I'm scheduled for an induction on Thursday morning. I was told I could and should eat before I come in. Does anyone have recommendations on breakfast foods that would keep me strong and full all day?
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Re: STM: What to eat before induction?
Usually most hospitals won't allow you to eat anything. I was only allowed ice chips and Popsicles once I was in the hospital
Proteins over carbs. So eggs and ham or bacon over pancakes or cereal.
FWIW, I never had any desire to eat while I was in labor, even when my labor was over 24 hours long.
Kelly, Mom to Christopher Shannon 9.27.06, Catherine Quinn 2.24.09, Trey Barton lost on 12.28.09, Therese Barton lost on 6.10.10, Joseph Sullivan 7.23.11, and our latest, Victoria Maren 11.15.12
Secondary infertility success with IVF, then two losses, one at 14 weeks and one at 10 weeks, then success with IUI and then just pure, crazy luck. Expecting our fifth in May as the result of a FET.
This Cluttered Life
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TTC since 12/17/11
BFP 02/19/2012
M/C 03/05/2012 *we love you, angel*
Yep, my first, I couldn't eat at all. My second induction I was allowed little things here and there. I think it depends on how your dr thinks you will respond to the induction. Just eat high protein food for breakfast. that will definitely help!
This. I agree that you should go for things with protein.
I agree w/ Ghostmonkey. Also, that's not exactly how you carb-load. I would NOT actually carb-load late in pregnancy, because it first involves a prolonged starvation of carbs, which tricks your body into storing that massive carb intake as glycogen, which your muscles slow-burn, giving the endurance. Without being tricked, your body doesn't do that, and you just have a whole bunch of fast carbs on board. So GM is right.
It is true that glycogen stores get low in laboring women, and we shake, and we feel that we hit rock bottom in the hardest hour of transition. But I don't think a certain amount carbs is the answer. It just is. That's the big physical and mental challenge that we try to prepare ourselves for. Then adrenaline helps us through the rest.
Try to eat a balanced, protein-rich meal that will sustain you for the long haul, as you might not have a chance to eat for quite some time.