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Jennifer Margulis

Mothering Outside the Lines

In Sync, Out of Sync: A Dry Night

February 28th, 2010

I have to keep reminding myself that the only constant with babies is change.

Leone is almost four months old. As my regular readers know, we’ve been doing a combination of cloth diapering and elimination communication (EC) with her. Though I catch more than 90 percent of the poops, I find catching and communicating about the pees much harder.

So yesterday–which we spent at the annual Parent-Daughter Fair with Hesperus and Athena–Leone did all of her peeing in her diapers, which is why I’m so surprised about what happened last night.

Leone and I both fell asleep around 9:30 p.m. She peed twice in her chamber pot before falling asleep. When she woke up to nurse around 2:30 a.m. her diaper was dry. I held the chamber pot under her as I nursed her, cradling her in my arms with our tummies touching. She peed after she nursed as soon as I made the PSSS sound.

We both fell back asleep and she woke me up a few hours later because she was restless, flailing her arms and pumping her legs and making little complaints. I remembered from interviewing infant pottying expert Christine Gross-Loh that sometimes moms and dads misinterpret nighttime waking because a baby has to go pee as a need to nurse.

I checked Leone’s diaper: dry! So I held her over her pot. She peed right away with no cue.

The next time she woke up she peed again. Then I nursed her. She kept popping off the breast and squirming. On a hunch I held her over the chamber pot and made the grunting sound I use when she goes poop. She pooped right away, smiled hugely, and then nursed with great enthusiasm. That was around 4:00 a.m.

At six when she woke up for the day she was dry again! She pooped three more times on the chamber pot in about twenty minutes. (Synonym for baby = poop machine.)

I’m really surprised that we were so in sync and that Leone had a dry night because, honestly, I haven’t been feeling very confident about my EC abilities. I tend to ignore my intuition. I think, hmm, maybe she needs to pee but then don’t offer a pottytunity so she pees in a huge arc all over the floor or I suggest she go pee by holding her in position when she doesn’t have to and she gets mad and squawks in protest and I feel like I’ve failed her. Those scenarios are a lot more common than last night’s!

But maybe little by little Leone and I are actually getting the hang of it?

Related posts:
An Interview About EC with Christine Gross-Loh
More misses Than Catches
Misses and Catches
Only One Wet Diaper
Morning Diary of Baby Leone at Two Months
More on Infant Pottying
The Incredible Pooping Baby; or, Leone Uses Her Chamber Pot

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[ 3 comments ]

What Descartes Taught Me About Froot Loops

February 25th, 2010

When James and I met he was studying philosophy and I was studying literature. Though I struggle to understand the dense philosophical texts that James enjoys so much, I’ve always had a soft spot for literary theory, which is often very philosophical.

James says as parents, we are Cartesians. René Descartes, in his Meditations, wrote that in order for his philosophical thought to bring him to valid conclusions, Descartes realized that he had to discard all he had ever learned or heard before, and start from scratch using only what he could verify was certain.

I grew up eating Froot Loops, those neon colored O’s that make the milk turn bright pink in the bowl. My brother and I also liked Spaghetti-o’s. I came home to an empty house every day after school and watched TV from 4:00 o’clock onwards. We walked to school because everyone else walked to school. My parents put us to sleep on our stomaches because they were told babies should not sleep on their backs, for fear they would choke on their spit-up or aspirate their own vomit. My father was an atheist, a civil rights champion, and a much more involved dad than was usual for that generation. He liked to tell stories of his father being a card-carrying member of the Communist party. Still, we were mostly a family that did what everyone else did, from the food we ate to the sports we played (soccer) to the vaccine shots we received.

When I ask my mom now why she fed us Count Chocula and Apple Jacks, she says, “I don’t know. I guess because everyone else was eating that, so that’s what we ate too.”

My mom, though, is no stranger to controversy. In the 1960s when she was having her children (my oldest brother was born in 1959), my mom was told in the hospital not to breastfeed. She knew instinctively that was ridiculous. A microbiologist whose theories were so radical they were originally dismissed but are now in every basic scientific textbook but have now changed our understanding of evolutionary biology, my mom knew that calves drink cow milk, lambs drink sheep milk, and baby humans should drink human milk. So she bucked cultural pressure and breastfed the four of us. She even hand-expressed milk for one of my brothers when an infected appendix made it hard for her to nurse.

Though she questioned some of our culture’s expectations, she went along with a lot of what advertisers would have us all think is best. “Why do you drink this stuff?” I asked her when I saw she had a “fruit cocktail” beverage on her pantry shelf. The first ingredient was high fructose corn syrup. The second ingredient was sugar. “This isn’t food, Mom, it’s sugar water. It’s gross and bad for you and you shouldn’t be drinking it.”

“Oh, Jenny,” my mom said, exasperated. “I don’t care!”

But I do care.

Descartes tells us that we have to examine why we do EVERYTHING, why we feel a certain way, why we hold fast to certain beliefs. You have to take your beliefs out of the box where they are contained, spread them on the table, and look at them, as you would a rock collection. I started taking my beliefs out and examining them in a Cartesian way when I was pregnant for the first time eleven years ago.

