UPDATE: Mad Men actress January Jones has revealed she ate her own placenta after the birth of her baby Xander. She told People magazine: ‘I have a great doula who makes sure I’m eating well, with vitamins and teas and with placenta capsulation.’
“It’s something I was very hesitant about, but we’re only the only mammals who don’t ingest out own placentas,” she said. And she suggests all mums try the “natural booster” too…
Here’s a previous article we ran on eating placenta:
After my son was born all I wanted to eat was sushi. Maybe it was because I had been cautioned against eating it while I was pregnant or maybe because it is full of er, mercury and that is what my body craved. I like to think it was just that my taste buds like sushi rice and seaweed.
There were a few other things I was keen to eat – soft cheese, soft boiled eggs, actually anything that I could eat without feeling nauseous was high on my list (I had spent a lot of my pregnancy throwing up.) This could be ONE of the reasons I didn’t give a second’s thought to eating my placenta. Or was it my son’s placenta?
Turns out because he was born 10 weeks early and there were many complications it became the laboratory’s placenta and even though they packed it in the exact same type of container that I usually eat my cashew nut vegetable from, it was not destined for anyone’s plate. Just analysis.
It doesn’t always have to be this way though and more and more placentas are being sent home in take away containers. For consumption. Yes. I did say that. I understand the thought of chewing through a placenta can be quite off putting, especially for those of us who are not fans of eating organs in general but hey, they are making it much, much easier to swallow – there are in fact people who will create an easy to swallow pill using just the placenta and a few handy kitchen tools.
This from The New York Magazine
Mayer—an upbeat, blue-eyed blonde from upstate New York—is a professional placenta-preparer. Her job is to transform placentas into supplements that are said to alleviate postpartum depression, aid in breastmilk production and lactation, act as a uterine tonic, and replenish nutrients lost during pregnancy. Her clients are mostly middle-class, like Hughes and her husband, Doug, who are college-educated, in their thirties, and live on a gentrifying street in Crown Heights. On this dreary April morning, Mayer is driving the afterbirth to their apartment to begin preparing it.
“It’s the freshest placenta I’ve ever worked with!” she says, glancing over at the container as the car lurches through traffic. Mayer speaks about the organ in tones most women reserve for newborns: “perfect,” “beautiful,” “precious.”
Her enthusiasm isn’t unfounded. The placenta feeds the baby until birth, filtering toxins while letting in vitamins, minerals, oxygen, and other nutrients from the mother’s bloodstream. It even helps reduce the risk of transmitting viruses, including HIV, from mother to child.
Mayer, who also works as a massage therapist and doula, first became interested in placentas as a student at the University of Colorado. After reading up on the purported benefits of consuming one’s afterbirth and learning that a client was planning to try it, Mayer decided that she wanted to offer her customers placenta capsules: dried, ground afterbirth packaged into a clear pill no bigger than a regular vitamin supplement.
The technique, called encapsulation, was not widely practiced in Colorado and, until quite recently, was practically unknown on the East Coast. But Mayer found a doula who conducted training sessions with donated placentas, and started her business, Brooklyn Placenta Services, shortly thereafter.
“They’re happy pills,” Mayer says. “They’re made by your body, for your body. Why wouldn’t you want to try?”
Um, I wouldn’t want to try because I am a vegetarian. Does that count? Or maybe the fact that there is no real scientific evidence that the placenta is really that beneficial once it has done its intended job.
Mark Kristal, a behavioral neuroscientist at the University of Buffalo, is the country’s leading (and quite possibly only) authority on placentophagia, the practice of placenta consumption. He has been researching the phenomenon for twenty years, and concludes that it must offer “a fundamental biological advantage” to all mammals. What this advantage is, he writes in one of his papers, “is still a mystery … in fact, a double mystery. We are not sure either of the immediate causes … nor are we sure of the consequences of the behavior.” But placentas have carried a special spiritual significance in some cultures. In ancient Egypt, it had its own hieroglyph, and the Ibo tribe in Nigeria and Ghana treats the placenta like a child’s dead twin. In traditional Chinese medicine, small doses of human placenta are sometimes dried, mixed with herbs, and ingested to alleviate, among other things, impotence and lactation conditions. And in modern medicine, doctors often bank umbilical-cord blood to treat genetic diseases with harvested stem cells.
According to Kristal, the first recorded placentophagia movement in America began in the seventies, when people residing in communes would cook up a placenta stew and share it among themselves. “It’s a New Age phenomenon,” he explains. “Every ten or twenty years people say, ‘We should do this because it’s natural and animals do it.’ But it’s not based on science. It’s a fad.”
