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Babies, Toddlers, Kids & Childrens
Baby Your Baby --
And Give Birth To A Big Reader
There are a lot of options out there when
it comes to helping your baby's development along,
including piping Mozart to your child in the womb or
teaching her to sign shortly after she's born. But
you're still giving your baby a great start just by
providing her with the building blocks she'll need to
learn to read.
Just about all the important
things that modern science suggests when it comes to
helping your baby's brain develop have been practiced by
parents for millenni...
baby read, how to teach
your baby to read, teaching baby to read
There
are a lot of options out there when it comes to helping
your baby's development along, including piping Mozart
to your child in the womb or teaching her to sign
shortly after she's born. But you're still giving your
baby a great start just by providing her with the
building blocks she'll need to learn to read.
Just about all the important things that modern science
suggests when it comes to helping your baby's brain
develop have been practiced by parents for millennia.
Now as ever, these steps are important:
Sing to
your baby. Babies, Toddlers, Kids & Childrens and toddlers love rhyme almost as much
as they love the soothing sound of your voice.
Talk to your baby. Even when your baby is tiny, talk to
her as if she already understands what you're saying.
Use gestures, body language and tone of voice to keep
her attention and dramatize your message.
Imitate
your baby. When she makes those first experimental
sounds, make them back to her. Your baby will feel how
important she is to you, and get excited by the effort
of language
Play "where's the?" games. Ask your
baby, "Where's your toes?" "Find" her toes and touch
them, then switch the playing field to her fingers or
nose.
Touch your baby. Whenever possible, hold
your baby in your lap and cuddle her while you talk or
sing to her. Even when she's much older, she'll still
associate the warmth and coziness of this early
experience with language.
Start out with books.
Even as early as six weeks of age, you can start
introducing books to your baby. Pick bright, tactile
books with clear pictures of things your baby might
recognize, like puppies or cribs. Sturdy books they can
touch or pet are ideal; look for classic
"touch-and-feel" titles like Baby Animal Kisses or Pat
the Bunny. The classic fabric "Quiet Book," with its
embroideries, braids, buckles and buttons, is an
unbeatable way to interest a slightly older baby. Cuddle
your baby in your lap and read for short periods of
time, so it never becomes arduous for either you or her.
Baby High Chair
Guide
There
are many different types of high chairs such as the very
convenient ones like the on-the-go booster seat, the
euro highchair two, the transition highchair, the chicco
polly high chair, the sit 'n secure, bumbo baby sitter,
and much more. You should do a high chair review to find
the best baby high chair for your child.
The
Chicco Polly high chair is a very lovely Italian high
chair that is loaded with a lot of features such as a
three-way footrest, armrests that lift...
high
chair,baby high chair
There are many different
types of high chairs such as the very convenient ones
like the on-the-go booster seat, the euro highchair two,
the transition highchair, the chicco polly high chair,
the sit 'n secure, bumbo baby sitter, and much more. You
should do a high chair review to find the best baby high
chair for your child.
The Chicco Polly high chair
is a very lovely Italian high chair that is loaded with
a lot of features such as a three-way footrest, armrests
that lift up, and an adjustable leg rest. This chicco
polly high chair is for infants only ages six months and
up and it can hold up to thirty seven pounds. Put this
furniture near the dinner table and it will suit your
toddlers needs.
This booster seat is for youth
like nine-month infants and up and can withstand up to
forty pounds. The on-the-go booster seat deflates and
compresses for easy packing. It also weighs less then
two pounds so it is very light to carry. This booster
seat is very comfortable and it inflates at the parents
touch while keeping your youth content. The on-the-go
booster seat has some cool features like a storage
pocket to store food or what knots, wipe clean vinyl
cover, and a shoulder strap for easy portability. The
on-the-go booster seat is a inflatable booster seat that
has handles so it is portable that is why it is called
the on-the-go booster seat. It is ranked as one of the
top booster seats and high chairs for those mother and
fathers who are on the road a lot.
The bumbo baby
sitter is another interesting chair that is only for
infants that can hold their head up. This bumbo baby
sitter is a soft, comfortable chair that is molded to
support his or her back and sides. It also has passive
restraints that help keep him or her from sliding
forward. This baby sitter can support weight that is
between nine to twenty two pounds. Look for a cushion
that is going to prop up your toddler during those
growing years.
The euro high chair two is a high
chair that is three things in one. This is a high chair
for your baby, and then converts into a booster seat for
your toddler, and then it can be a chair for your
teenager. The euro high chair two only takes about
fifteen minutes to twenty minutes to assemble. This high
chair is also a wooden chair that supports youth that
weighs between eighteen to one hundred and fifty pounds.
This euro high chair also comes with many different
features such as a removable safety bar, an anti-skid
feet, built in stabilizers, a seat cushion, and a
five-point harness to make it very safe for your child.
This high chair is for only those infants who can sit up
on their own.
Baby Hemorrhoids
Baby Hemorrhoids
hemorrhoids baby
child care health fitness
Baby hemorrhoids are a
common thing and one of the many uncomfortable symptoms
of pregnancy. These are not hemorrhoids on the baby, but
hemorrhoids that the mother to be gets during the 10
months of pregnancy. Even the woman who has never gotten
hemorrhoids in the past can experience them during
pregnancy, so it's best to be forewarned.
Why do
hemorrhoids occur so frequently in pregnant women?
Hemorrhoids are caused by undue pressure on the veins in
your rectum and intestines below the level of your
uterus. When you are pregnant, the growing baby
increases the pressure on those veins and arteries. This
can cause hemorrhoids and clotting as well as varicose
vein and other pressure related problems.
Constipation is another problem common to pregnancy and
also a leading cause of hemorrhoids. Should hemorrhoids
be caused by the pressure of the baby in the uterus,
then constipation can aggravate the situation, inflaming
hemorrhoids and possibly causing them to rupture and
bleed. It is the straining during consti
pation that
causes the anal canal to push out hemorrhoids instead of
the bowel movement – or both.
Another reason why
pregnant women often end up with hemorrhoids is the same
reason why they exhibit wild mood swings and nausea –
hormones. The increased progesterone during pregnancy
causes a breakdown in the protection mechanism in veins
that usually slow or stop swelling. The walls relax and
there's nothing to stop the swelling. Progesterone also
contributes to constipation, which as shown above,
causes hemorrhoids and makes existing hemorrhoids even
worse.
Hemorrhoids during pregnancy are par for
the course. There is no need to call your doctor unless
you are bleeding. Do check in before using steroid
treatments and over the counter medications. Try a sitz
bath instead or a poultice.