2009 in Baltimore, MD, attracting more than 900 individuals from across North America for training, worship, inspiration, and encouragement. Despite a down economy and a changing political climate, the pregnancy center movement is alive and well, thanks to the support of individuals, foundations, and organizations providing new partnerships and resources to support its critical work.
“Care Net could not be more thrilled to see such amazing organizations come alongside our nation’s pregnancy centers, providing organizational excellence and mission-critical resources,” said Care Net President Melinda Delahoyde. “It is evidence that our movement is growing stronger as more people catch the vision for reaching out with compassion and help to those facing unplanned pregnancies.”
While full details will be revealed at the conference, two national organizations will announce new partnerships and programs to support the pregnancy center movement.
These new partnerships add to the growing support for pregnancy centers from groups like Evangelical Council for Financial Accountability, Alliance Defense Fund, Americans United for Life, and Christian Legal Society.
The Care Net conference will also feature on Thursday evening a pre-screening of a new pro-life film, “Sarah’s Choice” and a guest appearance by lead actress and Christian singer Rebecca St. James. Conference keynote speakers include the Honorable Marilyn Musgrave, author of unChristian David Kinnaman, Melinda Delahoyde, Star Parker, Ellie Lofaro, and Pastor Herb Lusk of People for People, Inc.
The conference will culminate on Saturday evening with an awards banquet honoring both pregnancy center directors as well as pro-life leaders who have significantly supported the movement.
Tags: pregnancies, pregnancy
Pregnancy: It seems to me that society treats this as such a delicate time. But, really, does it have to be like that?
What I’m referring to mostly is weight lifting exercise, and what pregnant women can and can not do to help them have a healthier and happier pregnancy and delivery.
When I did a Google image search for pregnancy and exercise (or weight lifting), all I saw were pictures of very pregnant women doing yoga or ball exercises. The only weight lifting picture I could find was the one you see above. And, I wouldn’t even really consider that weight lifting (I think the last time I did a lateral shoulder raise I was 16 years old and a newbie). No squatting, no pushups, no chipups, nada.
But, what I really want to know, and what I need help from YOU (the female “you”, that is), is how and can a pregnant woman lift during her pregnancy?
Obviously, in the first 3-4 months, almost anything that you can tolerate should be do-able (when there’s not any nausea or uncontrollable fatigue). Then after the belly starts to bulge, any supine (lying on back) positions, should be avoided due to the potential to restrict blood flow through the vena cava.
The American College of Ob/Gyn has a one-sentence line about strength training:
“Strength training will make your muscles stronger and may help prevent some of the aches and pains common in pregnancy. ”
But, other than this, it’s really a grey (or gray) area as far as weight lifting and pregnancy goes.
So, I’m doing as much research as I can here, scanning the peer-reviewed literature, and reading text books. But as I said, I need some help from real women who have lifted during their pregnancies:
What did you and could you do for weight lifting during your pregnancy?
Did you stop and just walk or doing light aerobics?
Did you keep doing what you were doing prior, but with some modifications (and what were they)?
Did you train harder? Did you try a new training program (And which one)? Etc.
I’d love to hear what you ladies out there did. One of my readers told me she was doing pull-ups the day before she delivered (wicked!) and another said she road her bike 10 miles a few days prior to delivery (and she was 2 weeks late, so she was quite big at this pt).
You can post your reply here, or send me an email (cassandraforsythe@gmail.com).
I promise that your thoughts and comments will be kept private if that’s what you’d like. Also, this information might end up as an article in the next issue of Muscle and Fitness Hers and Fit Pregnancy.
Cheers to a healthy and strong pregnancy!

We admit it. Here at DAMMIT JANET! and back at Birth Pangs, we’ve been a tad obsessed with Crisis Pregnancy Centers/Centres.
We — OK, who am I trying to kid? it’s mostly moi — blog regularly about the lying and deception and manipulation these Christofascists perpetrate on vulnerable women. (And of course, just to blow our own horn a little, we did have a helluva good time helping persuade the Ottawa Senators to pull financial support from one of the lying-liar outfits.)
But it seems there is a whole other ugly side to these fakers, even though I did blog once about a crisis pregnancy centre in Ireland that was convicted of running an illegal adoption agency.
So, I should not have been surprised to read today that ‘Christian Organizations Shame and Coerce Women Into Giving Up Their Children’. It’s a longish article by Kathryn Joyce, author of ‘Quiverfull: Inside the Christian Patriarchy Movement’.
Using good old shame and guilt, they pressure single pregnant women into giving up their children to ‘good’ Christian families. And with their usual disregard for truthiness, they lie to women about the terms of ‘open’ adoption. Women think they’ll be able to see their children only to find out, oopsie, no, you can’t honey.
Pregnant women are housed with ’shepherding’ families, isolated from friends and family who may offer other advice.
After delivery, women are rushed into surrenders. Taken to states with shorter ‘change one’s mind’ periods. Paperwork is delayed until the ‘change one’s mind’ period is just about up.