It’s a fad I wont be joining in. Even after watching this clip
Would you eat the placenta after you had given birth? Would having it in pill form make it easier to swallow?








Comments
178 Comments so far
Not without chips !
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And BBQ sauce…
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Or some fava beans and a nice chianti…
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From the little thumbnail pic that came up with this story on the homepage I thought it was a raspberry drink of some kind and thought yum!
Now I’m feeling a little ill…
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In New Zealand, we bury placentas. It’s quite a big deal signifying spiritual connection to the homeland. Personally I’m not grossed-out by this eating idea, but culturally I have something else I have to do with placenta! (ie bury it)
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I’m from NZ too. My niece was born at home and my brother and his wife retained the placenta, put it in the freezer and then on the next visit to our family property, buried it with a tree planted over it. All the grandchildren have trees on the property but only my niece has a placenta under hers. With my girls I saved the little bit of umbilical chord that falls off when the baby is a few days old and we buried them under trees. Close enough!
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I have had my placenta encapsulated. I had a home birth and decided i wanted to keep the placenta with initial thoughts of planting it. It grew and looked after my beautiful baby for 10 months, why would i just throw it away? When i looked into it further i found out about a homeopathic remedy you can make with it (only about an almond size piece of it) and then also encapsulation. The placenta of the baby it grew is of such value to them, it could heal them in the future and god know if our children ever become so ill you would do anything to try and help them through it and if this is an option, god knows id try it. So i made a homeopathic remedy, had it encapsulated and all that could not be used i planted her birth tree. I’m not a part of a tribe living in a clay hut in the outback either, i’m a regular person living in Melbourne with a plasma TV and a farily mainstream view to things, i just wanted to make this clear to those thinking the only people who do these things are tree hugging hippies dancing with fairies and sending their kids to a “special” school.
I understand the view most people have in this topic which is clear in the responses so far, i just wanted to put one out there for the few who choose to take the other option.
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I completely understand keeping cord blood or even planting a birth tree. But would you EAT your placenta ?
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yes absolutely. people are looking at it too literally, take your photo and think of plonking it on the table with a knife and fork…… not so appealing. Think of having it dried, made into a powder and tiny amounts put into capsules, doesn’t sound quite so bad does it??
I haven’t had to take any of mine yet but i have it there if later down the line i develop say an illness and am desperate to find some sort of cure and it leads me back to this, likewise for my daughter. As you say we use the cord blood don’t we??
I have homeopathic drops made from it which was an “infusion” of a tiny piece of placenta in with brandy that has since been removed but holds all the key nutrients from it. Wouldn’t you rather have this on hand if need be than throw the precious thing out?
I have friends who have started hemorrhaging after birth and the midwife has placed a tiny piece of placenta under her tongue and she stopped heavily bleeding in a few minutes……. i think if you were in this state and probably thought you may die you would do anything wouldn’t you?? I have also heard amazing things about treating it for PND and other post birth issues.
I totally understand the gross out factor but you just need to get the stainless steel bowl with the entire thing, membranes, chord and all picture out of your head and think of it in other ways. Think of all the stuff they use in chinese medicine. On that note pigs placenta is a huge one in chinese medicine, id rather my own than a pigs any day.
I know i’m in the minority but i’m proud to have done what i did with it and actually couldn’t live with myself if i had it thrown away.
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If I’m having a postpartum hemorrhage I want emergency surgery and a blood transfusion.
Having said that I wonder if your friends had case studies written about them or if this is a common practice. Anything is possible.
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I think shoving a small piece of anything into someone’s mouth during a medical emergency is the absolute worse thing you can ever do.
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I’m open to it…I think all your points are entirely valid. Might consider it if we decide to have a third.
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i was a bit pre-oocupied after giving birth but did always consider it, especially if it was cut into tablet sized proportions or into capsules. if it had another baby i would try to mention it in my birth plan just to keep it for me for a few days. i have checked my placenta out though and found it absolutely fascinating.
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with all due respect for those who choose to, the word that comes to my mind is cannibalism.
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So we should do this cos animals do it? They eat their own poop, too. Is that what’s next for us? The Hidden Benefits Of Poop? Give me a friggin’ break. Glad that placebo’s working for you, but since Science and Research can’t find it’s benefits & give it a thumbs-up, that’s probably all it is, a placebo.
}:)
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thanks for the laugh!
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that’s funny…Science and Research can’t find the benefits of routine episiotomy, induction of labour without medical indication, birthing in lithotomy position but those practices are happening to MOST women in MOST hospitals every.single.day. I support people to do what works for them…eat your placenta if you believe in the benefits, or don’t…have an induction of labour, or don’t. It’s your choice.
