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      <copyright>Copyright 2006</copyright>
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            <item>
         <title>Baby, come out... Part 2!</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>So, today I am 41 wks and 5 days along.  I never, ever thought I'd make it this far.  You know it's kind of ironic, as almost EVERYONE I know has had problematic pregnancies rife with problems, and early babies.  It feels sometimes like it's contagious, and I honestly thought I'd wind up going early, vs. late!  But here I am.  Belly: tight as a drum!  Cervix: tight as a drum too, but 80% effaced!  Absolutely feels like nothing is happening except some practice pressure waves.  </p>

<p>I have been sitting on my birthing ball, squatting, rolling my hips, doing hands and knees rocking, walking, vacuuming, squatting, eating pineapple, having sex, having orgasms, eating spicy curry, taking evening primrose oil, and doing nipple stimulation, and... </p>

<p>Baby is just HAPPY in there.   So I make a good baby house!  She is head down, and according to my midwife "RIGHT THERE," but just... nada, zip, zilch. </p>

<p>I am really getting nervous though.  Going *too* far overdue *does* have an increased incidence of risk factors and I just don't want to go there.  I don't even want to be pondering induction;  I am.  I don't want to ponder the potential results of induction;  (ie: failure to progress, unhandleable birthing, epidural, c-section, etc)  I am.   </p>

<p>I guess I'll go do more birth ball stuff... </p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.joannabk.com/babyblog/2006/12/baby_come_out_part_2.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.joannabk.com/babyblog/2006/12/baby_come_out_part_2.html</guid>
         <category>babystuff</category>
         <pubDate>Wed, 27 Dec 2006 21:42:36 +0000</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>Baby... come out!  </title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>Yeps, baby, it is time... time to come out into the world!</p>

<p>Yesterday I had to have a NST (Non-stress test).  This is where they sit you down in a recliner or some such contraption and strap monitors to your belly to monitor any uterine activity, baby's heartbeat, and you have this push button thingy you are supposed to click every time baby moves.  They are looking to see if baby's heartbeat goes up a certain amount after each movement and stays up the proper amount of time. </p>

<p>'Cept... *my* baby did not like these things poking her and kept moving away.  So for about an hour (instead of 20 minutes), I sat there being poked, prodded, slimed with lube (it's a conductor), and praying for my baby to... simultaneously move and hold still.  How is that for confusing her?  My prenatal appointment, which usually only takes about a half hour, took me almost two hours!  I was so exhausted, hungry, and poked out by the time I got home.  </p>

<p>And, they didn't get good results, so I had to go for a biophysical profile today at a radiology clinic... for this they use sonogram and measure baby, make sure she is breathing ok, make sure the amniotic fluid is ok, make sure she is moving, etc.  All was perfect!  This baby is fine, she is just happy in there. </p>

<p>But... baby... come OUT!!!! </p>

<p>I don't want another NST on Tuesday.  Then another on Thursday.  This increased monitoring is making me tense and nervous, not to mention the fact that it is just not fun.  So I want baby to come out!  Even though I'm nervous about my birthing too.  (Nerves regarding the unknown!)  We have the tub set up for me to enjoy during my birthing time, I have my Hypnobabies stuff ready to go, and... well it's just about Christmas, so there is not much going on here. </p>

<p>But with all this thinking about getting her out, I'm realizing how much I'm going to miss her being IN THERE.  I have really gotten used to rolling over in the middle of the night, feeling her kick inside me, cuddling her and going back to sleep.  I love sitting here at the computer and watching my belly undulate as she shifts and squirms around inside me.  I just love her being in there.  I can't imagine anything more worthwhile to do with my time than grow this beautiful girl in my belly... and I'm going to miss her like crazy when she comes out... even though I *know* she is going to keep me so busy once she is out, that I hopefully won't notice so much!  </p>

<p>Baby... come out!!!!!   </p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.joannabk.com/babyblog/2006/12/baby_come_out.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.joannabk.com/babyblog/2006/12/baby_come_out.html</guid>
         <category>pregnant or crazy? both!</category>
         <pubDate>Fri, 22 Dec 2006 19:29:10 +0000</pubDate>
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            <item>
         <title>The straws that broke my back... </title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>When I first approached the vaccine question, I actually did so from an *anti* perspective.  I'd been pretty inundated with that attitude on the Mothering boards, and as I agree with so much else there... I really assumed I'd wind up agreeing with that too, once I started digging.  But there were a few things right off the bat that turned me off. </p>

<p>1)  The fact that if you question an anti-vaccine resource (many anti-vaccine websites are run by individuals with no medical training or background whatsoever),  you get slammed, demeaned, belittled, and accused of not doing any research.</p>

<p>2) When you ask for verifiable facts regarding statistics, 9 times out of 10 you are sent to one of those anti-vaccine websites.   </p>

<p>3) That the authors who write books about how terrible vaccines are have not done any original research, but distort results from the research of others... carefully choosing which studies they will use and trying to find the most flawed studies.  (Because yes, of course, scientists do make mistakes and not every study is perfect.)  Also these authors usually spend all their time quoting one another so that the entire thing is circular.  "Anti-vaccine guy A says vaccines are horrible!"  This gets repeated over and over by all the other anti-vaccine folks until it is accepted as a verifiable fact, when really it is just an *opinion.* </p>

<p>4)  It seems the majority of anti-vaccine folks do not understand even what I mean when I ask for a verifiable fact.  They think they do.  They seem to think that if someone put something on a website, that makes it a verifiable fact.  </p>

