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Children of 9/11 Whose Dads Died That Day Are Turning 17

They are the final gifts their fathers left behind.

Known as the Children of 9/11, they were the 100 or so babies born after their fathers died on September 11, 2001, in the worst terrorist attack in U.S. history. PEOPLE first introduced them in a cover story just a few months after 9/11 and then again 10 years later in 2011.

Now, 17 years after 9/11, PEOPLE is once again catching up with several of those kids – now teenagers – and their families in a new special Children of 9/11, 15 Years Later on the PEOPLE/Entertainment Weekly Network (PEN).

“These children are what comes after 9/11,” says Jenna Jacobs, whose son Gabriel was born six days after the death of his father Ariel. “They are the joy, the salve, the ointment. They’re the love.”

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Colin Kaepernick Nick ‘Just Do It’ Campaign: Celebs, Customers Pick Sides

Are you boycotting Nike for selecting former quarterback Colin Kaepernick as its spokesperson for the 30th anniversary of its “Just Do It” campaign?

If so, I’d like to suggest instead of throwing away your Nike products or burning them as some of his detractors and Donald  J Trump supporters have done online, that you consider donating them to homeless Military vets! Here are organizations you can donate to:

Kaepernick, a former San Francisco 49er has not played in the NFL since 2016, the year he began to take a knee during the National Anthem as a silent protest against police brutality. Dozens of other players followed his lead, which led to heavy criticism of the NFL and many angry fans boycotting the sport entirely. Due to this controversy, Nike, which signed Kaepernick in 2011, held off in using him for ad campaigns. However, Nike kept him on their roster even after Kaepernick became a free agent in 2017.

Several celebs including our Bellyitch Bumpwatch alums Chelsea Peretti and his fellow brand spokesperson Serena Williams shared their support online.

On Friday night, Kaepernick and his former 49ers teammate Eric Reid, a Pro Bowl safety who joined in the protests and also now out of the league, were each given huge ovations when they were introduced and shown on the big screen during a match between Serena and Venus Williams at the U.S. Open.

If you are team Kaep and plan to purchase Nikes in support of this campaign and to counter the 3 percentage point dip in stock price the company has suffered because of this announcement, I curated a few pieces from my partners at Shopstyle for you to pick from:

Study: Celebrity Pregnancy Coverage Destigmatizes Out-Of-Wedlock Births Among White Women

A new study states that media coverage of celebrity pregnancies has destigmatized out-of-wedlock births especially among white, middle class women.

Analyzing PEOPLE magazine covers from 1974 to 2014 featuring celebrity pregnancy, researcher Hanna Grol-Prokopczyk, an assistant professor in the University at Buffalo Department of Sociology took note of the magazine’s reference to the parents’ relationship status at the time of the pregnancy announcement and the time of the child’s birth.

In the study, published this month in the journal Demographic Research, Grol-Prokopczyk looked at how media presentations of celebrities’ childbearing influenced larger society.

Indeed, there has been a rise in out-of-wedlock births. Between 1940 and 2009, the number of U.S. births to unmarried women increased from about 4 percent to nearly 41 percent.

While existing scholarship suggests that economic and cultural factors have contributed to this growth, Grol-Prokopczyk wondered whether celebrities might have been the trigger for that 10-fold rise.

“No one has actually tested whether celebrities in fact engage in more out-of-wedlock childbearing than the general public,” she told Science Daily. “This is an important question to address because the power of celebrity culture to shape all kinds of decisions, including childbearing-related decisions, is often under-acknowledged.”

Grol-Prokopczyk concludes that celebrities might shape how we think about the nature of the family and the right environment in which to have children and used People magazine as a yardstick because it is a reliable source of data for exploring this issue. Also, it is heavily trafficked companion to its print edition with over 70 million unique monthly visitors.

The influence of celebrity news is undeniable. Consider that 74 percent of US adults became aware of Angelina Jolie‘s decision to have a preventative double mastectomy just weeks after her op-ed appeared in the New York Times in May of 2013.

