Tuesday 12 November 2013

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At the beginning of the tract, just inside the opening of the vagina, is the hymen, a mucous membrane. In virgins, the hymen usually encircles the opening like a tight ring, but it may completely cover the opening. The hymen helps protect the genital tract but is not necessary for health. It may tear at the first attempt at sexual intercourse, or it may be so soft and pliable that no tearing occurs. The hymen may also be torn during exercise or insertion of a tampon or diaphragm. Tearing usually causes slight bleeding. In women who have had intercourse, the hymen may be unnoticeable or may form small tags of tissue around the vaginal opening.
Vagina:
The vagina is a tubelike, muscular but elastic organ about 4 to 5 inches long in an adult woman. It connects the external genital organs to the uterus. The vagina is the organ of sexual intercourse in women. The penis is inserted into it. It is the passageway for sperm to the egg and for menstrual bleeding or a baby to the outside.
Usually, there is no space inside the vagina unless it is stretched open—for example, during an examination, sexual intercourse, or childbirth. The lower third of the vagina is surrounded by elastic muscles that control the diameter of its opening. These muscles contract rhythmically and involuntarily during orgasm.
The vagina is lined with a mucous membrane, kept moist by fluids produced by cells on its surface and by secretions from glands in the cervix (the lower part of the uterus). A small amount of these fluids may pass to the outside as a clear or milky white vaginal discharge, which is normal. During a woman's reproductive years, the lining of the vagina has folds and wrinkles. Before puberty and after menopause, the lining is smooth.
Uterus and cervix:
The uterus is a thick-walled, muscular, pear-shaped organ located in the middle of the pelvis, behind the bladder, and in front of the rectum. The uterus is anchored in position by several ligaments. The main function of the uterus is to sustain a developing fetus. The uterus consists of the cervix and the main body (corpus).
The cervix is the lower part of the uterus, which protrudes into the upper part of the vagina. It can be seen during a pelvic examination. Like the vagina, the cervix is lined with a mucous membrane, but the mucous membrane of the cervix is smooth.
Sperm can enter and menstrual blood can exit the uterus through a channel in the cervix (cervical canal). The cervical canal is usually narrow, but during labor, the canal widens to let the baby through. The cervix is usually a good barrier against bacteria, except around the time an egg is released by the ovaries (ovulation), during the menstrual period, or during labor. Bacteria that cause sexually 
The channel through the cervix is lined with glands that secrete mucus. This mucus is thick and impenetrable to sperm until just before ovulation. At ovulation, the consistency of the mucus changes so that sperm can swim through it and fertilization can occur. At this time, the mucus-secreting glands of the cervix can store live sperm for up to about 5 days, but occasionally slightly longer. These sperm can later move up through the corpus and into the fallopian tubes to fertilize an egg. Almost all pregnancies result from intercourse that occurs during the 3 days before ovulation. However, pregnancies sometimes result from intercourse that occurs up to 6 days before ovulation or during the 3 days after ovulation. For some women, the time between a menstrual period and ovulation varies from month to month. Consequently, pregnancy can occur at different times during a menstrual cycle.
The corpus of the uterus, which is highly muscular, can stretch to accommodate a growing fetus. Its muscular walls contract during labor to push the baby out through the cervix and the vagina. During the reproductive years, the corpus is twice as long as the cervix. After menopause, the reverse is true.
As part of a woman's reproductive cycle (which usually lasts about a month), the lining of the corpus (endometrium) thickens. If the woman does not become pregnant during that cycle, most of the endometrium is shed and bleeding occurs, resulting in the menstrual period.


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My background is varied. I have previously worked as a clerk, office manager, sales representative and musician. However, it was the birth of my son Joshua in 1989, that signalled a change of course in my life. I began studying to become a Childbirth Educator. I became very involved with Parents Centres Australia (a consumer pressure group), both on the management committee and as a Childbirth Educator. We lobbied together for change for pregnant women and their families. During my involvement with Parents Centres Australia I set up 'Pregnancy, Birth & Beyond' through which I provided childbirth education classes initially, followed by independent midwifery services once I qualified as a midwife.

I studied continually since 1989. I've gained Parents Centres Australia Certificate in Childbirth Education 1991, Associates in Childbirth Education Diploma in Childbirth Education in 1993, Bachelor of Nursing with Distinction in 1994. Graduate Diploma in Health Science (Midwifery) in 1996, Gradate Diploma in Childbirth Education in 2004 and International Board Certified Lactation Consultant 2008.

As a Midwife I have worked both in the hospital system, on a Team Midwifery Program, and in independent midwifery practice. I have been involved as a midwifery author in "The Birth Book" and "Pregnancy for Dummies Australian and New Zealand edition".

I have dedicated my life to supporting families, as they move through pregnancy, birth and beyond. I have a passion for birth, believe in its normality and have a commitment to promote the rights of parent



There are guides to every aspect and every angle of parenthood-from prenatal to post-college-yet none tells us what couples really and truly feel once confronted with the awesome power of Nature's Course. The Three of Us does.

