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Labor And Delivery Nurses Are Revealing The Male Behaviors That Scream "Divorce Him" And Everyone Should Be Taking Notes

Labor And Delivery Nurses Are Revealing The Male Behaviors That Scream "Divorce Him" And Everyone Should Be Taking Notes

Yahoo2 days ago
Giving birth is already one of the biggest challenges in a person's life, but an unsupportive birth partner can make it even worse.
Take it from people who see this dynamic every day. While labor and delivery nurses are there in the room helping pregnant people endure the pain of contractions and epidurals, they are also sometimes dealing with bored, judgmental partners.
'A lot of times, you just are making eye contact with the other nurses in the room. Like, 'Can you believe what is happening at this moment?'' said Yancy Guzmán, a North Carolina-based nurse.
'Labor is where partners rise to the occasion or fail miserably,' said North Carolina-based nurse Jen Hamilton. 'I see it all the time where people have so much hope that their person is going to just step up to the plate ... It's just so devastating to watch somebody who you know had these really high expectations and then they weren't met.'
And the nurses interviewed, who have seen hundreds of births, said this unsupportive behavior is exclusive to heterosexual men.
Although they cannot predict whether couples will divorce, several of the nurses said they know when you should divorce, or hope you will. 'I never know the end of people's stories, but I feel like I can make a very educated guess on whether or not their relationship will stand the test of parenthood,' Hamilton said.
Washington-based nurse Alyssa Richard said that during labor, nurses see who men 'authentically are behind whatever facade they may put up in front of people.'
Here are the biggest offenses nurses say they've seen from men while their partner was in labor.
1. They Sleep Through Active Labor.
Richard said men sleeping through their partner's active labor is the most common unsupportive behavior she sees that frustrates her the most.
'If there's an emergency, and if the baby's heart rate drops, tons of nurses will come running in and start doing all kinds of stuff with the mom, and the dad's just over there sleeping, or pulls the blanket over their head so they don't have to be bothered by what's going on — that's my biggest pet peeve, that's crazy,' Richard said.
Hamilton said she recently had a woman who was screaming during labor, and 'this guy is trying to cover his ears to get a better snoozy position. I was so aggravated.'
Richard said that birth partners should only be sleeping when the person who is laboring is sleeping. 'It's such a short chapter in your life ... I don't think it's that big of an inconvenience for you to also be awake with them.'
In some cases, Richard has woken up sleeping men with, 'Hey, time to be up now. We need you [to be] a part of this.'
2. They Complain About Their Discomfort.
While their partner is going through the ordeal of birthing a whole human, some men will make this day about them, nurses said.
Hamilton said that when a man's first instinct is to worry about his own comfort in the room rather than his laboring partner's — with comments like 'How do you work the TV?' or 'I need more pillows' — it raises a red flag for her.
'Just a couple weeks ago, I had a dad make a comment about how this was really inconvenient for him because he had been working all day,' Richard said. 'And I'm just like, 'What the heck?' I can't even imagine saying that to someone, let alone your partner that you're supposed to be having a baby with.'
3. They Play Video Games.
There are some men who prioritize watching a screen over being there for their partner. 'I've seen them with headsets on so they're fully involved in an online game, while there's just like chaos going on around them,' Richard said.
