Thursday, September 17, 2009

Teaching Kids to Be and Eat Healthy



September is Go Healthy Month, and the American Heart Association with the Alliance for a Healthier Generation is working to encourage kids to motive themselves to eat better and move more with the the EmpowerME4Life movement

It's a program designed to teach kids the basics of healthy eating and living active lifestyles. It's an eight-session healthy living course that is age-appropriate, culturally relevant, targeted to kids ages 8-12; and can be facilitated by older youth or adult allies.

Each session of empowerME4Life is grounded in the expertise of the American Heart Association's recommendations and expertise in promoting heart-healthy lifestyles. The educational content and methods are aligned with the National Health Education Standards for fifth grade.

It is based on five steps kids can take to live healthier:

  • Get active for 60 minutes each day


  • Drink primarily water, 1 percent or fat free milk, and 100 percent juice with no added sugar


  • Eat fruits and vegetables with EVERY meal


  • Cut back on screen time and limit it to 1-2 hours a day


  • Get at least 9 hours of sleep every night



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    Tuesday, September 1, 2009

    Tips in preventing child abduction


    Reports of abductions have parents extremely concered and worried on how to protect their little children. Everywhere we hear in the news that some child is being forcefully kidnapped or lured into accompanying some stranger by using candy as bait.
    Here in this blog, I've picked up some helpful tips from an internationally acclaimed health and safety expert on how to protect your children against abduction.

    1. Have a family password. Teach your child that they can't go anywhere with anyone (even a relative) without your parent's permission, unless the person coming for you knows the family password. Practice situations so that the child understands the kinds of circumstances in which a person who doesn't know the password might be persuasive. Even if someone tells the child she must come along because her parent is in the hospital, she should ask for the family password.

    2. Don't advertise your child's name to strangers. Don't put your child's name on the outside of clothing or possessions.

    3. Help your child memorize important information: their first and last name, complete address and telephone number. Start with simpler imformation such as street name and color of your house. Teach children what 911 is and why people call. Children as young as 3 have been taught to successfully make 911 calls.

    4. Teach your child the tricks abductors may use. Some lines an abductor might use: I'm lost. Can you tell me how to get to . . . ? I've lost my puppy. Will you help me find him? Teach your children that adults should not be asking for help from a child.

    5. Teach your child when to scream, kick, yell and run. If someone tries to take you somewhere without your parent's permission, that's when he should scream, kick, yell loudly "this not my father/mother" and quickly get away from this person.

    6. In public places, never let a small child out of your sight. Teach children not to run, walk or even hide from parents. Provide children with instructions of what to if they get separated from you. Also, teach them that they can ask a mom with a child for help as well.

    7. Teach your child to always ask permission before going anywhere with anyone. (Friends and relatives included.) Ask even if it's to run next door for just a second to see the new puppy.

    8. ALWAYS supervise children, especially while they play outdoors. Invest in a comfortable lounge chair to use for these occasions.

    9. Invest in a monitored home security system. (At the very least, install audible alarms or tones on the doors and windows, which lets you know when someone enters or leaves your home.) Have solid-core doors for all entry points and equip them with good quality deadbolt locks. Use motion sensor lights near or around entry points. Install a peephole in your front door and use it before opening the door. Teach children never to open the door or to let anyone (even a friend) into your home without first asking permission. Do background screening and reference checks on everyone who works at your home, particularly babysitters or nannies.

    10. As an additional layer of protection, parents should consider purchasing a child monitoring device (such as a watch), which can be a very valuable tool in quickly locating a missing child. It may cost more but what's important here in the protection of your beloved little darling.

    Lastly, keep important information on hand: a current color photo (update frequently); up-to date dental and medical records, a video of the child, a complete description of the child, fingerprints, and a DNA kit.


    source

    Saturday, August 29, 2009

    Dealing with baby colds


    Having a baby with the sniffles is no fun, especially when it is causing them to be up all night sneezing, coughing, and making sad little gurgling noises. Before rushing off to the doctor, there are a couple home remedies to try that may ease the common cold.