<p>5) The conspiracy theories!  Oh the conspiracy theories!  I think there is a reason that people tend to roll their eyes at conspiracy theorists.  I simply cannot imagine how anyone could believe that every government in the world, every doctor in the world, every SIDS organization in the world, every Autism organization in the world, are ALL in on the conspiracy to harm people with vaccines.  Not to mention the very bizarre idea that Bill Gates would somehow make a profit from donating free vaccines to third world countries.  How does that work again?  </p>

<p>6) A lot of these people don't seem to understand that not only can anyone write a book (especially a self-published book, like "Just a Little Prick," which I can't help laughing at every time I think of it), but anyone can much more easily post a website.  (Yes, I include myself in that statement.  Did you think I was giving medical advice?  I am not.  It's just a blog, people.)   Anyone can make it *look* official and *sound* official if they try and have a decent education.  That doesn't make the information found in the book or website reliable.   </p>

<p>I mean really, if Ann Coulter can write a book and be taken seriously... *anyone* can!  </p>

<p>7) The fact that anytime you present any study or studies disproving what the anti-vax community claims, the response is... "That study is bogus!"  They don't ever give a reason why the study is bogus.  They just say it over and over again in hopes you'll eventually shut up.   It's easy to believe that you have all the information if you just completely disregard anything that conflicts with your opinion.  But why?  Who would want to make medical, life or death decisions for their families that way?  I don't understand.</p>

<p>8) The homeopathy connection.  <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Homeopathy">Homeopathy</a>, if you don't know, is basically an alternative medicine practice which involves giving a person a tiny amount of a toxin, to somehow balance their system and cure whatever the problem is.  Yet somehow, the anti-vaccine community does not see how protesting against the toxins in vaccines (Picture a needle, and the TINY amount of fluid in the needle, think of the many ingredients in that needle and try to figure out just how tiny an amount we are talking about.  REALLY tiny!), while ingesting toxins from homeopathy, are in conflict.  I recently saw a strident anti-vaccine activist discussing taking homeopathic doses of arsenic... while pregnant.   So arsenic in homeopathics is ok, but formaldehyde in a vaccine that could save your child's life is not?  Sorry... what was that? </p>

<p>9) Unverifiable quotes.  Like this one.  </p>

<blockquote>"Dr. James R. Shannon, former director of the National Institute of Health reported in December, 2003 that “the only safe vaccine is one that is never used”.</blockquote>

<p>Wow, that's pretty intense.  Notice I don't give a citation for it, though.  That's because there is no citation for it.  You can find it on every anti-vaccine website out there on the wide world of the 'Net.  But you won't find (or at least, I have been unable to find, and I tried) an original source or citation for this quote.  When I pointed this out on an anti-vaccine message board, I was told that it came from private correspondence between Dr. Shannon and another Dr.   That some anti-vaxer had somehow gained access to this private correspondence, quoted Dr. Shannon, and thus it is a verifiable fact, just not verifiable to anyone but that first person.  Hmmmmmm.... </p>

<p>There are lots of these quotes out there, this is just one example. </p>

<p>10) The insistence that mercury is still in our vaccines even though thimerosal was removed from vaccines years ago.  (Aside from one incarnation of the flu vaccine.  There are thimerosal free versions of flu vaccine available.)  The insistence that thimerosal causes autism even though numerous studies have shown there is no connection between the two.  The total crazy hysteria over thimerosal while people munch away on their tuna sandwiches.  </p>

<p>So... ten reasons for me to be turned and completely swayed by the anti-vaxers themselves, to go the other way.   I prefer living in the land of reality where I can verify things via solid medical research, personally.  </p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.joannabk.com/babyblog/2006/12/the_straws_that_broke_my_back.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.joannabk.com/babyblog/2006/12/the_straws_that_broke_my_back.html</guid>
         <category>vaccines</category>
         <pubDate>Wed, 20 Dec 2006 16:06:00 +0000</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>Still pregnant... </title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>This baby girl apparently *really* likes it in there, as thus far there is no sign of her making an appearance anytime soon.  I know due dates are really "guess" dates, but my "guess" date was five days ago.  It's fine with me, actually... I'm enjoying myself right now and I'll never have the luxury of being so pregnant without a child to care for, again!  I am browsing and reading all kinds of vaccine information, which fascinates me.  I am surfing and chatting with my friends online.  I am chilling out, basically!  </p>

<p>'Course I should be cleaning my house so my midwives aren't terrified when they arrive for my birthing time!</p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.joannabk.com/babyblog/2006/12/still_pregnant.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.joannabk.com/babyblog/2006/12/still_pregnant.html</guid>
         <category>pregnant or crazy? both!</category>
         <pubDate>Wed, 20 Dec 2006 16:03:11 +0000</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>The anti-vax thing... </title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>When I first started poking around the anti-vax issue, it was with the belief that vaccines are bad.  Which is a very trendy thing to believe these days.  Although, I had already been exposed to the skeptical side of myself via my research into SIDS and mattress fumes.  So, I suppose I was feeling a bit skeptical when I started out. </p>

<p>However, what I've found is... more than a little bit scary.  People who assert that vaccines cause everything from autism to allergies to SIDS and everything in between, and who do so in the face of all research which concludes the contrary.  People who believe that every SIDS organization, autism organization, government health organization IN THE WORLD are in on a grand conspiracy to convince us all to vaccinate for monetary gain.  </p>

<p>Someone close to me sent me to the Dr. Carly website, which was one of the first that I really made myself sit down and analyze... and found myself reading things like: </p>