And such shenanigans go back a ways:
In 1984 Leslee Unruh, founder of Abstinence Clearinghouse, established a CPC in South Dakota called the Alpha Center. The first center had opened in 1967, but in 1984 Unruh’s CPC was still a relatively new idea. In 1987 the state attorney’s office investigated complaints that Unruh had offered young women money to carry their pregnancies to term and then relinquish their babies for adoption.
“There were so many allegations about improper adoptions being made and how teenage girls were being pressured to give up their children,” then-state attorney Tim Wilka told the Argus Leader, that the governor asked him to take the case. The Alpha Center pleaded no contest to five counts of unlicensed adoption and foster care practices; nineteen other charges were dropped, including four felonies. But where Unruh left off, many CPCs and antiabortion groups have taken up in her place.
(Read more about Leslee Unruh in an article by Amanda Robb, niece of murdered abortion provider Dr Bernard Slepian.)
In a sadly ironic twist, the crap works best on religious, anti-choice women.
Religious women may be particularly susceptible to CPC coercion, argues Mari Gallion, a 39-year-old Alaska mother who founded the support group SinglePregnancy.com after a CPC unsuccessfully pressured her to relinquish her child ten years ago. Gallion, who has worked with nearly 3,000 women with unplanned pregnancies, calls CPCs “adoption rings” with a multistep agenda: evangelizing; discovering and exploiting women’s insecurities about age, finances or parenting; then hard-selling adoption, portraying parenting as a selfish, immature choice. “The women who are easier to coerce in these situations are those who subscribe to conservative Christian views,” says Gallion. “They’ll come in and be told that, You’ve done wrong, but God will forgive you if you do the right thing.”
Mirah Riben, vice president of communications for the birth mother group Origins-USA [which calls itself 'The voice of mothers who lost children to adoption'], as well as author of The Stork Market: America’s Multi-Billion Dollar Unregulated Adoption Industry, says that many mothers struggle for decades with the fallout of “a brainwashing process” that persuades them to choose adoption and often deny for years–or until their adoptions become closed–that they were pressured into it. “I see a lot of justification among the young mothers. If their adoption is remaining open, they need to be compliant, good birth mothers and toe the line. They can’t afford to be angry or bitter, because if they are, the door will close and they won’t see the kid.”
. . . .
There were nineteen lawsuits against CPCs between 1983 and 1996, but coercive practices persist. Joe Soll, a psychotherapist and adoption reform activist, says that CPCs “funnel people to adoption agencies who put them in maternity homes,” where ambivalent mothers are subjected to moralistic and financial pressure: warned that if they don’t give up their babies, they’ll have to pay for their spot at the home, and given conflicted legal counsel from agency-retained lawyers. Watchdog group Crisis Pregnancy Center Watch described an Indiana woman misled into delaying an abortion past her state’s legal window and subsequently pressured into adoption.
As they say, go read the whole thing, though if you want to check out the other links, you’ll have to do it from here since I put them in.
BONUS: The first commenter, Amy Adoptee, has a blog. Go read, especially this one.
Tags: pregnancies, pregnancy, pregnant, pregnant womenbecause I am less mobile than normal I have to wear white knee high compression tights… these are the most unattractive things I have ever worn… they are to help with stopping blood clots forming in my legs which is fine, but how am I going to survive wearing them in November when its too warm to wear boots and trousers that cover them?
I also am getting varicose veins this time, had managed to avoid them with the first three. And the stretch marks lol… well they aren’t actually happening at all… ironically K did such a good job of stretching my skin that I haven’t got any new ones yet.
There’s also the continuous indigestion that I suffer, liquid mylanta is my friend, and the cravings for things at random times, last night it was cupcakes and ice cream, neither of which I had in the house, I am also finding that I like spicy food too….
Pregnancy is a rather strange thing, its a totally parasitic relationship that wreaks havoc on your body and mind, yet its still one of the most amazing things I have ever done, you spend 9 months watching your tummy grow, waiting for milestones to be reached, feeling the first kicks,or watching your tummy move cos bubs has hiccups. I am so lucky that I have had 4 awesome pregnancies to enjoy, I sometimes wonder about the one I lost but its hard to feel hugely for it in some ways because I didn’t know about it, and it could never have survived.
As I type I am getting kicked in my ribs, and I sit and wonder what this baby will be like, will it have brown eyes like its siblings and Dad or will I manage to get one with blue eyes? is it a boy or a girl? will it grow up to change the world? so many hopes and aspirations of mine yet actually all I hope for is that it is a loved and cared for part of our family.
Tags: pregnancies, pregnancyI’m 38 now, and my mother was 45 -and my dad 47 – when they had me. I was not planned; in fact, at the time, it couldn’t have seemed like worse timing. (My brother, then 9, was undergoing brain surgeries due to hydrocephalus.)
Turned out that it was a blessing in disguise; I gave them something else to focus some of their attention on, and I brought great joy to my brother who felt very alone & scared. I also had a 20 year old sister and 16 year old brother at home at the time.
