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kids - boy or girl..?


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Posted
8 minutes ago, Quickgun_murugan said:

A raayi ayithey endi pallu raalakottukodaaniki.. America lo ammayi ayina abbayi ayina penchadam lo pedda difference undadu....eco typical desi mentality kakapothey 

Partly I agree but I have seen people who have preferences 

Posted
2 hours ago, Amrita said:

Atani comment kanna ni comment chedalam ga derogatory ga undi. Decent ga matladite there is nothing to lose. Just saying.

naa comment lo yem antha deragatory yemdundi cheppalani ee sandarbhamga demand chestunnanu Image result for brahmanandam gif

Posted
18 minutes ago, Nellore Pedda reddy said:

Inka ledu 😁

bhumi putka mundu nunchi inka kaaleda damn

Posted
1 minute ago, Guest said:

bhumi putka mundu nunchi inka kaaleda damn

Thondarem Ledu 😇

Posted
10 minutes ago, Guest said:

naa comment lo yem antha deragatory yemdundi cheppalani ee sandarbhamga demand chestunnanu Image result for brahmanandam gif

I replied Ganesh  and told him that Niku kadu . Gummadi kaya donga ante bhujalu tadumukuntunnav silent_I1

Ayina Adem question inka  pelli ney kale appude why to think about planning . Lite .

Posted
4 minutes ago, Amrita said:

I replied Ganesh  and told him that Niku kadu . Gummadi kaya donga ante bhujalu tadumukuntunnav silent_I1

Ayina Adem question inka  pelli ney kale appude why to think about planning . Lite .

ide mukka septhe aypotundi gaa

ayna whats wrong in planning..pelli ayna tarvatha inni yrs ki ani oka idea untundi gaa iyala repu

Posted
17 minutes ago, Guest said:

ide mukka septhe aypotundi gaa

ayna whats wrong in planning..pelli ayna tarvatha inni yrs ki ani oka idea untundi gaa iyala repu

Cheppa ga now . Okay atleast an year till I get little confidence that myself and my husband are compatible and will be together life long silent_I1

Posted
16 minutes ago, Amrita said:

Cheppa ga now . Okay atleast an year till I get little confidence that myself and my husband are compatible and will be together life long silent_I1

Meanwhile your biological clock will be ticking 

Posted
11 minutes ago, Rushabhi said:

Meanwhile your biological clock will be ticking 

That’s alright no big deal . One year is minimum inka edo inventory laga I can’t have kids  as soon as I am married though I love kids .  Repu compatible kaka single parent ayite who is to be blamed? Puttakapoyin  Parledu there are so many kids who need parents I will adopt but compatibility lekunda or that confidence lekunda I can’t bring kids into this world . Who is having kids within an year anyway ? I don’t know about others but I am not interested within an years time.

Posted

Down Syndrome Risk Factors

 

Researchers have found that it is more likely for an older mother to have reproductive cells with an extra copy of chromosome 21. So an older mother is more likely to have a baby with Down Syndrome than a younger mother.

The likelihood that a woman under age 30 who becomes pregnant will have a baby with Down syndrome is less than one in 1,000, but the chance of having a baby with Down Syndrome increases to 1 in 400 for women who become pregnant at age 35. The likelihood of Down Syndrome continues to increase as a woman ages, so that by age 42, the chance is one in 60 that a pregnant woman will have a baby with Down syndrome, and by age 49, the chance is one in 12.

Because the chances of having a baby with Down Syndrome increase with the age of the mother, many health care providers recommend that women over age 35 have pre-birth testing for the condition. Testing the baby before it is born to see if he or she is likely to have Down Syndrome allows parents and families to prepare for the baby’s special needs. 

Parents who have already have a baby with Down Syndrome or who have abnormalities in their own chromosome 21 are also at higher risk for having a baby with Down Syndrome. 

Posted

Real Talk: Is There A 'Right' Age To Have A Baby?

 

P.S. Can my mom stop talking about my biological clock already?

By Kristen Domonell 

Jul 19, 2018 

Lots of decisions are no-brainers: whether you want fries or a salad with that, for example. (Fries. Always fries.) Wearing a condom for the first time with a new partner is another one.

But deciding when's the right time to have a baby...definitely not so cut-and-dry. (If only there were a crystal ball for this kind of thing, amirite?). The truth: There's no ~perfect~ age to have a baby, so maybe stop with that thinking right now. Every woman's body and life circumstances are different. But there is one truth that's kind of hard to swallow: Women aren't fertile forever. The fact is, some ages are better than others—at least if you're trying to get pregnant. Understanding your fertility, however, can help you make a choice that feels perfect to you.

The best age to have a baby, according to research

Let's get technical for a minute here: A woman is born with all the eggs she'll ever have—about 1 to 2 million of them, according to the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG).

