How pregnancy dramatically resculpts the brain - BBC REEL

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BBC Global

BBC Global

Күн бұрын

Part 2: A Changing Brain
There are many hidden forces at play that shape a new mother's identity, biology and physical self. Melissa Hogenboom, BBC science journalist and author looks at the latest neuroscientific understanding of how the brain changes during pregnancy and motherhood, and the positive impact this can have on new mothers.
This is part 2 of 3
Part 1: How motherhood changes your sense of self • How motherhood changes...
Part 3: Why the Dutch are more relaxed when it comes to parenting • Why the Dutch are more...
#bbcreel #bbc #bbcnews

Пікірлер: 343
@Sekhmet19aspie
@Sekhmet19aspie 2 жыл бұрын
It makes me understand why having a miscarriage was so rough for me, and so many other women. The brain litterally changes and gets ready but in the end we never get to experience motherhood.
@sarahduncan7345
@sarahduncan7345 2 жыл бұрын
Or maybe bc our baby died ??
@mabelsue123
@mabelsue123 2 жыл бұрын
I pray not “never”! Miscarriages are a lot more common than people realize.
@carolinpurayidom4570
@carolinpurayidom4570 2 жыл бұрын
You already have you are mother
@mamapegg
@mamapegg 2 жыл бұрын
I'm sorry for your loss 😢❤
@astralcamisado648
@astralcamisado648 2 жыл бұрын
I'm so sorry you went through that and for your loss.
@patinoa97
@patinoa97 2 жыл бұрын
We also need to talk more about Postpartum Depression, because many people aren't even aware of it.
@bernadettemusa3182
@bernadettemusa3182 2 жыл бұрын
Its not taken serious and we are out here suffering because of ignorance. Once the baby is born and the mother is able to stand and move around we are easily forgotten. We need mental care
@SarahR2D2
@SarahR2D2 2 жыл бұрын
Its think its talked about too much and overdiagnosed.
@amysantiago7065
@amysantiago7065 2 жыл бұрын
@@SarahR2D2 lol bye
@kamif3187
@kamif3187 2 жыл бұрын
My mental health declined not after birth but nearly a year after. I was shocked myself. As such as I wanted my child and committed to him fully, of a sudden, I couldn't move, I was stuck in a dark hole, and froze for a couple of days. Well, good job, father was on board and took care of our child... I was completely worn out, physically and mentally. I cried and screamed inside of my soul (silently) as I couldn't make myself keep going. The horrible feeling of guilt... I recovered, but ... it was tough at the time.
@sherrygrace960
@sherrygrace960 2 жыл бұрын
@@SarahR2D2 yeah I think too many things are over diagnosed these days ; we’re a lot stronger and more resilient than we think we are/allow ourselves to be
@cloverg7821
@cloverg7821 2 жыл бұрын
I was bad before but ever since having a baby I have found that I constantly forget my vocabulary and it makes having conversa with people really difficult. I'm constantly apologising to people i speak to because I keep forgetting what words I want to use! It's so frustrating 😫
@JustinL614
@JustinL614 2 жыл бұрын
My wife is very smart and has a PhD. Since getting pregnant she has had loss of memory and lack of focus at times. We jokingly call it "Baby Brain" so this is interesting to see.
@blackbox8490
@blackbox8490 2 жыл бұрын
how has this impacted her work performance, do you know?
@dDoodle788
@dDoodle788 2 жыл бұрын
I don't want to sound rude but are you sure that you are helping her out and not letting her fend for herself while pregnant, because stress and general tiredness can do things like that
@TheLeijosa
@TheLeijosa Жыл бұрын
Same! Going through it a second time too!
@listahandverk7429
@listahandverk7429 Жыл бұрын
@@dDoodle788 she would have a harder time whether he's a good husband or not. This video paints the whole thing in a positive light which is a nice, but these massive changes necessarily have to happen at the _temporary_ expense of faculties deemed less necessary or even hindrances by mother nature (and of course these are just general trends), such as ability to comprehend or visualize structures and, weirdly, both short-term memory and orientation skills. I'd have thought those two would be even more important during and immediate after pregnancy than before a child enters the picture. If I remember correctly, the parts of the brain responsible for social inhibition are also reduced. This would be a positive, because the mother should not be holding back for fear of social embarrassment when she deems something a threat. Now, one might politicise this and say this antifeminine propaganda or that partners, family, social structures, etc. are to blame, but when you're in the health- and caretaker- trades, these things are a) obviously true and b) vitally important to know for proper care and empathy. In fact, this is one of the rare occasions where medicine is looking at female-specific trends. Most other studies are heavily weighted towards male test subjects, seeing as their hormone balance is more dependably even and predictable. In fact, these studies should have been done on women _decades_ ago; They'd already been done on female animals before anyone looked at a woman's head
@karenpowell3800
@karenpowell3800 Жыл бұрын
Why she risk her brain/ body? Couldn’t she get a surrogate? Why did she risk her PhD brain/life?
@Mandeee
@Mandeee 2 жыл бұрын
Pregnancy itself made me more empathetic. Before I could easily handle stories about death and things of that sort, but since it upsets me so much more than it used to. Not to mention the thoughts that come with a greater need to survive for my baby
@gueyshart5476
@gueyshart5476 2 жыл бұрын
Omg me too! I get emotional about certain types of news. I have to tell my hubby not to tell me about news involving children of all ages 😑😑
@shaynewks
@shaynewks 2 жыл бұрын
Motherhood definitely changed my outlook on child abuse! I knew it was wrong before but now it breaks my soul when I see cases of it.
@cloverg7821
@cloverg7821 2 жыл бұрын
I'm exactly the same! I'm so much more sensitive then i used to be since having a baby
@googleuser6275
@googleuser6275 2 жыл бұрын
That is true for the first few years.
@safaaclermont1560
@safaaclermont1560 2 жыл бұрын
Yes, the need to survive! I have been obsessed and anxious about this since giving birth.
@az956
@az956 2 жыл бұрын
Curious what a full time single parent’s brain changes might be, if it differs from a dual parent household?
@xoxo3588
@xoxo3588 2 жыл бұрын
This is a very interesting suggestion. I'm curious as well.
@Abcdefghijajajaja
@Abcdefghijajajaja 2 жыл бұрын
Doubt it
@sahriestar
@sahriestar 2 жыл бұрын
Hmm... I can't say because I'm a full- time single parent 😆 😉
@chemisek2774
@chemisek2774 2 жыл бұрын
This is it right here 👍🏾💖
@annekeburns380
@annekeburns380 2 жыл бұрын
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@kasban8672
@kasban8672 2 жыл бұрын
I started feeling changes in my brain and my mind reprioritizing things for me as early as the first trimester. It takes a lot of work for our bodies to grow these humans so it's no wonder. Women and moms are wonderful ❤️
@devorah935
@devorah935 2 жыл бұрын
💗❤️🌹
@chilledjuice
@chilledjuice 2 жыл бұрын
I felt the same, and 3 years on my brain is still having trouble. For example I was always a good writer, but after my baby was born I attempted grad school twice in the past 2 years and it’s just not the same, feels so much harder to think and write papers.