The celebrity coverage has shifted attitudes particularly among white, middle class women who generally, have less out-of-wedlock births compared to women in other racial groups.

But unlike their regular folk counterpart, white celebrity women are more likely to have a baby while not married or engaged.

“If you compare celebrities to just white Americans — which could make sense given that until recently People magazine has disproportionally depicted white celebrity parents on its covers — you find that celebrities have the same rates of non-marital fertility,” she added.

Here is the link:

Grol-Prokopczyk also found that most celebrities featured on People magazine’s covers who got pregnant while unmarried did not marry before the child’s birth. Since the mid-2000s, many have declared themselves, “engaged.”

Instead of “shotgun weddings,” Grol-Prokopczyk sees this as modeling what she calls “shotgun engagements,” which if imitated in the general population could have contributed to a substantial rise of non-marital fertility in the U.S.

Interesting findings.

Louisiana Catholic School Rescinds Hair Policy Deemed Discriminatory Against Black Girls

Faith Fennidy’s family and their attorney held a news conference Friday after the story about Faith and another girl getting kicked out of their Louisiana Catholic school for wearing braided extensions in violation of a new school policy implemented over the Summer.

After the Families Black Girls  kicked out of their Louisiana Catholic School last week for violating a ban on hair extensions sued, a judge blocked the ban and the school  rescinded its policy following much public outcry.

It happened in Boston, Massachusetts last year.

It happened in Louisville, Kentucky in 2016.

It happened in the US Navy until this year.

It happens in the corporate Workplace daily.

And the federal courts in the US recently said it was okay.

I am talking about discriminating against or banning black hair worn in braided styles and extensions. Sadly, it is too common in a society that has historically policed the bodies and hair of people of African heritage and descent. It’s not just a US thing either.

In South Africa, school officials forced black girls to straighten their hair to make it more acceptable and less unruly. Black hair routinely gets penalized in corporate and non-traditional jobs even once at a makeup counter at a department store where one black beauty blogger was told her braids weren’t high end enough to represent a brand and was denied a job because of them.

The latest installment of this hair discrimination came this week at the start of the new school year at Christ the King Elementary School in Terrytown, Louisiana.

Shortly after class began, the school sent 11-year-old Faith Fennidy home because she broke a rule on wearing hair extensions.  Fennidy had worn thick extensions with her hair for two years before the school made a rule change over the summer, banning unnatural hair, her mother, Montrelle Fennidy, told NBC News affiliate WDSU.

Faith’s brother, Steven Evergreen Fennidyposted video of Faith walking out of school on Facebook with her family after being told her hairstyle was unacceptable.

“Extensions make the hair easier to maintain,” Steven Evergreen Fennidy wrote on the social media site. “It allows my sister to have access to the swimming pool without having to get her hair Re-done every night. How do you make a policy without even having a discussion. It’s because you don’t care and it’s just one more barrier to entry for black people.”

He said the policy prohibiting “extensions, clip-ins or weaves” was added over the summer.

Faith’s family and the family of Tyrielle Davis, also removed from school, filed a legal petition arguing that the policy is discriminatory and adversely affects minority girls. A civil court judge granted a temporary restraining order against Christ King School following backlash over a hair policy that was implemented this school year.

Faith’s family has since withdrawn her from the school and is looking to place her elsewhere.

Archdiocese of New Orleans Catholic schools superintendent RaeNell Billiot Houston said the school has rescinded the portion of its uniform policy having to do with hair extensions and the school’s principal and  pastor have welcomed the girls to return.

That will not take away the shock and embarrassment from being drawn out of class and sent home. And having to leave her friends and favorite teachers and school environment is also unfair even if it was her mom’s decision to do leave the school.

Houston added that the school is working with Christ the King School and all of the archdiocesan schools to create a uniform policy that is “sensitive to all races, religions, and cultures” going forward.

The Fennidys canceled a meeting with the school scheduled for today, a local news report states.

Editor’s note My daughter wears her hair in braided hair extensions because they allow her hair to stay coiffed and neat for a longer period of time than if she braided her own hair. As Faith’s brother wrote, the style is also perfect for swimming which my daughter does year round.