Those numbers decline with age, but as soon as a girl hits puberty and starts releasing those eggs and menstruating, she can get pregnant—between the ages of 10 and 14, according to the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

A woman's fertility starts to decline at age 32 and declines more rapdily after age 37.

Basically, your body is super fertile when you're a teenager. But while a 15-year-old's body may be physically ready to start having babies, the rest of her...not so much. Pregnancy carries high health, emotional, and financial costs for teen moms and their children, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention(CDC). So, biologically-speaking, the best age for a woman to get pregnant is in her twenties. By then, her body is mature enough to actually carry a child—and she's got a solid decade before her fertility starts to decline (that begins at 32 and becomes more rapid after 37, per ACOG).

Really, though, the whole fertility-decreases-as-you-get-0lder thing is no joke. One bummer study published in the journal Human Reproduction found that women in their late thirties are about 50 percent less likely to get pregnant during their most fertile days than women in their early twenties. 

The risk of having a child with Down syndrome at 20 is one in 525; at 40, it's one in 65.

And if you do conceive in your thirties, it can come with more risks: The chance of stillbirth, for example, is higher for women over the age of 35, according to ACOG, as is the risk of chromosomal abnormalities, such as Down syndrome.

There's also a risk of preterm birth, preeclampsia (dangerously high blood pressure), and gestational diabetes in older women, according to ACOG.

Posted
3 hours ago, Rushabhi said:

Naaku matram girl kavali because they are cute. Ee magapillalatho padalem abba. 

.0

Posted
2 minutes ago, Staysafebro said:

Real Talk: Is There A 'Right' Age To Have A Baby?

 

P.S. Can my mom stop talking about my biological clock already?

By Kristen Domonell 

Jul 19, 2018 

Lots of decisions are no-brainers: whether you want fries or a salad with that, for example. (Fries. Always fries.) Wearing a condom for the first time with a new partner is another one.

But deciding when's the right time to have a baby...definitely not so cut-and-dry. (If only there were a crystal ball for this kind of thing, amirite?). The truth: There's no ~perfect~ age to have a baby, so maybe stop with that thinking right now. Every woman's body and life circumstances are different. But there is one truth that's kind of hard to swallow: Women aren't fertile forever. The fact is, some ages are better than others—at least if you're trying to get pregnant. Understanding your fertility, however, can help you make a choice that feels perfect to you.

The best age to have a baby, according to research

Let's get technical for a minute here: A woman is born with all the eggs she'll ever have—about 1 to 2 million of them, according to the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG).

Those numbers decline with age, but as soon as a girl hits puberty and starts releasing those eggs and menstruating, she can get pregnant—between the ages of 10 and 14, according to the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

A woman's fertility starts to decline at age 32 and declines more rapdily after age 37.

Basically, your body is super fertile when you're a teenager. But while a 15-year-old's body may be physically ready to start having babies, the rest of her...not so much. Pregnancy carries high health, emotional, and financial costs for teen moms and their children, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention(CDC). So, biologically-speaking, the best age for a woman to get pregnant is in her twenties. By then, her body is mature enough to actually carry a child—and she's got a solid decade before her fertility starts to decline (that begins at 32 and becomes more rapid after 37, per ACOG).

Really, though, the whole fertility-decreases-as-you-get-0lder thing is no joke. One bummer study published in the journal Human Reproduction found that women in their late thirties are about 50 percent less likely to get pregnant during their most fertile days than women in their early twenties. 

The risk of having a child with Down syndrome at 20 is one in 525; at 40, it's one in 65.

And if you do conceive in your thirties, it can come with more risks: The chance of stillbirth, for example, is higher for women over the age of 35, according to ACOG, as is the risk of chromosomal abnormalities, such as Down syndrome.

There's also a risk of preterm birth, preeclampsia (dangerously high blood pressure), and gestational diabetes in older women, according to ACOG.

 

7 minutes ago, Staysafebro said:

Down Syndrome Risk Factors

 

Researchers have found that it is more likely for an older mother to have reproductive cells with an extra copy of chromosome 21. So an older mother is more likely to have a baby with Down Syndrome than a younger mother.

The likelihood that a woman under age 30 who becomes pregnant will have a baby with Down syndrome is less than one in 1,000, but the chance of having a baby with Down Syndrome increases to 1 in 400 for women who become pregnant at age 35. The likelihood of Down Syndrome continues to increase as a woman ages, so that by age 42, the chance is one in 60 that a pregnant woman will have a baby with Down syndrome, and by age 49, the chance is one in 12.

Because the chances of having a baby with Down Syndrome increase with the age of the mother, many health care providers recommend that women over age 35 have pre-birth testing for the condition. Testing the baby before it is born to see if he or she is likely to have Down Syndrome allows parents and families to prepare for the baby’s special needs. 

Parents who have already have a baby with Down Syndrome or who have abnormalities in their own chromosome 21 are also at higher risk for having a baby with Down Syndrome. 

Topic is about boy vs girl not age of conceiving. Just saying . 

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