{"id":3130,"date":"2013-03-06T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2013-03-06T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/1millionbestdownloads.com\/condition-pregnancy-3-must-have-pregnancy-products\/"},"modified":"2013-03-06T00:00:00","modified_gmt":"2013-03-06T00:00:00","slug":"condition-pregnancy-3-must-have-pregnancy-products","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/1millionbestdownloads.com\/condition-pregnancy-3-must-have-pregnancy-products\/","title":{"rendered":"3 Must-Have Pregnancy Products"},"content":{"rendered":"
This week, I crossed an incredible finish line: my fetus is officially considered "term."<\/p>\n
When we thought I'd miscarried at six weeks, I thought we'd never pass this marker. Now I feel an overwhelming amount of gratitude to the supportive readers and editors of this blog, the friends and family who fed and cared for my children while I suffered from tough pregnancy symptoms such as bleeding <\/a>and fluid leakage, and even some inanimate objects that have made my pregnancy bearable.<\/p>\n Thank you, nasal dilator strips, medicated wipes, and anti-chafing gel, for helping this pregnant lady through her darkest hours.<\/p>\n Nasal dilator strips let me (and my husband) sleep<\/strong> My 50-pound weight gain might have something to do with it. This sonorous effect could be directly related to a pregnant women's weight<\/a>, according to a study published in European Respiratory Journal.<\/p>\n A good night's sleep is the ticket to a healthier pregnancy, as well as combating postpartum depression. But this is much easier said than done, with multiple trips to the bathroom, heartburn, back pain<\/a>, and now sawing logs all night.<\/p>\n After three pregnancies, however, I've found that a carefully applied nasal dilator strip stops my most egregious snoring and makes it easier for me to fall asleep after a bathroom trip—minus all the honking and sniffling.<\/p>\n Medicated wipes: a pregnant girl's best friend<\/strong> A pregnant woman's chance of developing hemorrhoids peaks in the third trimester<\/a>, according to the March of Dimes.<\/p>\n So yes, we glowing mothers-to-be have special problems "down there." On top of this, many of us suffer from alternating constipation and diarrhea (the glamor just doesn't stop). This was the problem that led me to an emergency ultrasound at 14 weeks—when my constipation caused vaginal bleeding. And it's still lurking around to vex me, 23 weeks later.<\/p>\n Additional urine leakage and vaginal discharge can also characterize the third trimester<\/a>, so you can imagine that the constant application of these witch hazel pads has become a necessity in my life. They are simply gentler and more "thorough."<\/p>\n
Snoring<\/a> more than I have in my whole life is one of the less glamorous sides to pregnancy. Snoring is a side effect of narrowing upper airways that can wake us up while shocking and alienating our long-suffering husbands.<\/p>\n
A big stack of flushable medicated wipes has been stationed in our bathroom for many months now, and they've been a lifesaver.<\/p>\n