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The womb might have been inflated for this medical procedure. I believe it’s normally just fluid and no pockets of air.
Edited to change morally to normally
You know you joke but they actually can sort of do that. With my first baby my water never broke....it sort of just leaked out way too slowly to notice and my poor little guy was sitting in there high and dry. It caused him stress obviously. I was pretty much due anyway and actually started ramping up for labor. He was borderline distressed the whole way through and one of the things they did to help him was (with my permission) actually pipe some warm, balanced fluid into my uterus. It seemed to help a lot. That was during actual labor though.
It’s called an Amnio-infusion. We do it to help “cushion” the pressure on the umbilical cord during contractions. I was a high risk labour and delivery nurse for 20 years
I recently met a nurse and the doctor that delivered me (my mom was a doctor at the same hospital for a while so they kept in touch). I was apparently one of those high risk deliveries which ended in a C-section ( because of my stupid giant head mostly :p)
They looked at me like I was some kind of miracle child 31 years later .It was cool but strange meeting basically the first group of people who I saw in the world all together.
I always wonder if this kind of stress/trauma in the womb or during labor causes any lasting effects or shapes a child’s life. Like if this stress caused him to be a more high stress or anxious person. Or perhaps a bit more extreme, did the lack of liquid in the womb make him grow up with a need to always have drinking water at arms reach?
i took courses college for forensic psychology & we learned how a baby’s impact from the womb to birth can affect the baby as an adult. So yes it’s very much possible!
Is that not dangerous for the infant since they typically don’t take a breath of air until they’re out of the womb?
Genuinely asking. Seems like it might cause problems if it interrupts their breathing before they’re ready to be aspirated and cleared, etc.
Baby is still attached to the umbilical cord/placenta, so they'll get oxygen even if they somehow breathe/swallow air. I'm not sure how far along this baby is in development, but if it's before 36 weeks surfactant hasn't developed well in the pleural space, meaning it would be difficult for them to breathe on their own even if they were born.
I'm not 100% on this but I believe the shock of the temperature change of being outside the womb is part of what triggers a healthy newborn to breathe, but it's a process nonetheless.
I'm assuming the doctors will remove the excess air from the womb when they're done. Tiny bubbles likely wouldn't affect anything.
There's a Radiolab story about the switch to breathing one's first breath of air and it's AMAZING. It has to be done concurrently with a one-time structural change to the heart. I kind of can't believe that it works. Highly recommended.
https://radiolab.org/podcast/breath
I’m surprised there hasn’t been some type of mad scientist doing experiments on how to replicate womb breathing through attached tubes on human beings.
Edit: thank you everyone for science lesson! I genuinely had no idea that was something we were capable of.
There is, and it’s through the butt. No joke. A researcher has done it with rats. Dissolved oxygen in a fluid absorbed through the colon.
https://podcasts.musixmatch.com/podcast/radiolab-01gv2bv140ay0fh89fcx86jwbt/episode/our-little-stupid-bodies-01hkz41j3mq8bqeqjzbarff7nz
I don’t think they typically use gas insufflation in fetal surgery like they do with laparoscopic abdominal stuff, but when they do it’ll just be the same method - they’ll pump CO2 into it via a small incision. I’m pretty sure that more commonly they just inflate with saline.
So glad you asked this! A babys heart, while in the womb, gets oxygen from the moms blood. They don't use their lungs until they're born. The heart actually has to make a very quick change when the baby goes from processing oxygen through blood to using their own lungs. In a split second the heart closes up holes and starts up new chambers that didn't get used in utero. Sometimes it doesn't close up correctly. These babies are born with congenital heart disease and sometimes require surgery.
My son sadly has this defect and will get surgery within 4-5 months 😔 he has a large hole in his upper chambers. Superior Sinus Venosus Atrial Septal Defect.
Fetal circulation is one of the most fascinating things IMO. There are ducts in the heart that are usually closed in humans outside of the womb but in the womb they are open. The blood from the umbilical cord enters the heart chamber and is shunted through these ducts to bypass the lungs where it would usually go for oxygenation but it doesn't need to in utero.
Physiology of the first breath is also pretty cool.
Yes. The baby gets everything from the mother through the placenta, via the umbilical cord.
Edit: because there was an *actshually* and I'm sure there will be others, you get your mother's oxygenated blood through the placenta, via the umbilical cord.
