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Deodorants and breast cancer investigated
Birth plan? You're joking
My baby was due in three weeks. Have you made a birth plan? enquired a friend. If I had made one, I wouldnt have told her. Share your birth plan and youre opening a catering-sized can of worms. Of course, so-and-so did it naturally, my friend continued. No drugs. Not even gas and air. And the baby popped out like a pea.
This didnt seem the ideal moment to confess that I fancied the idea of a whopping dose of diamorphine. Hell, its one of those rare occasions when its perfectly acceptable to take drugs, and you dont have to find your own way home afterwards.
But naturally, no one knows precisely which drugs they will require during childbirth. Thats the bizarre thing about birth plans: even if its your 11th child, you cannot be certain whether the baby will make a speedy Birds Eye exit or require the assistance of forceps. Yet youre somehow expected to plan for this. A friend of mine insisted: I want the baby delivered onto my stomach. Yet, when it actually happened, she said she would have preferred the child to be cleaned up while she enjoyed a nice cup of tea.
Birth plans have their uses, of course. They force you to think about whats to come. You can waddle along fantasising that your baby will emerge fully attired in fleecy garments from Gap; figuring out your birth plan forces you to acknowledge that the process may be a teeny bit messy.
First time around, I gleefully joined the birth plan club. I shall use this, said a serene redhead at our NCT group, wafting a bottle of Bach Rescue Remedy. Another woman was adamant about the birth pool option, until she witnessed a video showing an awful lot of thrashing about and little in the way of relaxed floating.
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