<blockquote>"However, the reverberating truth, “the shot heard round the world” which will lead to the evolution of consciousness necessary to stop the holocaust against humanity known as vaccinations, will be that not only are vaccinations not safe or effective, but that they are actually  weapons of mass destruction being perpetrated upon humanity in the name of health, for the purpose of genocide and to bring in the New World Order.  Part 2 of the genocidal plan could drop anytime with activation of the Model State Health Emergency Powers Act whenever the next fabricated terrorist attack using biological agents occurs. The “bird flu” is apparently going to be used as an excuse to inoculate the masses soon, as predictions of a pandemic are being made by the media almost every day." ~<a href="http://www.drcarly.com">Dr.Carly</a></blockquote>

<p>Yes... that's right, folks.  Vaccines are part of an attempt at global genocide.  </p>

<p>Of course there is no explanation as to who would benefit from said genocide nor what their motivation would be to do such a thing.  </p>

<p>Not only that, but Dr. Carly is part of a group of people who believe that <a href="http://www.satanicvaccines.com/">vaccines are part of some satanic ritual</a>.</p>

<p>It doesn't bother me or scare me to see parents (like myself) doing more in-depth research as to what is in vaccines, why they are given, what they prevent against, and all the facts therein.  It does bother me to see people taking advice from someone who believes a) vaccines are part of a global genocidal plot or b) vaccines are part of a satanic ritual.  Either way, consider your source please!  </p>

<p>Trying to have a coherent discussion with the most vehement anti-vax people usually goes something like: </p>

<p>Anti-vaxer: "Rotavirus is no big deal."<br />
Skeptic: "My godson had rotavirus and spent a month at children's hospital.  It was way more than "no big deal" for us.   A vaccine could've saved a month of his life spent hooked up to IVs."<br />
Anti-vaxer: "But if he'd died of a vaccine, you'd have a different perspective."  </p>

<p>What???? I'm not sure how that is relevant, except for being able to say in response: "Yes, and if your child had almost died of rotavirus, maybe your perspective would be different as well."  </p>

<p>I'm really doing this only for my own sanity and to sort out all the information I've been collecting about vaccinations, but I'll be going through and addressing some of their basic arguments and concerns about vaccines.</p>

<p>To clarify, I will just say that being concerned over vaccines is good.  Researching them is good.  Having a dose of *healthy* skepticism towards modern medicine can be good.  But rejecting all medical science, all medical research, and every doctor on the face of the earth in the belief that sodium ascorbate can heal all the world's ills and vaccine preventable diseases are no big deal... sorry, that is not good.  </p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.joannabk.com/babyblog/2006/12/the_antivax_thing.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.joannabk.com/babyblog/2006/12/the_antivax_thing.html</guid>
         <category>vaccines</category>
         <pubDate>Mon, 04 Dec 2006 22:09:52 +0000</pubDate>
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            <item>
         <title>Becoming a skeptic... </title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>Actually I suppose to a certain extent I've always been a skeptic.  I like to have proof.  I love facts, scientific studies, research.  I like to know whether a thing is TRUE or not. </p>

<p>I remember several years ago I found the urban legends website Snopes.  I was *dismayed* as I read legend after legend... so many things I believed to be true, which everyone knew were true, were in fact... NOT TRUE.  </p>

<p>Ever since, I've been using the Internet to verify things for me.  Of course you have to be careful of your sources on the Internet... I mean, you cannot use Billy Bob's website as a reliable source.  (In <a href="http://www.joannabk.com/babyblog/2006/10/sids_and_mattresswrapping.html">my post about mattress wrapping</a>, I point out that all the proponents of mattress wrapping are just random people who have NO PROOF that it does anything whatsoever. )  But my background in journalism helps me find things which I believe to be reliable.  Also you can usually verify a reliable fact more than once, on more than one site or news article.  </p>

<p>But I love the natural living communities.  Attachment parenting makes so much sense to me.  Breastfeeding to me seems so simple, so logical!  I am not sure how I feel about co-sleeping, except that I am not against it and plan to see how it works for me and my family.   Birthing at home not only seems safer and so much more comfortable, but there is ample proof to show that walking into a hospital to give birth increases so many risks to you and your baby, that I don't even need to debate it.   </p>

<p>But then I see things in the natural living communities which honestly make me feel a little scared and like I am way, way on the outside.  </p>

<p>Like, the Bill Gates killing babies thing.  Or, that HIV is a myth.  Or that all vaccines kill babies and that anyone who is pro-vax is pro-killing babies.  Or that you should wrap your mattress against all the toxic fumes it emits.   That there is a global genocide in progress, coordinated with every government in the world, to use vaccines to kill babies.  That big Pharma makes more money from us being dead than they would if we lived. (???)  That autism is caused by vaccines.  Honestly it goes on and on, and it makes it hard for me to believe a lot of what I read about.  </p>

<p>This site might be becoming where I hash these things out while I try to figure out for myself what is true and not true, what is valid and what is just jumping at shadows.  Frankly I think there are enough real concerns for parents to have, that jumping at shadows like toxic mattresses are a waste of our energy.  But I suppose we'll see how it evolves... </p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.joannabk.com/babyblog/2006/11/becoming_a_skeptic.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.joannabk.com/babyblog/2006/11/becoming_a_skeptic.html</guid>
         <category>musings...</category>
         <pubDate>Wed, 01 Nov 2006 19:13:20 +0000</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>Bill Gates: Baby Killing Monster??? </title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>I recently noticed and became involved in a discussion on a message board about the Gates Foundation;  the consensus was that Bill Gates wants to kill babies to make money, which is why he is sending millions of dollars of vaccines to Third World countries. </p>