    Start out by wiping the whole place down and shoving everything in the laundry machine and dishwasher. Getting everything cleaned up sparkly will stop the spread of any further nasty viruses and bacteria, keeping everyone else in the house – hopefully- from getting sick. Make sure to use HOT water to clean pacifiers, toys, baby bottles, and sippy cups. Launder sheets, blankets, and stuffed animals. Wipe off anything the baby puts their mouth on, which in most cases is just about everything.

    Once you have a sparkling clean house, start hydrating that sniffling baby. Hydration will help break up the mucus and start moving that cold out of the system. A small amount of water is just fine for a stuffed up baby, or make some watered down formula for baby to suckle on. Stick to water, as fruit juice for babies isn’t recommended. Juice is mostly natural sugar, or added sugar, and can cause digestive issues such as constipation.

    If your infant is eating cereal or munching on solid foods, add in some extra vitamin C. Don’t run for the oranges, grab the red peppers instead! Red peppers have huge amounts of vitamin C, and 1/2 cup has over 100 mg of the happy healthy cold fighting stuff. Don’t think your babe will like it? Mine couldn’t get enough when her nose was running. Steam small chunks of red pepper until soft and then puree. Let cool, and spoon away.

    Set up baby’s room for success by investing in a humidifier. There is some discussion as to which works better for easing colds, but the main concern is that warm-mist humidifiers can cause burns if your baby touches them, which is not something any parent wants. Either only use warm-mist humidifiers when your baby is safe in the crib, or try a cool-mist humidifier. Whichever type you go with, turn it on and crank it when your wee one has the sniffles. It will help get the congestion clearing and moving out of baby.

    Now, what to do with all that snot? It comes out when the baby sneezes, drips constantly from the nose, and causes raw red areas under the nose and chin. Help keep your baby’s face and nose happy by using soft items to wipe the nose. Cut up and old t-shirt into squares and use as hankies. Apply Calmoseptine to the nose, upper lip, and chin area to alleviate red irritated skin. Many of us have it hiding around from the beginnings of breastfeeding. Remember that? If you don’t have any Calmoseptine, some Vaseline will do nicely.

    Yes, there is always the wonderful bulb syringe. This lovely little item can help suck the snot out of an infant’s nose like a turkey baster, but finding a baby that enjoys this process is almost impossible. If you can get your baby into a comfortable head tilted back position to attempt using a bulb syringe, start by dropping some saline solution into each nostril. Squeeze the air out of the syringe before placing it into your baby’s nose. Put the tip of the bulb syringe in one nostril and then release the bulb syringe allowing it to suck out all that nasty mucus. Go ahead and try the other side, that is if your baby is still sitting calmly on your lap complying with this atrocious nose sucking. If you are successful, make sure to clean out the bulb syringe with warm soapy water.

    I don’t know about you, but I am exhausted just thinking about it all! Getting the crib ready for a good night’s sleep is beneficial to easing nighttime wakings from colds. By elevating one end of the crib, the baby will be on a slight incline when sleeping, which will alleviate the back of the throat drip drip dripping. Putting a pillow or blanket under one end of the crib bedding is another option. If your baby is into sleeping in their infant car carrier, try a night in it and see how it goes. They are in an almost upright sitting position, which allows the bothersome mucus to flow easily without causing irritation.

    Lastly, take a look at yourself. How are you feeling? The best thing you can do for your baby is to stay healthy. Take some vitamin C, pop the baby in the stroller (even if it is in the middle of winter and cold – you and your baby can wear layers) and get some fresh air. Make sure to get some sleep. Keeping yourself healthy is the first step in keeping your baby healthy.

    Make sure to contact your doctor if you are concerned about how your baby is breathing or if their symptoms get worse. Never feel like you are bothering your doctor with silly questions or concerns when it comes to your baby. Just like the saying goes, it is better to be safe than sorry!


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    Thursday, August 27, 2009

    Teach Children How to Act Around Dogs and Other Animals


    A child can learn some wonderful life lessons while caring for an animal, but there can be some potential hazards that accompany pets of any kind. A young child can harm your pet, and some pets can most certainly harm your child. Never leave a baby or young child alone with any pet and always supervise children around dogs, cats, ferrets and other animals. Even if your home doesn't have a pet, teach your children these important tips.


