Notice
it says place for baby to sleep.
Not exact matches
That being
said, Jennifer, there is a big difference between a mama who tried everything and has
to learn
to let her
baby fuss / cry
for a few minutes
to get some much needed
sleep and a parent who willfully
places a
baby alone in a crib with the intention of leaving it there with no comfort
for a pre-determined amount of adult - approved time.
Even once he can roll you should continue
to place baby flat on his back
for every
sleep, but safe
sleep experts
say that once
baby can independently roll
to his belly, you can leave him there (even if he can't yet roll independently
to his back).
i have read many articles that
say the same thing «The car seat isn't suitable as a long - term
sleeping place;
babies need
to lie flat
for proper spinal development»
The Lullaby Trust (formerly known as the Foundation
for the Study of Infant Deaths — FSID)
says the safest
place for your
baby to sleep is on his back, on his own
sleep surface, in the same room as you,
for at least the first six months.
But it
says the safest
place for a
baby to sleep for the first six months is in a cot in its parents» room.
The UK Government
says the safest
place for a
baby to sleep is in the parents» room but not in their bed.
It goes without
saying, but you'll need a safe
place for your
baby to sleep day and night.
I didn't
sleep well, hustled into the office via a mailbox delivery
to my ex's
place of the youngest's homework and orange clothes
for Harmony Day, listened
to a message on my phone from the eldest's school about her fringe being too long (WTF FFS), bolted home after work
to let the fur
babies inside, bolted back
to work
for an office dinner (that's the gang in the main pic), realised on the way home that I need
to be at a work function on Wednesday morning at 6.30 am... which is the youngest's birthday; had a major panic attack over the youngest waking up parentless on her 11th birthday; sent a frantic message
to my ex asking if he could come over at 6.30 am on Wednesday; chatted briefly
to an exhausted DD as he drove home from work at 9.30 pm; felt my stomach drop slightly when he
said «just don't blog about the howling dogs»; pointed out that those sort of suggested edits needed
to be made MUCH earlier
to avoid appearing in the blog...