@silverdove88
@silverdove88 2 жыл бұрын
Participating as an adult in pregnancy, birth and infant and childhood development is such are such powerful experiences. Many people who have experienced this could have told you about many of these changes. It’s really nice also get science to vet this and create a stronger collective understanding.
@gemmacasasmarimon6315
@gemmacasasmarimon6315 2 жыл бұрын
I find this documentary really interesting. I absolutely agree that hormonal levels may interefere with brain formation and mental abilities. I would like to share my experience with it, as it may be helpful to the scientists. From a young age, I wrote poetry and prose and I even had some school prizes, but all my creativity vanished with puberty. Some years after my last pregnancy, it suddenly came back. I have started blaming hormones for it from an uninformed point of view, but your study absolutely makes me feel my guess may be right.
@MsFunkelstern
@MsFunkelstern 2 жыл бұрын
May I ask If you had a girl? I had a boy and experienced that my logical and rational ability of thinking increased while as I had my girls my emotional were a mess but I was more creative.
@user-od4zo1ow6d
@user-od4zo1ow6d 2 жыл бұрын
I am pregnant with a girl now and I’m experiencing emotions like I never did with my son. I feel way more irritable, have dramatic highs and lows. There has to be something to this because I hear this from many women.
@rektcompass6218
@rektcompass6218 2 жыл бұрын
There's no agreeing/disagreeing that hormones effect the brain, that's literally how the brain works.
@jenivettebigham7060
@jenivettebigham7060 2 жыл бұрын
@@user-od4zo1ow6d omg I'm pregnant with my 2nd (only 8 weeks) with my son I felt calm. But right now I'm so irritated and moody! I feel like there is. A firecracker in there
@giuliaddd
@giuliaddd 2 жыл бұрын
Well I experienced the opposite...before having my daughter I studied humanities at the university and that fueled my creativity and my numerous projects; that partially continued during pregnancy, but stopped altogether in my child's first year - It was like my brain needed the time to adjust to the new responsabilities and routine before taking up something else, which later did. Now I'm 18 week pregnant with my second child and I can say that the moment I found out about the pregnancy my brain immediately started to revise its priorities and I wasn't able to put a single line onto paper😅.
@LivingDead53
@LivingDead53 2 жыл бұрын
I've never been pregnant. I helped take care of my siblings growing up due to our age gap. I am automatically drawn to crying babies though, without even thinking about it.
@SAHMmiller
@SAHMmiller 2 жыл бұрын
I want to know if brain changes happening when you work in childcare. I love and care for 6 week - 12 month children. I feel stress when they all cry. I feel happiness and love when they smile and are happy. I love my job.
@CutieYoli
@CutieYoli 2 жыл бұрын
I suppose of husbands brain changes the more time they spend raising the children despite not giving birth themselves, would the same apply to people working in child care? it seems like it would, thats a very interesting question!
@indie_princess
@indie_princess 2 жыл бұрын
This is odd because after I became a mom I noticed I became more dexterous with my fingers and could suddenly do French braids easily and other things came easy to me that never did before.
@hunterG60k
@hunterG60k 2 жыл бұрын
Humans have evolved to raise children communally, it's unsurprising that many woman find the job overwhelming when expected to do it alone or while also working. I'm also really interested to know how many cases of post natal depression are actually PTSD due to their birth experience.
@alekm.5377
@alekm.5377 2 жыл бұрын
or something akin to TBI in the changes to brain structure along with the up and then down of hormone levels during an post birth.
@sasi5841
@sasi5841 2 жыл бұрын
Correction: with extended family members, not Communally In old times those two things were synanomous, but in modern times that distinction need to be made when it comes to wording.
@taylorfrink1182
@taylorfrink1182 2 жыл бұрын
@@sasi5841 not even neccesarily.. many cultures evolved as entire communities taking care of the children of said community
@sasi5841
@sasi5841 2 жыл бұрын
@@taylorfrink1182 give examples of cultures where people of unrelated origins raised children together. I am sure there were cultures like that, just like how there were cultures that remained as hunter-gatherers even during the industrial age. But they became irrelevant or extinct as time went on. Most cultures that manage to advance were ones where the extended family played a significant role in child rearing. The people alive today (in developed/developing countries) were all from cultures where the extended family played a significant role in child rearing. Essentially the extended family was the community. However in modern times, where people are very atomized, community usually refers to your neighbors, who are more often than not completely unrelated to you.
@dshe8637
@dshe8637 2 жыл бұрын
Laura, exactly so
@JoeHoboBro
@JoeHoboBro 2 жыл бұрын
What about after miscarriage? I truly felt that my brain was different for about a year after, I felt it took me about a year for my brain to feel back to " normal "
@stayathomemarine
@stayathomemarine 2 жыл бұрын
As someone who experienced a stillbirth it is almost a sick joke. Like, our brains are wired to listen to a crying baby, yearn to hold and nurse a sweet baby but there is no baby. It is really distressing.
@brendacastro3976
@brendacastro3976 2 жыл бұрын
What about moms who develop postpartum depression? Because I feel as if my brain has completely stopped functioning after becoming a mom
@h3artands0uLL
@h3artands0uLL 2 жыл бұрын
Is that a result of PPD or different from it?
@ketzalzin6321
@ketzalzin6321 2 жыл бұрын
Same here, a lot of brain fog.
@Jacqueline_Mondragon
@Jacqueline_Mondragon 2 жыл бұрын
Same here!
@sahriestar
@sahriestar 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah I am surprised this video wasn't about the brain blurp that comes along for the ride. I find I doubt my memories whereas before I rarely did (& the doubt is justified because I haven't forgotten anything of importance). Bizarre.
@linlovecraft2023
@linlovecraft2023 2 жыл бұрын
Can like anyone explain to me how it feel like. Doctors talk about symptoms but I feel like the symptoms are so cut and dry.
@springsterhood6853
@springsterhood6853 2 жыл бұрын
I don’t feel brain growth. Just lack of sleep and stress stress stress. And a partner who stresses me when he needs to do his part in parenting.
@babiifrshj07
@babiifrshj07 2 жыл бұрын
Ugh, that sucks. I hope that you get the support you deserve because even with it’s stress and hardships, being a parent is great. That said, if my husband didn’t help and wasn’t as hands on as he is, we probably only would’ve only had one 😂 especially because of my anxiety and being prone to stress in general... Ironically less of an issue with 3 going on 4 kids AND a supportive partner.
