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Just make sure you are offering formula first and then waiting a bit and offering food after. It should always go breast milk or formula first and then food until they are one. We did the same with my son and let him eat as much as he wanted to. He loved food too and ate a lot no matter if he nursed right before or two hours before. There were days where he wasn't as interested in food and days when he shoveled food in like he'd never get a chance to eat again. As long as he was still getting plenty from nursing I just followed his lead. Edit: you may want to replace the rice cereal with something more calorie laden. That is basically empty calories with no real benefit and a lot of docs recommend skipping it entirely now. Also a quick google leads me to others who post that their 8 month olds drink between 16-30 oz of formula a day so yours fits right in there. How much was he drinking before introducing solid food? sheri fucked around with this message at 02:03 on Jan 20, 2015 |
# ? Jan 20, 2015 01:59 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 08:19 |
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My public health nurse gave awful advice at the 8 month checkup. I told her my son wasn't very interested in eating solids for breakfast (he was breastfed and nursed ay night). She was adament he eat breakfast and told me not to breastfeed him 3-4 hours before offering solids. How about no. Like others have said, food before one is just for fun and the majority of nutrients should come from formula or breast milk.
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# ? Jan 20, 2015 11:57 |
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Sockmuppet posted:I'm can't comment on the food vs formula-proportions, because we just basically nursed and fed her whatever she wanted to eat afterwards,, but re: the weight thing - your kid is now at the age where she''s no longer an immobile lump, but moving and rolling and starting to crawl and really DO stuff all day, and their weight can take a real hit from that. I had a gloriously fat infant, who rapidly doubled her birth weight - and then stayed at that weight for over half a year, because she was on the move all day and burned through everything we fed her. But the nurse wasn't concerned, because she was obviously fit and healthy, just - tiny! My god. My 1.5 yr old is 31.8 lbs. I would kill for a tiny baby.
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# ? Jan 20, 2015 14:43 |
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jassi007 posted:My god. My 1.5 yr old is 31.8 lbs. I would kill for a tiny baby. That's like 99.5%tile flowinprose fucked around with this message at 15:57 on Jan 20, 2015 |
# ? Jan 20, 2015 15:55 |
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jassi007 posted:My god. My 1.5 yr old is 31.8 lbs. I would kill for a tiny baby. Our three year old is 33 lbs. Our 1.5 year old is probably about 30 lbs. Soon the youngest will be the biggest, I think.
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# ? Jan 20, 2015 15:57 |
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Why does your three year old not eat the younger, and absorb his power?
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# ? Jan 20, 2015 16:13 |
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flowinprose posted:That's like 99.5%tile yes it is. He weighs 2 lbs less than his 3.5 year old brother. Poor guy is only 40% for height to. He's basically a hobbit.
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# ? Jan 20, 2015 16:13 |
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jassi007 posted:He's basically a hobbit. awwwwwww!
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# ? Jan 20, 2015 16:14 |
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jassi007 posted:yes it is. He weighs 2 lbs less than his 3.5 year old brother. Poor guy is only 40% for height to. He's basically a hobbit. My 2 year old weighs 24 pounds and looks like gollum when walking up the stairs in just a diaper. We should have a Middle Earth toddler hangout.
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# ? Jan 20, 2015 18:57 |
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My 4 year old is 28lb. He's meant to be starting school in the summer but I decided to defer him - the thought of him going to school with kids potentially twice his size was a bit scary.
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# ? Jan 20, 2015 19:48 |
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Tell me about allergy tests! My 1yo son (12.5 months), just had a blood allergy test done since he was getting hives after trying cow's milk for the first two times he tried it. It came back with a ton of positives that are kinda making the wife super worried, but reading online it seems like false positives are pretty common? ie: even over 50% of positives are false? He came back as a 5/6 score on eggs/nuts/dogs, but he's eaten both those fine and we have two dogs and have had them since he was born with no issues. We have a followup scheduled w/ an allergist in ~2.5 weeks (soonest they had), but if anyone with more familiarity with this stuff could chime in, it'd probably help calm both us parents down.
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# ? Jan 20, 2015 20:28 |
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Splat posted:Tell me about allergy tests! I hate to be unhelpful...but that's the kind of thing you should really just wait until you talk to the allergist.
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# ? Jan 20, 2015 20:30 |
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I'm with you, jassi007. I love hearing about the disparity of the sizes of kids. Especially siblings! They're all so different, but still perfectly okay. 6 year old 1st grader is just shy of a full 4 ft, and 50lbs. Has never been a big kid; perfectly proportional and healthy though. Was 21lbs at his one year check-up. 3 year old is won't-stand-still tall, but is only about half a head shorter than his brother, and 45 lbs. He was 29lbs at his one year check-up. A moose from the get-go, but perfectly proportional and healthy too. Carrying him around has made me strong; consider big kids a fitness plan!
