Weird Myths about Pregnancy
Pregnancy is a phase of pleasure and expectation, and expectant mothers are regularly full of questions, many of them, unluckily, based on myth and misconception. If I take coffee during my pregnancy, will my sweetie be born with brown spots? Can seeing at a lunar eclipse truly cause an abnormality in my child?
There are
numerous myths, superstitions, and old wives’ stories regarding pregnancy, many
of them wonderfully deceptive and yet actually assumed and spread. The
following significant ones are presented and exposed here.
Baby gender effect Expecting mother’s beauty
According to myth, daughters pinch away their mothers’ beauty. By contrast, if an expecting woman develops more beautifully through her pregnancy, she can thank a boy in her womb.
Of course, the reality of the problem is that morning illness or
sickness, fluctuating hormone levels, and a growing baby bump leaves several
pregnant women fatigued and overwhelmed with acne, particularly in the first
trimester. So, at the top of beauty, pregnant women generally are not. And that
stands irrespective of the baby is a girl or a boy.
Morning sickness
The worse a woman’s morning sickness, the more probable she is to be having a girl, or so common myth recommends. And myth it possible is, if you were to request an expert on the question. But study advises that there could be something to this one.
A
study shows that the percentage of women who experience morning sickness was a
little higher for women who got treatment for sickness in the course of
pregnancy than for women who did not try to find treatment.
Spicy Diet
The myth also proposes that spicy diets consumed during pregnancy can hurt the baby’s eyes, causing blindness. Spiced foods also have been held responsible for miscarriages and the stimulation of early labor. While those relations might sound believable to some people, they aren’t real.
Highly spiced foodstuffs can increase an expectant
woman’s risk of heartburn, however. Recurring heartburn for the period of
pregnancy may possibly mean that the baby will be born with a head full of
hair if we are to rely on a different old wives’ tale.
Stepping over Ropes and nuchal cords
In certain ethos,
superstition guides pregnant women not to step over ropes while pregnant, since
doing so could cause a nuchal cord, where the umbilical cord becomes jumbled around the baby’s neck. In the new era, the myth has been prolonged to
include electrical cords. Myth too commends against raising the arms over the
head during pregnancy, as this, too, may possibly affect a nuchal cord.
There is nothing logical and scientific for any of these myths.
Trimming Hair and birth defects
If a woman trims her hair while she is pregnant, the baby may possibly develop complications with its vision. It is challenging to understand a natural process that could be the cause and effect implied by this fallacy.
Other controversial is whether
women should color their hair whereas pregnant. The use of hair colorants has
not been ultimately connected to birth defects in humans, however professionals
recommend against it in the first trimester.
Full Moon (lunar) effect
Among the more firmly rooted superstition of pregnancy is the belief that the rate with which babies are born upsurges during a full moon. Even some medical staff working in labor and delivery wards has faith in this one, perhaps strengthening in the popular mind the believability for an actual connection.
Despite broad research, however, experts have yet to find a link between full moons and birth rates.
Seeing Ugly animals
An old wives tale that is present in a number of cultures suggests that when a pregnant
woman looks at a hostile or ugly animal, her baby will get on a resemblance of
that animal. There is no proof to prove the idea, and more importantly, babies basically
cannot be ugly.
Gifts before Delivery
In some ethos, it is believed that purchasing, getting, or opening baby gifts afore the baby arrives invites evil spirits or brings adversity, like a miscarriage. Based severely on fear and faith in magic, this one bears the hallmarks of irrational belief.
Some women consider that the baby’s spirit will be afraid away (in the form of miscarriage) if the pregnancy is publicized too early. This, also, is based on a deceitful understanding of causativeness.
The possibility of miscarriage
naturally is greater in the first trimester equaled with the second and third
trimesters. Revealing a pregnancy in these early weeks has no impact on
miscarriage risk.
Rubbing Tummy
As attractive as it may be, a pregnant female should refrain from too much rubbing of her bloated tummy, according to an old wives’ tale spread in China. If she indulges out there a reason, her baby will be damaged. What the myth recommends is extremely unlikely.
It is worth noticing, however, that by 10 weeks of growth the
developing fetus may sense touch, making responses when pushed through the
mother’s belly.
Read More: Chinese gender predictor
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