<p>I'm still a little unsure how GIVING medicine to needy people makes him money, but...</p>

<p>If you are one of the very few people in the universe who are unaware of the vaccine debate raging on the 'net these days, you may want to google it... the following won't make much sense otherwise.  Anyways, it's funny to me to see people posting on the internet about vaccines, and their signature says "Vaccines are not natural," while they are typing on their plastic computer connected to electricity and a network of wires that is the Internet!  </p>

<p>Regardless, I wanted to repost my posts about Bill here.  Never, ever in a million years would or could I have thought I'd find myself defending Bill Gates to anyone, anytime!  But, here it is... </p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.joannabk.com/babyblog/2006/11/bill_gates_baby_killing_monste.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.joannabk.com/babyblog/2006/11/bill_gates_baby_killing_monste.html</guid>
         <category>babystuff</category>
         <pubDate>Wed, 01 Nov 2006 19:04:35 +0000</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>Toxic mattresses... </title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>My post about SIDS, which I posted on Mothering.com's boards, generated lots of discussion... mostly grateful to know this is BS science that is trying to scare parents, for which I'm glad.  But I was a little surprised at how many wrote, "But I will still buy an organic mattress, because of the toxic fumes!"  </p>

<p>The theory behind this is that mattresses which have been treated to be inflammable must give off fumes which are toxic for humans to breathe. </p>

<p>Personally, this doesn't make a lot of sense to me.  I have a hard time believing that just about every industrialized country treats mattresses to make them less flammable, and adults sleep on them 8 hours a night every night for years and years, without a marked affect from the treatment.  I think we'd definitely see some changes in rates of allergy/asthma problems from the times when mattresses began to be regularly treated.  Maybe even other symptoms... headaches, for one, all kinds of sleep disorders, I can think of a million things that breathing toxic fumes would cause. </p>

<p>Regardless, *everyone* knows this is true.  Googling "toxic mattress fumes," will pull up thousands of results confirming that mattresses are toxic.  Of course, almost unanimously these are sites which are selling organic mattresses.  Some are selling other things.  Some just say it to say it.  NONE have any proof whatsoever, that I've been able to find, that mattresses emit toxic fumes.  </p>

<p>I'm not saying proof is not out there.  I'm simply saying that it seems it would be easier to find.  If this were really such a big problem, I cannot imagine that the CDC and similar organizations for other countries around the world, would not have researched it and made public their findings.  </p>

<p>I did find this, from the National SIDS Council of Australia...<br />
<a href="http://www.sidsandkids.org/documents/September2005_000.doc">http://www.sidsandkids.org/documents/September2005_000.doc</a></p>

<p>Also check out their FAQ on safe sleeping.  This is a PDF file.<br />
<a href="http://svc021.wic005tp.server-web.com/documents/FAQOctober2006.pdf">http://svc021.wic005tp.server-web.com/documents/FAQOctober2006.pdf</a><br />
They restate their position that the claim about gases from mattresses contributing to SIDS is patently false.  </p>

<p><a href="http://www.10news.com/investigations/7131615/detail.html">Here's a news article about mattress toxicity</a>;  please note that the person suggesting that mattresses are toxic is SELLING MATTRESSES!  </p>

<p>Here's a press release about flammability regulations for mattresses with some very dramatic photos.<br />
<a href="http://www.cpsc.gov/cpscpub/prerel/prhtml06/06091.html">http://www.cpsc.gov/cpscpub/prerel/prhtml06/06091.html</a></p>

<p>There are so many things in this universe to be legitmately worried about, I hate to think of so many people jumping at the shadow that is mattress fumes.  On the other hand, if anyone has PROOF... real live scientific studies (which, IMO, it would be very very easy to conduct!) which prove that mattresses are toxic, please do let me know!  </p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.joannabk.com/babyblog/2006/10/toxic_mattresses.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.joannabk.com/babyblog/2006/10/toxic_mattresses.html</guid>
         <category>babystuff</category>
         <pubDate>Thu, 26 Oct 2006 15:17:19 +0000</pubDate>
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            <item>
         <title>SIDS and Mattress-wrapping... </title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>There have been post after post on Mothering and other mama message boards about the dangers of placing baby on an unwrapped mattress.  This issue has been confusing the heck out of me, soooo...</p>

<p>Ok, so I bit my fear bullet and went on a search to find out what the deal was with the New Zealand studies about SIDS. Turns out that NZ previously had pretty high rates of SIDS and thus they initiated a big campaign to go after it.</p>

<p>Unfortunately the only sources I can find which cite mattress wrapping as a factor in reducing SIDS deaths are secondhand.  The site usually referred to in disucssions about mattress-wrapping is cotdeath2000.co.nz.  (Sorry, I'm deliberately not linking to it directly.) Cotdeath2000 is not affiliated with a medical organization. It's "someones" website. I tried to track it down, but the New Zealand domain registry service doesn't provide much in the way of information. I'd be interested to know what other domains these people own, but I do know they own both cotlife2000.co.nz and cotlife2000.com.</p>

<p>First thing I found, dated 2006, is an article about a scientist castigating Auckland University for releasing this study about cot death for publication; claims are made that the study is both biased and invalid.<br />
<a href="http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/GE0610/S00025.htm">http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/GE0610/S00025.htm</a></p>