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I sure as hell wouldn’t eat a placenta! My placenta was a source of great interest after Miss Shadow was born though and the doctor asked me if he could take a photo of it to show to his colleagues! I assumed he was joking, but he wasn’t – apparently my placenta was in halves, joined by a straw thin blood vessel. If that vessel had broken my baby and I would have been in serious trouble. No more babies for me just in case that happens again – couldn’t risk a rupture!
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Really………….don’t know what to say, except this reminds me of when you see a dog or cat vomit, and then proceed to eat it back up again. People, have we not evolved to realise that there are things our bodies get rid of, like placenta’s, poop, vomit, sweat……..it does it for one reason…. it doesnt want them any more. Honestly, take a vitamin and do a yoga class. Its all good.
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Not for me
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no, thanks
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I think placentas are fascinating things. But eat one? No.
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well I sure had never heard of eating the placenta…I dont think I would be kean to do so!
But I have heard, and many cultures actually do take it home and bury it in the garden, well actually grow a tree of some sort on top of it!
My daughter was born in the Marquises, and I was asked if i wanted to take it home..But I lived on a boat, thus had nowhere to plant a tree and I did not want to feed the sharks with it! So they kept it, but next time, if I have another child, I will plant a tree with it!
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you lived on a boat in the Marquises.
sooooooooooooooooo jealous.
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Aaaaaand there goes the thought of finishing my lunch….
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Please put a warning on this! Not a good article to be reading while eating my lunch…
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Now i want vegemite on toast………
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A far better choice than placenta!
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Umm ewww no thanks! I doubt I’ll want to even look at it if I ever give birth either!
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I looked and thought that it was cool that I could see one of my organs! Looking I can handle…eating, not so much!
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I think i just did a little bit of sick in my mouth…
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Don’t people chose to be vegetarian because meat requires a death?
Wouldn’t that make placenta the holy grail for vegetarians? The gateway to finally being able to have a tasty meal?
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But would it really be tasty? Ha ha.
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meh, I’m French, anything’s fine as long as it’s fried wth garlic and herbs (snails, frog’s legs…)
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Exactly! It’s not like you’d just plop it on a plate. Once it’s chopped up (or perhaps minced) it’d be like any other piece of meat.
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Someone in the office just told me about her friend who is a midwife and saw a woman in the birthing centre eat her placenta. Just like that. After birthing it. !!!
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Er OK, maybe some would…
At least it’d still be warm at that stage I guess. I’d still want a bit of pepper or tabasco.
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Looks like a good steak or perhaps a liver? A bit of guiness and cheese and it’s make a great pie!
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You just made me think of Anthony Hopkins. Slllurp
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Hello clarice…
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Yeah, kinda like people fruit!
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Finally! A fruit more expensive than bananas!
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No way. The bit that I don’t understand is that if it filters out toxins during pregnancy, wouldn’t it be full of toxins and, therefore, not that great for you anyway?
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This is a good point. Does anyone know if the filtered out toxins stay in the placenta, or go back to the mother’s bloodstream?
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I’ve often wondered about that with Vampires…not only does your blood transport food and oxygen around the body…it also transports waste products to your kidney and bowels…if you were a Vampire, would you really want to eat someone’s waste products!?
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My understanding is that the baby’s waste products are filtered back into the mother’s bloodstream where they are then circulated through the kidneys and liver to remove waste products and toxins as per normal. Which leads me to my next point – I think eating kidneys, liver, oysters, mussels etc is much more disgusting because these thing actually filter all the crap out of blood/seawater.
The grossest things about a placenta is that it would be all sinewy, oh and that is has been encasing a bunch of uriny amniotic fluid – well now, actually that is rather gross…
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All a liver does is filter toxins, and livers make great eatin’.
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To be honest, probably not. But I’m very much in the camp of each to their own.
I gave birth to my third child a week ago (yes, just a week!!) and I was very keen to see the placenta after the birth, just as I had been with my previous child but it was already gone once I asked about it. I always felt disappointed about that. I did see the placenta from my first child, who was stillborn at full term three years ago.
After my daughter was born last Thursday (by caesarean) I asked the obstetrician if I could see the placenta. I was just curious and really keen to see it, because it does do an amazing job for nine months. And it did live inside my body, right alongside my daughter for all those months.
They sort of made me feel a bit odd, almost like, “oh no we have another crazy one who wants to see the placenta”. But really, all I wanted was a quick sticky beak. It would have just been sent to medical waste.