    ALWAYS:

    -Treat animals with kindness and respect

    -Handle pets gently

    -Wash your hands thoroughly after handling pets


    NEVER:

    -Approach any unfamiliar animal

    -Disturb an animal that is eating, sleeping, caring for its young or guarding something

    -Touch any pet before asking its owner if it is okay to do so

    -Tease, chase, or stare at an animal

    -Grab an animal by the feet, ears or tail

    -Feed, touch, pick up or handle a wild or stray animal

    -Try to break up animals fighting

    -Play with a dog unless supervised by an adult

    Also, show your child what to do if approached by an unfamiliar dog:

    -Be still like a statue if a dog comes up to you

    -If you are knocked down by a dog, roll into a ball and lie still like a rock


    Lastly, if your child or any family member is bitten or scratched by any animal, act quickly. Wash the wound thoroughly with soap and water for at least 5 minutes and seek medical attention immediately.


    source

    Tuesday, August 25, 2009

    What parents must know about babies' sleeping position to prevent SIDS


    A study by pediatric specialists at Children's National Medical Center in Washington, DC, found that many magazines aimed at women in the 20-40 years of age group depicted babies sleeping in a position that may be unsafe for them. The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that babies sleep on their backs (called the "supine" position) to minimized the risk of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS). The magazines studied showed babies sleeping on their bellies (called the "prone" position).

    Babies should NOT lie on their bellies for sleeping

    SIDS is a condition where infants die in their sleep without any previous history of disease that may cause this. Even after investigating all probable causes of the death, nothing stands out as the culprit. In Maryland, there were 64 babies who were reported to have died from SIDS in 2006 (the year for the latest available data). In the United States, about 2,250 deaths attributable to SIDS are reported each year, according to CDC. Back in the 1980's, investigators began to notice that babies in cultures where they were placed to sleep on their back (like China) were less likely to die from SIDS. Further research backed up this observation thought he point that it is widely recommended all over the world that babies be placed on their back for sleeping.

    Older children can sleep in any position... If they sleep at all.

    It is not well known why babies on their back are less likely to die from SIDS, but theories abound. These theories include the positioning of the airway, where babies are better able to breathe on their backs. Another theory is that babies on their backs do not fall into a deep sleep and are easily aroused if their breathing is compromised. How would a baby's breathing be compromised during sleep? Infections of the respiratory system, allergies, and even heavy bedding around them may block their airway. So it is also recommended that babies with any respiratory problems be promptly seen by a health care provider. Furthermore, the baby's sleep area should be clear of excessive bedding, toys, or other objects that may crowd the baby and prevent the baby from breathing.

    Tuesday, August 18, 2009

    Top tips for dads on bonding with your baby


    Most Dads are shy especially when taking care of the baby is concerned. They would assume that the everyday responsbilities of their baby only belong to the mother. Some if not most would delegate the changing of diapers or feeding the baby to their mothers for fear of hurting the baby or assuming if what they have been doing is the right thing. The secret of male-bonding with a baby is realizing that you're not supposed to try to be another mother. Your child already has one of those, and what she really needs is for you to be yourself. Still feeling a little awkward? Try these break-the-ice activities.

    Give a midnight bottle

    After I began to supplement breastfeeding with formula, my husband offered to get up for the middle-of-the-night banquet. Okay, so maybe I bullied him into it at first, but before long he told me he enjoyed having that time with the baby. No one else around, crickets chirping outside, and bizarre infomercials on TV. Once, I overheard my husband having a 3 a.m. conversation with a sound-asleep Kyle. "You know what, buddy?" he was saying. "We're the only two people in the universe who know that they aired that same show about Wilt Chamberlain four nights in a row."

    Have a staring contest

    Prowess is a guy thing, right? Lest you believe that little baby of yours is a pushover, engage her in a time-honored ritual of seeing who'll blink first. She may surprise you. Babies love to contemplate faces, and chances are that before she gets bored you'll have dropped your gaze, wondering where she got that incredible dimple, or whether her ears look like your mom's or your wife's.

