HOW DOES OF A BODY OF A PERSON CHANGE FROM THE MOMENT JUST BEFORE THEY ARE BORN TO THE TIME JUST BEFORE PUBERTY?
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Answer:
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PHYSICAL CHANGES HAPPEN DURING PUBERTY:
During puberty, you can expect a lot of changes to your body. Your genitals will get bigger.
In people with a vagina, the breasts will grow and your vagina, uterus, and fallopian tubes will develop.
In people with a penis, the penis and testes will get bigger. Erections will be more frequent.
Everyone will get:
- Taller, heavier, and stronger
- An increase in sweating
- More oily skin
- Hair growing around their genitals, under their arms, and on their legs and arms.
- The influx of hormones during puberty can cause a range of feelings or emotions and these feelings can change often. You might get:
- Sudden mood changes
- Changing emotions
- An involuntary increase in sexual feelings and fantasies.
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What Your Newborn Looks Like
You probably have visions of a robust bouncing baby, but in reality many newborns are tiny, wet creatures when they first arrive. Often their heads are slightly pointed as a result of passing through the birth canal. This is only temporary — the head will take on a rounded look within a few days. It may surprise you that a newborn's head is so big compared with the rest of the body.
Your baby also may look scrunched up since the legs and arms have been kept bent at the knees and elbows while in the womb. After months of growing in ever-tightening close quarters, this is perfectly normal. The limbs will straighten out as your baby grows.
Look at your baby's tiny fingers and toes. You'll notice the paper-thin — and sometimes long — nails.
Your baby's skin may look somewhat red, pink, or purple at first. Some babies are born with a white coating called vernix caseosa, which protects their skin from constant exposure to amniotic fluid in the womb. The vernix is washed off with the baby's first bath. Other babies are born very wrinkled. And some, especially premature babies, have a soft, furry appearance because of lanugo, a fine hair that develops while in the womb. Lanugo usually comes off after a week or two.
Rashes, blotches, or tiny white spots also are common on newborns. These usually clear up over the first few days or weeks after birth. The doctor will examine your baby within the first 12–24 hours of birth and make sure that any rashes or spots are normal.
Remember, your baby's appearance will change a lot over the next weeks. The limbs will extend, the skin tone will probably change, and the blotches will disappear.