Ever wished your partner could understand what pregnancy really feels like? You might want to show him this.
Last night my husband was complaining about having to sit on an uncomfortable chair while I reclined into our one and only comfortable Ikea armchair. It was the perfect opportunity for me to launch into a 34-week pregnancy tirade. It went something like this:
Him: “Why do I always get the uncomfortable chair?”
Me: “Oh, you’d like to trade places would you?”
Him: “…..” (He could already sense this wasn’t going to end well.)
Me: “So, you’d like to be the one that gets to lug this big gut around? You’d like to be carrying an extra 10 kilos and comical-sized boobs? You’d like to push this *emphatically points to gut* out of your pea-sized hole?”
Him: Silence. No words. Nothing. He knows better than to keep provoking a tired, emotional and highly-hormonal pregnant woman.
Read more: A man who changed women’s lives has died. Thank you, kind sir.
So it was much to my glee when I came across the 3 Pregnant Dads this morning; three men who are honouring their mums for Mother’s Day by ‘being pregnant’ for a month. It started as a dare, and now there’s no going back.
The dads are up to day eight of their experiment, going everywhere, including work and catching public transport while wearing a 15kg (the average weight gain a woman will experience during pregnancy) suit complete with breasts and belly.
The suits are specifically designed to create the following awesome pregnancy side effects: abdominal distention, pelvic tilt, shift in posture causing waddling gair, abdominal aches, lower back stress, inability to get comfortable, pressure on bladder, stomach and lungs, shortness of breath, difficulty rising from chair or bed, increased breast size, rise in body temperature, increased blood pressure and pulse, fetal movement, tiredness. You know, just to name a few.
Maybe they ought to read this: 10 things about pregnancy nobody tells you (and weren’t in the brochure).
Top Comments
Too bad they didn't get to experience the joy of all-day morning sickness!
When I was pregnant with my second, I still had to run around after my 1 and a half year old, do housework (vacuuming at least every two days, mopping,cleaning bathroom kitchen etc) and all the grocery shopping and I never fussed about the fact that I was pregnant.
I'm sure there are plenty of other pregnant women who experienced the same thing.
Women like this author, who make a big deal over such trivial things like a chair seriously do my head in.
Ok. I guess nobody should make a fuss and everyone should believe that it's easy. :)
I'm pregnant and don't fuss but I'm all for people trying to understand that it's not easy.
That's like saying nobody should have spoken up for people's rights during slavery. Do you think that they should have just kept their mouths shut and nobody should have fussed about it?
People who try to trivialise other people's lives and experiences in order to big note themselves seriously do my head in.