    Play kangaroo

    My firstborn was a colicky baby who was never happy unless someone was holding him. At the end of the day, Tim used to come to the rescue by strapping on a Snugli and going about his business — raking leaves, setting the table, tossing a ball for the dog — all with Kyle cuddled against his belly.

    Take a bath together

    A new dad we know dreaded the nights when it was his turn to bathe his son — the combination of screaming baby and slippery skin made him nervous. One night, he simply stripped down himself and took the infant into the tub with him. Lo and behold, the baby was calm for the entire duration of the bath. Being snuggled against his father's chest made all the difference.

    Read the sports page

    Aloud. Let's face it: Goodnight Moon can get you only so far. After the 1,500th reading of the classic book, my husband finally threw in the towel. I walked by the nursery at bedtime to hear him very sweetly crooning the details of a Patriots game to Kyle. The baby loved every minute of it ... it didn't matter what his father was reading, just so long as he was.

    Set a table for two

    If your baby is old enough to be eating solid food, then you might as well be the maitre d'. It's entertaining — see the food go in, watch it come right back out!
    Change a diaper

    Talk about bonding at the earthiest level — with babies, the bottom line (no pun intended) often involves cleaning up a mess. During a change you get to touch the baby, and talk to him, but it's sometimes hard to see a silver lining when a soggy lining is so much more evident. Still, fair's fair. My friend Mary's husband once asked her what she did all day with the baby, so she lined up 18 dirty diapers in neat, plastic piles on the front stoop for him to see when he came home.

    Be there for a cold or fever

    Nobody wants their baby to get sick, but there's nothing like an illness to prove how much the little guy really needs you. A night spent rocking a sick child will make you painfully, preciously aware of what parenting is all about.

    Bench press

    The bad news is that once you're a parent, you don't have much time to get to the gym. The good news is that you have just acquired a fabulous set of hand weights, approximately 7 to 20 pounds. Once our kids' necks could support the weight of their heads, Tim would balance their bodies on his palms and then carefully curl them, bench them, whatever struck his fancy ... and both his biceps and the babies loved it.

    Be a texture board

    One of the greatest attributes of men is that they feel great (or they probably wouldn't be daddies in the first place). From the rough shadow of beard to a silky moustache to a crewcut hairdo, a father is a tactile delight. Beware: Little fingers can get a punishing grip on chest hair.

    Take pictures

    Nothing makes as flawless a subject as your own child. An added benefit? All the grandmas and grandpas and uncles and cousins who are the recipients of the prints can't help but notice what a great time you're having being a dad.

    Roughhouse (within reason)

    Studies have shown that mothers and fathers hold their babies in very different ways. Moms are more likely to cuddle; dads tend to get a little more physical. You should never shake a baby, but you can certainly stimulate her muscles. If your child is old enough to sit up, she might like being tossed gently in the air, or getting bounced on a knee, or being carried beneath the arm like a football ... things that Mom isn't as likely to do, but that are sure to bring squeals of delight.


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    Saturday, July 25, 2009

    The Best Baby Sleep Tips Ever


    Having a baby is the greatest joy to parents. They will go to great lengths inorder to make their precious angel as comfortable as possible. One way for a baby to be healthy and active is to have plenty of sleep. To know the best baby sleep tips, pls read this post.....

    P.S. pls visit my homepage

    Friday, July 17, 2009

    Why Every Kid Needs a Vitamin C Supplement


    You may know that it's important to get enough vitamin C into your diet, but what about when it comes to your kids? Are they getting enough vitamin C? With all the fast food, packaged foods and on-the-go eating in today's age, it's likely that your kids are not getting enough of this essential vitamin. That's where supplementation steps in to help! Keep reading for more information on why every kid needs a vitamin C supplement.


    Vitamin C is extremely essential to your body so knowing what it is and does is important. Vitamin C, also known as ascorbic acid, is a water-soluble vitamin that is essential to form collagen in your cartilage, bones, blood vessels, muscles, and helps in iron absorption. The nutrient is manufactured by almost every living being except for human beings. It is therefore required that you ingest it through the food and supplements that you consume. You may already be eating some of the food sources that contain vitamin C, such as oranges, berries, garlic, kiwi, cabbage, parsley, red pepper, guava, papaya, broccoli, cauliflower, potatoes, Brussel sprouts, spinach and tomatoes.