@largefamilychaos1837
@largefamilychaos1837 2 жыл бұрын
I totally get you. My husband wasn't even at the birth of our son because he said he didn't feel well so, I went to my induction myself. We have other children so he stayed with them but I had someone to watch them. Im deeply hurt but need him to help pay the bills. I don't know if I can stay with him after this but I can't support my kids alone right now. I really had hoped that he could be there for us. My son is 10 days old right now.
@kyipasbeautyminati4172
@kyipasbeautyminati4172 2 жыл бұрын
@@largefamilychaos1837 my husband was mean to me when I was going through c section..he didn't co-operate and he was extremely mean to me and my mom..I feel so sad because it was him who wanted the baby and when it was time to get the baby into this world he was acting strange...I can't leave him because my child needs his father...I am tolerating alot for my baby
@largefamilychaos1837
@largefamilychaos1837 2 жыл бұрын
@@kyipasbeautyminati4172 so sorry, your husband treated you that way. My husband wanted this baby too and it was a boy so I don't know what happened when it was time to have him. We woman should be protected and cherished during this time in our life. All that we go through and all the work we put into caring for these little ones. You deserve to be loved.
@veganpelosanimais1216
@veganpelosanimais1216 2 жыл бұрын
Amen sister. My husband is my second kid,as he does nothing except for playing online games and sleeping
@penguinista
@penguinista 2 жыл бұрын
Human babies require an insane amount of care to mature to their full potential. Humans of both sexes have been designed to take care of children. People of both sexes describe having a child as a turning point in their outlook on the world, so it would stand to reason there are changes in the brain behind that. One of the unusual characteristics of humans is the care males demonstrate toward children. If we focus solely on the maternal care side of the equation, we risk pigeonholing females into child care roles as well as shutting men out of them.
@deuscoromat742
@deuscoromat742 2 жыл бұрын
Propaganda by omission. They never mention the fact that the changes in males are nowhere near as drastic as the ones in females. It is impossible for a male to undergo the same physiological changes as a female during pregnancy. A disgusting use of hedging that seeks to negate sexual dimorphism in human beings for political purposes.
@elizabethhenning778
@elizabethhenning778 2 жыл бұрын
@@deuscoromat742 Cry harder
@ld3354
@ld3354 2 жыл бұрын
@@deuscoromat742 …….. what?
@karate4348
@karate4348 2 жыл бұрын
agree with comment about men aswell as women and pigeonholing. agree with what?
@snowfoxxie
@snowfoxxie 2 жыл бұрын
If you watch the whole video it talks about men and their “brain boost” too. I wonder how it works for childcare givers. Do we have super brains? Lol 😂 anyway we need to support our dads~ they do a fantastic job. I really look up to mine :) I’m just wondering if single men look up a lot of stuff/info about having children and if there is enough content out there that supports this- is it all just women talking about having children to women? Honestly, we can’t live in a society anymore that only supports motherhood due to everyone working- we need our dads more than ever. Things are freaking hard. It’s teamwork or no work. Ideally we would work less and spend more time with our children. I would like to see that.. but it’s just getting harder and harder. 😑
@jJust_NO_
@jJust_NO_ 2 жыл бұрын
it could be true that childrearing and childbirth influences the mothers brain age because of the feeling good hormones being secreted or produced by the experiences. yet the effect could be opposite either especially to teen, unsupported moms living in impoverished areas. the pregnancy and the chores of caring coupled with financial stress deteriorates and ages them prematurely. at least in third world countries like mine, thats all i witnessed. so pregnancy and family life has never been a top priority of mine. my exposure to such experiences did not bode well into my memory. in fact at 33, childless and jobless, im at my healthiest mentally and physically because ive given time and energy to focus on me and really fathom whats life for me not whats being imposed on me. thus given the time, education and awareness i developed along the way, i now am capable of envisioning a wholesome family of my mine or a productive life.. .thanks internet
@justme8108
@justme8108 2 жыл бұрын
Women who give birth to several children may also receive left over stem cells being absorbed into their bodies from the stem cells of the children and the baby-capsules, thus making the woman stay younger looking (inner-stem cell health).
@LvUhcX
@LvUhcX 2 жыл бұрын
Interesting !! Does this apply to pregnancy or only if given birth ?, ( does miscarriage abortion or stillbirth count?)
@zhannadaae5608
@zhannadaae5608 2 жыл бұрын
In Latvia we go on materniny leave on 30 week of pregnancy. If you are a working mother you come back to workplace only after a year from the moment a child was born. All this time we receive financial support from employer which ir 80% of salary. I heard that in other countries women start to work straight away after giving birth because they have no other option. I wonder how does this affect a woman’s brain when you can’t fully devote yourself to baby and have to combine both work and raising a baby(especially in the first year of adaptation).
@waterandsand4845
@waterandsand4845 2 жыл бұрын
America is terrible, I went back to work at 6 weeks postpartum. I literally felt like I was dying.
@JustinL614
@JustinL614 2 жыл бұрын
@@waterandsand4845 America used to be much different not too long ago.. Women used to stay at home as caretakers for children and households. Women chose to have careers. My wife wanted to not only have kids, pursue her PhD and have a career so I told her that's her choice but don't complain that you're tired. This isn't America's fault this is 100% the fault of women
@waterandsand4845
@waterandsand4845 2 жыл бұрын
@@JustinL614 i didn’t mean America the country is terrible. I just meant that American’s maternity leave is terrible. Also, I’m not tired. I felt like I was dying because I missed my child. I have to work because I have bills- staying at home is a luxury. Not everyone can stay home.
@kleinemaus6094
@kleinemaus6094 2 жыл бұрын
Hi there! Ukrainian American here! I'm a mom of 4, with number 5 on the way, and I can tell you from personal experience how badly it affects a woman. With my first three children, I only had 6 weeks after birth to recover and be with my children. I had severe PPD, and with my 3rd child I ended up being hospitalized for a week for it. It broke my heart. It still breaks my heart. With my fourth I had 10 weeks full paid leave, which was INFINITELY better and I had no PPD issues this time-although I firmly believe, even being a conservative, that America needs maternity policies on par with what you have in Latvia. It's a crime that we expect our women to jump right back into work after such a vastly emotional and physical experience of bringing a human into the world.
@kleinemaus6094
@kleinemaus6094 2 жыл бұрын
@justin if we were able, I would stay home in a heartbeat. Due to our situation I cannot. It IS on America. I am staunchly pro life and one thing I agree on with the pro choice crowd is that we NEED better maternity policies. We are simply a society where both sexes work outside the home more often than not, either by choice or necessity, and we are severely lagging behind the rest of the world in caring for our new mothers.