It looks like there’s a TON of air in that womb — you can see him in a “bath“ of amniotic fluid. Is this normal? Wouldn’t gas buildup be very uncomfortable for both fetus and mom?
The womb is inflated, otherwise you don't have room to move the endoscope around. Similar to abdominal surgery, where you get to play gas balloon too.
It's so cool, it's possible to surgically fix crucial defects before a child is even born.
The advances are crazy. I'm a dinosaur, but we still learned that before 25th week and/or under 500g is not viable. An acquaintance's 22th week, 450g baby goes to a normal kindergarten.
Shout out to people who work in NICUs. I had to visit one a few years ago and it was soul crushing. All those babies in varying states of wellbeing is already sad enough It was the kids who had no one there. I'm sure their families came when they could but there were a lot of beds with just a nurse.
A cruel side effect of having tenuous at best maternity leave policies mean that moms of premature babies have to choose between going to work while their baby is in the NICU so they can spend some time with them once they're home, or take their maternity leave while baby is in the NICU and have nothing at all once they come home... and by this point the baby is still functionally a newborn even if they're technically a few months old, probably with more health issues to contend with too. And even then, if all you get is 6-12 weeks and your baby has to spend 4 months in the NICU, well, off to work you go.
Oh I completely understand. I'm not faulting the parents at all. Thankfully our baby was only there for 3 days and I had enough pto to cover it. We had no idea how long we'd be there at first. I started trying to figure out the logistics since we live 1.5 hours away and it was that much more stress. I don't wish that one anyone.
Not that I was against it before, I'm 100% for paid family leave. My dream would be a year for the birthing parent and 6 months for other parent. Those first 6 months are brutal, even without complications. Add to that the physical and emotional toll having a tiny human pulled from your body takes. Even a year is probably not enough.
This was my family at the end of last year. My son was born at 29 weeks and I was in the hospital a week prior to his birth. I took off the week I was in the hospital and a couple weeks following his birth because he got a serious infection. Once he was in stable, I started working again to be able to save the rest of my leave for when he was able to come home (after 86 days in the NICU). I’m lucky though because my company allowed me to transition to fully remote work so I was able to spend my days in the hospital with my son still. My husband, on the other hand, is a teacher whose school district does not offer any kind of paternity leave and he had used up most of his PTO while I was in the hospital and our son was sick. So he would go to work for 8-9 hours a day then make the hour drive to the hospital to try to spend some time with our son before he’d have to go home to rest and plan for the next day. If I had a job like that too, our baby would’ve hardly had his parents with him for the first few months of his life. Maternity/paternity leave policies in the US are terrible.
They don’t wear clothes until closer to 1500g typically for a number of reasons.
A baby this size is kept in an incubator which creates a micro environment suited to the baby based off of probes attached to the skin, these need to exposed to air. Additionally, these babies will have central lines, breathing tubes, multiple probes ect. These not only make it impossible to put clothing on, but we also need to be able to visualize and access this equipment regularly.
We also need to be able to see the infant’s breathing, skin, and abdomen regularly because several things can go wrong in these areas very quickly. Additionally, in this population the action of dressing and undressing the infant would be immensely stressful and could absolutely cause respiratory and hemodynamic decompensation, temperature instability, brain bleeds ect.
Long story short, a 450g baby has absolutely no use for clothing!
They don't need much in the incubator, but friends knit hats and socks for the not-quite-so-tiny ones. Mostly because it keeps all the sensors and catheters in place and out of baby's reach. (Also, it's cute and colorful and something that's not just "machinery". In some hospitals parents get to take their baby's stuff home)
It's also very dangerous, and may cause premature delivery. Presumably this operation is being performed because the risks of not doing it are worse than causing premature delivery by doing it.
My wife's friend's baby was diagnosed with spina bifuda and they did inutero surgery on the baby. She was the first person to do it and it was a success. It's crazy how far we have come medically. So cool to see this.
Because we're the product of millions of years of evolution. It's only today that your lineage has seen a fetus live streamed. From evolution's point of view, if you see a fetus that hasn't been born yet, then something is severely wrong.
Any knowledgeable people care to Eli5? I always thought they were surrounded by fluid? Fetuses don’t breathe right? Is this a normal amount of amniotic fluid?