'I've seen a guy go to Best Buy while his wife or girlfriend is in labor and get a 55-inch screen monitor and bring it to the hospital because their gaming system wouldn't hook up to our TVs,' Hamilton said.
Richard said it's fine to play games if your partner is comfortable or resting, but 'when your partner's awake crying ... playing your video games isn't inappropriate.'
4. They Leave When It Matters Most.
'I had a guy one time who had signed up for a timeshare talk, and literally left his wife when she was eight centimeters dilated to go to a timeshare talk and missed the birth of his child,' Hamilton said.
Guzmán recalled a time when a dad never acknowledged the nurses in the room. 'He moved his recliner so that he was facing the TV and never had to look in our direction ... and then he kind of got up abruptly. He's like, 'I've just been stuck in this room this whole day, and I just need to walk outside,'' she said. 'Meanwhile, his partner's in the bed, who literally can't leave the room, who's the one doing all the hard things, and he's turning it into this situation where it's about him.'
5. They Make Inappropriate Comments About Their Partner's Body.
After childbirth, stitches might be needed for vaginal repairs. On more than one occasion, Richard said, she has heard men making 'incredibly inappropriate comments about sewing it up tighter or 'Is it going to look as good as it did before?''
6. They Judge Their Partner's Decisions During Childbirth.
Hamilton said it's unsupportive when men insert their own judgments about the laboring patient's choices with comments such as 'You don't need an epidural' or 'You're being a wimp.'
'I am going to support whatever she wants, but he's making it so much harder for her to get relief,' Hamilton said. 'He's making it so much harder for her to feel at peace in her decision.'
Guzmán said when men make judgments about what their partner should do for pain management, 'I will try to get the dad out of the room by saying, 'Can you go get me some ice water for her or whatever?' And then I do take advantage of that time to say, like, 'What do you want? Why is he speaking for you?''
Hamilton said that sometimes men will override the laboring patient's decisions about who she wants in the room, recalling partners who wanted to bring someone like the mother-in-law into the room. 'That indicates a lack of respect for her boundaries and not protecting that sacred space where she needs to feel the safest,' she said.
How Can You Be A Better Birth Partner?
Fortunately, supportive birth partners outweigh the disengaged and outright hostile birth partners, nurses said. But often, there are also confused, nervous partners who could simply be better with more guidance.
Ideally, Richard said, birth partners should ask their pregnant partner, 'What do you think would be helpful if you were in a lot of pain?' before the day their child is born. Some people might prefer to be touched and held, while others would not, and it's better to talk this out before the high-stakes, stressful situation of labor.
And when it's time to give birth, be humble about what you don't know if you're trying to be a support person. 'A lot of nurses would really admire someone to say, I don't know what to do, but I want to be helpful,' Guzmán said.
And if you are pregnant and concerned your baby's father will make labor a nightmare, Hamilton encourages you to bring someone else, even if that person makes zero sense to outsiders — like a sibling, a best friend or your hairdresser who is always there for you in a crisis.
'It's OK to pick someone that others may see as random,' Hamilton said. 'Protect your peace. Labor is too hard to bring someone with you who is just going to make it harder.'This article originally appeared on HuffPost.
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Topps Throwbacks: Unpacking 1990's Topps MLB Booster Packs
Topps Throwbacks: Unpacking 1990's Topps MLB Booster Packs

