[knock on door]
- Come in.
- Hello.
- Good evening, Eva.
How are you?
- I'm good.
- This is comfortable
right here.
What we doing?
- This is we barely made it,
doc. Look.
- So what's that little
"I'm having contractions"
thing?
- Oh, I know. I was having
really bad contractions
yesterday,
and back pain on this side.
- So if I hit that spot,
does it hurt?
- It don't hurt at all.
- Okay.
- Eva transitioned
from L.A. to Atlanta
almost halfway
through her pregnancy,
about 20 weeks,
and who you gonna call
when you move to Atlanta
for an OB/GYN?
Dr. Jackie.
Are you ready, though?
Everything's in place?
- Yeah, I'm ready.
We can go ahead
and, uh, set the schedule
for this induction
of uterine,
because I'm so ready.
- Really?
You're gonna really evict
the baby like that?
Are we selfish like that?
It's all about you
and not the baby.
[light thumping]
He's saying,
"Mama, don't evict me.
Please don't evict me."
- I mean, if he want to stay,
he can stay.
- "Please don't evict me."
In that third trimester,
all women are tired
of being pregnant.
- It's just uncomfortable
after a while.
- You can't sleep.
You're peeing all night.
It's just a miserable,
miserable last few weeks.
You know, sex helps.
- Yeah.
- There's a little prostaglandin
in his semen.
- Mm-hmm.
- Kind of deposits
some prostaglandin
and soften
your cervix up and--
- I can't even find it,
though.
[laughter]
- I don't want you
finding your own cervix.
Okay? A good old prostaglandin
would do you good, honey.
So when you see your man,
say, "Hey, baby,
can I have
some prostaglandin?"
[music]
I'm out. But, uh, headaches,
blurred vision,
right upper quadrant pain,
let us know.
- Okay.
- Toxemia.
- Okay.
- Start to contract
seven minutes or less
for more than an hour
without a break.
- I'm having one right now.
- Let me feel.
Oh, yeah. You are having
a contraction.
- Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.
- Oh, I can feel it.
- I know.
- Let me have it with you.
Mm. [inhales]
let's blow it out.
Again.
- Mm.
- I feel that.
That's better.