Seasoned travelers, successful professionals, Joanna Coles and Peter Godwin arrived in Manhattan ready to make it their oyster-she to be the New York correspondent for a major British newspaper, he to pursue his prize-winning career as a writer and journalist. Of course they were self-absorbed; why come to New York, if not to explore every avenue of self-interest? The news that Joanna is pregnant, however, causes a massive shift in paradigm. Suddenly they are launched unsteadily but irrevocably toward an altogether new New World.

Like a series of mental ultrasounds, The Three of Us consists of alternating diary entries in which, day by day and month by month, Peter and Joanna navigate the uncharted waters of impending parenthood. There is much to discuss. 

In the tradition of the best-selling classic The Ultimate Workout Log, The Active Woman’s Pregnancy Log is the daily pregnancy diary for the active mom-to-be—from two of America’s leading fitness writers and experts.

At last, a pregnancy journal that doesn’t focus on shower gifts, baby gear, and nursery decor but on your own health during pregnancy, including your fitness, nutrition, relaxation, and general physical well-being. At a time when prenatal fitness is booming, The Active Woman’s Pregnancy Log is your healthy pregnancy headquarters—a portable, one-stop source of inspiration, information, and organizational tools to keep moms-to-be feeling fit and confident and exercising wisely throughout this amazing journey. Spanning forty weeks, this day-by-day diary features:

• a quick guide to the “active” pregnancy, including how to work around symptoms as well as exercises for every level through each trimester • eating advice that will ensure baby keeps growing and mom stays healthy • numerous charts
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Lauren London (1984- ) is an up-and-coming black actress in Hollywood. She is best known for playing New New, T.I.’s girlfriend in the film“ATL” (2006).
Although she is well known in certain circles, she is not a household name – yet.Loretta Divine, who played her mother in “This Christmas” (2007) says, “She has such a strong presence – that mixture of class, innocence and girl-next-door beauty. She should rock this industry.”
London does have a sweet and innocent-looking beauty. She is light-skinned with long black hair and beautiful dark eyes. She looks even better in person than on film.
Even though she does not see herself as all that desirable, it seems that the readers of King magazine cannot get enough of her. She appeared on the cover in 2006, was in the magazine again in 2007, and in 2008 was still third on the magazine’s request-o-meter. Only the singers Rihanna and Alicia Keys were in greater demand.
But she is not just another one of Hollywood’s brainless beauties. She is wise beyond her years – maybe because life was so rough for her growing up. She says it helps her to be a better actress.
But she is not just another one of Hollywood’s brainless beauties. She is wise beyond her years – maybe because life was so rough for her growing up. She says it helps her to be a better actress.
She is not so much interested in becoming rich and famous as in becoming a great actress. She wants parts in films that will make her a better actress, not a necessarily a famous one. She hopes to win the Oscar one day.
In 2003 she started appearing in hip hop videos, like those of Snoop Dog,Young Gunz and especially Pharrell. She did it only to get some experience, not as an end in itself. She will still do videos on rare occasion.
When she appeared in King in 2006 she was in a two-piece swimsuit. In 2007 she was much more covered up. It matches how she is entering a more serious stage in her acting.
She has appeared on television as Monay in “Everybody Hates Chris” and as Turtle’s girlfriend in “Entourage” on HBO.
Rap guy’s girlfriend: She has reportedly been the girlfriend of rappers Lil Wayne, and Neef of Young Gunz . Right now she has little time for a serious love life. Which makes her a bit afraid for her future: she does not want to wind up like Oprah, rich and famous but without a family of her own.
She says that if she was alone on a desert island with her perfect man he would climb the tree to get the coconut and let her eat first. Makes you kind of wonder about Lil Wayne.

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Born Katherine Litwack on June 13, 1986 in the Bryn Mawr area just outside Philadelphia, PA, "Kat" was the youngest child of Gerald, a molecular pharmacologist, and Ellen, a poet and speech therapist. Home schooled throughout her entire academic career, she graduated from high school at the age of 14. Despite a somewhat reclusive home life and childhood, she had shown an early interest in acting and began landing commercial work by the age of 10. Having taken the stage surname of Dennings, she made her television acting debut in a 2000 episode of "Sex and the City" (HBO, 1994-2004) as a precocious 13-year-old who hires Samantha Jones (Kim Cattrall) to plan her lavish bat mitzvah. Her impressive, assured performance landed the actress a regular cast role as the spirited daughter of Bob Saget's recently-widowed character on the short-lived sitcom "Raising Dad" (The WB, 2001-02). Although the project tanked, the experience convinced Dennings to fully commit to acting as a profession and, to the dismay of her parents, she and her cautious yet supportive family made the move to Los Angeles in 2002.