    Your body cannot store Vitamin C because it is water-soluble. This is why getting enough vitamin C on a regular basis is extremely important. Vitamin C is vital for both growth, as well as for the development of tissues in every part of your body. It is an essential component both for body building functions as well as for prevention of diseases. This is especially true when it comes to your children. It is necessary that your children get enough vitamin C, whether it is through diet or supplements.

    If you have children you know how they can get cuts and bruises, and as an adult, you’re not exempt from the bumps and bruises either! Ascorbic acid as it is essential for healing wounds as well as for the repair and maintenance of your cartilage, bones and teeth. At the time of healing, be it from injury, infection, surgery or disease, the body requires large quantities of ascorbic acid.

    Along with helping your body repair itself, Vitamin C is one of the most potent antioxidants and is also a natural antihistamine. The immune-enhancing effects that vitamin C has on your body makes it an important ingredient in preventing infections and also in decreasing the duration of illnesses. In fact children fighting illnesses have shown remarkable improvement when they were given high doses of Vitamin C. Studies have also shown that vitamin C is instrumental in both antiviral and antibacterial purposes. Also, large doses of vitamin C are important in fighting the flu virus.

    Vitamin C is also helpful in blocking the damage caused from free radicals. For maximum effect it is best to take your vitamin C with bio-flavonoids spaced all through the day.

    Vitamin C is safe for your body even when the doses are high. No one has been known to overdose on vitamin C (at least not to our knowledge) but it may have a slight laxative effect. It is therefore recommended that you slowly increase the amount you take.

    If your child is not getting enough vitamin C through food, it is essential that supplements be taken. Taking vitamin C supplements will ensure that children never suffer from Vitamin C deficiency. A great way to encourage kids to get their daily dose of vitamin C is to give them a chewable or gummy vitamin C supplement. Just make sure these supplements don’t have any added sugar (such as high fructose corn syrup).

    If You're Like Most of Us, You Need to Supplement
    And you should. Every day. Adults need Vitamin C too! If you're looking to bump up your antioxidants, AHJ recommends you try: MangoBerry-ES

    By: Sylvia Anderson, AHJ Editor


    Posted by: superoyee

    Vitamin C - mother of all vitamins

    Tuesday, July 7, 2009

    Taking care of the baby


    Nursing Mother, Working Mother:
    the essential guide for breastfeeding and
    staying close to your baby after you return to work.

    by Gale Pryor

    The Role of Breastfeeding in Bonding

    My Wife just gave birth to a healthy baby girl thru a caesarian procedure last March 31, 2008. she is a working mother and most of the day she leaves our baby under the care of a nanny. she is breastfeeding our baby more than a year ago and she still continues the practice. her friends and some family members advised her to stop breastfeeding the baby since its been more than a year now and switch it to full time powder milk. My wife objects to this advise and explains what's the importance of breastfeeding.
    We already knew breastfeeding is best for babies from commercials and advertisements but she has her own personal reason for prolonging this.

    Below are some reasons on why breastfeeding is important to babies and mothers.

    Breastfeeding usually plays an integral role in forming the deep attachment between mother and baby. Bottle-feeding mothers, of course, can also be securely attached to their babies. There are many tools in the attachment kit; breastfeeding is but one. It is, however, an extraordinarily powerful one.

    Breastfeeding is designed by nature to ensure maternal-infant interaction and closeness. If done without schedules or other restrictions, breastfeeding guarantees that you and your baby will be in close physical contact 8 to 18 times in every 24 hours. In fact, nursing mothers tend to be with their infants altogether more than other mothers. In the first 10 days after birth, nursing mothers hold their babies more than bottle-feeding mothers, even when they are not nursing. They rock their babies more, speak to their babies more, and are more likely to sleep with their babies. In Western society many women never hold a newborn until they give birth to their own, yet this frequent skin-to-skin contact and interaction soon make up for even a complete lack of familiarity with babies. The mother who immerses herself in her newborn, breastfeeding frequently and without restrictions, quickly learns to read her baby's cues and to trust her own instincts. She extends the gentle give-and-take, the empathy, and the commitment of breastfeeding into the rest of her mothering. Nursing her baby provides her with a blueprint for sensitive parenting in the years to come.