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# ? Jan 20, 2015 20:40 |
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My son is just about 5', and 100 lbs, at 10 years old. So somewhat bigger than average, but not terribly so. He used to be very, very high in percentile for both height and weight but he's slowed down in growth in recent years.
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# ? Jan 20, 2015 20:46 |
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AlistairCookie posted:I'm with you, jassi007. I love hearing about the disparity of the sizes of kids. Especially siblings! They're all so different, but still perfectly okay. My little guy is such a softy too, when his brother snatches a toy he just whines and comes toddling over to me or mom. I'm waiting for the day when he realizes he can just knock his brother around.
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# ? Jan 20, 2015 21:52 |
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Splat posted:Tell me about allergy tests! This blog post is by a pediatrician and might help give you some questions to bring to the allergist. https://pediatricinsider.wordpress.com/2014/12/01/food-allergy-testing-do-those-big-panels-work/
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# ? Jan 20, 2015 22:10 |
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My baby is almost 4 months old now (time really flies), and he is a lazy little bastard. He loves smiling and talking and waving his arms and legs around, but my and my wife have a very hard time motivating him to lift his head when he is lying on his stomach. Any cool tips? Some times it works putting something under his chest so he is elevated, or putting a mirror in front of him so he can look at himself, but it only lasts for like a couple of minutes and then he just lies down and starts sucking on his hand or screaming because he doesn't want to be on his stomach anymore. This is not a big problem, and he is getting better every day, so I'm just looking for fun ways to make him more excited about lying on his stomach and lifting his head.
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# ? Jan 21, 2015 00:40 |
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Get down on the floor with him, he'll probably find that hilarious for a while. Pillows are great, things on the ground that light up or make noises were even better. That being said, my son was also lazy with tummy time. He got more of a neck workout being held against my shoulder and looking around - out the window, into a mirror, etc. One day, almost exactly at four months, it was like a switch was flipped - he suddenly had head control! He loved tummy time and demanded to be held up standing.
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# ? Jan 21, 2015 01:04 |
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Ceridwen posted:This blog post is by a pediatrician and might help give you some questions to bring to the allergist. Thanks for that, it's a helpful article and will absolutely help us w/ questions in a couple weeks.
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# ? Jan 21, 2015 01:13 |
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Sweet Gulch posted:Get down on the floor with him, he'll probably find that hilarious for a while. Pillows are great, things on the ground that light up or make noises were even better. That being said, my son was also lazy with tummy time. He got more of a neck workout being held against my shoulder and looking around - out the window, into a mirror, etc. One day, almost exactly at four months, it was like a switch was flipped - he suddenly had head control! He loved tummy time and demanded to be held up standing. He loves standing up! Almost to much, he barely want to sit down. So we do a lot of standing on laps and as you said walking around the apartment looking at stuff. Funny that it never occurred to me that it serves as a supplement to tummy time. And thanks for the tips, I will definitely get down on the floor more with him. We have light up toys that he loves, but I absolutely hate them. Especially that loving fisher price dog that sings songs. Oh well, guess i will bite the bullet in the name of being a good dad! Thanks again!
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# ? Jan 21, 2015 01:21 |
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Werner-Boogle posted:My baby is almost 4 months old now (time really flies), and he is a lazy little bastard. He loves smiling and talking and waving his arms and legs around, but my and my wife have a very hard time motivating him to lift his head when he is lying on his stomach. Any cool tips? Some times it works putting something under his chest so he is elevated, or putting a mirror in front of him so he can look at himself, but it only lasts for like a couple of minutes and then he just lies down and starts sucking on his hand or screaming because he doesn't want to be on his stomach anymore. This link has some great ideas how to make it more fun: http://mamaot.com/2012/03/25/tips-for-making-tummy-time-a-little-less-um-miserable/
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# ? Jan 21, 2015 02:13 |
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Posting to say that until you've tried to get 5.5 month old twins to sleep through the night, you haven't lived...or in our case, wished your were dead. We were this close to doing CIO because my wife was also completely at the end of her rope after weeks of disrupted schedule from a month of Christmas travel to the grandparents. We're just starting to try to wean them mostly off of night feedings and almost gave up after night one. Our current goal is a big bottle at 7, an hour of gradually more soothing quiet talking and stories and/or bath, bed at 8, and then very quick "dream" feeds at 11 and 3. Fingers crossed. Although the book we read makes CIO sound dangerously tempting...reporting that it usually only takes "2-5 nights to take effect". (maybe they heard me typing this...one of them woke up, but a few seconds of shushing and rocking put him right back down)
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# ? Jan 21, 2015 03:47 |
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My 11 month old daughter hates napping at home in her crib. She just wants to nap on us, or play all day. But this week, we decided to ask daycare what they do, since she takes regular naps there, and we figured they can't possible hold her for an hour plus while she naps. Apparently, they just wait for her to look tired and then put her in the crib and she goes to sleep by herself. Tried it over the long weekend, and it's just 30 min of rolling around in a circle babbling to herself. No crying or anything, just won't go down for the nap. Gonna keep plugging away at it, and hope she starts to put herself to sleep at home too. It's just maddening, because we know she can do it. Also, just today, I've learned my daughter will just fall asleep in the middle of the room while playing by herself at daycare, since that's how I found her when I picked her up today - teacher was just about to put her in the crib.