Forbes

timean hour ago

  • Forbes

Topps Throwbacks: Unpacking 1990's Topps MLB Booster Packs

Collecting baseball cards often blurs the line between investment and obsession. Especially when you realize that the value of the standard baseball card is akin to the paper it's printed on. Unless your card is graded or some super rare insert with a piece of jersey in it, you are have an often pretty, sometimes drab and uninspired piece of visual photographic art of a sport you love. So it is as I find myself finally, after many years of deliberation, opening up a handful of sealed Topps MLB booster packs from the 1990s. A collector's journey Like many children of the 1990s my collecting impulses were influenced and financed by my father. While there is some regret in not leaving some Star Wars and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles figures in their blister packs, the baseball cards were opened without such regard. Because as we would learn later, the inherent value would continuously sink, especially as the market was flooded with new brands and fancy inserts. My father collected every Topps set from 1985 to 2004, stopping when he became frustrated with the deluge of new cards and brands. He bought the sets at the end of every year, for around $40, and packs throughout the year just for kicks. I only acquired the packs. That is, until he passed late last year, when I acquired his entire collection. Due to the lack of storage space in my collecting closet, I sold them all. There weren't any individual cards worth anything, unless I wanted to pay to have them graded, but the collector at the flea market was enthused by my father's organization (everything was in binders, in order). And while I did stop collecting baseball cards in the 90s (transitioning to Magic: The Gathering cards, Gundam models, LEGO sets, Funko Pops, and a slew of other random crap), I still hold that nostalgia, mostly because I still watch and love baseball (a game I also played until college). So when I found these unopened blister packs in a separate location when going through the rest of my father's belongings (including about 500 science fiction novels), I felt like that 13-year old kid again. And since they really aren't worth anything — an unopened pack of 1994 Topps MLB cards is going for between $2 and $9 on eBay — I've decided to open them for us all to enjoy. 1991 Topps According to the entire boxed set is worth about $10. I sold mine for $20. As for individual cards, there are a few error cards in the double digits, including a Nolan Ryan blank front error, and a Mark Whitten error card going for about $30 ungraded. While I did pull the non-error version of this card, in the few packs I opened that was the only moment of pause. There were no rookie cards (Chipper Jones would have been a rookie in this set) and nothing else of substance. But it did feel nice to thumb through these classic cards, all in perfect condition, and now headed into a card box to be shoved under the bed until my kids throw them out. 1992 Topps This was a very unremarkable year in baseball card collecting, as far as value. Nothing tops $2 as a single, ungraded card. There were a few rookies, but the only redeeming value of the 1992 set was collecting cards of your favorite players. For me, at that time, it was Mark Grace and pretty much any Atlanta Braves pitcher. Unfortunately I didn't pull any Jim Thome cards from any of these packs, any year. This was my all-time favorite player and up until last year (when our house flooded) I had a binder full of roughly 400 Jim Thome cards. But I did pull a checklist (honestly, one of the best non-player cards ever) and a reminder that Deion Sanders played baseball. 1993 Topps 1993 is when things started to change with the structure of baseball cards. Not in massive ways, but the cards got smoother, no longer the paper-feel cardboard of years past. Instead, these were glossy and stuck together. We started to find alternate versions of cards embossed with reflective gold, a precursor to the foil cards that would eventually make their way into packs. This is also the year that Colorado Rockies and Florida Marlins entered the league, and there's an alternate set of cards with a little gold seal. Topps Gold suddenly became a thing, and a few of those cards are worth a few bucks. But the most notable thing about the 1993 set was The Captain himself, Derek Jeter. This set contained his 1992 Draft Pick card, with a resell value of anywhere from about $6 for the standard card, to upwards of $150 for the Marlins Inaugural version. I did not pull any of these cards. Instead I pulled draft pick cards for a selection of who-dat players, none of which made nearly a fraction of the impact on the game that Jeter did. 1994 Topps Aside from having to peel these cards apart from one another, and then making the Robin Ventura and Nolan Ryan cards fight, I didn't pull a Billy Wagner rookie card, which might have been worth about $30 at grade nine. Topps continued with the Topps Gold alternates in this set, which were a little easier to read than the year before. But other than that, a very uninspiring and drab set. Other than the gum. There was gum in these packs. It was inedible and grey, but the 16 year-old tried it anyway. It was spat out just as quickly. 31 year-old gum. Gross. Bonus: A single pack of 1988 Topps This one is just pure nostalgia. Dale Murphy, Kirby Puckett, Wade Boggs, Bobby Witt, totally kitsch bright yellow All-Star cards highlighted a great year in collecting baseball cards for a Gen-X kid. You'll find a lot of graded cards from the 1980s, because this is the generation that loves storing and displaying its core memories whenever possible. As for this single pack? Nothing of value, cardboard with pictures and a piece of gum that was as brittle as a sand dollar. There might be some discussion in the baseball card community as to whether these blister packs were worth more closed than open, but that just might be a dash of hopeful optimism. Baseball cards have always been worth more as a collectors item for baseball fans IMO. And I sure do miss paying less than $2 for a pack of cards. And while there are plenty of investments to be found in baseball card collecting, it's not in this particular selection of Topps MLB booster packs. But stay tuned because I just found an unopened retail box of 1991 Fleer baseball cards.

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