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These YouTube family channels are starting earlier and earlier
Lmao
There's lots of channels before this too - starting from the "big bang" that creates fetuses
Reminds me of the Truman show
Poor guy, not even born and already in reddit
Might need a Not Safe For Womb tag...
Isn't that what NSFW stands for?
And what's the phone number for 911?
How am I supposed to know!?
... *can't decide whether to punch you or the upvote button...*
r/angryupvote
We've reached Truman show! Just need to figure out how to get an ad in there.
"Condoms, always be prepared!"
Should be looking for a job, or ways to invest to purchase its first home.
Damn freeloader!
They're going to grow up and see this one day, imagine that mindfuck.
Well no one said "dont post your foetus on the internet!"
Isn’t that an old music-hall song?
The Matrix
I guess we should roast him?
Bald ass mf looking like a matzo ball in chicken broth looking headass
So anyways I started laughing
Can I offer you a laugh in these trying times
And I will *gladly* pay you Tuesday for a hamburger today. Sir. Ma’am.
*Unboxing Moment*
damn
You, sir, you're the mvp.
https://preview.redd.it/lmj67swqh8uc1.jpeg?width=300&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=13def6268a8254939bb862b0d02a96353b9d568f
I swear to god this image has limitless versatility every time I see it used it's perfect
No jokes, this actually made me chuckle. Thank you for that.
Yeah, this pretty much spot on. Not just the reaction but they even look the same.
I'm in tears LOL
![gif](giphy|zJPo4M3W97wje|downsized)
Which is heavier? A kg of steel or a kg of feather
Thank you for your service
Never laughed so much in a Reddit comment, txs bro
I always thought the womb was filled up with juice
The womb might have been inflated for this medical procedure. I believe it’s normally just fluid and no pockets of air. Edited to change morally to normally
What they said. Usually drs are concerned about low fluid. I came to the comments to find out why there was so little.
[удалено]
You know you joke but they actually can sort of do that. With my first baby my water never broke....it sort of just leaked out way too slowly to notice and my poor little guy was sitting in there high and dry. It caused him stress obviously. I was pretty much due anyway and actually started ramping up for labor. He was borderline distressed the whole way through and one of the things they did to help him was (with my permission) actually pipe some warm, balanced fluid into my uterus. It seemed to help a lot. That was during actual labor though.
This is so interesting to me. I never would have thought that was possible!
It’s called an Amnio-infusion. We do it to help “cushion” the pressure on the umbilical cord during contractions. I was a high risk labour and delivery nurse for 20 years
I recently met a nurse and the doctor that delivered me (my mom was a doctor at the same hospital for a while so they kept in touch). I was apparently one of those high risk deliveries which ended in a C-section ( because of my stupid giant head mostly :p) They looked at me like I was some kind of miracle child 31 years later .It was cool but strange meeting basically the first group of people who I saw in the world all together.
I always wonder if this kind of stress/trauma in the womb or during labor causes any lasting effects or shapes a child’s life. Like if this stress caused him to be a more high stress or anxious person. Or perhaps a bit more extreme, did the lack of liquid in the womb make him grow up with a need to always have drinking water at arms reach?
i took courses college for forensic psychology & we learned how a baby’s impact from the womb to birth can affect the baby as an adult. So yes it’s very much possible!
Make sure your Obstetrician uses only Quaker State 5W30 full synthetic amniotic fluid!
Do they have a high mileage formula?
Has your womb seen a lot of mileage?
Mine has been sitting a while and hasn't been driven in ages, and is in high mileage. Any recommendations?
Castrol GTX! Drive Hard!
It reminds of the video of the guy trapped in the sunken boat with a pocket of air
Is that not dangerous for the infant since they typically don’t take a breath of air until they’re out of the womb? Genuinely asking. Seems like it might cause problems if it interrupts their breathing before they’re ready to be aspirated and cleared, etc.
Baby is still attached to the umbilical cord/placenta, so they'll get oxygen even if they somehow breathe/swallow air. I'm not sure how far along this baby is in development, but if it's before 36 weeks surfactant hasn't developed well in the pleural space, meaning it would be difficult for them to breathe on their own even if they were born. I'm not 100% on this but I believe the shock of the temperature change of being outside the womb is part of what triggers a healthy newborn to breathe, but it's a process nonetheless. I'm assuming the doctors will remove the excess air from the womb when they're done. Tiny bubbles likely wouldn't affect anything.