When I did, so much in our life started to change. Luckily James was right there with me, changing too. It was James who explained that organic food was better than conventional food and convinced me that it was worth the extra money to buy it, it was I who convinced James to stop driving the mile to campus and start biking instead. Together we read an article about a baby being poisoned by Drain-O and that same day we rounded up the two buckets full of toxic cleaning products that we had always used and took them out of our house for good (we use vinegar now for cleaning, and baking soda for scrubbing).

We didn’t know enough to say, “No thank you,” to plastic toys and electronic toys and the bribe of disposable diapers given to us in the hospital (though we stuck with cloth) but we started to change our diet, our cleaning products, our mode of transportation, and our beliefs about the healthiest place to give birth and the best ways to raise a child.

It’s a work in progress. If you are committed to examining your beliefs, you have to be committed to re-examining them as well. You can’t ever hold one dogma and insist that it is The Correct Way. You have to constantly reevaluate, rethink, and question yourself.

It’s hard to be Cartesian. I try to be conscious of my reactions. When I have a knee jerk response of “That’s wrong,” or “That’s stupid,” or “Why would someone do that?” instead of turning off my curiosity I try to open myself to that new way, new idea, or new concept. That’s how we came to have a lotus birth (which I thought sounded gross when I first read about it), start going diaper free (which I thought must be impossible before I knew anything about it), and start eating meat (I was a vegetarian for 20 years until my body started to tell me I needed to eat meat.)

We’ve applied this concept even to shoelaces.

Have you ever thought of why you tie your shoes?

It turns out there’s a better way than the bunny ear method we all learned as kids. Ian’s shoelace site will tell you all about it.

Here’s a video of Hesperus showing Athena how to tie shoes a better way.

A new shoelace method. An unassisted homebirth. Cloth diapers. Selective vaccines. And no Froot Loops. Thank you Descartes.

Did you make changes to your lifestyle after becoming a parent? Do you think it’s a good idea to examine and re-examine your beliefs? Do you do things differently now that you are a grown-up from how you were raised as a kid?

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“Maybe She Just Looks Puny Compared to MY Baby”

February 23rd, 2010

Yesterday Baby Leone, Etani, and I walked two miles to pick up Athena from school. The stepmother of one of Athena’s classmates was there, so I got to see her son, who was born three days after Leone, for the first time.

The babies smiled at each other.

“How much does she weigh?” The mom asked me.

“I don’t know,” I began. “We don’t–”

“She’s so tiny,” she interrupted.

“Tiny?”

“Well, maybe she just looks puny compared to MY baby,” she said. “He weighs fifteen pounds!”

Of all the adjectives I would use to describe Leone, “puny” isn’t one of them. She’s like a sumo wrestler with so many chins you can’t see her neck. She has chubby thighs and a Buddha belly. I don’t get it. Was it because she had a boy that this mom was sure her son was bigger than my daughter? The most bizarre part is that we weighed Leone at the Y a few weeks ago and she was fifteen pounds then so she probably actually weighs more now than the other mom’s baby.

“First time mom?” My friend Victoria, whose kids are 10 and 7, asked on the phone when I told her about it later that day. Etani was in the tub while Leone sat on my lap and watched him splash around. Athena was drawing, Hesperus at gymnastics.

“Uh huh.”

“That explains it!” Victoria cried. “You say–and think–all sorts of crazy things when you’re a new mom! You know that as well as anybody.”

I remember coming out of a restaurant with Hesperus in Atlanta when she was just a few weeks old and bumping into a new mom with a baby around the same age. We started comparing height and length and percentiles, as breathless and oblivious to anything but our own babies as teenagers in love, and as fierce in our comparison as if we were talking dick size not head circumference. My dad rolled his eyes and moved away from us. With ten years of hindsight, I realize now that my dad must have been embarrassed by the meaninglessness of our conversation.

I’ve been at this long enough that the puny remark shouldn’t have got my hackles up. But it did. I thrust Leone into the other mom’s arms.

“Here,” I said. “Hold her. She’s pretty hefty.”

Leone immediately started to fuss. Athena took her. She quieted right down in her sister’s arms.

Why do you think new moms act competitive with each other? Have you ever inadvertently insulted another mom’s baby? How do you respond when people you barely know say hurtful things? Should I have responded differently? I’m really looking forward to reading your thoughts in the comment section below.

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[ 12 comments ]

Two Daughters Growing Up: Of Thumbs and … Other Things

February 22nd, 2010

On Friday nights we have Shabbat dinner together. We light candles and say blessings over the light, the wine, and the challah. We sing the blessings in Hebrew, which is the only way I feel comfortable doing it since I don’t believe in God.

We also play a game called Wooden Spoon. Whoever has the wooden spoon has the floor. First we share the best thing about our day, then the worst, then the silliest. Then we take turns saying one thing we are grateful for.

Baby Leone plays too.

This Friday James was holding her when it was her turn: “Best thing, my day, found something to suck on. It was yummy. Coming out of my hand.”

She was talking about her thumb, which she started sucking on while I was carrying her in the front pack facing outward on a long walk across town earlier in the day.

