Not exact matches
* Tinsletown darlings and celebrities everywhere have been spotted wearing their
babies in slings, breastfeeding
in public, carrying cloth diapers
in their diaper bags, and even giving birth to their
babies at
home.
I could go anywhere with my
babies in a
sling, nurse them and let them nap, instead of running
home or driving them
in a car to get them to sleep.
You may want to practice nursing
baby in the
sling at
home before you attempt it
in public.
Even though I would have been fine with my daughter having all of her naps
in a
sling, we did set up the playpen so that I could put her down during some naps at
home in order to have some time to cuddle with my first
baby.
I thought something similar when I read,
in Claire Dederer's recent novel Poser, her description of a north Seattle mom for whom «breast - feeding was simply the first item
in a long, abstruse to - do list: Cook organic
baby food, buy expensive wooden toys, create an enriching
home environment, sleep with your child
in your bed, ensure that your house was toxin free, use cloth diapers, carry your child
in a
sling, dress your child
in organic fibers.»
A woman usually stayed
home with her
babies, but if she had to work
in the field or somewhere, she took her
baby wrapped against her
in a
sling, therefore, not interrupting the nursing, and not upsetting her hormone level.
When returning the
baby home to the US, I was considering bringing him or her
home in a
sling, but I've seen reports of
babies suffocating
in slings.