Thankfully it was still hanging around when I asked, the midwife brought it over to me and showed it to me, back and front, as well as the membranes which were attached and that was it. I didn’t touch it, nor did I want to and the whole process only lasted a minute or so. That’s all I wanted. But yep, I realise this also might gross people out, but it was just what I wanted.
Again, each to their own!
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I did the same with my last baby – I was shocked at how small it was and that it would fit into a takeaway food container!
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Really? I actually thought it was bigger than I’d imagined it would be! Still, I thought it was really interesting to see and while not for everyone, a big step removed from taking home and eating/burying etc!
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Maybe I was hoping that it would be bigger, because then it would have accounted for a bigger proportion of my belly!!
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My husband saw all of our kids placentas, he found it fascinating. Baby no#1 was 10 days overdue and according to him it was obvious why they usually induce babies at this stage, because of the state of the placenta. Our other kids placentas, who were born on time, all looked completely different.
Thats all I needed to know!
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Congrats on the birth of your baby!
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Thanks Lana
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you have every right to see your placenta without feeling like a crazy woman. Cant believe they made you feel strange for asking. It actually belongs to you believe it or not.
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It wasn’t too bad, really. They just said they don’t get many asking to see it, so they were more surprised if anything. And I was just lucky I asked when I did, while it was still there. They seem to whip them away pretty quickly and do with them what they do. In the end, they almost seemed glad I asked and glad that I had shown interest. I’m glad I looked as well. I’m very relieved it did it’s job so well for 38 and a half weeks.
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Curiosity is always a healthy thing! Congrats of your kid!
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Congratulations on the birth of your bubba! I am due with #3 in a few weeks and I really want to check out the placenta so this comment was very encouraging. The first time I didn’t think of it, the second baby was born in the car and with all the confusion, it didn’t arrive at the hospital with me but this time I want to check it out – mostly just out of curiosity as I’m fascinated by all things biological. Thanks for sharing, just the reassurance I needed to ask
Did donate the first two to the medical school attached to the hospital though so at least someone got something out of them…
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i have seen your story a few times on MM so am really happy to hear of the birth of your third baby. i hope he/she is a sleeper and brings you much joy xx
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I know a home birth midwife who either encourages you to bury the placenta (gives dad something to do during early labour maybe?) or she takes it home for her garden. She takes it in a ice cream container and sometimes store them in the freezer until she gets a chance to get out into the garden.
Her children never, ever self serve themselves ice cream.
The point is a lot of people take them home for burying.
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how can the father bury the placenta during early labour???
Its not out then yet!!!
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I meant digging the hole!
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OMG hahaha I didn’t read it properly the first time and I thought you wrote “she makes icecream out of it and feeds it to her kids”
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The placenta is rich in vitamins and minerals and can end up in face creams for this very reason. Animals eat their placentas because that’s the only food available to them in the nest (no-one to bring them room service) they must stay in the nest until their young are strong enough to leave. Animals also
birth quietly so as not to attract attention from
predators. And some just plant a tree on top as a symbol of healthy ( tree of ) life and the child knows the tree is theirs:)
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I’m going to go against the grain here and say the idea intrigues me. Having said that its pretty difficult to gross me out – and I have an iron stomach. I don’t get that mental queasy thing.
I would be interested to hear what those in nutrition related disciplines think about this. The body has put a lot of work/energy and nutrients from your own body to produce this. I have heard that if you do eat your placenta – you very quickly replenish what you lost in making it and your baby.
Not that I’ve ever been pregnant yet – but when I eventually do have children I’m kind of hoping more research will have been done on this to check the validity of these health claims. That and if the conclusion is favourable towards eating your placenta – that it becomes a bit more socially acceptable!
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Please do look into it when the time comes. i had mine encapsulated from my daughter and also made a homeopathic remedy from it for her if she should need it in the future. There are a few that do it in Australia you just need to look. Good luck.
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I have three children. And – pretty scarily, actually – after my first was born, I CRAVED the placenta. To eat. Yes. I didn’t though. This was back in the ’80′s when such an admission may well have seen you burned at the stake (well, almost). Actually, my midwife at the time told me it would be ok if I really, really wanted to. I think the resistance and repulsion came from friends and family. The craving never returned with my two subsequent children. Thanks be.
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After my first two babes were born I ate a mouthful of raw placenta, about an hour after the birth. With my third I had the pills. There is a lot of symbolism and meaning around the placenta and how rich it is in iron etc… as well as being full of life force. There is also some evidence that eating placenta helps to prevent extreme blood loss after birth, and helps with balancing hormones. I ate mine for this reason and to symbolically/energetically give something back to myself. Have you ever pricked your finger and sucked it? That is what it tasted like.