I’m a total believer in thumb sucking, though only one of my three older children ever sucked her thumb.

I like it because:

1) Your thumb can’t get lost
2) It’s a way for a child to find comfort
3) It satisfies the urge to suck
4) It’s not made of toxic plastic or any other foreign substance
5) It’s free

I know a lot of parents think thumb sucking is bad. My friend Michelle didn’t even like her son to suck on any part of his hand or fingers. I remember when he was four months old and we visited and every time he found his little fist, Michelle would bat his hand away from his mouth.

But I feel sort of sad about Leone sucking her thumb (though she hasn’t done it consistently since, so maybe I’m jumping the gun).

“She’s self-comforting,” James said, a little sadly.

“Already?” I added, a little sad too.

On Sunday Hesperus, Leone’s 10-year-old sister, had her first Body Basics class with a group of her 5th grade friends from school. Hesperus is growing up in so many ways, becoming longer and leaner and looking more like a young woman than a little girl.

I notice the changes, even though they are still so subtle, all the time now–when I smell her scalp as I kiss her goodnight on the top of her head, when she reads the Twilight books one after the other breathlessly and then decides she likes them so much she’s going to read them all again, when she talks about her friends (”My friends all have pierced ears, Mommy,” “my friends love to listen to iPods, Mommy”), when she sleeps as late as she can instead of bounding out of bed like the morning person she has always been.

I’m so proud of her but part of me just can’t bear it. I’M NOT READY FOR THEM TO GROW UP SO MUCH, I want to shout from the rooftop. CAN’T THEY SLOW DOWN?!

How do you feel about your children growing older? Do you have mixed feelings about it? Are you ready for them to leave for college? Do you wish they could just stay small? Please share your thoughts in the comment section below (if you want to weigh in on thumb sucking, I’d be interested in your opinion about that as well).

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[ 12 comments ]

An Interview About Elimination Communication (EC) with Author and Expert Christine Gross-Loh

February 18th, 2010

IMG_5507 (1)My guest today is Christine Gross-Loh, a mother of four, an international traveler, a Harvard Ph.D., and—if that’s not already enough!—the author of an excellent book about infant pottying called, The Diaper Free Baby: The Natural Toilet Training Alternative.41VLOiohpZL._SL75_

JM: I really enjoyed reading your book and I learned so much about elimination communication (EC) and how to go diaper free.

Can you tell me a bit of the backstory about how you found out about EC and why you decided to write an entire book about it?

CGL: I first saw EC when I was a student living in Japan. The family I was living with had twin baby granddaughters, and one day I saw their grandmother hold them over a potty one by one after they woke up from a nap. I was really surprised—in fact, I was skeptical, as it seemed counter to everything I’d ever heard about toilet training.

When I eventually had my own baby and started using cloth diapers, I learned about EC and remembered what I’d seen in Japan.

My mother, who was raised in Korea, also encouraged me in this by buying my son a potty when he had just turned one.

I was opposed to doing anything that would seem like pressuring my child, but once we got started, I realized that there was nothing pressured about it—it truly was about supporting him in a natural process, following his cues and engaging in a mutual conversation. It was so joyful and fun!

I was always frustrated by all the misconceptions about EC out there, especially after I had my second child, met many other EC’ing parents, and truly knew that this was not a fluke, but rather, a knowledge that our society had somehow lost.

There was a huge surge of media interest in diaper free babies in the fall of 2005, but many misconceptions remained, so although there were two wonderful infant pottying books out there already, it felt like the right time to write a new book aimed at modern parents who wanted practical tips on how to do EC in a way that would fit their lifestyles.

Christine and her fourth child, Anna (who is 3 weeks old here), lock eyes as Anna uses the potty

Christine and her fourth child, Anna (who is 3 weeks old here), lock eyes as Anna uses the potty

JM: I’m not as intuitive as I wish I were with our 3-month-old baby. What I mean is, I can’t tell exactly when she needs to pee. I find it’s MUCH easier to tell when she needs to poop. So I offer her what you call “pottytunities” throughout the day. We have a little “chamber pot” (it’s a plastic mixing bowl with a handle and a spout and a rubber ring on the bottom that I bought for $1 at the Dollar Store) and when it’s been awhile I hold her over it and make a cueing sound. “PSSS.” She often pees when I do that! It’s amazing. But I can’t help wondering if I’m doing it wrong or if, somehow, I should be more in tune with her signals?

CGL: First of all, it sounds like you are very much in tune with your baby, Jennifer! I know that it may not feel that way at times, but this all sounds well within the range of normal when pottying a three month old. There’s a learning curve and in a way, it never ends—we continue to learn more about our babies the older they get—but that’s what parenting is all about.

There are three basic ways that parents figure out when to offer a pottytunity: cues, timing (awareness of baby’s patterns), and intuition (a feeling that your baby just has to go).

Some parents do find it hard to read a young baby’s cues and feel that they work better via timing or intuition, but generally you’ll find it’s a combination of all three, or different methods at different times of day. For instance, I always take my baby to pee after she wakes up, even though she’s not showing any signals, because I know this is her pattern (as it is for many babies).

