Like A Mom

Like A Mom




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Like A Mom


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4.3 out of 5 stars

54 ratings




Is Discontinued By Manufacturer

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No MPAA rating

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X (Mature Audiences Only) Package Dimensions

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7.1 x 5.42 x 0.58 inches; 2.93 Ounces Director

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Kotamaksu Media Format

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NTSC Run time

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1 hour Release date

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August 23, 2011 Actors

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Ashley Thrill Dubbed:

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English Subtitles:

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English Studio

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Kitty Media ASIN

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B004LBA05O Number of discs

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1


4.3 out of 5 stars

54 ratings



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Wierd story, horrid ending but decent sexy bits in between. (Only reason I kept it). This one is hard on the decision process. Really borderline value for the price.


daryl drumheller Top Contributor: Anime










Keita's father believes his son still needs a mother so he gets three women that he know and has Keita live with them to see witch one would be best to be him mother. seems to me that Keita's father is trying to get him a girlfriend verses a mother and when a classmate of Keita's that likes joins the party things get interesting.












I was watching clips from this hentai online (Mama Puri) and knew I wanted it when it dropped. The storyline is a bit stupid but not necessarily cheesy. 4 women competing to be this late teen's stepmom. Daddy's never home. Excuse me for saying this but yeah,if I recall what a perv I was in my late teens/early 20s... I probably woulda tried to bang 'em too! All the characters are nicely drawn and make this fun to watch. I love funny hentai and the 'detective mom' pretty much steals the show. And it helps that the women are perverts too although they try to hide it. Basically, the story is just a reason to have plenty of girls living with a young guy and tons of great sex scenes ensue. Grab it.












First I am not a big fan of hentai anime. Unless there's a comical element to the story. Like a Mom delivers a great story with humor to the erotic venue. The detective steals the show with her odd behavior (how she initially enters the house and her semi ditzy nature). A definite must have for your collection












Do not waste your time. Doesn’t play on American DVD players. I don’t know why they sell things without letting costumers know in advance. Disappointing on Amazon’s behalf.












The movie should have been a lot better. These were candidates to be his mother. It should have been more sweet more emotional more love and more feelings.












I wish they could make more episode of these video then it could be much better


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Keita's father is worried because his son grew up without a mom. He can't understand women and has never felt a mother's kindness. To fix this, Keita's father has invited three busty women to live with them. Chiyo the office worker, Kazue the cook, and Noriko the detective. Not wanting to be left out, Keita's childhood friend Haruka moves in too. Now Keita's got four women pampering him and competing for his body and heart!

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Like a Mother by Angela Garbes.


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Preview — Like a Mother
by Angela Garbes




What to read after What to Expect . . . . A badass, feminist, and personal deep-dive into the science and culture of pregnancy and early motherhood that debunks myths and dated assumptions, offering guidance and camaraderie to women navigating one of the biggest and most profound changes in their lives. Like most first-time mothers, Angela Garbes was filled with questions w
What to read after What to Expect . . . . A badass, feminist, and personal deep-dive into the science and culture of pregnancy and early motherhood that debunks myths and dated assumptions, offering guidance and camaraderie to women navigating one of the biggest and most profound changes in their lives. Like most first-time mothers, Angela Garbes was filled with questions when she became pregnant. What exactly is a placenta? How does a body go into labor? Why is breast best? What are the signs and effects of post-partum depression? But as she discovered, it’s not easy to find satisfying answers. Your OB will cautiously quote statistics; online sources will scare you with conflicting and often inaccurate information; and even the most trusted books will offer information with a heavy dose of judgment. To educate herself, the food and culture writer embarked on an intensive journey of exploration, diving into the scientific mysteries and cultural myths that surround motherhood to find answers to her questions that had only previously been given through a lens of what women ought to do—instead of allowing them the freedom to choose the right path themselves. In Like a Mother, Angela offers a rigorously researched and compelling look at the physiology, biology, chemistry, and psychology of pregnancy and motherhood, informed by research, reportage, and her own experience. With a journalist’s curiosity and discipline, a mother’s urgency, and a food writer’s insatiability, she explores the science behind the pressing questions women have about a number of subjects, including postpartum hormones, breast milk, and miscarriage. Infused with candor and humor, born out of awe, appreciation, and understanding of the human body and its workings, Like a Mother is a full-frontal look at what’s really happening underneath your skin (and to it), and why women need to know.
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Published
May 29th 2018
by Harper Wave



0062662961
(ISBN13: 9780062662965 )


To ask other readers questions about
Like a Mother ,
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Dawn Fornear


Yes! She talks about many aspects of female reproductive/health care, and not just motherhood/pregnancy.





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4 years ago


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Cat


I loved Expecting Better, and found it really useful when I was pregnant. This is more narrative, and less prescriptive/specific. It is both an intima …more I loved Expecting Better, and found it really useful when I was pregnant. This is more narrative, and less prescriptive/specific. It is both an intimate analysis of how we talk about pregnancy ("we" including the culture and the scientists) and the massive, life-changing, emotional/cultural/political/physical/psychological wallop of pregnancy and birth. I would definitely recommend reading both! (less)



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Start your review of Like a Mother: A Feminist Journey Through the Science and Culture of Pregnancy

Shelves:
unfinished-business


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93 likes · Like
 · see review


Apr 09, 2018


Jaime


rated it
it was amazing









This. Is. Excellent. I say that as a mother, as a maternal-child health MPH, and as a woman. This tells it like it is, with the science and research and sociology to back it up. I laughed, i underlined, I wrote in the margins. I only wish I’d had this when I was pregnant. She writes about that dreaded postpartum poop with a candor that I loved. This should be mandatory reading for pregnant people. And anyone who loves them and cares for them.




