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Question:

Question for my exclusively breastfeeding mommies?

DS is 6 weeks old and I think I have over-supply issues. I have all the signs-very gassy baby- constantly has hiccups-my let down makes him choke, sputter, and gag-if he pulls off during my let down, I spray like a fire hose. Seriously, I could feed him from across the room - My breasts ALWAYS feel full even if he feeds for 45 minutes- his poops are quite runny, they're mustard colored and have some cottage cheese looking bits in them but mostly it's runny poo that absorbs straight into the diaper.He was born at 7lbs 5 oz and is now at over 11 lbs only 6 weeks later so he's gaining well. But feeding him is like torturing him sometimes because he chokes so bad.Any advice??

Answer:

To answer your last question first: The charge in the thundercloud isn't lost. What causes lightning is a built-up charge difference between two different bodies - in the case of cloud-to-ground lightning, cloud and theuhmground. They have different charges. The lightning strike is a big static shock that re-equalizes those charges. So, really, this isn't a matter of a charge lost from the cloud, but in reality it's a matter of the cloud returning its charge to the ground. A better question would have been: How does the ground's lost charge get replaced, and the answer is lightning. At any rate, lightning will strike any object, charged or uncharged, that is in a region with a charge differential relative to the clouds. And since electricity likes to take the shortest possible path, it'll arc towards anything taller than the ground that's available. Like golf flags, trees, or Uncle Sid.
when the collision is elastic, they trade velocities, it doesn't mastter what the mass is, so the policeman's car ends up going 38 m/.s and the criminal's car goes 40m/s.

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