Things will continue to evolve. I love EC because I feel that it keeps parents in close communication with their babies, allows them to observe them, and encourages them to keep up with all their changes.

One thing that really helps (which I know you do) is babywearing. When I wear my baby close to me—especially if she is wearing underwear or training pants—I’m much more able to recognize the subtlest signals. For instance, as a very new newborn she would stretch her legs and body whenever she had to pee or poop. Babies also clearly signal by squirming when they have to pee if they are being babyworn. So if you aren’t doing this already, increasing diaper-free, babywearing time would be a great first step.

Also, remember that this communication is a two-way thing. Sometimes my baby gives out no clear signals for pee, but I’m the one who realizes, oh, it’s been awhile since I took her, or I look for a chance to take her after she’s nursed, etc.

Your baby responds to you when you hold her over a potty, and this means that she understands what you are helping her with.

The fact that your baby usually pees when you take her means that you have a good understanding of her patterns, even if you don’t consciously think about it.

Believe me, if you took your baby to the toilet when she didn’t have to pee, she wouldn’t pee.

The final thing I’d emphasize is to remember to value the process, rather than focusing on results. The important thing is to stay present and aware and open to your baby, rather than stress about catching everything in a potty.

JM: How do you know when the baby is done pooping? I almost always catch the first poop. Leone grunts and fidgets and it’s really obvious that she needs to go. But I make the mistake, sometimes, of taking her off the chamber pot when she isn’t finished. This morning she pooped FOUR times in a row. I caught all of them but that hasn’t always been the case (eh hem). My fear is holding her over the chamber pot too long and making her uncomfortable so I think I take her off too soon. Do you have advice about this?

CGL: This is a great question! I think, as with all else pertaining to EC, it has to do with patterns, intuition, and cues. Each baby is an individual, so I can’t tell you specifically how to tell when your own little baby is completely done, but I’m betting you know more about her than you give yourself credit for, and each time she goes to the bathroom, you learn more about her. Also, I find that often there is a change at around 3-4 months, and babies’ patterns become much more predictable, bowel movements become more consolidated, and EC overall feels easier.

Try to take note of her patterns—for instance, does she eliminate for a longer period of time in the morning?—and go from there (but keep in mind that patterns do change). Before taking her off the potty, try to observe whether she’s still grunting or breathing or restless at all or whether she seems calm and content.

Also, misses are par for the course—if you find you miss a poop you can still talk to her. Babies understand and take in so much!

If you’re worried she’s uncomfortable, check the position you’re using. You might want to start to use a low potty if you can. I usually start using one around three months. This gives babies more support. Or start using a toilet insert or just hold her on the toilet facing you. The thing I like about these positions is that my baby and I can look into each other’s eyes. It’s just lovely and babies often calm down and start to coo and smile at you. Conversely, babies also do love the “in arms” position (where they are held closely, but facing away), because they love that feeling of being nestled close to you. It’s good to have a variety of things in your toolbox.

JM: For moms and dads new to elimination communication (EC), what advice do you have to get them started?

CGL: I usually suggest that parents give it a try at a time when the diaper would usually be off, like at a diaper change, and then observe what kind of body language their baby does right before or while eliminating. The only thing about that, though, is that if the baby is used to eliminating exclusively in a diaper, she might just have peed and would actually hold it while the diaper is off. So if that seems to be happening, try a longer stretch of diaper-free time.

Mornings are a good time if you have time then, because a classic elimination pattern is more pees in the morning (and fewer in the afternoon), thus more chances to try to get in tune.

Many parents are already aware of when their baby is just about to have a bowel movement, so I would suggest that as another ideal time to put baby on the potty.

JM: I’ve heard a lot of people—including some readers of this blog—say, “Oh, I tried that and it didn’t work.” What advice do you have to people who feel like it’s impossible? Is EC not for everyone?

CGL: I think that EC resonates with certain people. I don’t think it’s for people who aren’t interested in it, but it *is* possible for most every baby. It does require a change in mindset, but the actual change in your daily routine doesn’t need to be significant.

You have to believe that your baby wants to communicate with you, and have faith in your ability to understand her. Most parents become adept at figuring out when their babies are hungry or sleepy—this is just an extension of that.

Next, you have to believe that babies are physically capable of this. Just practicing it successfully once or twice is usually enough to convince parents of that.

Finally, you have to accept that when it comes to helping our children become toilet independent, we have a choice. We either transition our babies at birth to becoming used to eliminating in a diaper (a feeling which I’d argue doesn’t feel completely natural to them at first), and then transition them from that later on when they are older, or we help them remain used to the natural, instinctive, inborn desire to feel clean and dry by helping them eliminate in a toilet or potty (even part time) from the time they are infants.

You also have to be a parent who can let go of a results-oriented mindset, and just be willing to go along on this journey.

Most EC’ed babies are completely out of diapers earlier than children who are conventionally toilet-trained, but this shouldn’t be the primary goal.

Sometimes there are practical reasons why EC doesn’t seem to work. Little changes like setting up your home to be EC-friendly with potties within easy reach, or dressing your baby in easy-change clothing, or preparing some supplies for you to take with you when you are out and about (such as a container with a lid that you can quickly potty your baby in if you aren’t near a bathroom), can make the difference between continuing with EC or not.