    Nursing couples need each other physically and emotionally. The baby, of course, has a physical need for milk. As scientists have amply documented, breast milk benefits every system in a baby's body. Breastfeeding offers protection against allergies and respiratory infections, and perhaps obesity. Breastfeeding improves vision and oral development; breastfed babies have fewer ear infections; breast milk is better for the cardiovascular system and kidneys; and babies' intestinal immunity is enhanced by human milk. Juvenile diabetes is less common among breastfed than bottle-fed babies. Breastfeeding enhances a baby's cognitive development, partially because it allows the baby more control in feeding--the ability to control one's own actions appears to be essential in human development. The composition of breast milk, too, appears to support optimal brain development. Indeed, recent studies have found that children fed mother's milk as babies have higher IQs, on average, than those fed formula.

    And, of course, a baby's emotional need for love and reassurance is just as strong as her physical need for milk. Whereas most formula-fed babies are soon taught to hold their own bottles, the breastfed baby is always held by her mother for feedings. A breastfed baby enjoys not only the comfort of the warm breast, but caressing, rocking, and eye contact before, during, and after feedings. With all her senses, she drinks in her mother's love.

    The mother, in turn, has a physical need for the baby to take the milk from her breasts. The let-down of milk is relieving, satisfying, like a drink of water when one is thirsty. When your newborn begins to suck at your breast, or even just to mouth your nipple, the hormone oxytocin is released in your body, hastening the contraction of your uterus and inducing the let-down or milk-ejection reflex, which begins your milk flow. Called "the love hormone" because it is also produced during sexual intercourse and birth, oxytocin brings on a sudden feeling of contentment and pleasure as you breastfeed your baby. In this way you and your baby become a happy team at feedings, each amply rewarded by the other for her efforts.

    The Confident Parent

    Successful breastfeeding not only tends to produce healthy, happy babies, it also creates confident mothers. Marianne Neifert, a pediatrician and mother of five, saw this in her practice. "I began to recognize the impact of early parenting experiences, such as breastfeeding, on long-term parental competency. A woman who received necessary support and information, which enabled her to breastfeed as long as she had planned, tended to look back on her experience with pride and satisfaction. Her confidence radiated to other areas of mothering, and she viewed herself as a competent and successful parent."

    "Breastfeeding nudges other aspects of maternal behavior."

    --Niles Newton

    Breastfeeding's gift of confidence comes as you nurture your baby with your own body and mind. Parents who use formula often rely completely on manufacturers' and doctors' advice, and so develop little faith in their own judgment. And, whereas a breastfeeding mother generally leaves milk composition, temperature, cleanliness, and intake to nature, for the formula-feeding parent these are all subjects for worry and argument, which further erode her confidence.

    Parenting styles differ enormously from family to family, and many different kinds of families produce wonderful children. Whatever their parenting style, though, mothers and fathers who are confident in themselves as parents tend to raise equally self-assured children. These parents not only teach self-esteem by modeling it, but because they are self-confident they are also empathetic. They respond to their children's needs, and thereby help their children to feel secure, trusting, and confident in themselves and their world.

    Far more valuable than advice from relatives, friends, or experts is the knowledge within you that you are completely capable of caring for and raising your new baby. Bruno Bettelheim, the child psychologist, writes in A Good Enough Parent that "acting on the recommendations of others cannot evoke in us the feelings of confirmation that well up in us only when we have understood on our own, in our own ways, what is involved in a particular situation, and what we can therefore do about it." Successful breastfeeding kindles these "feelings of confirmation'' for the breastfeeding mother knows in her heart that she can nurture her child well.

    Breastfeeding, in short, is much more than a feeding method. Beyond providing perfect nutrition at every stage of your baby's growth, breastfeeding is a language, subtle and intimate, between you and your baby, as well as a proud and marvelous expression of your unique abilities as a woman. When you return to work, breastfeeding will ensure that the bond between you and your baby cannot be weakened by your frequent separations.

