You’ve been pregnant for 40 years huh? Wait, I mean 40 weeks. Most women can’t wait for their baby to be born once they hit the last month of pregnancy. Bladders are small, backs are sore, feet are swollen, and they can’t wait to meet their new bundle of joy. Many women seek advice from friend, books, or the Internet on how to naturally induce their labor. Nipple stimulation almost always comes up in conversation. If you are pregnant and someone tells you to use nipple stimulation to induce your labor, smile but don’t take their advice.
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29Oct
Tags: baby nurses, body, gentle thing, intense contractions, labor, labor induction, last month of pregnancy, nipple, oxytocin, stimulation
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26Aug
The moment you conceive a child your body begins to change. It has to in order to become the safe haven that the baby needs to grow. While the changes can be difficult, they are normal and usually nothing to worry about. You’ll notice different changes for each trimester. Some will be unmistakable, such as the cessation of menstruation, while others are more subtle, coming on slowly over the course of a few days or weeks. The key to taking the new developments in your body in stride, is to understand which changes may occur and when. This makes things much easier. With that in mind, we’ll start with the first trimester. Continue reading »
Tags: baby, body, first trimester, food cravings, mood swings, Pregnancy, pregnancy symptoms, sign of pregnancy, stomach, trimester
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24Aug

If you’re trying to have a baby, the first thing you’ll want to know is when you’re ovulating. By the same token, if you’re trying not to have a baby you’ll want to know when you’re ovulating! You can only get pregnant when you ovulate, so it’s important to know when it happens.
Every woman’s cycle is different, so here’s how you can find out what time of the month you’re most fertile.
Continue reading »Tags: body, egg, egg whites, fertility, fertility monitors, menstrual fluid, month, ovulation, ovulation kits, two eggs
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17May
SweatingYou might think that you are only supposed to sweat when you are hot, but once you hit puberty, you also will sweat when you are nervous. Your sweat glands (which make sweat) become more active during the teen years, causing both more sweat and also some smell. You actually have 2 million to 4 million sweat glands all over the body. Most are on the soles of the feet, the palms, forehead, cheeks, and in the armpits. Don’t panic, though. Sweat and smell are normal parts of becoming an adult. Sweating also does an important job – it helps to cool your body down when you are hot.
How to help keep sweat from smelling badly:
- Shower or take a bath every day.
- Use a deodorant (covers smell) or an antiperspirant (decreases sweating), or a product that has both.
- Talk to your doctor if these things do not work or you are worried.
Tags: Acne, antiperspirant, armpits, Bad Breath, blackhead, body, Breath, breath smell, cystic acne, deodorant, Don, food pieces, forehead, hair, Hair Care, oil, puberty, raw onions, sinus infection, skin, smell, sulfur compounds, sweat, sweat glands, Sweating, Tanning, teen years, Whiteheads
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17Mar
By Annetta Holmes
With the increasing downward spiral of food quality, vitamins and minerals that should be in your food are absent. Add to that processing and poor eating habits and this lack of sufficient nutrients show up in abnormalities of the body. The skin, our biggest organ, is the first line of defense against the microbes that lurk in the air and when changes for the worst occur in the skin it is time to re-assess our diet and to start thinking about supplementing with vitamins and minerals.
The body carries out it’s daily routines of which we are oblivious. However we become aware that all is not well when we start to see disease or deterioration. The body, to keep vital functions going – lungs repaired, heart beating rhythmically, correct pH levels of the blood – will strip less important parts of their nutrients in order to keep you alive. If a nutrient is required to keep your lungs in good repair and the nutrient is not being supplied through your diet then your body will start breaking down healthy cells just to retrieve the correct vitamin or mineral. This puts an added burden on your body. Cells once constructed usually have a certain length of life before they are broken down and new cells made. By depriving your body of its required vitamins you force it to work harder recycling itself. The more deficient your food, the harder the body works which has a knock-on effect as extra nutrients are used up in the break down, re-construct cycle.
Tags: body, body cells, downward spiral, Food, quality vitamins, riboflavin, skin, vitamin, vitamin B2, vitamin b2 riboflavin, vitamins and minerals, Whiteheads


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