Woman thought she had a kidney stone but gave birth instead

When Juanita Stead complained of shooting pains in her lower back on New Year’s Eve, she thought she was passing a kidney stone.

Instead, she was giving birth to a baby boy.

The eastern Newfoundland woman says she didn’t realize she was pregnant until she was rushed to Carbonear General Hospital that night and an X-ray didn’t turn up any kidney stones.

“When I went back to emerg, the doctor was waiting for me and he said, ‘It’s no kidney stone.’ He said, ‘You’ve got a baby ready to be born,’ ” said the 36-year-old Stead.

“I said, ‘No, that can’t happen’ . . . I told him he had the wrong X-ray file.”

Six minutes later, seven-pound, 12-ounce Nicholas was born breech at 12:31 a.m. local time on New Year’s Day, making him among the first babies born in Canada for 2009.

“He came out bum first,” Stead said Wednesday, cradling the one-week-old child.

Doctors weren’t able to carry out a caesarean section because of Nicholas’s quick entry into the world, she said.

Hours before the sudden birth, Stead and her husband Terry, 35, went to her sister’s house for a New Year’s Eve family gathering.

As she explained her symptoms to Terry and her brother-in-law – who owns an ambulance service – the two men became increasingly convinced she was experiencing a kidney stone attack.

“Honest to God, I just don’t have words to explain it,” Terry said.

The Steads, who live in a two-storey home in the small outport of Port de Grave, N.L., say they had no reason to think Juanita was pregnant because she didn’t experience the usual telltale signs, such as morning sickness and kicking from the womb. She says her menstrual cycle remained regular throughout her pregnancy.

“People have been saying to me, same as I’ve been saying, ‘How could you not know you was pregnant?’ ” she said.

“Everyone is still in shock I think.”

This isn’t the first time a pregnancy caught the Steads off-guard.

Two-year-old Cameron was born six weeks premature in July 2006 in their home bathroom, weighing three pounds and 11 ounces. His birth was marred by complications and last September he underwent a bowel, liver and pancreas transplant at The Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto.

But the toddler now appears as rambunctious as any his age, running around inside the house and playing with his toys.

Nicholas is faring well also, sleeping and eating regularly despite growing attention from families, friends and the public, his mother said.

“Two little miracles meant to be.”

Friends and family have provided them with toys and clothing for the new baby, because they discarded Cameron’s old belongings months before Nicholas’s birth, she said.



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Robber thwarted by Power washer hose!

In Oregon, a car wash attendant chased off a would be robber with a power washer, however he ended up in jail due to an old warrant! So much for his good deed!

A gunman disguised in a skeleton mask strolled into Washman Carwash in Portland on the 13th of December. He confronted employee Chris Truax, demanded money and produced what looked like a handgun.

Unfortunately for the would be robber the weapon broke and the gunman stuck it in his waistband.

Truax pulled the power washer from a pail and aimed it at the robber like a rifle directing a high pressure stream of water toward the assailant.

Truax’s employers gave him two days off with pay but the police jailed him on a seven-year-old warrant accusing him of driving under the influence of intoxicants.

Well, hopefully he gets a little time off his jail sentence for preventing a robbery.

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Janet Jackson’s ‘Nipplegate’ case could reach US high court

Did you hear that the US government has asked the Supreme Court to reimpose a half-million-dollar fine slapped on CBS television for a 2004 broadcast of live images of pop star Janet Jackson’s breast, court documents obtained by AFP show.

It is up to the Supreme Court to decide whether it will consider the request.

Prosecutors are asking the high court justices to weigh in on a case that raised eyebrows and stirred passions in the United States, where nudity on non-pay television is a no-no in advertising, while rare and limited to late-night hours in television series.

Jackson was performing live at the Superbowl when the attention-getting move took place, in a routine featuring her and fellow performer Justin Timberlake.

The performers shrugged off Jackson’s exposure level as a “wardrobe malfunction,” amid criticism from some quarters that it looked every bit as carefully choreographed as their routine, watched by 90 million viewers at home.

The Federal Communications Commission imposed a 550,000 dollar fine on CBS for breaking indecency rules.

But after a three-year court fight, a federal court in Philadelphia in July ruled that the network could not be held responsible for Janet Jackson’s actions.

The government asked the high court to consider “whether the court of appeals erred in holding that the federal communications commission acted arbitrarily and capriciously (…) in determining that the most widely viewed broadcast public nudity in television history fell within the federal prohibitions on broadcast indecency.”

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