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50 likes · Like
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Shelves:
mental-health ,
feminism ,
non-fiction ,
body-stuff




There's a pretty good consensus nowadays that pregnancy guides are problematic in various ways. They're condescending, judgmental, and aren't very informative. There's a real need for books that speak more to the science of pregnancy and don't infantilize women when offering advice, and Angela Garbes's book is a step in that direction. While much of this is personal narrative, Garbes does some deep dives into subjects most mothers encounter during pregnancy and childbirth (like wtaf is a placenta
There's a pretty good consensus nowadays that pregnancy guides are problematic in various ways. They're condescending, judgmental, and aren't very informative. There's a real need for books that speak more to the science of pregnancy and don't infantilize women when offering advice, and Angela Garbes's book is a step in that direction. While much of this is personal narrative, Garbes does some deep dives into subjects most mothers encounter during pregnancy and childbirth (like wtaf is a placenta, why childbirth destroys your pelvic floor, and why breast milk is the most brilliant human creation ever). She confronts the myth of long-standing pregnancy advice about abstaining from caffeine and alcohol (I love sushi and frequently mused during pregnancy that if I lived in Japan, no one would be telling me to avoid it). And, perhaps most importantly, she talks about stigmas surrounding miscarriage and postpartum depression. Again, this isn't a science-heavy book, but there's a lot of great information that women don't receive during pregnancy that can arm them with more agency in their pregnancies and births. Which is SO desperately needed for maternal care in this country. And a big HELL YES to a pregnancy book by a woman of color. <3
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Mar 20, 2019


Nori


rated it
it was ok

 · 
review of another edition








That was an incredibly disappointing read. With all the talk in the reviews and the book itself about how there’s all this great research and emerging science about women’s bodies and pregnancy that simply hasn’t reached the public yet, I think I expected it to be something along the lines of Oster’s “Expecting Better.” It was nothing of the sort. This was more of a personal history of the author and her friends through pregnancy, with scientific facts (such as a few paragraphs on the physiology
That was an incredibly disappointing read. With all the talk in the reviews and the book itself about how there’s all this great research and emerging science about women’s bodies and pregnancy that simply hasn’t reached the public yet, I think I expected it to be something along the lines of Oster’s “Expecting Better.” It was nothing of the sort. This was more of a personal history of the author and her friends through pregnancy, with scientific facts (such as a few paragraphs on the physiology of milk production, or the size and function of the placenta) sprinkled in. I was left with a complete lack of understanding of what the point of the book was intended to be. The best I can come up with is something like “a set of intersectional feminist affirmations about pregnancy and early motherhood, mixed with frequent statements about how criminal it is that science doesn’t better understand these stages and populations.” It *was* that, but my disappointment came from thinking it would be more, or different. If that sounds good to you, by all means pick this up. Otherwise skip, and stick to “Expecting Better.” Oh, and — I honestly have no idea what other reviewers are complaining about, that the section on nursing myopically ignores women who can’t or choose not to breastfeed. The author very explicitly and repeatedly qualifies her relatively easy experience in this department as lucky, and that feminism means supporting women in what they choose (“breast-feeding mothers need trained support to help them keep trying. But they also need to be told that, if they want to, they can stop. There is no right or wrong; there is just what we decide.”) I am completely mystified as to how other readers were offended by this chapter.
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As an OBGYN physician, I’m always looking to read what my patients are reading. A patient recommended this a few months ago and I was excited to read it. In the book's introduction, the author writes, “This book is not meant to be a traditional pregnancy guidebook with advice on what or how to do things,” but after reading it, I'm still unsure of what it is truly meant to be. It's not quite a memoir, but also not a feminist guide either. Despite the stream-of-consciousness style, I really enjoyed
As an OBGYN physician, I’m always looking to read what my patients are reading. A patient recommended this a few months ago and I was excited to read it. In the book's introduction, the author writes, “This book is not meant to be a traditional pregnancy guidebook with advice on what or how to do things,” but after reading it, I'm still unsure of what it is truly meant to be. It's not quite a memoir, but also not a feminist guide either. Despite the stream-of-consciousness style, I really enjoyed Garbes' honest presentation of her experiences of pregnancy, birth and early motherhood. She accurately pointed out the weaknesses of many pregnancy "guidebooks" and how they more often than not infantalize women. As if pregnant women (or pregnant people, no matter their gender identity) are automatically more "moral" than the average person. Most pregnant women, while they care for their growing baby immensely, are also partners, mothers, workers and members of their community at the same time. I, too, get incredibly frustrated almost daily by the lack of scientific evidence we have on the safety of many medications in pregnancy, including many meds for colds, migraines, and other miserable conditions. I am also especially frustrated by the cultural perception that NO medications are safe in pregnancy and that women must thus suffer from chronic pain, nausea, depression, anxiety and other life-altering conditions while they are pregnant. I love that she touched on the autonomy and agency of pregnant people and how they deserve to be educated about the risks and benefits of a variety of "lifestyle" decisions so they can make informed decisions for themselves. This was very refreshing. I also enjoyed her descriptions of the human placenta. It has been fun to have more patients and families interested in seeing and learning about their am
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