Guest guest Posted July 1, 2008 Report Share Posted July 1, 2008 Hullo Lolita. LOL, not that amount of time to expell the placenta. but to cut the cord. The lotus procedure can leave the baby connected to the placenta for up to 6 days, to separate on its own. I cant imagine that, but.... Sorry for any confusion. Glad Day ~ Karla in IL Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 1, 2008 Report Share Posted July 1, 2008 Hullo Lolita. LOL, not that amount of time to expell the placenta. but to cut the cord. The lotus procedure can leave the baby connected to the placenta for up to 6 days, to separate on its own. I cant imagine that, but.... Sorry for any confusion. Glad Day ~ Karla in IL Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 1, 2008 Report Share Posted July 1, 2008 At 12:50 PM 7/1/2008, you wrote: >Hullo Lolita. LOL, not that amount of time to expell the placenta. >but to cut the cord. The lotus procedure can leave the baby >connected to the placenta for up to 6 days, to separate on its own. >I cant imagine that, but.... Sorry for any confusion. Glad Day ~ Karla in IL <giggle> Thanks for explaining!! I don't think I'd want to leave a baby connected that long, but it's probably a better choice than the way it's done regularly in hospital! Lolita " Children- take 'em as they run- You kin bet on, ev'ry one! Treat 'em right and reco'nize Human souls is just one size. " Whitcomb Riley 1849-1916 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 1, 2008 Report Share Posted July 1, 2008 There are other reasons for the lotus birth than just the physical aspects... children who have been birthed in a lotus birth do not experience the too common 'birth trauma' that almost all children experience in some form today. Apparently, under hypnosis, they have very positive recollections of their birth. Families who have had children born both conventionally and through lotus birth say the children have experienced some symptoms of birth trauma and the ones who had lotus births do not. They are emotionally different people. Again, under some form of hypnosis, they found that the lotus birth children did not experience birth trauma in the slightest while the ones who were born conventionally did. At least even the mildest form of birth trauma occurs to nearly every child born today, although the symptoms are usually not apparent. You can do more research if you're interested since this is getting quite off topic On Tue, Jul 1, 2008 at 1:02 PM, Lolita Cook <lita46953@...> wrote: At 12:50 PM 7/1/2008, you wrote: >Hullo Lolita. LOL, not that amount of time to expell the placenta. >but to cut the cord. The lotus procedure can leave the baby >connected to the placenta for up to 6 days, to separate on its own. >I cant imagine that, but.... Sorry for any confusion. Glad Day ~ Karla in IL <giggle> Thanks for explaining!! I don't think I'd want to leave a baby connected that long, but it's probably a better choice than the way it's done regularly in hospital! Lolita " Children- take 'em as they run- You kin bet on, ev'ry one! Treat 'em right and reco'nize Human souls is just one size. " Whitcomb Riley 1849-1916 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 1, 2008 Report Share Posted July 1, 2008 There are other reasons for the lotus birth than just the physical aspects... children who have been birthed in a lotus birth do not experience the too common 'birth trauma' that almost all children experience in some form today. Apparently, under hypnosis, they have very positive recollections of their birth. Families who have had children born both conventionally and through lotus birth say the children have experienced some symptoms of birth trauma and the ones who had lotus births do not. They are emotionally different people. Again, under some form of hypnosis, they found that the lotus birth children did not experience birth trauma in the slightest while the ones who were born conventionally did. At least even the mildest form of birth trauma occurs to nearly every child born today, although the symptoms are usually not apparent. You can do more research if you're interested since this is getting quite off topic On Tue, Jul 1, 2008 at 1:02 PM, Lolita Cook <lita46953@...> wrote: At 12:50 PM 7/1/2008, you wrote: >Hullo Lolita. LOL, not that amount of time to expell the placenta. >but to cut the cord. The lotus procedure can leave the baby >connected to the placenta for up to 6 days, to separate on its own. >I cant imagine that, but.... Sorry for any confusion. Glad Day ~ Karla in IL <giggle> Thanks for explaining!! I don't think I'd want to leave a baby connected that long, but it's probably a better choice than the way it's done regularly in hospital! Lolita " Children- take 'em as they run- You kin bet on, ev'ry one! Treat 'em right and reco'nize Human souls is just one size. " Whitcomb Riley 1849-1916 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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