Ryan and Debi & Toren

What we’ve learned having a child – v1

Debi and I have a background that provided us with a lot of information about pregnancy and childbirth, so we thought we were at least somewhat knowledgeable about having children (yeah, not really).  I teach a class on the Sociology of Human Sexuality (using this text: Understanding Human Sexuality), so I knew the basic outlines of what to expect as far as pregnancy goes.  Debi is a health and medicine guru who spends a lot of time perusing PubMed and has for years as part of her job.  Granted, she knows a lot about what can go wrong with pregnancy, particularly when it comes to genetic problems, but in order to know what is wrong you have to know what is “normal.”  So, combined, we thought we knew quite a bit about pregnancy, childbirth, and child development.

To add to that, I’ve read a few books on the topic and skimmed a couple more:

Additionally, Debi has read several books:

In addition to the above books, we’ve read, combined, dozens of peer-reviewed articles and spent quite a bit of time online searching through forums and other websites.  One website I’ve found particularly useful is www.babycenter.com.  If you sign up and fill in the requisite information on their website, including the expected due date, they will send you weekly emails telling you about how your unborn child is developing and what you can expect.  And once the baby is born, they continue to send you weekly emails with information on developmental milestones, etc.  Together, I think Debi and I have read almost every page on that site.  It’s a nice, kind of passive way, to have information delivered to you.  (NOTE: It is ad supported, but some of the deals they have are pretty good.)

So, we’ve tried to become fairly knowledgeable about having a child.  But all of the above aside, there are a few things that no resource has mentioned.  So, here’s “What we’ve learned having a child”…

Well, I think that does it for Volume 1 of what we’ve learned having a child.  If you can consider realizing that you know nothing the first step toward enlightenment, I think I’ve just taken the first step.  I’d sure like to know how many fracken steps there are though!

How to Make a Pregnant Woman Happy

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