Remember, too, that this doesn’t have to be done full-time. Your baby and you will still retain a lot of benefits even if you’re EC’ing part time. If your circumstances make it hard for you to catch in a potty at times, then hold her in the position you would normally hold her in and cue her in a diaper, then change her as soon as you can.

If people have specific questions about how to practice this, for every issue, there are EC’ing parents who have been there, done that. The vast support network out there—via DiaperFreeBaby meetings (http://www.diaperfreebaby.org) and various Internet support groups is quite incredible.

JM: A few nights ago Leone was dry for five hours in a row. I couldn’t believe it! Is it true that if you practice EC a baby stops wetting at night? Do we have any idea why this is so?

CGL: That’s great, and not surprising! Lots of EC’ed babies are dry at night quite early on and also dry during the day for longer stretches of time than an exclusively diapered baby is.

It makes sense since they have retained an awareness of the muscles which control elimination. It feels natural for them to eliminate in a toilet or potty.

Many EC’ing parents who find their babies eliminating rather frequently look at it as a sign that their baby may have food intolerances, and so this becomes another helpful way to monitor their health.

JM: What do you do about nighttime diapering, or maybe I should say, nighttime communicating?

CGL: The nighttime approach to EC is very individual. There are lots of families who EC at night right from the start, and some of their strategies include having a potty by the bed (sometimes with a pre-fold in it to prevent accidental spills), waterproofing a bed with a wool puddle pad, and dressing baby in a particular way at nighttime. Some people love pocket diapers, and others like to put a baby to bed with nothing on at all, simply laying her on a few pre-folds, so that they can quickly potty her.

I usually put my babies to bed in a kind of long wool bunting or skirt which is open at the bottom so the bed is waterproofed and they stay warm but I can quickly change or potty them. This is how we do it but everyone does it in the way that fits them best. Many parents find that their babies wake less at night if they potty them—in fact, they discover that what they thought was night waking to nurse was really restlessness from having to pee.

If your baby wakes up restless, bicycling her legs, breathing heavily, etc. then that might mean she needs to pee and would get back to sleep faster after a pottytunity.

I myself don’t usually do much nighttime EC until my children are in mid-infancy. It works better for our family if I minimize the amount of times I have to actually get up out of bed to hold baby over a potty until she is peeing less at night anyway. Also, after baby #2, there was always at least one extra older child in bed with us, on my side of the bed, so it made taking baby to the bathroom challenging. If my baby was very restless I would offer to her to pee in an open diaper and then quickly change her.

JM: You mentioned to me when we talked awhile ago that people who have been exposed to other cultures are more open to EC. Why is that?

CGL: EC is practiced in many other cultures, especially those where disposable diapers are uncommon or unavailable, and where babies are closely held, nurtured, and responded to. There are benefits to witnessing it in action rather than reading about it or hearing about it. Also, living or traveling abroad opens up your mind to the idea that there is more than one set way of doing things (this goes for all sorts of things, not just infant pottying).

It’s a lot easier to challenge mainstream conventions when you have support, so even just knowing that there are other people out there in the world who practice EC can make it seem a lot less daunting.

JM: You have four children, including a brand new baby who’s just a few weeks older than mine. How can you possibly manage to do EC with the newborn AND respond to your other three kids at the same time?!

Newborn Anna with big sister Mia wearing handmade leg warmers

Newborn Anna with big sister Mia wearing handmade leg warmers

CGL: You know, I’m surprised by this myself, but I actually find it easier this time around, both because by now I don’t even have to think about the logistics anymore, and because I have older kids who are more self-sufficient and also are able to help if I need something. Also, it’s a huge time saver for me to simply take my baby to the bathroom rather than change and wash lots of cloth diapers or buy and dispose of disposable diapers. We did go through more diapers at the start, because I was changing after each miss, but after Anna grew older and we got in sync, the amount of laundry dramatically decreased.

I think that two things that helped were having baskets of supplies (small diapers, covers, a potty, toilet paper, and pre-folds for lying the baby on) around when Anna was a newborn, and being more proactive about asking other people to help potty her at the beginning.

I’m also relaxed about catches and misses. I know that there are new opportunities for getting in tune with my baby every single day and I also know that catches and misses can vary day to day (or hour to hour), and that this is normal. I think the most important goal for me right now is to help her maintain her bodily awareness.

Now, I feel like my baby and I are in a good rhythm. She’s three and a half months, she and I have a favorite babywearing carrier (I’m using a Baby Hawk mei tai), and she eliminates much less frequently than she did as a newborn, so if we go on shorter outings I don’t even usually waterproof her. If there’s a miss—and they do happen!—it’s no big deal, we’ll just change clothes.

The thing I love about doing EC with my new baby is that it really allows me to see her as an individual even though she’s part of such a large family. You know how they say babies have different nursing personalities—EC is the same, and her cues, body language, communication are all her own. I also have to say that even though I’d been through this before, I was just as astounded and moved as any brand-new mother would be by the clarity of my baby’s communication from her first few hours of life.

EC’ing a newborn is incredible.