@ksy4747
@ksy4747 2 жыл бұрын
After 7 years of motherhood with 2 kids I feel anything but focused or successful.
@wheatstonebridge
@wheatstonebridge 11 ай бұрын
Huh
@victoriadiaz6710
@victoriadiaz6710 2 жыл бұрын
My son is 2 and a few weeks ago I woke up in anxious panic thinking he wasn’t breathing. I shook him till he stirred. I hadn’t experienced that since ages ago. And postpartum depression kicked my butt too. I’m at the stage now where I have to just push myself to do things it’s getting easier
@kamif3187
@kamif3187 2 жыл бұрын
oh, bless you Victoria. I understand you so well. I slept on the floor beside my baby in moses basket and kept checking on his breathing. I felt reassured when heard those squeaky noises, but when became quiet, I was immediately alert. When he overgrew moses basket, I had to transfer him to his bedroom, to his cot. (I had no space for a cot in my bedroom, either no space for myself in his bedroom, so we had to be separated; but the rooms were next to each other). I was very anxious! However, my baby immediately adapted to a new bed. I kept checking him on camera, whenever he turned, made noise, etc. And several times checking him in person if I awoke and he wouldn't move. He just turning his 2nd birthday, and I feel more confident about his safety now. I guess, you experiencing similar things that I did a year ago. What I can advise you... and it's not easy to do... if, you have a chance (safe child care; I don't know? baby's father, your mum, sister, best friend, agency care worker), give yourself a break... even if it's a couple of hours per week, such as indulging bath, walking on cost, or spoil yourself with shopping or hair change style/color might help. But you need to do this!! Because, if you will still keep pushing yourself, you will get beyond or above your level of tolerance, then would be difficult to say what it would take to bring you back on the track. Take care of yourself!
@victoriadiaz6710
@victoriadiaz6710 2 жыл бұрын
@@kamif3187 You have no idea how reassuring I felt with your words. Thank you so much I feel very accompanied now in my day that I’ve read this. I appreciate so much you taking time to answer to my comment. I’ve started taking those kind of steps just a few months ago. It still burdens me to do something for myself and even when I do it it hangs on my conscience like I did something bad. Pray for me so that I can keep pushing. Especially because we are planning for another baby very soon trust me I want to be a mother to other children but it’s just been having such a hard time adjusting to my first one.
@kamif3187
@kamif3187 2 жыл бұрын
@@victoriadiaz6710Don't rush with plans for expanding family yet. Look, you are vulnerable at this time, and keep pushing yourself up to meet someone's (or maybe even yours) agenda won't help your family. Think about your existing child. If you will keep pushing, it could compromise his/her needs and quality of his/her life. I do understand, you want have a "full picture" of the family. But, realistically, there are no circumstances which would support that plan. Do this what is needed to do now. And future will reviled itself, not need to push it. Just be... and take care of yourself!
@Homesowing
@Homesowing 18 күн бұрын
When i get pregnant my brain functions exceptionally well and i get a huge boost in my senses ,over all i feel a vigorous happiness and strength.
@angi1479
@angi1479 2 жыл бұрын
since I have been pregnant I have experienced a loss of hand grip when holding on to things. Stuff just slip out of my hands. Also my reflex is at its worst. When I was attending one of my driving classes I was steering wrong in times of obstruction. A normal reflex action would to be to steer away from hazard but I was actually steering into. I had to stop learning and now I am waiting to give birth and recover to resume.
@merlinthomas7869
@merlinthomas7869 2 жыл бұрын
Upon seeing this study , what came through my mind is the number of elderlies in the nursing home , many grannies there end up because of dementia , if as u say , having many children can make your brain younger then , their dementia should not be coming at all , but then , they all remember their pregnancies and the conversations they had during that time . ( I am a nurse )
@chistovmaxim
@chistovmaxim 2 жыл бұрын
>having many children can make your brain younger then , their dementia should not be coming at all obviously, this mechanism only delays getting old but does not stop it forever - since you don't grow children all your life.
@mikochild2
@mikochild2 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah that part seemed strange to me as well...especially when they mentioned that "mommy brain" includes forgetfulness.
@wheatstonebridge
@wheatstonebridge 11 ай бұрын
There is a study that shows that pregnancy REDUCES grey matter and it doesnt come back. Mothers are much more likely to get dementia and alzheimers because of this fact than childfree women.
@mamapegg
@mamapegg 2 жыл бұрын
Gave me a sixth sense, fr My boobs would leak at work and was the same time my tiny one got hurt! Crazy how connected we are to our kids
@mindyb1986
@mindyb1986 2 жыл бұрын
My son is going to be 2 soon ( less than 2 weeks). He has been giving me more and more temper tantrums lately and I can feel the stress and frustration take over me. Being a parent is a lot of work and stress. More than I knew before being one.
@LvUhcX
@LvUhcX 2 жыл бұрын
that’s why parents need a lot of help children are hard
@brittanygulker2051
@brittanygulker2051 2 жыл бұрын
“My children are regularly looked after by my husband.” Uhhh you mean your husband watches his own kids?? Hahaha
@piperdragon3200
@piperdragon3200 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah why when a guy takes care of his own kids it's said as if he is babysitting them? No, he is just being a dad!
@kamif3187
@kamif3187 2 жыл бұрын
Her husband doesn't have to be a biological father automatically. And you have no idea about that family circumstances, so maybe, I kindly ask you, to consider, if your comment was actually adequate. From my perspective, you were judgemental and narrowly viewing... Maybe just stand back, and look at the bigger picture before you make a judgment?? Is it make sense for you??
@piperdragon3200
@piperdragon3200 2 жыл бұрын
@@kamif3187 At very least he is a stepfather. But there is a tendency in society as a whole to imply that a man is watching his kids while a mom is taking care of them. It's annoying!
@desertmoonlee6631
@desertmoonlee6631 2 жыл бұрын
But not all women bond with their children unfortunately. There should be some studies why some women can’t do that and live with guilt which make many women scared to have children because of the fear of not bonding
@babiifrshj07
@babiifrshj07 2 жыл бұрын
Yes, I agree. I’d love to read some good, fleshed out studies on the subject, too. I wonder if it has to do with the nurture or lack thereof from their own childhood? Very interesting, for sure. (Edited for spelling)
@desertmoonlee6631
@desertmoonlee6631 2 жыл бұрын
@@babiifrshj07 there is many things about women’s body and childbearing we don’t know because men were running all fields for a long time and simply many didn’t care about us but now i hope there will be more studies and answers since women are educated now and we can learn more 👍
@iseeyou2810
@iseeyou2810 2 жыл бұрын
Mental health and postpartum are some of the reason. I have seen woman who got molested as child who didn't even want the baby near her. So many things happened to women and mostly no one cares.