Dennings soon began to land supporting roles in made-for-TV movies like the comedy-fantasy "The Scream Team" (Disney Channel, 2002), featuring Monty Python's Eric Idle. Over the course of the next two years, she also picked up several guest spots on police procedurals like "Without A Trace" (CBS, 2002-09) and "CSI: Crime Scene Investigation" (CBS, 2000- ), in addition to an appearance on the fish-out-of-water sitcom "Less Than Perfect" (ABC, 2002-06). Dennings then made her feature film debut in the Hilary Duff vehicle "Raise Your Voice" (2004). Cast as Sloane, a dour piano student at a Los Angeles music school, Dennings' performance was one of the few highlights in the otherwise forgettable coming-of-age musical drama. She went on to land more supporting roles in such films as the neo-Western drama "Down in the Valley" (2005), starring Edward Norton and Evan Rachel Wood, and in the drug-fueled drama "London" (2005), featuring Jason Statham and Chris Evans. While those two independent features were seen only in limited release, it was another film that same year that truly gave Dennings a substantial boost.

As Catherine Keener's perpetually sulking, embarrassed teenage daughter in writer-director Judd Apatow's comedy "The 40-Year-Old Virgin" (2005), Dennings deftly gave voice to the teen's outrage at the injustice of having to remain a virgin while her mother has an illicit affair with the film's titular man-child (Steve Carell). Although her work in the hit summer film was not a fast-track ticket to major leading roles, it did allow Dennings to continue to hone her screen craft with a recurring role as Zoe Butler, a troubled teen involved with the older Dr. Ray Barnett (Shayne West) on the long-running medical drama "E.R." (NBC, 1994-2009), in addition to a guest turn in a 2005 episode of "CSI: New York" (CBS, 2004- ). Back in theaters, she picked up roles alongside preteen actress Chloë Moretz in Martin Lawrence's fat-suit sequel "Big Momma's House 2" (2006), then played Anton Yelchin's love interest and Robert Downey, Jr.'s daughter in the romantic comedy "Charlie Bartlett" (2007).

Dennings' screen presence increased with more prominent roles in such films as the girl-power comedy "The House Bunny" (2008), starring Anna Faris as a naïve, yet good-hearted playmate imparting her unique brand of wisdom to a group of sorority outcasts - with Dennings and fellow rising star Emma Stone among them. After playing a series of anti-social supporting characters, Dennings was given a shot as leading lady opposite Michael Cera in the indie romantic-comedy "Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist" (2008). Based on the 2006 novel of the same name, the charmingly simple film followed the unlikely emergence of the title characters' romance over the.

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(about her love for acting) I love it because I love to tell stories. I like being in movies that have a great story. I'm not so interested in being a Hollywood star. It's a job, you know. When you wake up at six in the morning every day for a week, it feels like hard work.
I don't want to make movies for kids, and I don't want to make movies for adults either.
Acting is such a personal thing, which is weird because at the same time it's not. It's for the consumption of other people. But in terms of creative outlets and expressing yourself, it's just the most extreme version of that that I've ever found. It's like running, it's exertion. When you reach that point where you can't go anymore and you stop and you take a breath, it's that same sort of clearing of the mind.
A lot of actors think that what we do is so important, like we're saving people's lives or something.
All I try to do in the press is be honest about something that I really care about.
I've always had an aversion to looking sexy, but I've grown out of it.
I start everything from the same place, with that sense of responsibility. On a bigger movie, you have to be aware that you can only control your aspect of the film. It's nice to be on a smaller movie because you're working with your friends and you feel so close-knit. It's your movie and you can do anything you want, and nobody's going to have anything to say. With a bigger movie, it concerns so many people. It's so much more of a process. But, in terms of what I do personally, it has to be the same, or else I'm just on some big movie, being a liar, and I can't do that.
Really, I'm incredibly disjointed and not candid. Just in general, my thoughts tend to come out in little spurts that don't necessarily connect. If you hang around long enough, you can find the linear path. But it will take a second. That is why these interviews never go well for me.
About having an aha moment when it came to pursuing an acting career: I have the "Aha" moments progressively -- they're like milestones and they hit you. I think my first "Aha!" moment was when I did this (TV) movie called "Speak." I was just rolling with it, and ended up kind of really losing myself in it, so that I felt like I was a different person at the end. That was a big moment.
You should have the opportunity to be more than one person with different people - because you have that within you. It's not like you're faking it. If everyone knows you so well and can always get a hold of you, then you're stuck to this thing that people think you are. You should have the opportunity to reinvent yourself. Because you do. Naturally.
On whether she wants to develop her skills as a writer: I do want to work on writing, because writing's a skill. Writing is something that you can train yourself to know better. To know yourself better. And it's intimidating as hell. I mean, I definitely will always do what I've been doing. I've also started taking a lot of pictures, and they help the writing. The pictures help the writing. I mean, I want to make books. I want to take pictures and then write all over the pictures. And then I don't have to say a complete story, because I have the picture, and I have just a word.
About Bella in New Moon: Well, she loses what basically gives her the drive to do anything in her whole life. She loses the man she's in love with, but she also loses her entire life plan, and she's so young to have to be forced into a decision like that. It's just a glorified, elaborate version of the worst breakup you've ever been through. All of a sudden you question everything. All of a sudden you know nothing and you're dropped in the middle of a freezing cold ocean. Oddly, we have a character that's warm enough and bright enough to bring her out of that, and it's truly gut-ripping. Because as perfect as Jacob is for her, she holds on to an ideal, the ultimate fiery love that she has for Edward even though it's not comfortable, it's not practical and it's not a good idea.
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