JM: Do you use cloth or disposable diapers when you are not doing EC? Why do you think cloth is a better option? What brands of cloth have you liked the best?

CGL: I do use diaper backup from time to time and I encourage parents to use as much as they need to until they feel comfortable or when life gets really hectic.

Various underwear, training pants, and diapers used for EC

Various underwear, training pants, and diapers used for EC

I usually use cloth, although I use disposables on long international plane trips (our family travels back and forth to Japan a lot).

My very favorite setup right now is actually training pants or underwear, which my friend Melinda encouraged me to switch to when my baby was just about to turn three months old. Underwear makes such a difference because 1) It heightens your awareness and responsiveness 2) It is vastly easier to take a baby to the bathroom without fiddling with covers, velcro, snaps, etc.—thus it increases your catches and gets you and baby in a rhythm sooner and 3) It’s just so nice to hold a baby without a diaper on! I really recommend it. You can expect that you might have more misses at first, but I really think it’s worth it, ultimately.

There aren’t a lot of underwear or training pants out there for such little ones but some sites to get supplies include: DiaperFreeBaby.org, ContinuumFamily, TheECStore, ECWear.com, and NooneWilga.

I also find that just using Size 2 training pants or underwear works okay for a baby because they are easy to pull on and take off since they are a bit loose, and they are usually not too expensive.

When I do use cloth diapers, my favorite setup is a thin Japanese woolen cover and then a thin cotton hourglass-shaped insert (also Japanese, but any doubler would do), which holds just one pee. I also sometimes use coverless fitteds made from recycled pre-folds, which are the right thinness—anything bulkier is overkill.

Unfortunately, the Japanese items I use are only available in Japan, but the wool covers are similar to Nikky’s, available at BabyWorks and the fitteds made from recycled pre-folds can be found at TinkleTraps.

You can even use a washcloth for a diaper—they are less bulky than pre-folds. There are so many wonderful WAHM-made cloth diapering products—inserts or doublers and wool covers or pants made from recycled wool would be particularly useful for EC’ers.

The advantage of switching to cloth, even part time, is that babies remain aware of the feeling of eliminating, even if it’s in their diaper.

Disposables are designed for babies not to feel wetness, which dulls their awareness, and it becomes harder for parents, too, to stay aware of their baby’s patterns—but I do know many parents who have successfully EC’ed while using disposables.

JM: Anything else you want to add about EC or infant pottying that I haven’t already asked you?

CGL: I know that if you are new to it, the whole idea of EC can be a stretch. It certainly felt that way to me when I first started doing it nine years ago. But now that I am doing it for the fourth time, I just can’t imagine not doing it.

Nothing warms my heart more than knowing I am understanding and helping my baby in this way. I really feel EC has enriched my relationship with each of my children and taught me so much, and it’s great that more and more families are experiencing this too.

Christine's third child, Mia, using the potty when she was six months old

Christine's third child, Mia, using the potty when she was six months old

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[ 13 comments ]

Family Movie Night

February 17th, 2010

Okay, I lied in yesterday’s post about not having a television.

We actually have a TV. A cheap Korean 25-year-old analogue 19-inch TV that our renters left two and a half years ago. We found it in the house when we came back from a year in West Africa.

The TV is in the closet by the front entrance. There’s a DVD player attached to it with duct tape. It’s so bulky and awkward I can’t carry it by myself. We used to watch movies on it sometimes but we haven’t taken it out of the closet in months.

Still, once a week, usually on Saturday afternoons, we rent a DVD and eat dinner in front of a movie. Since the TV’s so impractical to move, we use my 17-inch laptop.

“I’M MAKING THE POPCORN. I’M THE BEST popcorn maker,” 6-year-old Etani announces. He scooches a chair over to the stove, pours some oil into a pan, adds three unpopped kernels, and asks me to turn on the stove.

“Did you wash your hands?”

Etani gives me an exasperated look, sighs, leaps off the chair, and comes back trailing a towel.

He knows just what to do, dumping in more kernels once the first three are popped, rattling the pan over the burner energetically so the popcorn doesn’t burn, barking orders at me.

When it’s ready Etani loads the popped corn up with butter and nutritional yeast. If either of his older sisters tries to sneak a single kernel he spreads his arms and crouches like a linebacker to keep them away.

Popcorn flies out of his bowl while he runs to claim the middle seat on the couch.

When everyone has popcorn and a plate of food we start the movie. We try to pick movies that we’ll all enjoy (among our recent unexpected favorites: Julie Andrews’s 1967 classic “Thoroughly Modern Millie,” “The Golden Compass,” and “Journey to the Center of the Earth”).

Food gets smushed into the couch, there are screams of frustration when the movie pops out of Full Screen mode as inevitably happens with the computer’s DVD Player, the kids always find something besides the popcorn and seating arrangement to bicker about, and we almost always go to bed later than the ideal time on Family Movie Night (though we pause the movie to put on pajamas and brush teeth and it’s the one night a week when nobody has to be hurried along).

But it’s totally worth it.

The screen time. The glorious screen time. Our two-hour family foray into what most American kids are doing 53 hours a week.