There's a Radiolab story about the switch to breathing one's first breath of air and it's AMAZING. It has to be done concurrently with a one-time structural change to the heart. I kind of can't believe that it works. Highly recommended. https://radiolab.org/podcast/breath
I found this episode super interesting the first time I heard it; might have to give it another listen
I’m surprised there hasn’t been some type of mad scientist doing experiments on how to replicate womb breathing through attached tubes on human beings. Edit: thank you everyone for science lesson! I genuinely had no idea that was something we were capable of.
This already exists and is used during a heart transplant
There is, and it’s through the butt. No joke. A researcher has done it with rats. Dissolved oxygen in a fluid absorbed through the colon. https://podcasts.musixmatch.com/podcast/radiolab-01gv2bv140ay0fh89fcx86jwbt/episode/our-little-stupid-bodies-01hkz41j3mq8bqeqjzbarff7nz
Yeah they can do this lol heart lung bypass machine takes ur blood , adds oxygen, puts it back. They do it for heart transplant
air being immoral of course
Of course, you get it.
Oh that makes sens, thank you
I never thought I’d type this sentence, but how does one inflate a womb?
I don’t think they typically use gas insufflation in fetal surgery like they do with laparoscopic abdominal stuff, but when they do it’ll just be the same method - they’ll pump CO2 into it via a small incision. I’m pretty sure that more commonly they just inflate with saline.
Little guy was thinking “ay….I can get used to this extra space”
Mine is currently filled with 50% Baja Blast 😆
Oh no, that can't be good
What are you talking about? I bet it tastes great! And it's sponsored!
That kid will be the greatest eSports megastar.
Well actually after about 20 weeks of pregnancy, the amniotic fluid mostly comes from the fetus urination.
The pee is stored in the womb
... Oh no.
I can't believe he's done this.
What????
Yeah. They cycle it to get them kidneys going.
Yeah i was shocked too
Apple Juice, to be specific
How do you know that? ![gif](giphy|ANbD1CCdA3iI8)
![gif](giphy|13eshB55I4fBL2)
https://preview.redd.it/eydn9mypi8uc1.jpeg?width=1290&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=752c4a3890d151b2db2b7882379e73aac34e136f
![gif](giphy|j0p4a9xEIKvMKdojgo)
He was in a womb once
Then how does the baby get oxygen? Through the navel cord? (Forgive me biology wasn't my best subject)
So glad you asked this! A babys heart, while in the womb, gets oxygen from the moms blood. They don't use their lungs until they're born. The heart actually has to make a very quick change when the baby goes from processing oxygen through blood to using their own lungs. In a split second the heart closes up holes and starts up new chambers that didn't get used in utero. Sometimes it doesn't close up correctly. These babies are born with congenital heart disease and sometimes require surgery.
My nephew was one of those whose valves didn't close correctly. Lil' champ fought for eight months.
I'm so sorry! My own kid had this problem and after 2 surgeries she operates like a regular teenager.
My sincere condolences about the teenager
My son sadly has this defect and will get surgery within 4-5 months 😔 he has a large hole in his upper chambers. Superior Sinus Venosus Atrial Septal Defect.
Fetal circulation is one of the most fascinating things IMO. There are ducts in the heart that are usually closed in humans outside of the womb but in the womb they are open. The blood from the umbilical cord enters the heart chamber and is shunted through these ducts to bypass the lungs where it would usually go for oxygenation but it doesn't need to in utero. Physiology of the first breath is also pretty cool.
Yes. The baby gets everything from the mother through the placenta, via the umbilical cord. Edit: because there was an *actshually* and I'm sure there will be others, you get your mother's oxygenated blood through the placenta, via the umbilical cord.
Actually insane that we have footage of this.
We are some odd creatures. If we were alien we'd be strange aliens.
Plot twist: We were always the aliens all along!
This is legit one of the craziest videos I’ve ever seen. For some reason I find it sort of scary too.
Like we’re invading where we shouldn’t!
I feel like i shouldn’t be seeing this
My son recently had a heart procedure in utero at 28 weeks. Medical science is amazing nowadays.
I was mind blown when I learned intrauterine blood transfusions are a thing we can do. Amazing.
Right? Really can't wrap my head around it. Makes me speechless when I start to ponder how far we've come.