With the pills I took them every day for a few weeks…that was the fastest recovery from any birth I experienced…despite a almost 5kg baby. It was amazing. With my fourth I didn’t do anything…. which I am sad about because I took the longest to recover that time and had PND. It may have helped if I had eaten some or had the pills.
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i could easily handle the pills and wish i had either done that or at least taken it home and dug it into the garden.
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Can I ask where you got the pills from? Were they made from your placenta or can you buy them somewhere? I am fascinated by this topic.
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I had a homebirth with an independent midwife and she made them. I am anonymous from above….just wasn’t recognised by computer before…
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yep, i had mine encapsulated, made a homeopathic remedy and planted all that was left (very happy to have done all 3!). I haven’t used them yet but it brings me great comfort to know i have them. I couldn’t bear the thought of mine and my babys placenta being thrown away.
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What are the pills going to be able to cure your kid of?
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They are not going to be able to “cure my kid” of anything in particular, they are purely medicinal in the way of say Chinese medicine that if you suffer an illness or condition and you chose to try Chinese medicine (or in fact anything if you were desperate enough and ill enough) then they may be of benefit down the line in some way. If she for instance did come down with something and i was madly researching what i could try and it came up as a possible solution then i have it there. The child’s own placenta is like gold to them, it is theirs that grew them and is linked to them like nothing else, why wouldn’t you save it??? Just to mention also, pigs placenta is used frequently in Chinese medicine so you cant say that human placenta from that child is of no use. Ultimately its individual though and comes down to personal beliefs and choice, if you don’t get it then that’s fine.
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Well, i’ll happily eat steak and kidney pie, but eating placenta? Not a chance. It did a great job of keeping my baby healthy, but once I push it out it’s done its job and no longer has any use. Also, it’s just a bit too close to cannablism in my mind.
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I think you should tag this post NSFL (not safe for lunch).
I know of people who have done it (its that kind of neighbourhood). But no, not for me. Sushi, camembert and champagne were high on my list.
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OK…yes, that is possibly the grossest picture ever posted on MM…thanks a bunch!
Yes, maybe thousands of years ago there was a benefit from eating the placenta…times were tough and a quick munch on some nutritious, iron-rich placenta probably helped some new mothers survive the shock of child-birth…but it’s the 21st Century…if you are a healthy middle-class woman with access to good nutritious food, why would you even think of doing this…?
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Er, I think you missed the time we posted on period art. Yes we did. http://www.mamamia.com.au/health-wellbeing/menstrual-activists/
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Actually, that one didn’t gross me out…it’s art! I think it’s the cold-sterile nature of the placenta in the stainless-steel bowl that makes it look so yuck!
How about this?
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Damn me and my curiosity! I opened the link to the period story (thanks Lana lol) omg! I missed that story I wish I had continued to miss it! Can’t believe her parents have a painting in their house! Ahhh gross!
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Don’t consider myself squeamish – the placenta pic didn’t bother me – but i opened the link to the menstrual art and just about hurled….And the other thing is, what is so creative about it? Not exactly a bloody Picasso (ha ha).
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Hahaha, get a grip JJ. It’s just an organ that no ones died to create……
Birth is a very primal thing, the sounds, sights and smells. The placenta is just one part of that. These days I don’t think we’re quite prepared for that aspect of birth anymore. I’ve had women ask for their placenta, mostly to bury, but occasionally to eat. We happily pack it up for them. I like the planting idea, not to sure about eating one though. I can understand why it’s done though.
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Yuck.
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Er, no.
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Lovely article to read over your lunch… :/
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I feel sick.
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Gross. That. Is. All. Now I hope I can stomach my sushi for lunch………….
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Sushi
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On the topic of” it’s nature and animals do it” they also lick their own butts after they poop. Another natural thing i am not willing to try.
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Not all things done in nature are natural, for anyone other than the natural species. I once bottle raised an orphan kitten and was told by the vet, that the mother licks its bum after feeding, to instigate the “expected” reflex. My horrified look said it all, but luckily she then added, all I had to do was wipe it.
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I just keep imagining the smell of the dehydrating placenta. But I am trying desperately hard not to….
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Well, I was eating lunch as I read this….
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that picture turned my stomach so much i had to comment. blech.
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I forgot to include in the post (or maybe I am just scared of my extended family) but after my nephew was born my sister-in-law sent me to her naturopath/herbalist to get her some “stuff” that she had made up for her. Now I am wondering what was in there.
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That picture is really gross!
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