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# ? Jan 21, 2015 04:08 |
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gninjagnome posted:My 11 month old daughter hates napping at home in her crib. She just wants to nap on us, or play all day. But this week, we decided to ask daycare what they do, since she takes regular naps there, and we figured they can't possible hold her for an hour plus while she naps. Apparently, they just wait for her to look tired and then put her in the crib and she goes to sleep by herself. Tried it over the long weekend, and it's just 30 min of rolling around in a circle babbling to herself. No crying or anything, just won't go down for the nap. Gonna keep plugging away at it, and hope she starts to put herself to sleep at home too. It's just maddening, because we know she can do it. My son started willingly napping at daycare way way WAY earlier than he did at home. When they described his naptime habits, it was like, "oh no, you must have him confused with someone else, that's definitely not our son." This is more of a toddler strategy, but we've found that setting timers and giving him tons of warnings has made transitions of all sorts (bath, bed, leave the house, etc) much easier. Basically just, "Okay I'm setting the timer for 2 minutes, when it rings that means it's bedtime" "1 minute until the time rings" "In 30 seconds the timer will ring and that means it's bedtime" "Oh, the timer rang, okay time to go"
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# ? Jan 21, 2015 04:20 |
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Werner-Boogle posted:My baby is almost 4 months old now (time really flies), and he is a lazy little bastard. He loves smiling and talking and waving his arms and legs around, but my and my wife have a very hard time motivating him to lift his head when he is lying on his stomach. My daughter was like that at 4 months. She has reflux as well so we never really did a lot of tummy time as she'd just puke everywhere. At about 6 months she started tolerating being on her stomach longer. She was just examined at almost 7 months and the ped said he was impressed by how strong her neck was!
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# ? Jan 21, 2015 06:14 |
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Papercut posted:My son started willingly napping at daycare way way WAY earlier than he did at home. When they described his naptime habits, it was like, "oh no, you must have him confused with someone else, that's definitely not our son." Based on my chats with other parents at kindergarten this is pretty much the norm. Our kid is like this at well, our jaw just dropped when they told us that "Oh, when it's naptime she fetches her bunny and her blanket, and goes to lie down on the mattress. Sometimes we have to lay down next to her and stroke her cheek untill she falls asleep, but mostly she just nods off." This is the child who has at 1,5 years old never yet gone willingly to bed during the day, and puts up a fight like she thinks we're going to kill her in her sleep, and who hasn't fallen asleep next to one of us since she was a newborn. At kindergarten she also sits in her chair during mealtimes and drinks from a cup. It's like the twilight dimension
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# ? Jan 21, 2015 08:28 |
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Yes there is what I call daycare/school magic. My kid naps great, eats great, is happy at daycare and saves all his tough behaviors for us at home!
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# ? Jan 21, 2015 15:21 |
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Ha! Same with us. Our almost 6 month old is just a terrible napper at home, but at daycare she naps like a champ and doesn't whine or anything.
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# ? Jan 21, 2015 17:52 |
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Kindergarten is like a magical fairy place for toddlers. Anna (will be 2 this Sunday), hasn't been napping at home since November. She just started kindergarten after new year's, and she naps like a champion every day when she's there. I love those ladies, it's so great picking up a happy and content kid every afternoon instead of dealing with the nagging whinetroll she used to be when she was at home with us all day.