@desertmoonlee6631
@desertmoonlee6631 2 жыл бұрын
@@iseeyou2810 that’s what so sad no one really cares about women and when we complain they won’t take us seriously just call us crazy or other words because they just don’t get it. Women from all ages keep being blamed for everything because we are simply women and still not seen as human in the eyes of many incels
@Nikki30288
@Nikki30288 2 жыл бұрын
Hormones ... they truly suck. It's not that they don't love their children but its that their hormones are raging so quick and fast their reasoning goes out the window
@MotoTvWoodsFarm
@MotoTvWoodsFarm 2 жыл бұрын
interesting and fascinating
@AlfredBarron
@AlfredBarron 2 жыл бұрын
What is that classical music at the end of the video? Amazing. Good video too
@venkonikolichev
@venkonikolichev 2 жыл бұрын
Vivaldi - Winter ( Four Season)
@AlfredBarron
@AlfredBarron 2 жыл бұрын
@@venkonikolichev thanks mate
@mramirez5239
@mramirez5239 2 жыл бұрын
It's not a contradiction. It's likely the structural growth helps to *counter* or offer brain balance to "mommy brain" bc that state is REAL.
@lilacmelody2021
@lilacmelody2021 2 жыл бұрын
The music in the background is cring when trying to watch this. Would be better without the music getting loud and distracting from the message
@RobyVicary
@RobyVicary 2 жыл бұрын
What is that music in the background?
@weshasawi
@weshasawi 2 жыл бұрын
I wish with all my heart that I become a mother soon
@persnickety369
@persnickety369 6 ай бұрын
Sleep deprivation plays a huge role in brain function as well.
@emmahill6832
@emmahill6832 2 жыл бұрын
What's with all the imagery of women swimming underneath deep water? It felt very ominous and threatening.
@Mandeee
@Mandeee 2 жыл бұрын
They were talking ab mental health problems & stress
@reverethepatriot1776
@reverethepatriot1776 2 жыл бұрын
Pregnancy on every level is such a miracle. It is so divinely orchestrated. From the woman, to the development of the baby, it’s astounding.
@user-zy4wv7yx1z
@user-zy4wv7yx1z 2 жыл бұрын
Billions of years of evolution will do that.
@ChiakiShirakawa
@ChiakiShirakawa 2 жыл бұрын
妊娠中のつわりが酷かったし、会社も行政も何もかも過酷で、早産帝王切開で、超絶痛みの後陣痛。 シガニーウィーバーさんのエイリアンの映画に親近感わいた。 キモい映画だと思ってたけど、腹の中で生き物育てて、切って取り出すとこは同じ。 人によっては選別して胎児ぶっ殺し放題の対象にするし。 私の場合は、甘い夢や期待より責任感の方が役立った。 赤ちゃんはレジ袋をクシャクシャ丸める音が好きだっていうから、よくクシャクシャしてたけど、同時期に、産み捨てられてごみ袋に捨てられた赤ちゃんの気持ちを歌った歌を聴いて心に刻まれた。 なぜ私をごみ袋に捨てたの?何か悪いことした?って悲しい気持ちと愛情を求める歌。 私も妊娠発覚後にすぐに医師二人から中絶示唆されて絶望したから、切実。ずっと忘れられない。 人間性を根本から破壊する現代の医療モドキには絶望と憎悪しかわかない。
@jackb1969
@jackb1969 2 жыл бұрын
Is there a study on the father's brain?
@rainbowpandasays8851
@rainbowpandasays8851 2 жыл бұрын
2:50 .. did you watch the video ?
@loveh0tel
@loveh0tel 2 жыл бұрын
I would also love to see this for fathers. :)
@lex2.0
@lex2.0 2 жыл бұрын
Motherhood is hard
@professionalboycottservice7872
@professionalboycottservice7872 8 ай бұрын
That's why don't breed and don't rawdog
@rozhin6055
@rozhin6055 2 жыл бұрын
I wonder if there's any research done on people who's parents have babies when they (the other kids) are teenagers! 🤔
@ZavalaLove
@ZavalaLove 2 жыл бұрын
It's challenging, fun, different and work. My mom was 40 when she had my youngest brother. I was 15, older sis 16 and younger brother 12.
@Opinions567
@Opinions567 2 жыл бұрын
They should have shown us baby pictures
@Nikki30288
@Nikki30288 2 жыл бұрын
Lol
@MommyKnowsBest
@MommyKnowsBest 2 жыл бұрын
"Mommy Brain" is definitely a real thing! Check out our most recent video where we asked out mom community their best mom brain moments! ❤
@apelsinuke
@apelsinuke 2 жыл бұрын
erm, it's scary already to go through the body changes and the trauma of giving birth, ofc it's going to change one's brain.
@titaemira
@titaemira 2 жыл бұрын
Not all birth are traumatic, some are wonderful 😊
@Kriistall7
@Kriistall7 2 жыл бұрын
Pregnancy and birth/postpartum were the most joyful and peaceful times of my life.
@veronicav575
@veronicav575 2 жыл бұрын
Well, women have only been doing it for literally thousands of years. It’s a natural process of life. Are you scared every time you poop? Yeah, things can go wrong, people die of bowel impaction every day, but that doesn’t mean you should live in fear of it. I’ve had 5 babies, completely naturally, so I should know.
@scullymariam1922
@scullymariam1922 2 жыл бұрын
@@Kriistall7 how so? Wasn’t giving birth painful? Or did you make use of an epidural?
@flannelpillowcase6475
@flannelpillowcase6475 2 жыл бұрын
nice seeing men helping to raise their children and helping them form healthy mental health which they'll get to carry with them into adulthood. i didn't get that myself.
@lunnalocca9376
@lunnalocca9376 2 жыл бұрын
People would say I have pregnancy brain all the time. Now it all makes sense lol
@BeanDar
@BeanDar 2 ай бұрын
My ex changed a lot for the worse when after she gave birth. Her whole demeanor and personality changed and she became abusive. I knew her brain had changed because she wasn’t the same sweet girl I once knew
@michellethiesen7972
@michellethiesen7972 10 ай бұрын
Wait so when i have a baby I'll become even more forgetful? Oh dear god help us all! 😂😂😂
@ngerstner753
@ngerstner753 2 жыл бұрын
it makes sense that a creator would design our brains to change with such a big life change.
@al.the.
@al.the. 2 жыл бұрын
creator 🤦🏻 🤢
@goldrays4862
@goldrays4862 2 жыл бұрын
Imagine believing everything can come from nothing 😂😂😂😂🤢🤢🤢
@user-zy4wv7yx1z
@user-zy4wv7yx1z 2 жыл бұрын
OR we evolved that way. It makes sense that we evolved to provide care for our young so our species would survive
@user-zy4wv7yx1z
@user-zy4wv7yx1z 2 жыл бұрын
@@goldrays4862 but your god came from nothing and that makes sense? Or your god existed forever and that make more sense?
