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Fansidar (Pyrimethamine, Sulfadoxine)

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Fansidar (Pyrimethamine, Sulfadoxine)
MAN IN THE MAKING: PRE-NATAL IMPRESSIONS
Except for such phenomena as the above the infant is completely separated from the mother. There are no nerve connections between them. The mother does not feel it when the umbilical cord, the one connection between the pair, is cut. There are no means for transmitting memories or ideas.
Yet throughout the ages people have believed in “pre-natal impressions.” This is the belief that if a woman while pregnant is seriously alarmed or injured, the experience may leave a mark upon her child. How often when children have been born with spastic paralysis, having little control of their muscles and possibly with weakened minds, it has been said that the mother was, while pregnant, molested by a drunken man. Even Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, in his novel Elsie Venner, discussed the serpent-like nature of a young woman whose mother had been bitten by a rattle snake when she was bearing her child. Yet one cannot help feeling that even a century ago that practical anatomist and well-trained medical man expected his story to be taken only as an interesting fantasy.
The Bible quotes at least one such (supposed) case of the influence of maternal impressions. Burton in his Anatomy of Melancholy three centuries ago cited numerous examples; and even in my time a distinguished college president quoted such cases to his class. You will notice that sensations of grief, terror, and other unpleasantness are what pass through to injure the child. No one competent observer suggests that any lovely, intelligent, sweet-dispositioned child possesses these characteristics because the mother spent her period of pregnancy visiting art galleries, attending symphony concerts, and reading the world’s best literature.
Embryologists (those are the persons who devote themselves to studying what has been discussed here) are more than sceptical about pre-natal impressions. They do not believe in them at all. If you were told that a hen, having laid a clutch of eggs, was scared by a hawk before the eggs hatched and the chickens turned out to be Barred Plymouth Rocks with cross markings on their feathers like those of a hawk, you would pooh-pooh the idea of cause and effect. But when we come down to fundamentals the hen and the human mother are producing a chick or a child by the same process. The hen puts an ovum no bigger than the point of a pin, together with a lot of nourishment, inside a hard shell for protection. The egg is kept warm until the ovum has absorbed all the nourishment and grown into a chick. The human mother puts her ovum in her warm womb and then stands by to furnish the nourishment through the cord and placenta until the child has grown to man’s form. The idea is the same. Only the technique is different.
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