Recent Keyword Searches: women having babies at 48 year old, pregnacy success stories, 43 years old and want to get pregnant, pregnant at 50, successful pregnancies at age 43?
Tags: pregnacy, pregnancies, pregnancy, pregnant
Any to-be-mother who is desirous of having a child and who has conceived a baby is very mindful of the fact that a miscarriage or a spontaneous abortion is one of the most common complications of early pregnancy and that a miscarriage is an extremely traumatic and difficult occurrence to deal with.
Studies have shown that as many as 25% of pregnancies are miscarried by the sixth week of gestation. As many as 8% of pregnancies end in a miscarriage after the 6th week.
There are several factors that significantly raise chances of a woman having a miscarriage and they are:
Understanding the risk factors for a pregnancy ending in miscarriage is important in minimizing the chances of occurrence.
Tags: early pregnancy, pregnancies, pregnancy, pregnant, when pregnant
Many of us have heard about an aunt or a friend’s relative or someone known vaguely to have had a pregnancy where the woman continued to have her periods during her pregnancy.
You may have heard that in some cases the woman did not even know she was pregnant until she was quite a long way along. While this is not common, it is known to happen and in some cases it is not a matter of worry.
The reason why a woman menstruates in the usual course is that the hormones that drop to signal the body that there has been no fertilization of an egg; no pregnancy and the uterus therefore sheds the lining which results in a period.
During pregnancy there is usually no such drop in the hormonal levels; which instead continue to rise and therefore result in the absence of periods.
The body perceives that all available resources are required to nourish the fetus and that they cannot be expended any other way so the pregnant woman generally stops getting her period; in other words the uterine lining that is shed every month by way of periods is not shed; instead it is used to provide a hospitable environment for the developing fetus.
However in some pregnancies, there is the case of Decidual Bleeding which happens when the usual rise and fall of hormone levels is somehow disturbed and part of the uterine lining is caused to be shed periodically even when there is a pregnancy subsisting.
Decidual bleeding is more common during the early part of pregnancy, however many women do continue to get a period like discharge throughout their pregnancy.
What is however more common is that this period like discharge happens in the early part of the pregnancy, before the placenta has been fully established. This is usually not something that has to be worried about generally.
There is also frequently bleeding in the early part of pregnancy; what is called Implantation bleeding which happens when the fertilized egg ‘implants’ itself into the uterine lining and the placenta begins to form. Some women bleed during this time, and it is usually no matter of concern.
Though there are these instances where bleeding during pregnancy is not a matter of worry, we may add a note of caution here, that no bleeding during pregnancy should be ignored; any bleeding during pregnancy should routinely be reported to your physician or attending doctor. This is in order to rule out any abnormality or potential problem.
Tags: bleeding during pregnancy, during pregnancy, pregnancies, pregnancy, pregnant, pregnant woman
When you have had a miscarriage, it is more than just a physical event. It is an emotional event as well.
Different couples need differing amounts of time to work through their grief and make the decision that the time is right to try to conceive again.
When it comes to your emotional needs, how soon you are ready to conceive a baby after experiencing a miscarriage will depend entirely on you.
You may be wondering, however, how soon your body will be ready and able to conceive again after having a miscarriage.
When it comes to your physical ability to conceive, how soon your body is ready to conceive a baby after you have experienced a miscarriage depends entirely on your body.
When you are pregnant, your body experiences hormonal changes. When your pregnancy ends, either through miscarriage or by delivering a baby, it takes some time for your hormone levels to return to normal and for your body to begin ovulating again.
The amount of time this takes can vary considerably. If you have delivered a full term baby and you are breastfeeding exclusively, it can take months for your body to begin to ovulate again. (When used properly, breastfeeding can even be an effective form of birth control).
If you have experienced a miscarriage, then your hormones could return to normal and you could begin ovulating again as quickly as two to three weeks after the miscarriage.
However, if you had miscarriage recently, early symptoms of pregnancy you are experiencing may not be due to pregnancy: they could be because your hormone levels have not yet returned to normal.
The only way to know whether the symptoms you are experiencing are from leftover pregnancy hormones or from a new pregnancy is, to take a pregnancy test.
If you have experienced a miscarriage, and you do not wish to become pregnant, you should use proper contraception every time you are sexually active.
Remember that you become fertile about two weeks before your period starts, so don’t wait on your period to let you know you are fertile again. It is possible to conceive after miscarriage without having a period first.
In addition to knowing emotionally when you are ready to conceive a baby after experiencing a miscarriage, talk to your doctor or health care provider about your body’s needs.
Your body may need a little time to recover from its pregnancy experience to prepare for another pregnancy. If there were medical reasons for your miscarriage, those need to be investigated as well so that they do not cause problems with future pregnancies.
Tags: early symptoms of pregnancy, pregnancies, pregnancy, pregnancy test, pregnant, symptoms of pregnancy