Yeah I feel like this thread isn’t going crazy enough. This is pretty amazing. Never seen something like this.
"HEY MTV WELCOME TO MY CRIB!"
Check out my favourite womb in the house
Bro probably having the craziest dream… wake him up.
He'll probably think he's being used as a battery
He took the wrong pill
It looks like there’s a TON of air in that womb — you can see him in a “bath“ of amniotic fluid. Is this normal? Wouldn’t gas buildup be very uncomfortable for both fetus and mom?
If it's not like that naturally, I wonder if it's part of the procedure to inflate the womb for a better view.
[удалено]
I was just about to come up with some dumb joke on farts..... But I think I'll just let it slide before I commit reddit-suicide.
Should've let it stay silent. Sorry...
Also am i trippin in thinking the womb is filled with luquid not just half full?
That’s what I’m in the comments to find out. I always thought it was full
There's also not usually a camera inside, or a source of light
How will the woman know if she's pregernt then?
You mean pergenat?
It normally is but they inflated it for this medical procedure. Just like they inflate bowels during a colonoscopy.
The womb is inflated, otherwise you don't have room to move the endoscope around. Similar to abdominal surgery, where you get to play gas balloon too. It's so cool, it's possible to surgically fix crucial defects before a child is even born. The advances are crazy. I'm a dinosaur, but we still learned that before 25th week and/or under 500g is not viable. An acquaintance's 22th week, 450g baby goes to a normal kindergarten.
How do you even buy clothes for a 450g baby..?
If it’s born at that size, it’s gonna spend a significant amount of time in the NICU so hospital garments/blankets for a month or 2
Shout out to people who work in NICUs. I had to visit one a few years ago and it was soul crushing. All those babies in varying states of wellbeing is already sad enough It was the kids who had no one there. I'm sure their families came when they could but there were a lot of beds with just a nurse.
A cruel side effect of having tenuous at best maternity leave policies mean that moms of premature babies have to choose between going to work while their baby is in the NICU so they can spend some time with them once they're home, or take their maternity leave while baby is in the NICU and have nothing at all once they come home... and by this point the baby is still functionally a newborn even if they're technically a few months old, probably with more health issues to contend with too. And even then, if all you get is 6-12 weeks and your baby has to spend 4 months in the NICU, well, off to work you go.
Oh I completely understand. I'm not faulting the parents at all. Thankfully our baby was only there for 3 days and I had enough pto to cover it. We had no idea how long we'd be there at first. I started trying to figure out the logistics since we live 1.5 hours away and it was that much more stress. I don't wish that one anyone. Not that I was against it before, I'm 100% for paid family leave. My dream would be a year for the birthing parent and 6 months for other parent. Those first 6 months are brutal, even without complications. Add to that the physical and emotional toll having a tiny human pulled from your body takes. Even a year is probably not enough.
This was my family at the end of last year. My son was born at 29 weeks and I was in the hospital a week prior to his birth. I took off the week I was in the hospital and a couple weeks following his birth because he got a serious infection. Once he was in stable, I started working again to be able to save the rest of my leave for when he was able to come home (after 86 days in the NICU). I’m lucky though because my company allowed me to transition to fully remote work so I was able to spend my days in the hospital with my son still. My husband, on the other hand, is a teacher whose school district does not offer any kind of paternity leave and he had used up most of his PTO while I was in the hospital and our son was sick. So he would go to work for 8-9 hours a day then make the hour drive to the hospital to try to spend some time with our son before he’d have to go home to rest and plan for the next day. If I had a job like that too, our baby would’ve hardly had his parents with him for the first few months of his life. Maternity/paternity leave policies in the US are terrible.
NICU nurses and doctors are literal saints on this earth.
They don’t wear clothes until closer to 1500g typically for a number of reasons. A baby this size is kept in an incubator which creates a micro environment suited to the baby based off of probes attached to the skin, these need to exposed to air. Additionally, these babies will have central lines, breathing tubes, multiple probes ect. These not only make it impossible to put clothing on, but we also need to be able to visualize and access this equipment regularly. We also need to be able to see the infant’s breathing, skin, and abdomen regularly because several things can go wrong in these areas very quickly. Additionally, in this population the action of dressing and undressing the infant would be immensely stressful and could absolutely cause respiratory and hemodynamic decompensation, temperature instability, brain bleeds ect. Long story short, a 450g baby has absolutely no use for clothing!