<p>The end of the article states:<br />
<blockquote>The nationwide cot death rate has fallen by 70% since mattress-wrapping began and the Pakeha rate has fallen by around 85%. These reductions in cot death rates cannot be attributed to orthodox cot death prevention advice (e.g. face-up sleeping). There has been no material change to that advice in New Zealand since 1992.</blockquote></p>

<p>But I went to the New Zealand Ministry of Health website (http://www.moh.govt.nz) and looked up SIDS and cot death, and was unable to find even a single mention there of mattress-wrapping. You'd think if it really made such a significant change, the MOH would discuss it on their site! So basically they make this claim about a reduction in the rate of SIDS with nothing to back it up, which seems very odd to me.</p>

<p>Here's some info from New Zealand's Ministry of Health for 2002 (the most recent year I could find).<br />
<a href="http://www.nzhis.govt.nz/stats/fetal/sids.html">http://www.nzhis.govt.nz/stats/fetal/sids.html</a><br />
<a href="http://www.nzhis.govt.nz/stats/fetal/keyfacts.html">http://www.nzhis.govt.nz/stats/fetal/keyfacts.html</a></p>

<p>If you go to New Zealand's "HealthEd" database and search for SIDS, there are a series of articles discussing smoking, "back to sleep," safe bedsharing, and more on smoking. Nothing on mattress-wrapping. (Unfortunately these are not linkable).<br />
<a href="http://www.healthed.govt.nz">http://www.healthed.govt.nz</a></p>

<p>Here's an article from NZ about (sad, sad) a SIDS case where the factor of smoking and bed sharing comes into play.<br />
<a href="http://www.gisborneherald.co.nz/arti...iid=547&sud=27">http://www.gisborneherald.co.nz/arti...iid=547&sud=27</a><br />
(FWIW, NZ is not against bed sharing. But apparently smoking AND sharing a bed dramatically increases risks. Makes sense to me!)</p>

<p>Here's an article from Mothering magazine from 2002 in which no mention is made of mattress-wrapping...<br />
<a href="http://www.mothering.com/articles/new_baby/sleep/taylor.html">http://www.mothering.com/articles/new_baby/sleep/taylor.html</a></p>

<p>Canada is not recommending mattress-wrapping...<br />
<a href="http://www.dundasstarnews.com/dsn/news/news_629359.html">http://www.dundasstarnews.com/dsn/news/news_629359.html</a></p>

<p>Nothing on the CDC website about it...<br />
<a href="http://www.cdc.gov/SIDS/riskfactors.htm">http://www.cdc.gov/SIDS/riskfactors.htm<br />
</a><br />
Basically the only thing I have been able to find citing mattress wrapping are articles which refer back to the study listed at cotlife2000.co.nz. This link, which another poster posted (http://www.healthychild.com/cribdeathcause.htm) cites the man from the cotlife website (Sprott) as its source. So there are tons of websites talking about what they say on the cotlife website, but nothing else I can find. Not a single other source that I can find with any research or statistics to back it up. Plenty of sites selling mattress wrapping materials cite these statistics, though!</p>

<p>This article also says:<br />
<blockquote>In spite of denial and opposition from orthodox SIDS organizations, no research has disproved this gaseous poisoning explanation for crib death.</blockquote></p>

<p>Ok, someone please tell me why a SIDS organization would pooh pooh a possible cause for SIDS??? What would the motivation be? I don't understand that. Secondly, this is flawed logic. Disproved??? How would you "disprove" this??? So they say 800 people used mattress wrapping and not one had a case of SIDS. Who says there would've been a case of SIDS there ANYways????</p>

<p>This article goes on to say...</p>

<blockquote>This logical finding explains every factor already known about crib death, and is backed by scientific research (Sprott 1996, 2000) and eight years of practical proof consisting of a crib death prevention campaign that continues in New Zealand.</blockquote>

<p>Again their source is the same person, same thing, over and over again. Honestly, this seems like a pretty easy thing to track if ANY SIDS organization wanted to. I can't imagine that if the evidence were really so compelling, that Canada and the US government wouldn't have gotten on the bandwagon to see what effect it has.</p>

<p>Finally:</p>

<blockquote>A 100% successful crib death prevention campaign has been going on in New Zealand for the past eight years. Midwives and other healthcare professionals throughout New Zealand have been actively advising parents to wrap mattresses. During this time, there has not been a single SIDS death reported among the over 100,000 New Zealand babies who have slept on mattresses wrapped in a specially formulated polyethylene cover. The number of crib deaths in New Zealand that have occurred since mattress-wrapping began in 1994 is about 550. The number of crib deaths that have occurred in New Zealand on a properly wrapped mattress is zero.</blockquote>

<p>Gosh that sounds wonderful doesn't it? Except NOWHERE do they back it up. If this is true, why is it not on the New Zealand Ministry of Health website? Why is it not on ANY single solitary SIDS organization website? It just doesn't make any sense. Sure they have a list of references here; but most of those they are using to discuss general issues regarding SIDS. Not once do they actually attach a statistic to a valid source aside from this Sprott guy.</p>

<p>I would be grateful if anyone finds anything more than I have, if they'd post it... I've looked and looked! I just would like to be able to only be scared about things that really are a threat to my baby. It doesn't seem to me that mattresses are one of those things I should be too concerned about.</p>

<p>SIDS is a boogeyman to parents, IMO, and scares us to death. Scares me to death! I hate to think someone is preying on our desire to protect our children at any costs. So if there IS independant research about this and I'm not finding it, that is NOT sponsored by this Sprott guy or Baby Safe products, I'd be glad to hear it. I hate thinking people have unethical motivations for things like this.  </p>

