Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She's always seemed like someone who only wanted to have a baby because everyone else was doing it, or to fit an image or being perfect.
I can never get over the fact that a big factor contributing to her infertility was being very underweight. And that she repeatedly refused to gain 10-15 lbs against doctor recommendations, favoring vanity (or her disorder) over being able to get pregnant.
She said doctors said she wasn't under weight.... You do know she had cancer, right
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interview from Huff Post...
You’ve referred to your husband as a "baby hog." Who’s getting more me-time with the Duke these days?
"He really is, that’s just not stopped. We’re in New York this week and Bill likes to push the stroller in the city and he likes to always hold him and I just look like the lazy wife who doesn’t want to do anything. I just walk alongside Bill and the baby kind of going “OK if anyone needs me, I’ll be over here.” But yes, he’s definitely a baby hog. But you could call your husband worse things than a baby hog. At the end of the day, ultimately, it’s a blessing and it’s great that Bill is so nurturing and loving and wants to be with the baby all the time. In the end, it equals out because Bill travels a lot for work, so when he’s here and at home he wants to make sure that he spends as much time (with the baby as possible) and I respect that and I want him to be with the baby as much as possible."
She is so classy. This is how to be a good wife and mother. Empowering your husband. Absolutely nothing wrong with her allowing her husband to be a proud father.
This kind of approach is how you get an equal partner in child rearing responsibilities and at the same time achieve balance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maternal hormones will knock you over the head with love for your baby. It is like falling in love, or all the crushes you have had in the past rolled into one big love fest. All the oxytocin from breast feeding makes you fall in love over and over. You can't underestimate them. When I had my babies and was breast feeding, as tired as I was, it was like someone had given me a love potion!
Ok Tom Cruise, you do not speak for all women. Please enlighten yourself. You can start with the book Down Came the Rain by Brooke Shields
Why all the negativity??? This is how I felt. Yes, I was also tired, had post partum anxiety and mood swings, but I did feel all those love hormones.
Well I felt that way too. Except I had ZERO post partum anxiety and ZERO mood swings. My baby also slept through the night and I had to wake him to breastfeed. It was such an amazing experience I wanted to get pregnant at 3 months Post Partum. The whole experience was nothing sort of magical. Baby hormones and I agree quite well. For me the PP experience is like being on an amazing drug.
HOWEVER, I'm fully aware that my experience was not normal and I did not run around telling women about my world of rainbows, unicorns, and butterflies. I make a point to be aware of my surroundings and realize that all of my experiences as woman are unique to me. Statements like yours are just dumb and frankly nobody really cares about your experience in this context.
Anonymous wrote:My husband works long hours and misses the baby a lot so when we're out and about all together, he insists on carrying her. It might be the same with them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maternal hormones will knock you over the head with love for your baby. It is like falling in love, or all the crushes you have had in the past rolled into one big love fest. All the oxytocin from breast feeding makes you fall in love over and over. You can't underestimate them. When I had my babies and was breast feeding, as tired as I was, it was like someone had given me a love potion!
Ok Tom Cruise, you do not speak for all women. Please enlighten yourself. You can start with the book Down Came the Rain by Brooke Shields
Why all the negativity??? This is how I felt. Yes, I was also tired, had post partum anxiety and mood swings, but I did feel all those love hormones.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maternal hormones will knock you over the head with love for your baby. It is like falling in love, or all the crushes you have had in the past rolled into one big love fest. All the oxytocin from breast feeding makes you fall in love over and over. You can't underestimate them. When I had my babies and was breast feeding, as tired as I was, it was like someone had given me a love potion!
Ok Tom Cruise, you do not speak for all women. Please enlighten yourself. You can start with the book Down Came the Rain by Brooke Shields
Why all the negativity??? This is how I felt. Yes, I was also tired, had post partum anxiety and mood swings, but I did feel all those love hormones.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maternal hormones will knock you over the head with love for your baby. It is like falling in love, or all the crushes you have had in the past rolled into one big love fest. All the oxytocin from breast feeding makes you fall in love over and over. You can't underestimate them. When I had my babies and was breast feeding, as tired as I was, it was like someone had given me a love potion!
Ok Tom Cruise, you do not speak for all women. Please enlighten yourself. You can start with the book Down Came the Rain by Brooke Shields
Why all the negativity??? This is how I felt. Yes, I was also tired, had post partum anxiety and mood swings, but I did feel all those love hormones.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maternal hormones will knock you over the head with love for your baby. It is like falling in love, or all the crushes you have had in the past rolled into one big love fest. All the oxytocin from breast feeding makes you fall in love over and over. You can't underestimate them. When I had my babies and was breast feeding, as tired as I was, it was like someone had given me a love potion!
Ok Tom Cruise, you do not speak for all women. Please enlighten yourself. You can start with the book Down Came the Rain by Brooke Shields