When I first “cracked the code” on stabilizing and reversing prolapse, and wrote and published Saving the Whole Woman, I set up this forum. While I had finally gotten my own severe uterine prolapse under control with the knowledge I had gained, I didn’t actually know if I could teach other women to do for themselves what I had done for my condition.
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kiki
October 4, 2010 - 11:33pm
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trolleys
I love that you are thinking aobut this! I hate them! I usually refuse to use them. When i go shopping i take my wheeley trolley from Ikea, and put everything in that, take it out to pay, and put it back in. I have yet to be accused of shoplifting, so so far to good.
but sometimes, the trolley just has to happen. had to this saturday night at Ikea with a very tired DS2 and bad parents who dared to drag the kids out tooooo late to go get things... So he was in it, and I had to push a bit. argh! it actually makes my back vag wall ache! not a good sign. you are so right...satan was definitely involved somewhere along the way.
i will try your method Louise, but definitely don't think it would work with a heavy child in it...
let's hope the shops let em keep packing my wheely case (which btw once heavy, i find better to push in front of me than to pulll)
(and for anyone who thinks shopping bags on wheels you pull are, well, not hip, i saw that Orla Keeley does one for a mere $350--so they must have entered the age of hipness! Ikea also do one for £14...I know which I go for)
louiseds
October 5, 2010 - 12:49am
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When you think about it
... shopping trolleys are really only a really big box on wheels, so you can theoretically buy heaps more than you need, and get it all to the checkout, then out the other side and out to your car, without needing help from anybody who is being paid $$$$$ by the Chain. The other requirement of a shopping trolley is that it needs to somehow be able to take up less space than it occupies, so that it doesn't jam up shopping centre car parks, and can be reasonably easily collected into a snake for bulk handling back to the shop.
It does not have to be easy to
push,
pull,
steer eithout bashing into a wall, or display, or cabinet,
keep from overturning,
stop,
keep in one place on a slope, while removing a toddler or bags of shopping,
steer without dislocating a knee,
start,
transfer shopping into your car,
park safely,
not put dents in cars,
not have sharp bits than make holes in people's ankles,
have a solid compartment that small items won't slip through and get lost,
wheel quietly,
etc.
Seatbelts for toddlers mean that Mum can shop at 'leisure' without a child on lhe hip, or dismantling displays or getting lost and squashed by a forklift, without any help from the aforementioned paid staff member.
ie they are very shopping centre-centric, not customer-centric. Am I surprised that they don't cost anything to hire? Yes.
I really think having a little trolley of your own is a much better option, except that, like our shopping bags, it is sometimes hard to remember to put it back in the car when we have unpacked the shopping.
Yes, pulling a heavy trolley would be harder than pushing it. Pulling requires hunching the shoulders, or twisting and pulling, which will be bad for POP, whichever way we do it.
I am going to keep an eye out for a foldable box type trolley that I can keep in the car.
clavicula
October 5, 2010 - 12:49am
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Funny
Louise, you are so funny! :)
Yeah, I never use them. My husband does all the shopping for me! I am so lucky! :)
Liv
louiseds
October 5, 2010 - 2:43am
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Shopping (sigh)
Actually Liv, shopping bores me s&*^less. Thinking about the design of shopping trolleys is much more interesting than shopping itself. Yes, I admit it. I'm a nerd.
tullyleaf
October 7, 2010 - 4:58pm
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trolly avoidance
im so pleased im not the only one who seethes inwardly at the shockingly poor design of shopping trolleys. pushing them is horrible,making shopping even more of a consumer obstacle course/nightmare!
i find pushing them from the end, instead of using the handle end.this stops me having to jerk my body so much to adust its wild trajectory.my son also likes to 'drive' as he is at the front.
my pelvis seperated during my first pregnancy(S.P.D) and pushing a trolley would have my pelvis literaly grinding together at the seperation,pretty painfull!
when i had my pop,3 months pp,second baby, i bought a pram,as i had previously worn my babies, i didnt have one suitable for a baby,only a simple pushchair that my toddler used occasionaly,and carrying my baby was impossible for any length of time for me. my main requirements were that my baby would face me,and that it have a ridiculusly huge under carriage storage space.it took a while to find,but i have one with a flat open platform that i put a shopping basket on when i go shopping,when we are out and about my son can hitch a ride,(sitting cross legged on the platform) colouring in or munching a snack when his little legs tire. x