Thursday, November 20, 2008

BlogWonks

Opinion Matters

 

Turns out our grandparents were right on so many things, and that Judeo Christian lifestyle reflected a harmony with our biology our nihilist cultural presently doesn’t afford. They were right about sex, being an overwhelming selector it blinds us to everything else that is good if it’s not held in abeyance. They were right about the nuclear family, leading to the healthiest children. They were right about so much.
 
Well here is just another case of our elders knowing more than us. That we used to treat women better (contrary to feminists dispersions), and we used to coddle them when pregnant, rather than make them plough fields and work like drought horses. Its sensible things that would have changed the outcome in Rockefeller center this weekend, as a pregnant woman, has a birth spasm, jumps the curb, and mows down people.
 
In the past she would have been home being taken care of by family (the comedy of Lucille ball shows the lengths that people went to and thought were normal then). The feminists would scream that this is wrong. Now we have more evidence that his is the way to go. That mothers experiencing stress during pregnancy impact their children’s immune systems. That far from being an independent growth, a parasite, the mother and child are intimates, and their union under the protection of the husband and family is key to having a healthy future family, and healthy children.

  

Mother’s prenatal stress predisposes their babies to asthma and allergy

Women who are stressed during pregnancy may pass some of that frazzlement to their fetuses in the form of increased sensitivity to allergen exposure and possibly future asthma risk, according to researchers from Harvard Medical School who presented their findings at the American Thoracic Society’s 2008 International Conference in Toronto on Sunday.

“While predisposition to asthma may be, in part, set at birth, the factors that may determine this are not strictly genetic. Certain substances in the environment that cause allergies, such as dust mites, can increase a child’s chance of developing asthma and the effects may begin before birth,” said Rosalind J. Wright, M.D., M.P.H., assistant professor of medicine at Brigham & Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School.

Mother’s stress during pregnancy can also influence the babies developing immune system. While animal studies suggest that the combination of stress and allergen exposure during pregnancy may magnify the effects on the immune system, this is the first human study to examine this directly. The researchers analyzed levels of maternal stress and mother’s exposure to dust mite allergen in their homes while pregnant with respect to cord blood IgE expression—a marker of the child’s immune response at birth— in 387 infants enrolled in the Asthma Coalition on Community, Environment, and Social Stress (ACCESS) project in Boston.

They found increased levels of IgE expression in cord blood among infants whose mothers experienced higher level stress even when exposed to relatively low levels of dust mite during pregnancy. This indicates that mother’s stress during pregnancy magnified the effect of dust exposure on the child’s immune system such that the child’s immune response at birth may be altered even with lower levels of dust exposure in the home. The results held true regardless of the mother’s race, class, education or smoking history.

“This research adds to a growing body of evidence that links maternal stress such as that precipitated by financial problems or relationship issues, to changes in children’s developing immune systems, even during pregnancy,” said Dr. Wright. “This further supports the notion that stress can be thought of as a social pollutant that, when ‘breathed’ into the body, may influence the body’s immune response similar to the effects of physical pollutants like allergens, thus adding to their effects.”

While these findings are important, Dr. Wright noted that only with continued follow-up of these children will they know if these effects will result in increased asthma risk. Moreover, it will be important to replicate these findings in larger populations to give a clearer picture of the relationship between prenatal maternal stress, allergen exposure and subsequent childhood asthma development.

“It is notable that these findings were obtained in a U.S. urban population, which may be more likely to be simultaneously exposed to multiple factors, including stress and indoor allergens. More studies like this may help explain why asthma occurs more frequently in these high-risk groups,” said Junenette Peters, Sc.D., postdoctoral research fellow who presented these results.

In the meantime, the findings suggest that when such exposures—prenatal stress, allergen exposure— occur together, there is a magnified increase in risk, which supports the assessment of maternal psychological well-being along with other environmental factors as part of a prenatal health program.

Source: American Thoracic Society

 

 

 Having children later in life is fraught with a lot more stress. Working in a job during your pregnancy, rather than being home, is also fraught with a lot more stress. Carrying the baby to the last minute while working as if its not there is very stressful, as is commuting, and other things. Being a single parent because society no longer supports women as women, is even more stressful.

 
So not only are we finding out that biology IS destiny, the ignoring this point to the degree we do also creates a negative biological destiny for her children and children’s children. that how mom chooses to live her life has a serious impact on children from conception onwards, and that our ancestors knew that. over time its turning out that they were less imprisoned by those sad excuses feminsits used to explain why older culture is the way it was, and is more imprisoned by the knowledge of outcomes and the taking life serious enough and the responsibility serious enough for the children, to actually live a way that recognized how important they were.
 
They are so important, that the old society was built around them. Today, they are so unimportant that the society is built around something else entirely. So we have more children with mental problems, and more children with asthma, more with immune system issues, more with downs syndrome, and parents more stressed as the left crushes them between the hammer and anvil of taxes and inflation.
 
There is nothing we can do to change this biological outcome. Either we accept that life is a holistic thing, and that one cant arbitrarily disconnect themselves from life’s purposes without the consequences hunting you down. There is no state that can answer the call or cry to change this. This is beyond politics, and any politics that refuses to acknowledge it will lead to the death of that political group as they are eventually replaced by others who take their time on earth more seriously in is proper context.
 
We are free to experiment all we like, but we are not free of the consequences that those experiments will create. The social experiment that we have embarked on for 40 years has insured the very death of the cultures that rose up to even consider the experiment of unchecked lifestyle. Given that they pushed this so far to failure, a failure that is probably inescapable as its imprint is embedded in the children. Like a punishment of biblical proportions the children are not as healthy as the parents who could conceive of a lifestyle that ignored them while pretending to put them first. Their children will not be as healthy either, and eventually others who do not debase their future will replace them, and a thousand years hence the children of those people will discuss the great golden age of man, of the second renaissance, that fell to ashes through its own hubris and selfishness.
 
 
Then again, I could be wrong.  

 

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