This is one time when you want to be ahead of the curve. Pregnancy is full of unexpected events, and one of those may mean needing to head to the hospital before you thought. So don't wait until your thirty-sixth week––pack for any unexpected occasion, early on. This is especially important if your pregnancy is considered high-risk (e.g. expecting multiple births). For a low-risk pregnancy, start packing around 30 to 35 weeks. If you are having a scheduled induction or C-section, pack at least two to three weeks in advance. There are things you may need to take to the hospital that might not be necessary to worry about at home. Sometimes your birthing location has rules in place regarding what they will allow in the labour room. For example, to protect your car in case your water breaks while driving, sit on a towel with a bin liner beneath it. Also, use a waterproof mattress pad to protect your bed--it's very likely to happen when you're in bed. Incontinence pads (available at drugstores and retail stores) are also useful and great for use for babies. Have plenty of towels: You may really need them if your water breaks on the way to the hospital. Pack another towel so you can have a quick wash if you want to.
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One-sentence summary -- Don't procrastinate! Consider your birthing location. Find out what your birthing location (if away from home) will and will not provide and allow. Protect certain surfaces in case your waters break.

Article: Ryan Leaf was going to be the next big thing. A great football quarterback, finalist for the Heisman, second-overall pick in the NFL draft. Fast forward a few years, and Leaf is considered one of the biggest busts of all time, having failed to achieve at a high level. Natural talent for playing football doesn't mean anything if you don't commit to building it into a skill. When you find your talent, think of it like a seed that you're planting. You're off to a good start, but you've still got to water it, mulch it, and weed around the edges to make sure your seed grows into a big plant. It takes work. As iron sharpens iron, so one talented person sharpens another. If you've got a talent for something, or even if you just hope to develop talent in some field, surround yourself with other talented people and model yourself after their behaviors, practice routines, and attitudes about their talent. Learn everything you can from talented people.  Find a mentor who's willing to show you the ropes and coach you in developing your new skills. Blossoming guitar players need good teachers beyond YouTube. Blossoming singers need other people to play music with. Developing your talent into a skill and your skill into an ability is going to be hard. The more you learn about a subject, a task, or an ability, the more complicated it becomes. Commit to learning everything you can about your field and challenging yourself to become a master. Turn your talent into something special. Make your talent real. Playing chess might not get easier for Magnus Carlsen, just because he’s a phenomenal player. Now he knows just how complicated the game can be. The more you learn about a game, a skill, or a field, the more there will be to learn. It never gets easy. Even if you've got no talent for the guitar, practicing two hours a day guarantees that you'll get a lot better. Someone who practices, whether it be sport, art, or any other field, will always end up more talented than someone who never picks up their instrument, picks up their paintbrush, someone who never practices. Hard work outruns ability every time.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Commit to building your talent into a skill. Find other talented people. Respect the complexity of your talent. Practice.