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# ? Jan 21, 2015 17:53 |
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So, my wife ended up having pre-eclampsia. We stopped by the hospital on Sunday because she had a rash on her stomach and wanted to get it checked out, but when she got there they took her blood pressure and it was 200 over something. Crazy high. They admitted her, gave her magnesium sulfate and a ripening pill, and she delivered the baby the next day, which fortunately was her due date. Baby was born perfectly fine and healthy! The downside is she still has high blood pressure two days later, currently bouncing between 150-160/90-95. Has anyone else had pre-eclampsia? How long did it take for the blood pressure to go down? I am really worried about her, but she's getting great care. She is also off the magnesium sulfate drip, which apparently makes you feel like you were hit by a bus, and is now on another pill that they are increasing dosage periodically on, but so far hasn't made a massive difference. Edit: I wasn't sure if this was more appropriate for the parenting or pregnancy thread, but you guys seem pretty cool. three fucked around with this message at 20:32 on Jan 21, 2015 |
# ? Jan 21, 2015 20:28 |
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three posted:So, my wife ended up having pre-eclampsia. We stopped by the hospital on Sunday because she had a rash on her stomach and wanted to get it checked out, but when she got there they took her blood pressure and it was 200 over something. Crazy high. I did not have it, but everyone I know who did made a full recovery, some slower than others. Your wife will probably be fine.
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# ? Jan 21, 2015 20:30 |
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three posted:So, my wife ended up having pre-eclampsia. We stopped by the hospital on Sunday because she had a rash on her stomach and wanted to get it checked out, but when she got there they took her blood pressure and it was 200 over something. Crazy high. Yup, my wife did. It was several weeks after she gave birth before it went back to normal, like 2-4 if I recall? It was with our first back in 2011 so memories are a little fuzzy. It was kind of scary but it all turned out fine it just was a weird thing.
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# ? Jan 21, 2015 20:32 |
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jassi007 posted:Yup, my wife did. It was several weeks after she gave birth before it went back to normal, like 2-4 if I recall? It was with our first back in 2011 so memories are a little fuzzy. It was kind of scary but it all turned out fine it just was a weird thing. Thanks guys! I was thinking of getting an at-home blood pressure monitor for when they discharge her, but I also don't want to stress her out. If you recall, how high was her blood pressure when they let her go home?
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# ? Jan 21, 2015 20:34 |
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three posted:Thanks guys! Something tells me between like 160 and 190? Her parents had one of those at home BP cuffs. I think what she did was just checked herself a few times a day and the Dr. basically said 'go to the ER if it gets to high or above X"
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# ? Jan 21, 2015 20:36 |
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I had pre-eclampsia and had to be on blood pressure medications for 4-5 weeks. It can take up to 6 weeks to go away. It was frightening to have to deal with high blood pressure for the first time in my life but it passed with no issues. I would recommend a blood pressure cuff to make sure that the medicine is working. They put me on a different medicine when I went home and if I hadn't checked my blood pressure myself I wouldn't have realized it wasn't lowering it. Edit: my numbers were generally around 140/100 unmedicated. Isabelle Caramel fucked around with this message at 21:10 on Jan 21, 2015 |
# ? Jan 21, 2015 21:06 |
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Is anyone else's kid batshit obsessed with Parmesean cheese or, as Sydney calls it, 'cheese powder'? I don't remember liking Parmesean until I was maybe 20, but Sydney wants it on everything including oatmeal (this is where I draw the line). Yesterday I gave her a couple of strawberries after dinner and was disgusted to see her rolling them around in cheese powder from her plate, and happily eating it. I fear what I'm going to find in her diapers today.
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# ? Jan 21, 2015 21:54 |
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flashy_mcflash posted:Is anyone else's kid batshit obsessed with Parmesean cheese or, as Sydney calls it, 'cheese powder'? Yup ranch and shakey cheese on all the things.
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# ? Jan 21, 2015 21:56 |
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flashy_mcflash posted:Is anyone else's kid batshit obsessed with Parmesean cheese or, as Sydney calls it, 'cheese powder'? It's full of MSG and makes things taste good. I actually like the sound of it with oats, and you'll find tons of recipes with strawberries if you google. That's more for the real cheese, but still. Filboid Studge fucked around with this message at 23:07 on Jan 21, 2015 |
# ? Jan 21, 2015 23:03 |
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flashy_mcflash posted:Is anyone else's kid batshit obsessed with Parmesean cheese or, as Sydney calls it, 'cheese powder'? Savory oatmeal is really quite nice. Would it really hurt to let her put it on oatmeal?
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# ? Jan 21, 2015 23:13 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 08:19 |
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Mine currently wants pepper on everything.
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# ? Jan 22, 2015 00:29 |