Baby Stuff
Below are lists of baby stuff - one of items I appreciated during these last harrowing months and one of the not-so-appreciated. My perspective is one of cash-strapped, pseudo-environmentalist, space-limited obsessively-attached new parent.
Loved and Liked:
- Slings and Carriers - Ergo Baby Carrier (great as a backpack for later), Wrap Slings (especially for the beginning because your baby is small and testy and wraps let you carry her in a variety of positions) - look at kangaroocorner
- Toys - Whoozit and Whoozit Water Mat from Manhattan Toy, Lamaze musical inchworm, Musical Shakers from International Playthings, Edushape Blocks, Early Years Stacking Cups, Children's Factory 4 x 4 mat (so they don't bang their head learning to crawl), little things to chew on that are easy to clean and you stuff in a diaper bag (like the Bristle Buddy or plastic keys), rubber duckie
- Baby Books - Anything with textures (Fuzzy Bee, Zoo's Who, Dog, Quack Quack, B is for Bear), A Picnic with Monet, The Art of Colors, Colors by Priddy, Olivia, Why is Blue Dog Blue?
- Parenting Books - Our Babies, Ourselves (this changed everything for me), The Baby Book, Baby 411 (good in the beginning to quickly look stuff up)
- Hygeine/Medical - Mustela facial wipes (for their gross neck cheese), California Baby sunscreen (no PABA), Burt's Bees Shampoo Bar, Red Cross nail clipper, First Years aspirator, Feverall suppositories (check with doctor before using)
- Feeding - the Medela Pump-in-Style pump, Playtex Drop-ins 4 oz with slow nipple, the Boppy pillow, Bebe Au Lait nursing cover, freezer bags (Lansinoh or Medela), Svan high chair
- Clothes - Gap (best fit for larger babies and wear very well), Under the Nile (organic)
- Linens - Swaddle Designs organic receiving blankets, fleece or lambswool pads, Under the Nile organic burpcloths, hooded towel
- Diapering - Diaper Dekor diaper disposal system, Seventh Generation diapers (these are sized quite a bit more trimly than the listed weight indicates), Burt's Bees diaper rash ointment, 4-sided changing pad (need straps to come from underneath pad rather than from the top of the pad - I also recommend getting a cover because baby waste tends to erode the vinyl), travel diaper mat
- Strollers - a fold-up stroller like the Maclaren for the subway (you may not need this for a while if your baby remains lightweight - mine got hefty fast) and a substantial stroller for the long walks which will form the basis of your only exercise for months (I like the Bugaboo, which is expensive but has high resale value and is really good for when they're first born because it can be used in place of a bassinet)
- Carseat - SunshineKids convertible carseat (even if you live in NYC and have no car, you will have an occasion for a carseat and this one folds, will last their entire childhood, and can go on an any airplane but it is heavy)
- Arm's Reach Original Co-Sleeper - if you decide to go with co-sleeping, try having the baby in the bed with you first. Then if that doesn't work out, put them in the bassinet of your big stroller or the crib in your room. Abby wouldn't sleep in the co-sleeper and it's really a separate surface anyway, so you might as well put the baby in a crib or bassinet if you can't have him or her in the bed with you.
- Baby Bjorn - I used the Bjorn a lot for a couple of months but you can only use the carrier for a short time because of the weight window and it's pretty expensive.
- Wipe Warmer - these things are a stupid waste of energy (plus they have a filter in them that gets really nasty) - baby does not need warm wipes.
- Ring slings and pouches - I found that Abby, because of her reflux, would not lay on her side in a sling after she was a couple of weeks old. Wrap slings or rebozos really allow so much more flexibility for positioning that once you get the hang of tying them, they're much more useful than rings slings or pouches.
- Infant car seat - these contraptions are completely useless after eight months if your baby gains weight rapidly (as mine did) - better to get a convertible with a body pillow if you really need to have a car seat.
- Crib bumpers - even if you use a crib, crib bumpers are a waste of money, albeit often a beautiful, irresistible one, because they have to be removed at six months (they can use the bumper to climb out of the crib). The dust ruffle is a necessity for some cribs where the bottom part of the crib is all machinery.
- Wooden blocks - Baby is virtually guaranteed to strip the paint off the blocks within seconds once teeth start arriving. Maybe the paint is non-toxic, but it's disconcerting to see green paint chips on your baby's tongue. Besides, baby probably won't stop at removing the painted surface and will continue on into splintering the wood. Much as I hate plastics, plastic blocks are the way to go for a real mouther such as my kid.
- Baby gyms or entertainers - I know people love these but I feel that they take up a lot of space, are fairly unattractive, don't hold much sway with baby for long, and are a substitute for entertaining your baby yourself (which is not the anti-thesis of fun I always thought it would be).
- Expensive clothes - they grow out of and utterly ruin everything in two seconds. Buy everything on sale and not far in advance since you may not be able to predict their growth well.


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