queenofcelts said:Real family must have children!
Lakshmi said:I hope it is not true. I mean if she had a baby with Martin at some point, it would be wonderful...but pregnant at her wedding day..sort of tacky. She is not a teen. BTW she did not appear pregnant for me during her wedding.
Roxsteve said:I guess she is not blue blood after all. She is a woman who fell in love and who was intimate with her fiancee. She is happy...let her be happy and enjoy her time if pregnant. Bad example for the kids, great for her.
Roxsteve said:I guess she is not blue blood after all. She is a woman who fell in love and who was intimate with her fiancee. She is happy...let her be happy and enjoy her time if pregnant. Bad example for the kids, great for her.
Yes she was. Father was Vilhelm Frimann Marcher (1841-1872) a lieutenant in the calvary.. Baby - a girl Marie Katharina Jørgensen or Jensen (1871-1964). Girl was adopted by Rasmus and Anne Marie Jørgensen of Odense. Marcher killed himself on 4 January 1872 after a confrontation with the King.ysbel said:And somehow I don't believe that all the blue blooded princesses were necessarily virgins before they married. Princess Thyra, Duchess of Cumberland and youngest daughter of King Christian IX comes to mind. Didn't she get pregnant and give the baby away before she married the Duke of Cumberland?
Roxsteve said:I guess she is not blue blood after all. She is a woman who fell in love and who was intimate with her fiancee. She is happy...let her be happy and enjoy her time if pregnant. Bad example for the kids, great for her.
Lena said:I´m happy for every child, that is the result of a mother (and grandmother) of 40+ and that is healthy
But what you are always forgetting in your personal examples/experiences is, that the risks are simply growing. If a woman of 35 years is giving birth to a healthy child, it does show, that she is able to give birth...yes...but it doesn´t change the fact, that her eggs would age...and that her body would age in the next 10 years. So if she would give birth again at 43...already 8 years went by! That is alot, considering, that a woman is just about 30-35 years fertile. Of course things can go also well at a birth with a mother of 40 years...and in most cases they even do.
And also prenatal diagnostics have improved...early contractions, eclampsia, Gestational diabetes, calcifying placentas...that are things, that can be controlled better these days. Even though one can´t control them completely.
But there is one thing, you can´t change...and that is the genetical factor. If you would go the normal way of getting pregnant (so without selecting the embryos) you have (compared to 25y) at 35y at 3 times higher risk of getting a child with Down Syndrom , at 40y a 10times higher risk...and at 48 years the risk is nearly 100 times higher! And Down Syndrom is only one of genetical syndroms. Older women have a much higher risk to miscarry. And as I´ve said the risk of getting the child way too early is also higher in older women. So many things, that a woman has to consider. One can always say, that this wouldn´t happen and many of these things can also happen to younger mothers...but IMO as older woman one should truly think twice...could I live with a handicapped child? Could I handle a miscarriage. Many ppl seem to think, this doesn´t happen to me...but what if?
Lena said:I´m happy for every child, that is the result of a mother (and grandmother) of 40+ and that is healthy
But what you are always forgetting in your personal examples/experiences is, that the risks are simply growing. If a woman of 35 years is giving birth to a healthy child, it does show, that she is able to give birth...yes...but it doesn´t change the fact, that her eggs would age...and that her body would age in the next 10 years. So if she would give birth again at 43...already 8 years went by! That is alot, considering, that a woman is just about 30-35 years fertile. Of course things can go also well at a birth with a mother of 40 years...and in most cases they even do.
And also prenatal diagnostics have improved...early contractions, eclampsia, Gestational diabetes, calcifying placentas...that are things, that can be controlled better these days. Even though one can´t control them completely.
But there is one thing, you can´t change...and that is the genetical factor. If you would go the normal way of getting pregnant (so without selecting the embryos) you have (compared to 25y) at 35y at 3 times higher risk of getting a child with Down Syndrom , at 40y a 10times higher risk...and at 48 years the risk is nearly 100 times higher! And Down Syndrom is only one of genetical syndroms. Older women have a much higher risk to miscarry. And as I´ve said the risk of getting the child way too early is also higher in older women. So many things, that a woman has to consider. One can always say, that this wouldn´t happen and many of these things can also happen to younger mothers...but IMO as older woman one should truly think twice...could I live with a handicapped child? Could I handle a miscarriage. Many ppl seem to think, this doesn´t happen to me...but what if?
Most children who have Downs Syndrome now are actually born to mothers between the age of 30 and 34 over 70%. Few are actually born to older mothers possibly as they are more likely to ask for tests.
Lena said:Yes...and do you know why? Because older mothers are more liklier to get amniocentesis done. OB Gyns practically advice it to nearly all women older than 35. And what would many do, if the child would be handicapped? Yes, Abortion
As I´ve said, I´m happy for every healthy child being born...but it is a fact, that the risks are getting higher and that you can be easier forced to deal with "unethical" methods (prenatal selection...abortion)
And all I want is, that women know about these possible risks and think about them. And therefore I´m always getting angry and into it, when ppl promote getting pregnant at 40+ and pretend, that it is the same as if getting pregnant at 25. Is that so hard to understand?
Women may menstruate longer, but many also seem to have problems to get pregnant these days. Our nutrition, way of living got more secure and stable in the western world...but as it seems one also has to deal with the side effects of this luxury (Keywords: chemical food, poisons in the environment, hormones...) This is of course not so much the problem of a woman, who already has children. But if you have waited until 40 and start with nr1...it could get tight.
For me it´s also a social aspect of women 45+ getting pregnant. Yes, Alexandra is a bit younger and the women, who get children az 35-40, I don´t wanna get started at. But due to these public trend and some Docs Frankensteins, who get 60 year olds pregnant, the age limit of getting children seems to get stretched more and more backwards...