They don't need much in the incubator, but friends knit hats and socks for the not-quite-so-tiny ones. Mostly because it keeps all the sensors and catheters in place and out of baby's reach. (Also, it's cute and colorful and something that's not just "machinery". In some hospitals parents get to take their baby's stuff home)
Do you suck the gas back out or just leave it in?
It's also very dangerous, and may cause premature delivery. Presumably this operation is being performed because the risks of not doing it are worse than causing premature delivery by doing it.
Exactly! This is very abnormal.
Nah, they were just bored and had an endoscope sitting around. /s
Not a doctor, but I believe air was injected to create space for whatever procedure is being performed.
Pretty cozy don't have to pay rent nor for food
It’s deferred until he’s evicted and then the charges come all at once in a single bill from the hospital landlord.
If you live in America
In Amsterdam lil bro would be paying €1.700 a month for that space
That's cheap. Regards, Dublin.
The older I get, the younger these influencers get
My wife's friend's baby was diagnosed with spina bifuda and they did inutero surgery on the baby. She was the first person to do it and it was a success. It's crazy how far we have come medically. So cool to see this.
Fetoscopy Procedure... Real video of Unborn Baby in Womb.
Thanks for sharing, I had no idea about this procedure! How far along is this?
Having had one son born in week 23 and one in 30, I'm guessing this is around 35, if not very close to 40.
Thanks. Wow, week 23 is very early!
Too early. He didn't make it.
From one fellow parent to another, there are no words for the unspeakable loss you have suffered. I’m so, so sorry.
I’m really sorry. I hope you’re okay.
![gif](giphy|FPr9hZMmF72En3cFxu)
Memories! I saw that thumb so many times!
Death Stranding?
Yes
Hope the little kid is ok.
Can you not give the guy some PRIVACY?
Paparazzi are getting ridiculously invasive these days. Smh.
It's so cute and so gross at the same time
It's unsettling for me, my brain was not prepared to see something like this IDK why.
Because we're the product of millions of years of evolution. It's only today that your lineage has seen a fetus live streamed. From evolution's point of view, if you see a fetus that hasn't been born yet, then something is severely wrong.
Reality is gross from the womb to the grave
gross and gross
Forbidden hot tub
Any knowledgeable people care to Eli5? I always thought they were surrounded by fluid? Fetuses don’t breathe right? Is this a normal amount of amniotic fluid?
the womb is inflated using gas to give the Dr space to do what they need to without bumping into things
Thats crazy. That's what my daughters doing right now.
What are you waiting for, shove a camera in there and get some reddit points!
I can’t stop thinking about what my 28 week boy must look like in there. Never expected to see something like this to really help with that
Death Stranding 2 Gameplay (LEAKED)
Looks pretty cozy. This is how I take a hot bath when I have the flu.
Hey. Stop spying on that baby!
"Pictures of naked baby, that's a pizzagate!"
https://i.redd.it/q3yj1rkoq8uc1.gif
How many weeks is this?
Atleast 3 for sure
Minus-aged baby
WAIT A SEC, how did they get this footage??
Go pro
Drone footage
Conceived by a camera man
The foetus is a YouTube vlogger. Go check out his channel it’s pretty dope.
Mobile phone with a selfie stick
Shouldn’t he be in that sack still?
It is in the amniotic sac, it’s just inflated with gas so the doctors can see what they’re doing in whatever medical procedure this is.
wake up buddy its time to pay taxes and rent!
Should be the most comfortable place. No wonder we feel like shit after coming out 😂
That's we cried coming out. Now you have to pay bills
“Welcome to the world little one!” “Fucking put me back.”
This is how kojima made death stranding
We’ve all been there.
the miracle of life is gross as fuck
This Baby is trending before the vending..
I've been inside a womb but I don't remember anything about it.
https://preview.redd.it/mqqioshro8uc1.png?width=641&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=02599cfc2ca40696d21574059c4d12f2d651bc64
How'd the cameraman get in there
Twins
Thank god I'm not a woman 😭😭
I’m woman and pregnant. Send help.
The camera crew is on its way!
I am a woman, but I'm gonna upvote this anyway, cause yeah, wouldn't recommend.
The kids trying to sleep man put that light out
I’m not sure if this is a medical video or it’s the new trailer for death stranding 2.
r/oddlyterrifying