Braided extensions are a perfect hair option that is best for black girls and banning them does in fact unfairly target black girls disproportionately who rely on the style for ease of maintenance and practical reasons moreso than for style.

Faith Fennidy’s hair is not unacceptable even in a strict Catholic school environment by a long shot

If the purpose of the rule was to ban outrageous extensions of the colorful and crazy exotic variety, then certainly the neatly done and more than appropriate style Faith wore to school was nothing like that at all.

16 Nurses At Arizona Hospital Expecting

Pregnancy might just be catching at a Banner hospital in Mesa, Arizona, where 16 nurses are expecting at once.

That’s 10% of the nursing staff in the intensive care unit, and patients have started to notice the high pregnancy rate, the nurses said.

At a news conference, the women joked that there must be something in the water, or that maybe it was a joint plan for Christmas holidays off. The group’s first birth is expected in September and the last in January.

Rochelle Sherman, who is just over a month away from giving birth, said: “I don’t think we realised just how many of us were pregnant until we started a Facebook group

“It’s like we had some kind of pact going on.”

Her colleague Jolene Garrow thanked colleagues who have stepped in to do jobs pregnant women cannot do – such as dealing with contagious illnesses like tuberculosis pand shingles, or performing some treatments for cancer patients.

The staff will throw a joint baby shower for all the women next week, before they start going on their 12 weeks of maternity leave.

reprinted BBC

10-Year Old Who Learned on YouTube Helped During Aunt’s Emergency Delivery

Tween-Help-Aunt-Give-Birth

When Chloe Carrion‘s aunt passed out after unexpectedly giving birth at their Virginia home, the quick-thinking 10-year-old girl called 911 and cared for the newborn just the way she had seen it been done in YouTube videos.

Chloe was with her 21-year-old aunt, Dominique Spann, Tuesday afternoon when the woman started feeling ill. Spann went to the bathroom, then called for Chloe when she realized she was going into labor.

 “She had lost a lot of blood. She had fell down and she passed out. So I grabbed the baby and called 911.”

Chloe cut the umbilical cord and wrapped the baby while help arrived to their Fairfax County home.

“I watch YouTube videos about people playing with dolls and I see them care for the babies, so I used stuff I knew from the videos,” Chloe said.

Moments later, medics arrived and drove Spann to Inova Fairfax Hospital.

The birth came as a surprise to the family. Spann had kept her pregnancy a secret.

“She didn’t tell anybody,” said Chloe’s mother. “I thought that was her regular stomach.”

Spann and her newborn baby boy are healthy and resting. She’s thankful for her niece’s actions, and let her name the baby.

Chloe chose the name Isaac.

republished from NBC Washington

Image source: Western Journal

We’re Loving This Kentucky Mom-To-Be’s Taco Bell-Themed Belly Progression Photos



The weekly or monthly belly progression graphic is a common thing created by our new generation of expecting moms, especially among my fave generation, the very creative millenials.

One expectant Kentucky mom decided to use Taco Bell menu items to document her pregnancy and belly growth.

“I was brainstorming with my family and my brother-in-law suggested Taco Bell and I thought ‘Of course!’ It seemed so obvious,” Kelsey McKain revealed to Taco Bell’s blog. “After that I looked through the Taco Bell menu and created a week-by-week spreadsheet with how big the baby would be and chose a corresponding Taco Bell menu item. I’ve been working from that every week,” Kelsey said.

How to Do a Pregnancy Progression of Baby’s First Year Board

And Baby McKain seems to agree with mama’s choice. According to Kelsey, her baby girl moves around like crazy after she eats it. Ha!

Wanna check out some:

Study: Vitamin D Supplements During Pregnancy Doesn’t Impact Infants Growth

Even in a population of women with vitamin D deficiency, supplementation of high-dose vitamin D from mid-pregnancy until birth and for 6 months postpartum shows no benefits on measures of fetal or infant growth compared with prenatal supplementation only, or placebo, according to a study of more than 1100 women and their infants.