<p>Of course, everyone needs to make their own decisions for their family and their baby.  Hopefully though, we can make decisions about things that are rooted in reality and not superstition or someone's desire to sell mattress-wrapping materials and "safer" mattresses.  </p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.joannabk.com/babyblog/2006/10/sids_and_mattresswrapping.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.joannabk.com/babyblog/2006/10/sids_and_mattresswrapping.html</guid>
         <category>babystuff</category>
         <pubDate>Sun, 22 Oct 2006 20:24:54 +0000</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>Sonogram pictures... </title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://www.joannabk.com/pics/32wks01b.jpg"></p>

<p><img src="http://www.joannabk.com/pics/32wks02b.jpg"></p>

<p><img src="http://www.joannabk.com/pics/32wks03b.jpg"></p>

<p><img src="http://www.joannabk.com/pics/32wks04b.jpg"></p>

<p><img src="http://www.joannabk.com/pics/32wks05b.jpg"></p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.joannabk.com/babyblog/2006/10/sonogram_pictures.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.joannabk.com/babyblog/2006/10/sonogram_pictures.html</guid>
         <category>babystuff</category>
         <pubDate>Thu, 19 Oct 2006 20:12:11 +0000</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>32 Week Sonogram... </title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>I wasn't sure if I was going to do another sonogram... I don't think I really *needed* one, per se.  They recommended a follow-up after my first scan, but apparently that is just routine.  Nothing was abnormal or anything. </p>

<p>But, for me.. I was still in a state of disbelief that there really is an actual baby-sized baby in my belly.  I look down at myself and I just look and feel so BIG... it's like, where's the baby?  Even with all the kicking.  Even with being able to look down and see my belly jiggling from her kicking and moving inside me.  Even with all that, it still wasn't real to me.  In my head, baby was still a teensy little four month old fetus.  Not really a BABY, yet.  </p>

<p>Well, we decided to go, and it was today, and it was amazing.  Amazing.  This technology is just phenomenal.  That they can just touch me, and up pops my baby's face, right there, just like that.  Amazing!!!! </p>

<p>She is fine.  She is perfect.  She was moving, opening her mouth, blinking her little eyes, squirming around.  I could feel the movement inside of me while watching her move on the screen.  She was head down, but sort of diagonal, and had her hands both up in front of her face, like a little boxer.  She smiled!    Honestly she is just perfect.  </p>

<p>Tears were leaking out my eyes while I watched the screen, I just couldn't help it.  The whole thing is such an incomprehensible miracle.  No matter how much I may *know* about babies (having been doing sooooo much research!), or anything else... that there is a baby inside of me is still just... astonishing!</p>

<p>The fact that MY body, which I've always viewed with more than a little contempt, could create something so perfect... well that is even more astonishing.  For the first time in my life, I feel proud of my body.  Years and years of shame over my weight are completely overwhelmed by the fact that my body is making this perfect little person, and all I have to do is allow it to do its work.  Millions and billions of tiny little cells knowing just where to go, just what to do, creating the placenta, feeding the baby, helping her grow, getting my breasts ready to feed her, getting my pelvis ready to birth her, all this going on at once... and going RIGHT.  </p>

<p>All along I feel like I've just been waiting for something to go wrong.  Not that I would lose my baby!!! But that I would have all kinds of problems, as most of my friends have had.  That I'd wind up with exactly what I don't want, a medicalized pregnancy leading to a birth full of interventions because my body MUST be broken.  </p>

<p>Well, it's just... NOT.  Everything is working.  Everything is growing exactly as it should.  I feel like I've gained a little too much weight, but my body apparently knows exactly what is needed to care for this little girl in my belly.  So maybe I'll be able to quiet my worries, and trust myself and my body a little bit, for the very first time in my life.  Surrender to the process.   Be at peace.  </p>

<p>I can't wait to meet my little girl!  </p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.joannabk.com/babyblog/2006/10/32_week_sonogram.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.joannabk.com/babyblog/2006/10/32_week_sonogram.html</guid>
         <category>pregnant or crazy? both!</category>
         <pubDate>Thu, 19 Oct 2006 19:37:39 +0000</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>Class affair... </title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>Charlie and I went to our first birth class last night.  We don't really *need* it, to be honest.  I'm doing Hypnobabies at home, and I actually really am enjoying it.  Who knew it would be so much fun?</p>

<p>I mostly wanted to do a class because of the social aspect of it... meeting other pregnant mamas!  I chose a Birthing from Within class because I loved the book, and because it seemed very likely that I'd find other semi-crunchy mamas there to talk to. </p>

<p>Right before we went, I started having second thoughts about the class.  The book Birthing from Within is wonderful, and I enjoyed it.  I loved the discussions about our expectations, fears, worries about both birthing and becoming a mother/parent.  I loved the idea of sitting around with other mamas/parents doing birth art and chatting.  Fun!  But the book also includes pain tolerance exercises using a piece of ice.  A teeeeeensy part of the book for me, but I wondered if it would be such a teensy part of the class?  </p>

<p>Doing pain tolerance exercises would actually be totally contrary to the whole idea of Hypnobabies, which is focusing on birth as an intense series of sensations.  Intense, powerful, but not *painful.*  </p>

<p>Well, I decided to give it a try, and now I'm kind of wishing I hadn't.  Expectations, expectations!  </p>

<p>Here's what I did NOT expect. </p>

<p>I did not expect to be in a tiny basement with only two other couples.  Which apparently fosters intimacy and that is wonderful, but it's not very many people to meet and be social with. </p>

