Ultrasound: 10.5 weeks
June 8, 2008 Uncategorized 1 CommentThis last Friday we had another ultrasound. We could see the baby swimming around… it was very active. Things are progressing good.

This last Friday we had another ultrasound. We could see the baby swimming around… it was very active. Things are progressing good.

We got our first set of ultrasounds today… pretty exciting! The fetus is 1.13cm long, with an expected due date of Dec-30th 2008. The red arrow is pointing to the head, and the green arrow is the yolk sac. The baby’s heart is the white lump at its center… we could see it beating… what a trip!

This next image shows the heart beat… a healthy 143 beats-per-minute.

This last image is a stock photo showing what the baby looks like at this point. This is a side-view picture, while our ultrasound shows the baby from the front (or back… it’s hard to tell).

I found this post discussing the importance of names, and some interesting naming customs from other countries (”Have-a-Look Dube” has a certain ring to it :-)). What I found most interesting (and disturbing) are efforts by certain governments to limit the choice of baby names to a predefined set. From the post:
…in Zimbabwe names are often chosen to convey specific meaning. Thus, one will find names such as Trymore, Lovemore, Learnmore, Justice, Honour, Trust, Knowledge, Oblivious, Wind, Wedding, Funeral, Rain, and even Hatred. Have-a-Look Dube is apparently a famous footballer in Zimbabwe. In one family, the last of 13 children was named “Never Trust A Woman” — apparently to express doubts about paternity.
A recent bill proposed in the Venezuala National Assembly would have effectively limited parents of newborns to a list of 100 names chosen by the government (the proposal failed to advance). The purpose? According to sponsors, the list was intended to “preserve the equilibrium and integral development of the child” by preventing parents from bestowing names that open the child to ridicule, are difficult to pronounce in Spanish, or generate doubts as to the child’s gender… Some Venezuelan names — e.g., Kennedy, John Wayne, Pavel, Ilich — reflect historical and cultural ties . In the voter registry, one can find as many as 60 Hitlers; eight Hochiminhs, among them Hochiminh Jesús Delgado Sierra; and six Eisenhowers, including Dwight Eisenhower Rojas Barboza.
Read the full post HERE.