    The Risks of Working to Bonding

    Bonding usually proceeds without our thinking about it much. We get pregnant, we give birth, we fall in love with our babies, we decide to breastfeed, we become mothers in tune with our babies. Voila. We have accomplished one of life's major transitions, becoming a mother. Unless we don't.

    Sometimes women don't fully traverse the divide between childless woman and mother. They have babies, but they resist the bonedeep commitment that comes with motherhood. After all, becoming a mother is a frightening, gigantic leap into a new, all-encompassing stage of life. Motherhood threatens to submerge both accomplishments of the past and goals of the future, as well as one's present sense of self. The fear of losing oneself in its flood waters is entirely normal.

    Besides, in American culture today, motherhood receives scant respect, especially among high-achievers. If your self-respect comes mainly from your success at work, especially if that work is competitive and pressured, reentering the world with mother suddenly attached to your identity can be dismaying, to say the least. Despite the impressive diplomacy and managerial skills with which motherhood endows women, the business world holds mothers in suspicion. We are widely suspected of not being truly committed to our jobs and our

    And, as nursing mothers will tell you in chorus, breastfeeding has the most marvelous calming effect on them. A recent study documents their experience: At one month postpartum, breastfeeding women were significantly less anxious than formula-feeding women. The breastfeeding hormones, oxytocin and prolactin, cause a feeling of well-being that tends to promote maternal behavior. Also, the act of breastfeeding requires a woman to relax. No matter how hectic her life, a breastfeeding mother must sit or lie down with her baby eight or more times a day. And we mustn't discount the simple joy and peace of mind that come with cuddling a secure, satisfied, comfortable baby.

    Whether or not they care that nursing is good for their health, most nursing mothers would say that breastfeeding's primary benefit is convenience. Although breastfed babies nurse more frequently than do formula-fed babies, the non-nursing mother must dedicate a great deal of time to purchasing and mixing formula, cleaning bottles and nipples, and warming bottles. Unlike formula, breast milk is always ready, warm, and, as long as the baby continues to nurse frequently, plentiful. When the baby is hungry, the breastfeeding mother simply finds a comfortable place to sit or lie down with him. At night, whereas the formula-feeding parent must wake up and get out of bed to prepare a bottle, the breastfeeding mother can have her baby brought to her, or, if her baby is sharing her bed, nurse without ever fully waking up. A breastfed baby is also highly portable: There are no bottles to pack and carry; there is no need to find a place to mix formula and heat the bottle. A spare diaper in her purse, and the breastfeeding mother and her baby are on their way.

    The Benefits of Breastfeeding for Working Mothers

    Many women going back to work decide that the "added stress" of nursing is the last thing they need. As many working women can attest, however, their lives are made easier rather than harder by breastfeeding. One experienced mother finds that "breastfeeding is the easier part of being a working mother. It's much harder finding time to iron a shirt."

    The immunologic properties of breast milk benefit working parents as much as their babies. Breastfed babies wake their parents less often at night with earaches and stuffy noses. Because breastfed babies are generally healthier, they also tend to be happier. They cry less, smile more, and are less wearying to care for after a long day at work.

    The anti-infective properties of breast milk are a real boon when a baby is or will be in group day care. Babies in day care are exposed to more germs than are babies cared for at home. But when these babies are breastfed, they are protected against many serious bacterial and viral infections and secondary complications. And the lower incidence and severity of illness in breastfed babies reduces the time their parents must take off from work.

    The flood of relaxation that comes with the let-down of milk is made to order for stressed-out working mothers. You may find that, after nursing your baby at the end of the day, you have trouble remembering what had so vexed you at work just a few hours earlier. Your slate is wiped clean, and you can more easily and calmly attend to your family and yourself for the rest of the evening. A pediatrician comments, "My greatest release after coming home is putting up my feet and nursing the baby. We both feel wonderful. It is my unwinding time."

