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https://www.instagram.com/dhruvaaliman/ - Travel Videos - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLHDNI38HpasQMdimkQmb3-C59FKiZNamy - My friend had me consume some of her placenta 5 days after giving birth. Anything for youtube. Celebrities like January Jones and the Kardashians are doing it. But is the practice of placentophagy simply a fad, or are there actual health benefits to consuming one’s own placenta? According to one cookbook on the subject, you can mix your raw placenta with yoghurt and fruit in a blender and make a smoothie. Or add it to ground beef in a lasagna recipe. Or make chocolate truffles out of it. Dice it, slice it, sauté it with onions, dehydrate it and grind it up – it seems there’s no wrong way to eat placenta.

The practice of placentophagy – the formal name for eating the placenta for health benefits – has been having a moment. What was once an extremely fringe movement has been given a boost by celebrity endorsements from January Jones to the Kardashians. Articles describing personal experiences have popped up everywhere from XOJane to the New York Times. Advocates cite its ability to boost milk production, fight postpartum depression, reduce pain and increase energy in new mothers.

"I ate my wife's placenta raw in a smoothie and cooked in a taco" said one adventurous journalist.

Businesses offering to dry and encapsulate the placenta for those who are too squeamish to eat it with a side of vegetables have sprung up all over the US, generally charging around $250 for the service. Since the encapsulation process is typically done in the home of the new mother, and is for her own consumption, there is no FDA regulation or other oversight of the practice. There are also no uniform laws around releasing a placenta from the hospital with most states allowing hospitals to set their own individual rules.

Eating a human organ might trigger a gag reflex in some, but advocates point to the near ubiquitousness of the practice among mammals. While the exact reasons animals eat their own placentas is not known, scientists speculate one major reason may be to avoid having a bloody enticement to predators next to the new mother and baby. Unlike the modern practice of eating a placenta in dehydrated pill form over a length of time or cooking it for later consumption, animals eat their placentas raw and immediately after giving birth.

Animals may have been doing it before it was cool, but for humans the practice is relatively recent. Daniel Benyshek, associate professor of anthropology at University of Nevada Las Vegas is one of a few researchers who is studying the practice. He says the first published references to the practice of maternal placentophagy are tied to the home birth and natural birth movement in the US during the 60s. “It is really only in the last ten years that it has become a well-known – if rare – practice,” he says.
#LA #Foodie #WouldYouTryThis #DontKnockItTilYouSipIt #Placentophagy
#postpartumnutrition #balance
Transcript
00:00Can you explain this?
00:02This is my placenta. It was about bigger than my hand and this is just cut up like pieces of
00:11steak, but that's what the baby lived in.
00:15Placenta smoothie. Oh my god. You need to strengthen it.
00:20Alright, I'm gonna try this. Now. Oh my god, look at this thing. What's in it besides your placenta?
00:28My husband made it. I don't know. Ask him.
00:31That just makes me feel so much better.
00:36Okay, are we gonna do this?
00:59Good, huh? It's pretty good.
01:02Yeah, I can hardly taste the placenta.
01:08You're not supposed to be able to taste the placenta.
01:10Oh, okay. It's good.
01:17This is what true champions are made of. True mother champions.
01:21Placenta.
01:22And how much of that was in the smoothie?
01:25About that much.
01:26How much?
01:27About this much.
01:28The same amount?
01:29Oh yeah, it's about that much.
01:30If you look really close, you can see like that it's just flesh.
01:36Oh my god.
01:36It's the inside.
01:38And the uterus is now contracting and trying to heal itself.
01:42And that's why you're supposed to be bedridden for like two weeks to heal your body.
01:47While nursing your baby and trying to take care of your very hurting breasts and dealing with your spouse and
01:58all the emotional baggage that comes with it.
02:03That's something.
02:04And then not sleeping because it's four in the morning.
02:06Alright.
02:08But this helps because you don't need to sleep. You just eat placenta.
02:11And that just revitalizes you?
02:15Yeah.
02:16Dude.
02:17Seriously.
02:18This is amazing.
02:19I almost want to get pregnant and have another baby just so I can eat some more placenta.
02:26That's just dandy.
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