They really live in a bubble. Imagine saying that about your Tesco Manager they would think you were a stalker.duck me, this is a joke, right?
They really live in a bubble. Imagine saying that about your Tesco Manager they would think you were a stalker.duck me, this is a joke, right?
To be fair, the time a baby can head their head up independently at least for a short time varies so much from baby to baby. Mine could by 5 weeks for short periods. That being said, I don’t think a pic where she seems to be lifting her up gives us a true picture on how she handles her baby.well asked uncle google
and the answer is
" You can stop supporting your baby's head once he gains sufficient neck strength (usually around 3 or 4 months); ask your pediatrician if you're unsure. By this point, he's on his way to reaching other important developmental milestones: sitting up by himself, rolling over, cruising, and crawling!"
otter is far from this, when you have a baby in your hands you can usually tell if they need support or not - if you got common sense
you are right butTo be fair, the time a baby can head their head up independently at least for a short time varies so much from baby to baby. Mine could by 5 weeks for short periods. That being said, I don’t think a pic where she seems to be lifting her up gives us a true picture on how she handles her baby.
That's what Aldo tells himself tooyou are right but
I mean given that dianne looks more like a mom holding zoes baby- says a lot
My daughters a month older and we don’t support her head anymore, haven’t for a while. She is really strong though not sure about other babiesView attachment 814709
Uhh, shouldn't Zoe be supporting her neck a bit more? (Full disclosure, I have no idea how long you should support a baby's head lmao)
I also agree - I went to the glorious two the NHS offered and as a first time parent they were helpful - I had no idea about the black poo the baby does after being born, or things like avoiding a full on bath for them straight away etc wearing layers but not wearing a hat. For a first time parent I’d say they are essential and helpful!So put in her usual benefit if it didn't directly benefit her
I'd actually disagree with you as I did both. As a new mum I wanted to have people going through similar experiences to me who I could chat to once I was a mum. I made some amazing friends and being able to share how tit it felt, especially I the first few months, definitely got me through iy
Ok but I genuinely thought that this was a spooky prop at that scary farm thing. Why is she so grey. Why is her hair the same colour as her skin. Why does she look like she just crawled through that archway like like was a portal from hell.View attachment 814709
Uhh, shouldn't Zoe be supporting her neck a bit more? (Full disclosure, I have no idea how long you should support a baby's head lmao)
Because we keep responding to his desperate engagement posts on Instagram to remind him he's a tory twit who fancies his brother in law's girlfriend. Get a actual job Aldo or actually look after your daughterWhy does Alfie keep saying that one quote
I'm 37 weeks pregnant and antenatal classes are all online at the moment due to covid. It may be the same where they are, unsure. But at least they did them as so many people I know didn't as they couldn't do them in person.She didn't go to any antenatal classes they watched them online.
The video is way more awkward looking than the screenshot lolShe's holding her just fine. Looks like she's picking her up in that shot? I am a parent and I can't see anything wrong with the way Zoe is carrying/holding/picking up her child.