A Healthy Beginning: Nutrition for the Mom-to-Be

Expectant moms know the adage: you’re eating for two now. Growing children need nutritional food to sustain their rapid growth, and that includes a child who may now be no bigger than your thumb. So does that mean you can scarf down two Big Macs now? You may now find yourself driven by pints of rocky road or bags of potato chips, but making healthy food choices is essential for your baby’s health and yours.

 

Healthy Pregnancy Musts

 

Health experts have concluded that there are nutrient musts every pregnant mother should include in her diet regularly. Growing babies—and mothers!—require the benefits provided by certain foods or supplements, now in slightly greater amounts:

 

  • Folic acid, or folate: An essential pregnancy nutrient found in leafy greens, fortified breads and cereals, and supplements.
  • Vitamin C: Found in strawberries, orange juice, and broccoli.
  • Vitamin D: Found in cooked fish, milk, and fortified orange juice.
  • Iron: Found in meat, lentils, beans, ad fortified breads and cereals.
  • Iodine: Found in iodized salt.

 

Pregnancy websites are excellent sources for detailed descriptions on necessary nutrients, their functions, and ways to incorporate them into your diet. Natal vitamins provide additional nutrition. Speak to your doctor for advice on getting the right amount of nutrients; some women may have different needs than generally recommended.

 

Your Baby’s Health and You

 

Many of the food choices you make will affect the health of your baby. It’s important to know that large amounts of vitamin A, soft cheese, raw or undercooked egg and poultry, and alcohol should be avoided during pregnancy. And don’t forget that exercise! A healthy you will help your baby too.

The Conversation Necessity: Pregnancy

No words seem to be enough. No expressions seem worthy. Your life has changed—a pregnancy has been revealed; a child is now expected; and nothing beyond a grin seems eloquent enough for the discovery. Happiness has been found.

The transition of wife to mother is vital but complex. Your body will experience intense physical and emotional changes: a fluctuation of hormones, a redefinition of skin. And you (naturally) seek to prepare yourself for the days to come. The process of planning a pregnancy week by week demands more than an understanding of your body, however. It instead requires a dissection of your wishes for the future, as well as your partner’s.

Recognize what you desire for your child and what your spouse intends. Have a detailed conversation of all elements. Address the size of your current home, deciding if it can support a new arrival. Discuss all financial burdens that will occur once the baby is born (there will be many and a strict budget must be formed). Decide if you wish to remain at home or continue to work; money will often be the unavoidable variable of this. You simply may not be able to afford the time away from your cubicle, and, if you must return to your career, understand who will care for your child and the responsibility they must then wield. Consider names, potential schools, physicians and more. Examine every aspect thoroughly.

Too often communication is forgotten when a pregnancy is revealed. All focus is offered to laughter, to the joy of the moment. It is essential, however, to chart out all concerns before a baby arrives. This will spare you and your partner the horror of the unknown and coming home to confusion and far too many questions. Choose to express all opinions instead and reach a happy compromise.