“Vitamin D supplementation given to women during the latter half of pregnancy and in the postpartum period improved biochemical markers of vitamin D status and reduced the risk of vitamin D deficiency, as expected. However, even at higher than conventional doses, vitamin D supplementation did not have effects on infant growth up to 1 year of age,” first author Daniel Roth, MD, PhD, an associate professor in the departments of pediatrics and nutritional sciences at the University of Toronto, Ontario, told Medscape Medical News.

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Study: Inducing Pregnant Women At Term Reduces C-Section Rate

From NPR, a new report and study suggests that inducing pregnant women at term or close to term actually reduces the C-Section Rate. Listen and follow below:



Healthy women with normal pregnancies can opt to have labor induced without worrying that the decision will make a cesarean section more likely, according to a major study published in this week’s New England Journal of Medicine.

Obstetricians currently induce labor when a delivery has failed to progress, or if a woman is far overdue for giving birth. But when women who have no medical need for induced labor have talked to their doctors, “We’ve been saying, ‘Well you know one thing you need to know is it does increase the C-section rate,’ ” says. Dr. Uma Reddy, an obstetrics researcher at the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.

That advice was based on some older medical research. But researchers had doubts about that conclusion. So Reddy helped organize a study involving more than 6,000 first-time mothers with uncomplicated pregnancies, to put the idea to the test.

Half the pregnant women followed the normal course of labor; the other half had labor induced when the baby was full term, at 39 weeks. Overall, mothers and babies did fine when labor was induced with a drug.

“I think the most surprising finding was a decrease in the C-section rate,” Reddy says.

That rate dropped from 22 percent among the women who weren’t automatically induced to 19 percent for those whose labor was induced. Dr. William Grobman, the study’s first author and a professor of obstetrics at Northwestern University, says it’s an important goal to reduce the rate of cesarean sections in the U.S. So even a small percentage drop in the rate can have benefits overall.

But an individual woman might or might not consider that 3-percentage-point drop a big deal. “I think that’s not really for me to decide,” he says. “I think that’s for patients to decide.

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If Barbie Was A Millenial Mom Blogger, What Her Life Would Be Like

Ever wonder what it would be like if Barbie was a Millenial mom blogger?

Well you don’t have to if you follow the popular Instagram account @Tiff_TheBarbie! This fun account features Barbie and her husband of a few years and mom of three with a third baby due in September.

Scroll thru and you’ll see shots very similar to typical modern Millenial mom bloggers: the over the object flat lay, the month-by-month photo shoot, the fancy coordinated party for baby’s first year, the chalk board maternity post with baby’s gestational age and more

The first Mother’s Day Post:

The Pregnancy Announcement/Gender Reveal formal portrait.

Self Care/Spa Day

The 9-month v Post delivery Post

The Mom Blogger Flat Lay

The Gender Reveal Post

The Baby is the size of___Post

Too Fun! FOLLOW THIS ACCOUNT TO CHECK OUT THE ENTIRE SUPER CREATIVE FEED!!

Batman138 Bro138 Dolar138 Gas138 Gudang138 Hoki99 Ligaciputra Panen77 Zeus138 Kilat77 Planet88 Gaspol168 Sikat88 Rupiah138 Garuda138 Gacor77 Roma77 Sensa138 Panen138 Slot138 Gaco88 Elanggame Candy99 Cair77 Max7 Best188 Space77 Sky77 Luxury777 Maxwin138 Bosswin168 Cocol88 Slot5000 Babe138 Luxury138 Jet77 Bonanza138 Bos88 Aquaslot Taktik88 Lord88 Indobet Slot69 Paus138 Tiktok88 Panengg Bingo4d Stars77 77dragon Warung168 Receh88 Online138 Tambang88 Asia77 Klik4d Bdslot88 Gajah138 Bigwin138 Markas138 Yuk69 Emas168 Key4d Harta138  Gopek178 Imbaslot Imbajp Deluna4d Luxury333 Pentaslot Luxury111 Cair77 Gboslot Pandora188 Olxtoto Slotvip Eslot Kuy138 Imbagacor Bimabet