i guess maybe in more extreme cases then lol
Sweetheart, I think reddit might be a better place to share your incredibly sheltered, naïve takes. I'm sure they'd love to have you.
Ain’t nothing cozy about the first few weeks of parenthood. Where the HELL is she getting that from?
I don't see what's not "cozy" about sleep deprivation, leaking breasts, extreme hormonal fluctuations, and the crushing responsibility of keeping a tiny helpless human alive. Oh, and the bleeding. I think lochia is the coziest bodily fluid.
This bitch really thinks that she's going to sit in the heated recliner in the nursery having a massage while her precious
photo prop new baby does his own thing.
Packing snacks for hospital is something that surprised me when I first saw YouTubers like Sierra Schultzzie and Becky from Acre Homestead packing their hospital bags. In their case though they were packing hubby’s favourite snacks, whereas we know Alex is packing for herself. Totally unnecessary given hospitals generally have cafeterias, and if not they at least have vending machines.
In the United States, anyway, the food available for patients on the labor and delivery floor is often better than that provided for others. It's not uncommon, for example, for the hospital to provide a special meal for new parents after the baby is delivered. Sometimes, they even offer stuff like steak and shrimp for this. If she delivers at Women and Infants Hospital of Rhode Island in Providence, she will have the option of a
special meal.
Being in labor burns an enormous amount of calories, if you give birth at night they won't bring you any food in most places cause kitchen is closed (idk how it is in the US tbf).
Most of the hospitals I'm familiar with in the United States have cafeteria food available 24/7. It might not always be a hot meal, but food is always available, and as
@I call shenanigans says above, there are always vending machines. I think many non-Americans might not realize that our hospital cafeterias are often more like restaurants. Yes, some facilities do still have the stereotypical "hospital food" slop, but it's not uncommon to get an actual decent meal while hospitalized. I've actually had some really good food from hospital cafeterias.
Baby boy is going to be a fatty if that’s the kind of nutritionally bankrupt crap she plans on feeding him.
I don't think there's any "if" to it; going to be a fatty. He's doomed.