Thursday, March 24, 2011

40 Weeks

Well, today I am 40 weeks and yes this is baby Jesse's due date!!  I've had a lot of braxton hicks contractions the past few days and only a few that caused any uncomfortableness.  My last appointment with the midwives was on Tuesday and I was 2 cm dilated and 60% effaced, however, my cervix still needed to soften.  I'm hoping that I've made some more progress!!  Come on baby Jesse, Mommy's ready to hold you in her arms!!

Your Baby in Week 40 of Pregnancy 
Congratulations! This week marks the official end of your pregnancy. Your baby probably weighs anywhere from six to nine pounds and measures between 19 and 22 inches (though tons of perfectly healthy babies are smaller or bigger). The bones in his skull haven’t fused yet — Mother Nature’s way of making it easier to get through the birth canal during labor and delivery. He now has enough fat under the skin to maintain his body temperature outside the womb (with a little help from those cute outfits and swaddling blankets that you’ve been stocking up on!). You (or actually the placenta) are still providing the antibodies he’ll need to fight off infections for the first six months of his life. And if you plan on breastfeeding, your milk will be giving him more antibodies that’ll boost his immune system.

Your Body in Week 40 of Pregnancy 
When will your body know it's time to deliver this baby? Well, about half of all pregnancies go past the 40-week mark, but your baby's birthday will absolutely be sometime in the next two weeks, as your practitioner won't let you go longer than 42 weeks. One event that's not guaranteed before the onset of labor is your water breaking (the rupture of membranes surrounding your baby that contain the amniotic fluid he's been living in for the past nine months). Despite what you see in the movies, very few women experience a public water breaking. In fact, more than 85 percent of expectant moms enter the birthing room with their membranes fully intact. Even if you do end up springing a leak, it's more likely to be a slow trickle than a big splash.

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