@weekendnomad5038
@weekendnomad5038 2 жыл бұрын
I’ve had brain fog since like 2 ,weeks pregnant I get it bad after
@lone8636
@lone8636 2 жыл бұрын
Sadly, this is not only about women who become mothers. The video is also used as propaganda, but doesn’t go into backing up the information.
@LvUhcX
@LvUhcX 2 жыл бұрын
Propaganda on what?
@charlottemarceau8062
@charlottemarceau8062 2 жыл бұрын
I mean work is boring anyway, it makes sense that as animals when we have more important things to do we find other tasks less interesting and give them less attentions.
@asamanyworlds3772
@asamanyworlds3772 2 жыл бұрын
Yup yup mommy brain
@cshortize
@cshortize 2 жыл бұрын
I have a prolactinoma, as a male, producing prolactin a pregnancy hormone. My wife started noticing me happily organising things and putting away, something I had never done before. This was nesting I guess. There were many changes, many were quite pleasant but perhaps short term memory loss when the levels were high not so great. The bonding hormone is wonderful, and I have extreme peace from time to time. However I also got some cluckiness, and a testosterone driven version of "give me that baby" is pretty crazy. I never had the brain scan as I don't have negative side-effects but the doctor says 99% likely prolactinoma from blood tests. Some strategies have kept the levels pretty normal for a while now.
@kathgraham2758
@kathgraham2758 2 жыл бұрын
There are a thousand, probably thousands of things a mother designed to be primary caregiver for a child, is doing which have not yet been brought into our awareness yet. You might get a better awareness after being full time Mum for a while. Even after the children are grown, there will be aspects we are still unaware of. If we overlook what nature designed, we are at risk of abandoning things that have made us so successful at raising youngsters, before we are even aware what they are. The working mother, childcare catastrophe, is currently unfolding. We will probably survive it.... But perhaps as people with lesser human capacity.
@elizabethhenning778
@elizabethhenning778 2 жыл бұрын
And nearly every comment on this thread is misogynistic.
@deuscoromat742
@deuscoromat742 2 жыл бұрын
Exaggeration. Are you a female mayhaps?
@euthanasiadumbwaiter2520
@euthanasiadumbwaiter2520 2 жыл бұрын
@@deuscoromat742 Damn why is it so hard for you to just be compassionate? Women are people, and we are allowed to call out assholes when we see it. I’m tired of “males” (it’s really gross to refer to people by their genitals, btw) like you that weren’t raised right being unleashed on the rest of us. Shame on your parents and shame on you.
@Tretij_rebenok
@Tretij_rebenok 2 жыл бұрын
@@euthanasiadumbwaiter2520 same. Tired of the scrotes.
@Tretij_rebenok
@Tretij_rebenok 2 жыл бұрын
@@deuscoromat742 shut up scrote. Scrotes amount to nothing at all in this world. We could get rid of men, only save a few for those who want em.
@ling636
@ling636 2 жыл бұрын
@@Tretij_rebenok femcel
@sidneyboo9704
@sidneyboo9704 2 жыл бұрын
Wow human evolution is pretty amazing
@GrandTerr
@GrandTerr 2 жыл бұрын
This video is one part pieces of science, another part of random opinions. Oh yeah, and music with visuals to influence your emotions. Meh
@sahriestar
@sahriestar 2 жыл бұрын
Sooo... The end of this is that nobody knows anything about anything.
@cakeserenity
@cakeserenity 2 жыл бұрын
So the title is about how pregnancy affects the brain but they talk about gay me and women who don't have kids? 🤔
@dawnsalois
@dawnsalois 2 жыл бұрын
I think, but ONLY through CORRALTIVE observation, that this shift begins in the third trimester.. I never had children and I am different in attutude than my peers that became mothers.
@asamicat8323
@asamicat8323 4 ай бұрын
Be more specific, what makes you different?
@JulianaAgra
@JulianaAgra 2 жыл бұрын
Ok, now I have more reasons why I don't want to be a mother ever.
@alberthernandez5318
@alberthernandez5318 Жыл бұрын
I used to just think it was just having a baby no big deal
@kkdream99
@kkdream99 2 жыл бұрын
I wonder what if the mother is a psychopath or some other cluster B lacking empathy etc?
@user-rg4bl9wb7m
@user-rg4bl9wb7m 2 жыл бұрын
フランスで教えたけど ボンボローニ その前に別のモン出す言うから マリトッツォ ボンボローニ の 方が お似合いやで 言うてやったわ。。 バーカ フランス人 どっちも Italian 食べた事あるわ バーカ。。
@user-rg4bl9wb7m
@user-rg4bl9wb7m 2 жыл бұрын
絶対にボンボローニ 食うとけ Misterドーナツで エンゼルクリーム食え 「もう絶対にアガルからいいの出して」 頭ウンコ色ドロボーブス が 命令した 頭ウンコ色ドロボーブス ボンボローニ 食えよ 頭ウンコ色ドロボーブス ヨジュンキム 頭ウンコ色ブス
@Ishyona
@Ishyona 2 жыл бұрын
Going through pregnancy is like going through puberty again; And you can't help but look at people who haven't gone through pregnancy, the same way as someone who hasn't gone through puberty. To me, the evidence in the brain development is clear, you are a child until you are a parent.
@kamif3187
@kamif3187 2 жыл бұрын
I agree. I use to be focused on myself/reviewing and processing childhood traumas. Once, I became a mother, I crossed the line behind my past and decided it was all about the baby now, and his best interest. His life has nothing to do with this what happened to me. And this compartmentalization works for my family.
@miriamkwembe
@miriamkwembe 2 жыл бұрын
The thought of being a child forever excites me.
@woolypuffin392
@woolypuffin392 2 жыл бұрын
This is so scary.
@user-rg4bl9wb7m
@user-rg4bl9wb7m 2 жыл бұрын
顔面潰せ言うてる貧乏病院 コロナ流行らせてる貧乏病院  呼吸出来ないから 気管支炎になる 貧乏病院のせいで症状が酷くなる
@delilahhart4398
@delilahhart4398 2 жыл бұрын
I'm glad I've never been pregnant or had children and never will. Pregnancy and parenthood are nothing but disruptions.
