Archive for September, 2008
Last night was the premiere of one of my shows, it has been so long since I watched some TV… last night I put the baby down at 9h and off to watch desperate housewives.
It was quite funny. With all the changes they have Gaby has 2 kids! I can not beleive this Gaby is a mommy and looking regular! that’s a crazy twist.
Bree is still somewhat the same running her own business but something look odd bettween her and Orson.
Susan dont seem so helpless after all with her Hunky BF
Edie Oh My God Edie is maried!!? maybe to a a Psyco!
So much to unveil we just have to wait and see.
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Love Roodlyne
What’s going on in your tummy now? A lot. Your baby-in-the-making is just a tiny ball consisting of several hundred cells that are multiplying madly. Once the ball of cells (called a blastocyst) takes up residence in your uterus, the part of it that will develop into the placenta starts producing the pregnancy hormone hCG (human chorionic gonadotropin), which tells your ovaries to stop releasing eggs and triggers increased production of estrogen and progesterone (which keep your uterus from shedding its lining — and its tiny passenger woooh! that a very good feature— and stimulates placental growth). HCG is the hormone that turns a pregnancy test positive; by the end of this week, you may be able to take one and get a positive result! (If your test is negative and you still haven’t gotten your period in two or three days, try again then.)
In the mean time, amniotic fluid is beginning to collect around your ball of cells in the cavity that will become the amniotic sac. This fluid will cushion your baby in the weeks and months ahead. Right now, your little ball of cell is receiving oxygen and nutrients (and discarding waste products) through a primitive circulation system made up of microscopic tunnels that connect your developing baby to the blood vessels in your uterine wall. The placenta won’t be developed enough to take over this task until the end of next week.
How is your life changing?
THE meeting has taken place inside you —one single soldier (sperm) has made it through the tough outer membrane of your egg and fertilized it. Several days after conception, the fertilized egg burrowed into the lining of your uterus and started to grow. You are having a baby! You probably don’t know you’re pregnant yet, but you may notice a little spotting by the end of this week or not I never had any spotting. This so-called “implantation spotting” may be caused by the egg burrowing into the blood-rich uterine lining (a process that began last week at 6 days after fertilization), but no one knows for sure. In any case, the spotting is very ligh.



