User Panel
Posted: 8/6/2022 12:53:10 PM EDT
During child birth now a days we have somewhat sterile rooms and equipment. We have technology to let us know if a woman needs a c-section.
How did the early humans do this? What were they using a rock to cut the umbilical cord? What if the mother wasn't able to produce milk after birth? These are burning questions!!! |
|
If things didn't work right they died, that's a huge part of why the life expectancy was so low until the 1900's. Sure people lived to be older, but the average was way lower because people regularly died young.
|
|
Sometimes when a Daddy Neanderthal and a Mommy Neanderthal love each other very, very much………..
|
|
Don’t they teach this kind of thing in school anymore? If there was a problem the kid died.
|
|
They did it painfully, frequently, and with a lot of infant and mother mortality.
|
|
Quoted: If anything went wrong the baby and mother died. View Quote Pretty much, as was the case until very recently in history. People had short lives but they made up for it by producing babies early and often. |
|
Going back just a couple generations, I found my grandfathers routinely buried 2+ wives due to childbirth and countless children due to illness. Life finds a way though.
|
|
Quoted: If things didn't work right they died, that's a huge part of why the life expectancy was so low until the 1900's. Sure people lived to be older, but the average was way lower because people regularly died young. View Quote |
|
Quoted: During child birth now a days we have somewhat sterile rooms and equipment. We have technology to let us know if a woman needs a c-section. How did the early humans do this? What were they using a rock to cut the umbilical cord? What if the mother wasn't able to produce milk after birth? These are burning questions!!! View Quote See..... when a mommy and daddy love each other ...... do you really not know? Have your mommy and daddy have the birds and bees talk with you yet? |
|
|
They either survived or they died.
Modern medicine has hamstrung Darwin. |
|
|
captured human females were merely
warm holes breeding vessels and milk producers simple explanation |
|
|
Quoted: How did Neanderthals/early humans have kids? View Quote Naturally, the old fashioned way. |
|
|
|
|
early humans, hell…..,3rd world humans right fuckin now
mamasan can poop a kid out and continue to work in the RICE FIELDS MUTHA FUCKA |
|
A Paleolithic stork would drop the baby off.
Or lots of people died. Not just in childbirth but in every day life like they did for thousands of years up until the last hundred or two. Have any sort of medical condition? Dead. Get a bad injury? Dead. Run into a large predator or the tribe from a few miles away? Dead. Life was very harsh and often short. |
|
It was probably very risky until the anunaki came and genetically altered the neanderthals, turning them into humans who could be taught to work and use tools. The missing link is the anunaki making us a gmo
|
|
Them young ones popped right out while mama was scraping them mammoth hides for moccasins.
|
|
|
|
The Neanderthals were smart enough to take the mother & child to the Cro-Magnon run hospitals.
|
|
Quoted: What were they using a rock to cut the umbilical cord? View Quote Probably chewed through it. Then left the tag end on the baby until it dried up and fell off. Heck, they probably made soup out of the placenta. I know intellectually that it's all good protein but |
|
|
|
Have you ever seen mammals give birth in the wild?
The baby comes out, the mom chews the cord, licks it clean and gives it a titty. Some die. Some live until something eats it. Some live to sexual maturity and reproduce. Rinse & repeat. It really is that simple. |
|
My mother's mother was pregnant and got sick with something, probably pneumonia, we could cure with a pill today. She died. This was common at the time, the 1930's. During pioneer days, it was common for men to have several marriages ended by deaths during child birth. then the death rate for women was much higher than for men.
Darwin is always on duty. One wonders what he will do with us where weakness is a virtue and merit is almost a crime. |
|
|
few years ago stumbled onto a talk program featuring the woman that played Mrs. Brady, mother in the "Brady Bunch"... she was in her 80's, said she grew up on a farm in Nebraska... they were talking about kids and childbirth and stuff... said her mom had 10 kids, and everytime she did she went into a bedroom by herself and came out with the baby..
|
|
Quoted: few years ago stumbled onto a talk program featuring the woman that played Mrs. Brady, mother in the "Brady Bunch"... she was in her 80's, said she grew up on a farm in Nebraska... they were talking about kids and childbirth and stuff... said her mom had 10 kids, and everytime she did she went into a bedroom by herself and came out with the baby.. View Quote Those old farm women were a different breed. My grandmother was born in a barn in Minnesota in the 40s |
|
I wonder how long the mothers back than rested before getting back out there to help their tribe/family.
|
|
|
Sign up for the ARFCOM weekly newsletter and be entered to win a free ARFCOM membership. One new winner* is announced every week!
You will receive an email every Friday morning featuring the latest chatter from the hottest topics, breaking news surrounding legislation, as well as exclusive deals only available to ARFCOM email subscribers.
AR15.COM is the world's largest firearm community and is a gathering place for firearm enthusiasts of all types.
From hunters and military members, to competition shooters and general firearm enthusiasts, we welcome anyone who values and respects the way of the firearm.
Subscribe to our monthly Newsletter to receive firearm news, product discounts from your favorite Industry Partners, and more.
Copyright © 1996-2024 AR15.COM LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Any use of this content without express written consent is prohibited.
AR15.Com reserves the right to overwrite or replace any affiliate, commercial, or monetizable links, posted by users, with our own.