@netsyxx1137
@netsyxx1137 2 жыл бұрын
motherhood is wonderful.... im sad for u 😔
@wintersprite
@wintersprite 2 жыл бұрын
@@netsyxx1137 Not everyone wants to have children and that’s totally okay. Part of me used to want a kid but the older I get (I’m in my mid 30s), the more I don’t think I want them anymore. The world keeps getting crazier it seems. I have mild to moderate depression and anxiety and wouldn’t want my potential kid to end up with them. I fear I would be a horrible mother. It’s a big responsibility, physically, mentally, financially… For me, it might be better to stick with just having pets-my fur babies. It’s also not to say I’ll never have a kid, however at this point in my life, it’s not in the foreseeable future and that’s okay. I do feel a bit bad if my parents don’t get to be grandparents someday but no one should become a parent expecting that they’ll be a grandparent someday either.
@drpriyamhazramister
@drpriyamhazramister 2 жыл бұрын
Advertisement Prosthetics, Orthotics, Orthopaedics, Robotics, Automatic wheelchairs...
@celpaz4584
@celpaz4584 2 жыл бұрын
What about people that have pets? Would seem natural to find a similar response.... pet parent 😊
@barbarabreunis7788
@barbarabreunis7788 2 жыл бұрын
As someone that has owned many animals and a mother of 5 children I can tell you it's completely different. However touching pets stimulates the brains and makes you less stressed.
@marchewka2967
@marchewka2967 2 жыл бұрын
One more reason not to have children
@pepepompin1829
@pepepompin1829 2 жыл бұрын
thats the objetive, thats what want these kind of medias, make you think, because the powerfull people think that we are too much people in the world. so they show you this kind of material constantly, showing you just the bad side of make bbys
@aviralgupta393
@aviralgupta393 2 жыл бұрын
@@pepepompin1829 are there good sides too? 😂
@aymara9152
@aymara9152 2 жыл бұрын
@@pepepompin1829 But we are too many… a mammal our size should not exist in the billions especially when we are consuming nature without continuing to it.
@jelatinosa
@jelatinosa 2 жыл бұрын
@@pepepompin1829 the "powerful people" are the ones going frantic about the fact that regular people don't want to continue breeding at a level that will sustain their workforce, make jobs so competitive that they can offer less and less for more labor, consumers demanding more products, to continue to make them richer and richer as they control the supply. A smaller population will benefit all but the most powerful. It can go back to times of less competition and more resources for all, a healthier environment, more available land, less wars fought for land and resources, less contamination. If only some people didn't breed like unthinking animals led only by instict.
@yellowyosh470
@yellowyosh470 2 жыл бұрын
Having children is the best 💛
@pinedovlogs417
@pinedovlogs417 2 жыл бұрын
or half of our bodys energy or our soul goes to the baby lol
@DorianneSchwarz
@DorianneSchwarz 2 жыл бұрын
I feel that this happens to adopting parents as well, and not only with human children. Adopting cats and/or dogs and treating them as your own kids, will create the same effects.
@michaelp.4890
@michaelp.4890 2 жыл бұрын
Hm, I don't think it stretches to pets because although they require a lot of responsibility and care, they're not as demanding as human babies. Human babies require almost constant supervision during the first years. Also, our brain processes the faces of humans and animals on different regions, this could affect the changes as well.
@noracrittle5492
@noracrittle5492 2 жыл бұрын
Just don't make a claim without evidence, problem solved.
@Kriistall7
@Kriistall7 2 жыл бұрын
Cats and dogs aren't on the same level as human babies, you can crate your dog and go grocery shopping or sleep all night without them on a baby monitor. Agree about adoption of human children though.
@babiifrshj07
@babiifrshj07 2 жыл бұрын
@@Kriistall7 yessss! I hate when people say dumb crap like that. “Oh, you have kids? I have cats. They’re my babies. Let’s dish over the shared and similar stress.” Massive eye roll.
@moniqueloomis9772
@moniqueloomis9772 2 жыл бұрын
🙄
@ericx4124
@ericx4124 2 жыл бұрын
Damn. I have a coworker out on maternity leave. She’s was a nervous asshole before the baby…
@babiifrshj07
@babiifrshj07 2 жыл бұрын
😂 there are a ton changes happening in the body throughout the entirety of pregnancy and even after. I feel you, though.
@LAStars-sratS
@LAStars-sratS 2 жыл бұрын
It’s easy to have bias on this topic and present only the info you want ppl to believe 👎
@havok9717
@havok9717 2 жыл бұрын
Woman were never meant to be primary caregivers, if that was the case we would be able get pregnant all by our damn selves. Duh, it takes a man and a woman to make and care for a child. A man should always have say in the life and developement of his child from conception to death.
@suem6004
@suem6004 2 жыл бұрын
Let’s acknowledge the amazing female brain that prepares for the most important responsibilities in life: to birth and rear children. Biological adaptation is amazing. And just because the changes are superior to the adoptive parents, we need to acknowledge that and not back peddle so as not to offend other carers. I feel by constantly back peddling, minimizing biological birth mom brains, we are minimizing that singularly unique aspect of female mother brains. I do agree that nurturing is a female thing but so what? Again, minimizing the biological female gifts and talents. What a wonderful gift to empathize with others. But, I have seen too many women apply ‘smothering’ leadership to pandemics where female leaders by in large wanted everyone at home and never leave so as to all be safe. Interesting to see how their maternal brain changes potentially sheds light on female leadership styles. All interesting.
@kathgraham2758
@kathgraham2758 2 жыл бұрын
Here is a young Mum drawing conclusions to suit how she wants things to be. Children survive and even thrive in all sorts of relationships and environments, AND a mother is obviously designed to be primary caregiver. I wonder sometimes whether the 'childcare' (i. e. not all the time with their mothers mediating the world for them) upbringings of our young people is reducing people's capacity to think things through, to analyse thoroughly so that they can draw correct conclusions. In addition is it possible young pwople learn to fool mass educating institutions like childcare, even in small ways to be how they want to be (i. e. they learn the ropes) and develop more liklihood that they are prepared to fool themselves, and more readily believe things which suit them, rather than continuing the difficult task of striving for, and seeking truth.
@juliocesarsalazargarcia6872
@juliocesarsalazargarcia6872 2 жыл бұрын
The results of their experiments, measures and observations clearily imply that women are phisiologicaly better equiped to be the main caregivers, but even then they insist in forcing a feminist interpretation in saying the contrary. That is just pure stuborness and evidence denial. The fact that men can also adapt their brains up to some dregree to the parenting task does not mean they can adapt it to the same point or level as women can via drastic phisiological changes during pregnancy. Next thing we know they are gonna argue that men could breastfeed babies if they are not toxicaly masculine. Absurd.
@MaTara01
@MaTara01 2 жыл бұрын
I am a woman and I agree with you that women are better care givers than men will ever be. Women have proved this fact to be true for thousands of years of human evolution. My only problem is that the care - giving by women is NOT RECOGNISED AS WORK, when it clearly is. Such work needs to be economically validated and paid for by society, not by their husbands or partners etc. In fact, mothers need to be paid handsomely because they are the first teachers of the next generation of a country.
