vidim da je nekima dosadno na onom topiku od silan, pa se sad sjatile ovdje...

ako krenete raspravu o svrsishodnosti podforuma podrske, disklejmerima i ostalima stvarima koje su vec toliko puta prozvakane na ovom forumu, brisat cu vase postove.
za one koje su cule za Hathor the Cow Godess, stavljam ovdje jednu obavijest koja moze nekima biti zanimljiva:

Hathor the Cow Godess je izdala knjigu.
Obratite paznju na pricu koja ju je inspirirala za zbirku.

The idea for the book Simply Give Birth came to me a couple of years ago, as most of my ideas come to me, while breastfeeding. This particular day was unexceptional, except that I happened to sit down to nurse a sleepy baby and forgot to grab my book first. So I fished around in a drawer beside the chair and unearthed a stack of The New Nativity — a quarterly collection of unassisted birth stories. Lo and behold, that’s when and where I read Fiery’s Birth Story by Poppy Street-Heywood. Poppy begins her birth story with, “45 weeks and 4 days. That’s how long Fiery took to enter the crazy world outside my body.” Then casually, almost as if it were not the most important thing in the world, describes her birth that was long overdue and yet, somehow didn’t seem to cause her any fear or complaint. She just simply gives birth. Right there in the bathroom, just like it was any other day. And then, that’s when she got me with this line: “My other two births were not medically necessary c-sections before labor…” and I was hooked. I wanted to know more! How had she the composure? How had she the faith? The spirit? Then like a fisherman pulling in the big marlin she passes the pen to her husband and lets him tell his side of the story too. Humorous, witty, matter-of-fact, he claims that he “wasn’t worried at all.” I believed him. And my first thought was that this story needed to get out there into the world.

I contacted the editor of The New Nativity, and she helped me get in touch with Poppy. I asked her for permission to use her story. For what, I had no idea, but something, something…fast forward a few months later and I’m asked to speak at The Trust Birth Conference and an idea came to me, that for too long the other story, the drama, and pain and horrifyingly out-of -control helplessness, has been the predominant tale. It’s time for that story to go the way of dinosaurs. There’s a new way to tell our birth stories, a simple way, with humor and spirit and matter-of-fact exuberance, and that if we collect these types of stories and spread them out into the world, we’ll be spreading the idea that birth is a funny, crazy, everyday, yet still life-changing to our very core, experience. Because it is all that. And more.