I would go home to my wife
Tyson Chandler, Chicago's center and leading rebounder, announced that he will not go home to Chicago to be with his wife during the birth of his first baby, but will stay in Miami, and play against Miami in first round.
This is an old school decision, and I applaud his unselfish at ude, and I can understand his motives, but I think I would have to be with my wife in that situation.(Especially if I had to go against Shaq)
What about you people, would you stay with your team, or would you be with the wife?
I would go home to my wife
Deja vu....
Didn't we have this certain discussion last season about a certain Power Forward's impending first child?
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You have to support the family's decision. There's no right or wrong here.
Family comes first. Even pop would say that. (and in fact he often does)
Can't they delay and program the birth with drugs, so it falls on the first day of a 2-day gap after a game? he plays the game, goes home, has the baby, comes back.
First babies are big deals, and black dads who are around and even identifiable at are pretty big deals, too.![]()
My opinion is that it's nuna my damn bidness.
I think the question is what does his wife think? If she supports it, then who am I to say otherwise? I do think down the line somewhere he will look back and regret it.
Exactly. I would certainly understand if he went home to be with his wife. On the other hand, it's a personal decision that he's going to have to live with for the rest of his life...did he let his team down and affect the outcome of their playoff experience this season...or did he miss the birth of his first child - and you only get that opportunity once. He's a highly paid professional, this is a critical point in his team's season, and I can understand, unless there are complications, why he would opt to stay with his team. I'm sure his wife understood what he does for a living when she married him. And, I'm sure she's used to him being away from home during crises.
I don't have any problem, either way. I wouldn't have had any problem with whatever decision Tim Duncan made if he'd been faced with this decision during the playoffs last year, either. It's between the player, his wife, and the team. It is absolutely no one else's business what he does and no one has a right to judge him on it.
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Babies come when and how they want and when they are good and ready. The best-laid plans of mice and men. Unless you induce labor or opt for a C-section prior to the baby deciding it's ready, you have absolutely NO CONTROL. That was a true "man's" question.
Just to play devil's advocate... unselfish for whom??I would've been pretty disappointed if my husband had missed the birth of our baby.
My personal decision would be that my husband needs to be with me, even if it means missing a game of the playoffs.
However, my feelings about this are that it's between them and whatever decision they made together. One would hope his wife is ok with that decision, and if so I can't dispute it.
As for the drugs - yes, in theory, drugs could be used to induce labor or to try and prevent labor, but extensive drug use can have adverse affects on both mother and baby, and often when a labor is induced you can't stop it or delay it. And it's unwise to interfere when nature decides it is time unless the baby is not close enough to full term to live outside the womb.
I said you have to support the family's decision, which assumes he and his wife discussed it.
We can say he should be there for the birth, and very few would criticize him if that had been his decision. But what if it wasn't the first game of the playoffs, but game 7 of the Finals? Would that make a difference in anyone's mind? What if he wasn't the starting center but a scrub 12th man?
If Melvin Sanders misses the first game of the playoffs for his child's birth, no one would say anything. If Tim Duncan missed Game 7 of the Finals, all would break loose here. But should those situations really be treated any differently?
It's not a "man's question" at all.
I know child-birth is totally medicalized now, and hugely expensive, so I figured some drug company could have come up with an expensive drug to delay delivery a little bit (even if it didn't work, the drug company gets its money).
Yeah. It IS a man's question. No woman over the age of 13 would have asked it.
Don't fee too badly, Boutons. The son-in-law of a friend of mine asked his wife's doctor a few months ago..."Can't you schedule the birth on Sunday? That's the only day I'm off work." He's 32 and he was serious.
Well, epidurals typically slow down labor, especially with first babies, but not always. And Pitocin follows pretty quickly if labor slows with the epidural. Other pain medications can slow labor, but generally not as much as an epidural. For women who go into labor too early (term-wise,not convenience wise), there are various medications and techniques that can be attempted, but the success varies by woman.
But no doctor will offer them to a full term woman in labor for convenience. The success of such a treatment is highly debatable and medically unwise. The fewer drugs a mother receives, the better off the baby will be after delivery, generally speaking.
some people understand family
some dont
(shakes head)
Yeah. There's nothing but big money in obstetrical drugs that have no medical benefit and have unknown risk to the fetus.
If I had an NBA starter's salary, and several days' advance notice, I'd book a suite at the best hospital in Miami and charter a private jet to fly her, her ObG and my in-laws down in comfort and luxury.
I'd put it in the hands of the wife, however if it's my first, it would be hard to miss...
A lot of doctors won't allow a woman to fly at that stage of pregnancy...not even in a private jet...unless it's an emergency (like to save her life). I doubt they'd think a basketball game would qualify as an emergency. Their view would likely be that if the father wanted to be at the birth, he'd make other arrangements...regardless of his team's situation.
He will have plenty of time to bond with the baby while he is fishing this summer.
I know every play off game is important and I love the team winning championships.
However, I hated the thought of Timmy leaving Amy alone in labor- even though I am sure she is stong enough to handle it and no doubt would have been well taken care of.
The birth of a baby is just something a dad should not miss.
Props to Amy and Baby Duncan for being so considerate and allowing Timmy to make both appointments.![]()
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