<p>I did not expect both of the two other couples to be completely uninformed about birth.  I mean, I expected that they had at least read... yanno, Birthing From Within!  Nope.  One woman had read one book (Active Birth, so a good one!), the other had not read any.  At about 30 weeks pregnant. </p>

<p>I know that I go overboard with things like this.  (Well, really, what other thing is LIKE becoming a mother for the first time?)  I've wanted to have a baby my entire life.  I've been totally obsessed with learning everything I can about pregnancy, birth, babies, motherhood.  I am well aware that there is lots I cannot know until I go through it, but darnit... I plan to be prepared!  :)  I am always a prolific reader, and I've read... maybe 20 books.  Plus I'm addicted to the <a href="http://www.mothering.com">Mothering message boards</a>, where I read all different kinds of debates that make me go seek more information on the internet on my own.    Plus tons and tons of birth stories!  Oh how I love the birth stories!  :) </p>

<p>But it honestly scared me to see a mama telling the class that she trusts her doctor, feels safest in the hospital, and hasn't read much about birth because there's so much conflicting information out there.  It scared me to hear her say that her doctor told her at her 26 week appointment that she was having a HUGE baby and would need a c-section (based on a notoriously inaccurate sonogram!).  It scared me to hear her say that she feels empowered going into the hospital when the reality is that she obviously had NO CLUE about the basic pitfalls of having a baby in a hospital. </p>

<p>Don't get me wrong;  I believe a mama should be able to birth wherever she chooses.  Whether she is informed or not.  The choice is ALWAYS with the mama.  But I wanted to sit down and rattle off some statistics for her, I did, I wanted to!  I didn't!!!! But I SO wanted to.  </p>

<p>The other woman was not so scary; she was only six months along, was reading Active Birth, and was birthing at a birthing center with midwives.  It was just this one woman, C, who made my stress levels go shooting through the roof.  I have this awful tendency to want to rescue everyone, and I wanted to rescue her!  </p>

<p>So, anyways, then began the pain tolerance stuff.  The teacher started out by asking us, on a scale of 1 to 100, how painful we expected childbirth to be.  Well, yanno, I'm doing the Hypnobabies thing.  I believe I deserve an easy, safe, comfortable birth!  I believe that I can have that.  But I knew that if I said I believed birth to be TOO easy, she'd correct me.  I just knew it.  My husband and I both put our expectations of birth at around 50, and yes, she corrected us, and told us that she didn't want us to be expecting an easy birth and get a really hard one.  I responded that for me, I felt that believing I'd have a really hard, painful birth, would be setting myself up for a hard, painful birth.  She disagreed.  *sigh*  I don't necessarily think that is true for everyone, btw... but it IS true for me.  </p>

<p>So then she passed out the ice, and we went through a series of exercises holding the ice.  Now here is one thing that really upset me.  C, the woman headed straight for a c-section happy doctor attended birth, was not really feeling any pain or discomfort from the ice.  All the rest of us were!  (Try holding a piece of ice in your hand for 60 seconds.  To me, very uncomfy!)  Anyways, C tried a few different things.  She moved the ice to the inside of her wrist.  She tried it on her neck.  She just wasn't really perceiving it as painful at all.  The teacher, however, seemed determined that she WOULD feel pain, she'd find a way!  </p>

<p>I mean, isn't it possible that this woman has a high tolerance for pain, and is going to have a super easy labor?  Isn't it possible that giving her confidence about her bodies ability to cope, vs. making her feel "broken" for not experiencing it the same way everyone else did, might have done more for her birth?  </p>

<p>I know I'm overreacting, but this seriously upset me.  The whole thing upset me.  It got me all discombobulated and I wound up having insomnia all night till 4am, which I haven't had in a while.  (Baby makes me sleepy!)  So I'm going to try to get out of the class.  The other aspect, btw, is that I already know all the information the teacher is giving us.  I know the stages of labor, I know how the uterus works, I have seen tons of pictures of it, I can't wait to see my placenta!  I know that if I start freaking out and saying I cannot do it, that means I'm in transition and ALMOST DONE!  I know that I'm a little bit bossy sometimes (ok, maybe more than a little), and I have a hard time finding a balance between chatting and being... pushy.  It's the Leo in me.  It comes from a good place (wanting to help), but almost always engenders a bad reaction.  I'm working on finding better ways to do it, or just hushing up, but I am not there yet... and I know I won't be able to help myself in this class!  And, as you can see, the result is totally stressing me out. </p>

<p>I wonder if she'll refund at least half of our money!  </p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.joannabk.com/babyblog/2006/10/class_affair.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.joannabk.com/babyblog/2006/10/class_affair.html</guid>
         <category>pregnant or crazy? both!</category>
         <pubDate>Tue, 17 Oct 2006 15:08:12 +0000</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>Screaming babies... </title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>So I took Tramp to the park for a walk last night, and while we are walking I notice a couple playing tennis on the tennis courts.  They have a little girl (2-ish) wandering around the court while they play, and I see a stroller off to the side.  As I get closer, I hear it.. a tiny, tiny baby, screaming with his whole little heart as hard as he can.  And screaming, and screaming, and screaming.  I see the mama walk towards the stroller and think, "Ah, she is going to get him!"  But, nope.  The tennis ball had come to rest right next to the stroller.  She walked over, picked up the ball, and walked back to continue to play... completely ignoring her screaming infant.  </p>

<p>When I say infant, I mean little;  like newborn or maybe a few weeks old.  You know how newborn babies have that very distinctive cry with no shape to it yet, just a desperate sound!  </p>