Related post: Kill Your TV.

What about your family’s favorite movies? Do you prefer to rent movies or go to the theater? Please share your suggestions in the comment section below.

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[ 25 comments ]

Kill Your TV, and iPod, and Computer, and Cell Phone?

February 16th, 2010

My cyber friend Alexandra Grabbe, who has a wonderful, environmentally conscious, and superbly written blog about being an innkeeper in Wellfleet, Massachusetts, sent me the link to this New York Times article about the epidemic of childhood obesity and how America’s overweight children cost the whole country money.

You have to read to almost the end of the article to get to the really surprising and perhaps the most upsetting part of the article. According to a study by the Kaiser Foundation released on January 20, 2010, children ages 8 to 18 spend an average of 7 hours 38 minutes A DAY using media. But that number is actually an underestimate. Here’s what the Kaiser Foundation says:

And because they spend so much of that time ‘media multitasking’ (using more than one medium at a time), they actually manage to pack a total of 10 hours and 45 minutes (10:45) worth of media content into those 7½ hours.

Oh. My. Expletive Deleted (the good Web editors at Mothering.com would rather we did not swear). God.

What. The. Expletive Deleted?!

How many hours are there in a day that an 8-year-old child could spend more than seven of them watching TV, playing video games, using the computer, listening to an iPod, and talking on the cell phone?

We don’t have a TV.

My kids do not have computers.

There are no video games at our house.

And though 10-year-old Hesperus has been begging for an iPod (”ALL my friends have them, Mommy! I want one!”), we A) don’t have enough money to buy her one right now and B) wouldn’t buy her one even if we did.

“How do you spell, ‘Poor deprived child, Mommy?’” 6-year-old Etani wanted to know the other day. This was in reference to not being allowed to eat candy at that exact second of the day.

The kids haven’t caught on yet that they are deprived for so many other multi-media reasons.

Here’s what I’d like to know: Do your kids spend THAT much time in front of electronic devices? Does the results of this study seem plausible? Have you decided to kill your TV and more or do you think all this media exposure is good for children? Please share your thoughts in the comment section below.

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[ 25 comments ]

More Misses Than Catches

February 14th, 2010

Christine Gross-Loh, a mother of four and the author of The Diaper Free Baby, will be stopping by my blog this week.

Gross-Loh is an expert on infant pottying, a.k.a. Elimination Communication (EC), and I have about a million questions to ask her.

I feel like the baby and I haven’t been doing very well with EC the past few days. I think it’s because I had the hubris to brag about her only wetting one diaper all day.

Though I catch almost all the poops, I’ve been finding it hard to know when Leone has to go pee.

Either that, or there’s no bathroom nearby.

Take today, for instance. Leone and I took her 10-year-old sister Hesperus shopping at Justice. Hesperus loves Justice. She can spend all day at the mall. I would rather have Swine Flu than go to the mall but Hesperus’s grandfather bought her a gift certificate and I thought it would be a nice way to spend some time together and celebrate Valentine’s Day.

Leone came along. She slept in the front carrier a lot of the time. Then she woke up and squirmed and fussed. I suspected she needed to go pee but we were in full trying-on-shirts mode and the nearest bathroom was down a flight of stairs, past half a dozen shops, at the end of the corridor. Feeling guilty but not knowing what else to do, I ignored the signals she was giving me. When she complained a bit longer I put her on the chair in the dressing room and checked her diaper. Wet. I changed it.

Squirm-cry #2 = same problem of no nearby potty = wet diaper #2. I changed it.

Squirm-cry #3 = wet diaper #3. I changed it.

On the way home I had no more diapers so I put a washcloth under her while she sat in the car seat.

At one point during the ride home she squirmed and cried.

“What’s wrong Baby?” Hesperus, who was sitting in the back seat with her, asked.

Sure enough, the washcloth was wet when we got home.

I feel discouraged. I don’t think it qualifies as good communication if I know when the baby need*ED* to go after she’s already gone.

The day’s tallies: 1 caught (rather stinky) poop this morning, about 9 wet diapers throughout the day, 1 explosive missed pee in the kitchen (oops) when James was holding her, 1 caught pee before bedtime.

That will teach me to brag.

Related posts:
Misses and Catches
Only One Wet Diaper
Morning Diary of Baby Leone at Two Months
More on Infant Pottying
The Incredible Pooping Baby; or, Leone Uses Her Chamber Pot

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[ 6 comments ]

Study in Monkeys Suggests Dangers of Hepatitis B Vaccine For Newborns

February 11th, 2010

You may not have heard about a study published in September in the Journal of Neurotoxicology about what happens to newborn rhesus macaques after they are given a single dose of a thimerosal-containing Hepatitis B vaccine.

Nine scientists co-authored the study.

In the introduction, they explain that in 1991 Hepatitis B was recommended for all newborns, regardless of gestational age or birth weight, within twelve hours of life, even if their mothers test negative for Hepatitis B.

“We were unable to identify pre-clinical or prospective neurotoxicity studies that assessed the safety of this policy,” the authors write.

Translation: the vaccine was recommended for newborns without anyone in the government, the medical, or the scientific community establishing in advance or afterwards that the vaccine was safe.

