You can also keep a baby monitor to
hear your baby throughout the night.
Not exact matches
you often resort to the argument that i've
heard a million times
throughout my pregnancy when people find out i'm planning a home birth: that your birth experience doesn't matter as long as the outcome is a healthy
baby.
If you
hear lots of swallowing going on
throughout the feeding, you know your
baby is getting lots of breast milk.
Remember, that your
baby heard your voice
throughout his time in your womb, so even at just a few days old, he will look and stare in your direction.
Your
baby is not properly attached if: • You see pinched - in lips or their cheeks being sucked in • You
hear clicking noises or lip smacking • You feel pain in your breast
throughout the feed • To take your
baby off the breast, slide your finger into the corner of their mouth, then try again.
The downside of this is that with a monitor you may
hear virtually every sound your
baby makes which may disturb you
throughout the night as
babies do make a lot of noise and not all of it requires your attention.
Lots of non-violent, non-gory but otherwise unsettling scenes worth mentioning: many «jump» scenes when people or objects startle others; we
hear some noises during the night in many scenes (creaking doors and floorboards, screams, eerie whispers, doorknobs turning, pounding at doors) and doors slam shut as people run past them; we see eerie carvings and sculptures
throughout a house, a maelstrom and sculptures come alive and scream and a skeleton sits up abruptly; a ghostly face is seen at a window and in a ceiling, windows become eyes, ghostly children are seen a few times (in one scene, a ghostly
baby from a sculpture crawls under the sheets as a woman lies in bed) and a woman's hair is braided by invisible hands.
The persistent call of «drill
baby drill»
heard throughout the speech is just the sound of junkies looking for a fix.