    For the typical nursing and working mother, the most important benefit of breastfeeding is that day after day it confirms that she is irreplaceable to her baby. Most women who decide to breastfeed do so for their babies' sakes. Only later do they discover that it's good for them, too. For working mothers, breastfeeding is a friend, a constant ally against the anxiety that comes from having to leave their babies in someone else's care for most of the day, and wondering if they are good-enough mothers. For your baby, after all, the babysitter may be very nice, but only Mama has a soft, sweet-smelling breast and warm, sweet-tasting milk. And when you pick up the baby and nurse at the end of a work day, you and she are immediately a couple again. There is no "getting to know you again" period for a working mother and her nursing baby.

    A physician says, "Nursing has been a wonderful way to reconnect with my children while working. My daughter's favorite time to nurse is right after I get home at the end of the day. Even though she now goes all day without nursing, she gets a little frantic once I get home, and she really wants to nurse. I have found that nursing puts life into perspective. The sense of accomplishment, bonding, and wellbeing that I get from nursing makes me less anxious about having to leave her during the day."

    A book editor concurs. "I like that it keeps me feeling connected to him all day long. I'm forced to take 'baby time' when I'm at work, and I can even go see him and share our bond in the middle of a work day if I want. It helps ease the transition for me to nurse him when I drop him off and when I pick him up. I also feel like I'm still mothering him even when I'm not with him, by continuing to provide pumped breast milk for him."

    A social worker who formula-fed her first baby and breastfed her second speaks poignantly of the difference: "Since my mother-in-law took care of my first child eight to ten hours a day and since she could feed him just as well as I could, sometimes I felt as though he was more hers than mine. Since I had to be away from him 40 hours a week, breastfeeding could have tied us back together at the end of the day. Not breastfeeding my son is one of the greatest regrets of my life. My experience with him made me determined to have a different experience when my daughter was born."

    Breastfeeding after returning to work is a way to tie the two halves of your life together. It will help you to make sense of yourself in the challenging new role as mother while continuing your pre-baby work life. Learning the job of motherhood is hard enough without the distractions of responsibilities outside the home, but when you're trying to maintain your identity as a working woman you have an intensified need for the lessons taught by breastfeeding. You can rely on breastfeeding as a blueprint for the intuitiveness, nurturing, and empathy that comes with experienced mothering. Through breastfeeding, you can give your child the best possible beginning, and in return you will gain confidence in yourself as a mother.

    Parenting by Instinct

    Once we consider all the aspects of breastfeeding--behavioral, immunologic, and nutritive--we cannot help but be impressed by how perfectly we humans have evolved to feed our babies. This may lead us to wonder what other special baby-care behaviors have evolved with our species. If you traveled now to societies that are still much the same as they have been for thousands of years, what would you see? How do parents take care of babies in cultures unchanged by such technological marvels as the clock, the baby bottle, and the baby carriage?


    The Working Mother

    earn health & wealth

    Sunday, June 14, 2009

    Bald looks Great


    We've decided to shave Love's head because we realized her hair is thin. After attending a mountain fiesta, we stop by at Impressario beauty salon and let a gay barber shaved her head. the good thing is she is asleep all the time. At first, we were stunned by her first look. she looked like a baby boy! but when her mom put a headband with matching earings, she is very cute to look at! now, after 2 months, her hair is getting thicker. good thing we decided to shave her. if not, she would have a thin hair like her dad (that's me!).

    Friday, May 29, 2009


    Hi!


    Here I am with my gifts given by my guests at the party. I'm very excited to open them one by one. Mommy V. & Daddy R. are also very very excited. I just hope there is a "Winnie the Pooh" stuff toy in it.

    Wednesday, May 27, 2009

    Love's 1st birthday


    our unica ija's first birthday! with the videocam & camera ready, we started the cameras rolling by giving Love a bath then posing her with her dress & jewelries. (murag Kaslonon ba!) he he he he. then Love posing with her invitation board. We, along with friends and relatives, have a really wonderful afternoon. They were treated to the funny antics of the clowns. then there were games and the rest is history. we rented a videoke machine and after the party at Family park, we brought the videoke to our house and continued our merry making antics. We all like to sing but unfortunately the song does not like us.