It’s absurd.

It was a “routine” Hepatitis B vaccine that made me first question the CDC vaccine schedule.

When a nurse in the hospital bustles in and tells you to give your baby a vaccine against a SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED DISEASE you know you don’t have and your husband does not have, it gives you pause. When that same nurse becomes angry because you decline to inject your little frog-legged creature with a combination of possibly toxic chemicals that may well be completely unnecessary, you start to get suspicious.

Why would anyone in the medical establishment get upset at the parents of a healthy baby who simply ask for a few days to consider a suggestion and read up on it?

Perhaps because the nurse had already prepared the vaccine and my refusal meant the hospital could no longer charge me for it?

Perhaps because the nurse thought it is appropriate to scare parents, bully parents, vilify parents who want to be sure what a hospital is recommending is safe?

The truth is there is a lot about vaccinations that we do not know.

The truth is vaccinations are pharmaceutical products made by a multi-billion dollar industry that are injected intramuscularly into a baby’s body.

The truth may well be that 90 percent of the vaccines we are giving our children are unnecessary.

The truth may well be that the exponential number of vaccines we are now giving children (four times as many as when I was growing up in the 1970s) may well be harmful to our children’s long-term health.

Back to the study.

The scientists found that infant monkeys given the vaccine had delayed sucking, rooting, and snouting reflexes:

Infants were raised identically and tested daily for acquisition of 9 survival, motor, and sensorimotor reflexes by a blinded observer. In exposed animals there was a significant delay in the acquisition of three survival reflexes: root, snout and suck, compared with unexposed animals.

They conclude that more study is necessary:

In summary, this study provides preliminary evidence of abnormal early neurodevelopmental responses in male infant rhesus macaques receiving a single dose of Th-containing HB vaccine at birth and indicates that further investigation is merited.

Fair enough. Very scientific and politic. Let’s continue studying whether this vaccine is harmful in monkeys. But since my job as a parent is to keep my baby safe and free from harm, I am not in the mood to be politic. Here’s the bottom line (CDC are you listening?): it’s time to STOP giving the Hepatitis B vaccine to human infants who are at no risk for Hepatitis B.

Vaccine advocates will tell you there is no longer thimerosal in the vaccine. That’s certainly an improvement. But it’s not enough to guarantee the vaccine is safe. And, since the vaccine is totally unnecessary in the first place, the thimerosal question is actually irrelevant.

If you’re pregnant and planning to have a baby in the hospital, you will be pressured into accepting this vaccine.

But if you do not have Hepatitis B and your baby does not need a blood transfusion, there is absolutely no reason for your baby to get the vaccine.

Just say no.

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[ 6 comments ]

Taking the World by Scowl

February 10th, 2010

When Leone emerged into the world in a rush of amniotic fluid she was scowling.

James saw a frown on her upside down face even before her body came out.

It was as if she were saying, “What is this place? Where am I? What am I doing here?”

James imitating Leone's frown as she was being born

James imitating Leone's frown as she was being born


Now that she’s three months old she often has frown lines on her brow.

She’s not a fussy baby.

In fact, she barely cries.

On Sunday I took her to a parent meeting and she spent the two hours smiling, cooing, and drooling. But she still scowls at the world and often looks serious. It’s as if she’s an old soul and she already suspects there may be great injustice in the world.

Then the scowl passes and her eyes crinkle and her whole face smiles.

I wonder what all this frowning is about. I know that a baby’s personality is little, if any, indication of what she’ll be like as a toddler, preschooler, school-aged kid, teenager, or adult. I know the only constant with babies as they grow is change.

But I wonder if Leone will always have a dubious approach to new experiences.

Spluttering amniotic fluid, she let out a lusty cry a few seconds after she was born. James and I laughed and cried with her. She quieted down in less than a minute, naked on my chest, her tiny face pressed against my heart.

This week she learned how to laugh. It started as a guttural plosive “huh!” when James would tickle her stomach or put her toes in his beard. Then her 10-year-old sister was sitting with her reading a funny book and started laughing out loud. Leone looked in surprise at her sister and smiled. The next time Hesperus laughed suddenly, Leone giggled. We’ve been getting her to laugh by surprising her with a giggling face, a peek-a-boo, or a fake sneeze (”ah choo” in a high squeaky voice) ever since.

This baby seems to combine the best of everything: a sense of humor, a patient personality, and an affectionate nature all with a healthy scowly sense of dubiety about this crazy world.

What tricks do you have to make a baby laugh? What does your under one-year-old set find funniest? Share your ideas in the comment section below. I’ll test them on my little scowler and report back next week.

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[ 5 comments ]






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How to Deal with a Completely Toxic Person? posted by bubbledumpster, Sun, 25 Sep 2011 23:44:20 +0000
TOXIC Family... let's have it. posted by Imakcerka, Sat, 24 Sep 2011 12:55:34 +0000
my parents are coming to visit posted by Linda on the move, Wed, 21 Sep 2011 19:33:00 +0000
In a world of endless choices....how do you choose?? posted by youngspiritmom, Wed, 21 Sep 2011 07:36:13 +0000

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