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Birth of a father

Bracing for the moment of truth in the delivery room By JD Lasica BabyCenter managing editor Ireach the top of the landing at 12:57 a.m., after an especially long workday, and open our bedroom door. “How’d you like to have a baby today?” my wife says. My heart flutters. Mary is six days past her due date, and friends and neighbors have been showering us with advice about how to induce labor. (I’ll cop to this: Last weekend I drove my more-than-ready wife over a dozen speed bumps in an effort to speed things up. Still, we have our standards, and we’ve resisted the old hike-her-up-on-the-washing-machine-during-spin-cycle routine.) I’ve heard so many old wives’ tales about how to pop this kid

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Couples baby showers come of age

Food, gifts, guys — and life advice for the new parents By JD Lasica BabyCenter managing editor When our friend Catherine called and offered to host a baby shower, my six-months-pregnant wife knew me well enough to say, “JD will want to be a part of this, too.” ‘Twasn’t always so. Not long ago, baby showers were still deemed off-limits to men. The custom, after all, grew out of an era when midwives delivered most babies and women formed close bonds during the birthing process. Men at traditional baby showers? No, thank you, not with the field reports we got from the front lines suggesting rituals and practices that were, frankly, a little scary. But times are changing — and

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Dad’s cheat sheet for childbirth class

By JD LasicaBabyCenter managing editor Some expectant fathers, unfortunately, start getting interested in their babies around the time their wives say, “Loving husband, it’s time to proceed to the hospital.” By then, it’s a little late to whip out the how-to manual. My friends, spare yourself some messy surprises. Accompany your wife to a childbirth education class. Almost all birth hospitals hold sessions, and parents are usually given the option of attending two or three short evening sessions or one long daytime session. For me, the class was an eye-opener.

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