<p>I found myself full of... sheer rage.  I wanted to run over, punch that lady in the face, grab her little baby, and run.  Really.  I was steaming, my heart was hurting for this little guy, I thought I might cry.  </p>

<p>Talk about hormonal!!!!!  Research says that there are biological responses in a mama to her own babies cry.  What about to other babies, though??? </p>

<p>Anyways, as I continued to walk, I started making myself think of reasons *why* that mama could be so callous to her baby crying.  Maybe she is just one of the "Cry It Out" crowd who believes that babies should self-comfort.  (Total crap, in my opinion.  Babies cry as a survival mechanism, not as manipulation!)  Maybe.  But even the CIO people usually don't advocate ignoring a baby crying until they are the ripe old age of four months, and this baby didn't sound anywhere near that old. </p>

<p>So, my next thought... amongst "JoAnna calm down!"'s over and over... was, maybe this baby has colic and is simply inconsolable and mama is going completely bonkers.  Sometimes babies with colic simply won't calm no matter what you do, so I can see a mama at her wits end just winding up ignoring it.  </p>

<p>But still, it was a little chilling to me to watch mama and daddy totally blase' about their babies screaming, and even the little two year old seemed to think it was perfectly normal to ignore a screaming baby.  I wound up calming myself to the point of giving them the benefit of the doubt... I bet that baby has colic.  I bet she is doing the very best she can.  This is not the mommywars, and I am not on this earth to judge other mama's.  But I wonder what most mama's do when dealing with colic... just ignore?  Or something else?  </p>

<p>Here's hoping I never REALLY need to know the answer to that!!!!!  </p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.joannabk.com/babyblog/2006/09/screaming_babies.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.joannabk.com/babyblog/2006/09/screaming_babies.html</guid>
         <category>babystuff</category>
         <pubDate>Thu, 28 Sep 2006 16:00:15 +0000</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>First Kicks... </title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>So there I was, about 18 weeks pregnant.  I'd been feeling occassional flutters, but nothing where I *knew* it was the baby.  Just those little flutters you think to yourself, *maybe* that is the baby!  I was still able to lie on my tummy for short periods of time, and I would frequently go into my bedroom, lie on my belly on the bed, and lean over the edge to pet my dog.  He likes to sleep with just his head under the bed there, the whole rest of his body sticks out!  </p>

<p>So I was lying there petting him when all of a sudden I felt like... THWAP!  I shrieked, jumped, and rolled over immediately.  It was like baby was saying... "HEY!!!! Get offa my house!"  :)  </p>

<p>The next time I really felt the baby strongly was when we were en route to Vegas.  This was the first week of August, 2006, so I was a little over five months pregnant.  While the plane was accelerating, I suddenly felt baby start to go bonkers... flipping and whirling and pushing and kicking and squirming!  It felt kind of like when you go over a sudden hill on a road in the car and as you come over the top, your stomach gives a jump... except with added pressure!  Also feels all at the same time, like someone is whacking your bladder as hard as they can.  </p>

<p>I was a bit anxious over that as I couldn't get up to pee!  But all I could think was that baby did not enjoy the pressure as we rose into the air!  </p>

<p>Ever since that fateful day, this little squirmer has not stopped.  She squirms, flips, wiggles, giggles, pushes, and basically makes her presence known throughout the day.  I can't wait to meet her! :) </p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.joannabk.com/babyblog/2006/09/first_kicks.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.joannabk.com/babyblog/2006/09/first_kicks.html</guid>
         <category>babystuff</category>
         <pubDate>Wed, 27 Sep 2006 15:00:33 +0000</pubDate>
      </item>
            <item>
         <title>I love being pregnant... </title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>I really, really do.  I asked my mother-in-law the other day if she enjoyed being pregnant, and she just looked disgruntled.  She said she hated getting so large and that she wouldn't have wanted to do it again. </p>

<p>Hmmmm, Charlie is going to have his hands full keeping me from wanting to do it again!</p>

<p>In spite of all the negatives;  weight gain (20 lbs so far!), aching ankles, indigestion, random crazy headaches, emotional outbursts... I just love it!  I love knowing that my baby is safe and sound inside of me.  I love feeling her move around and push at me and spin and flip and squirm.  I love seeing my stomach ripple when she gets a particularly good kick going!  </p>

<p>I have wanted to have a baby for so long.  I remember as a little girl dreaming (literal, dream while asleep) of having a little girl.  I could see myself holding her in my arms and loving on her.  It was a repetetive dream that I had over and over again.  Now she is here, in my belly, growing and growing.  I can't wait to meet her!!! But at the same time I'm perfectly content to keep her safe and sound inside of me where nothing can hurt her.  </p>

<p>One of my favorite books, "In pursuit of the Green Lion," by Judith Merkle Riley, the protaganist is pregnant.  When she first feels the baby move, she says she can hear/feel the baby saying... "Joy, joy, joy!"  And flipping, swimming, squirming.  That's how I feel.  I love it.  I'm honored to be the vessel for this little one to make her way into the world. </p>

<p>I dunno if I will feel that way during labor, though... how good IS that hypnobabies stuff anyways? :) </p>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.joannabk.com/babyblog/2006/09/i_love_being_pregnant.html</link>
         <guid>http://www.joannabk.com/babyblog/2006/09/i_love_being_pregnant.html</guid>
         <category>pregnant or crazy? both!</category>
         <pubDate>Sat, 23 Sep 2006 23:04:09 +0000</pubDate>
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