@juliocesarsalazargarcia6872
@juliocesarsalazargarcia6872 2 жыл бұрын
@@MaTara01 I understand your point and I agree 100% that childcare is work, not easy, but hard work. It should be recognized as such and no woman on earth should be left alone with such a burden. I think we would have a much better society if the whole society suports every mother, not only financially but psychologicaly and in every way. Of course this would only work if and only if we can keep under control the amount of women that would try to abuse such system (guaranteed there would be at least some of those), but I think it is possible, the thing is that we would need a lot of social debate about it, suported by data, not ideology, so we would need to experiment with such a system in small communities for some years, is a long road, I know. This polarized societies that we have this days makes all that extremely difficult, we need less ideology, more rationality, a lot of solidarity, realism, practicality, openness and humanism.
@MaTara01
@MaTara01 2 жыл бұрын
@@juliocesarsalazargarcia6872 I agree with you. It can't be a totally foolproof system, given the nature of human beings. Some women are unfit to be mothers, as some men are unfit to be fathers.Circumstances, abilities, health etc aren't the same for everyone at all points of time. The same man/ woman can develop to become a better or worse version of themselves. As they say, it takes a village to raise a kid. Unfortunately, with the fragmentation of the family unit, this is becoming more and more difficult. But given the fact that women the world over are choosing not to have more children than they used to have earlier, it becomes even more imperative for society (especially, those in demographic decline) to incentivise motherhood. The demographic gap that is produced by women not having kids cannot be met by gay men having surrogate kids etc. Unfortunately, the West seems to be cut off so much from reality, that they prefer believing in pipe dreams to comfort their egos.
@juliocesarsalazargarcia6872
@juliocesarsalazargarcia6872 2 жыл бұрын
@@MaTara01 What you say about the demographic gap is sooooo true. And yes, it takes a village to raise a kid. Some countries already have or are near to having a problem, because they no longer have enough young working people to impulse the economy for the next decades or even give care to the elderly. For example Japan. Canada is also importing young working people to maintain the next generation of retired workers. I do not see a problem with regulated and ordered migrations, I just mention it as one of the consequences of the demographic gap you mention.
@MaTara01
@MaTara01 2 жыл бұрын
@@juliocesarsalazargarcia6872 Indeed. Italy, Germany, even China are in permanent decline demographically. Decline in global population is a good thing for the planet, but national economies would shrink substantially and that would ultimately lead to reduced incomes /pensions for people. Global migration can solve the problem for some countries, but it gives rise to its own set of problems, viz a viz, integration. Robots aren't going to solve the problem fully either - because whether Sci fi geeks like it or not, humans need other human beings emotionally and not robots. Suffice it to say, in a 100 years from now, things are going to look a lot different in more ways than one.
@ekatasatya2995
@ekatasatya2995 2 жыл бұрын
encouriging childbirthing into this challenging Earth environmental situation ? More than irresponsible..
@indie_princess
@indie_princess 2 жыл бұрын
🙄 by your argument you are part of the problem by being alive.
@veronicav575
@veronicav575 2 жыл бұрын
You’re less than intelligent. We have enough food and space for 6x our current planet population. It’s communist Marxist morons that are making people starve and being irresponsible with our resources.
@BobMarley-vl5gl
@BobMarley-vl5gl 2 жыл бұрын
Uh now I know why all those 16 year old girls became pregnant before the final exams. It’s because it make brain big, amazing so 5head.
@christthelord91
@christthelord91 2 жыл бұрын
It's God, not evolution. How obvious can that be
@GunmetalRaven
@GunmetalRaven 2 жыл бұрын
God, huh? Do you know anything about how octopus mother's handle pregnancy? They starve and brutally rip themselves apart due to changes in the way their body processes cholesterol and due to the activation of glands behind their eyes. Also post partum is a big issue women face... It's also what lead Andrea Yates to drown her babies so they wouldn't go to hell. Is it so hard to think that the concept of being formed 'from clay' refers to the gradual sculpting process that evolution is? Why is reality so scary to you?
@blackbox8490
@blackbox8490 2 жыл бұрын
Which god? Also, why did your god invent cancer and dementia and other diseases?
@al.the.
@al.the. 2 жыл бұрын
@Zee Aye some deity? maybe God of these most popular world's religions - nope, those are conflicting. Drop those cognitive disonance protections, and you'll see it.
@al.the.
@al.the. 2 жыл бұрын
@Zee Aye lol, what? you sure think you _explained_ something there, smh a. you're saying basically what I said, "some deity" (basics of deism) vs "knowable" people are describing. b. it was god vs evolution comment I replied to, specifically, and your "No, blahblahblah" is totally inconsequential. And I *don't care what "bible" says* (it is after all, scripts different _people_ wrote) but sure, act if you can lecture random people on the internet... & c. Hilarious - people are "describing elephant" but *you know* unknowable god can not be what any of them is describing, it's all made up, but that sime god unknowable - exists, that's not made up 😂 How could it be, lol, lol lol?
@MarcPagan
@MarcPagan 2 жыл бұрын
"How do you write as woman?" Jack Nicolson's reply: "I think like a man....then remove all reason" From the fine film "As Good As It Gets"
@penguinista
@penguinista 2 жыл бұрын
How do you quote someone saying something demonstrably stupid, bigoted, and hateful ...?
@MarcPagan
@MarcPagan 2 жыл бұрын
@@penguinista Nice job! You're a female, but no lady, or a Beta Male aka fake man... Both proffer "wisdom" behind both a fake name and keyboard. Shoo, you fake grown up
@mareebrown2163
@mareebrown2163 2 жыл бұрын
ah fantasy and fiction then!
@nmbnmbnmb
@nmbnmbnmb 2 жыл бұрын
What’s with the movie quote?
@elizabethhenning778
@elizabethhenning778 2 жыл бұрын
@@nmbnmbnmb They're so lame they need to borrow someone else's fictional misogyny.
2 жыл бұрын
"How do you write as a woman?" "I think like a man....then remove all reason," Jack Nicolson says in the excellent film "As Good As It Gets."
@penguinista
@penguinista 2 жыл бұрын
How do you quote someone saying something demonstrably stupid, bigoted, and hateful ...?
@deuscoromat742
@deuscoromat742 2 жыл бұрын
@@penguinista who cares
@nmbnmbnmb
@nmbnmbnmb 2 жыл бұрын
@@deuscoromat742 Normal humans care about things like hate and bigotry and know of their detrimental effects, not always to the person they are directed at but always and even more so to the person who cultivates these thoughts and emotions in him.
@nmbnmbnmb
@nmbnmbnmb 2 жыл бұрын
How does the movie quote relate to the video?
@drpriyamhazramister
@drpriyamhazramister 2 жыл бұрын
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