Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This sounds very normal. I would stop restricting your diet and not take any steps like that again unless your doctor tells you you need to. Send a photo of the poop to your pediatrician but it sounds completely normal. They don’t get actual turds until they start eating solids.
Seriously though, it’s good that you recognize you have some anxiety here and as a result, don’t do anything like a crazy diet until you check with an expert. They’re supposed to be squirmy and uncomfortable when they’re pooping. That’s just being a baby. Pooping is hard - they have to learn to coordinate the muscles to push and relax at the same time.
Do you have a good baby book like the one from the pediatrician’s association? A lot of this kind of thing is in there.
Seriously though, restricting your diet like that is a big step. Don’t just do that sort of thing on a whim.
Googled and sent to a friend who said it looked exactly as it should.
I feel like an idiot. I am not a kid/baby person so I’m afraid if I ask too many questions or don’t seem like that I know what I’m doing or taking the initiative people will think I don’t know what I’m doing. But I guess I really don’t.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This sounds very normal. I would stop restricting your diet and not take any steps like that again unless your doctor tells you you need to. Send a photo of the poop to your pediatrician but it sounds completely normal. They don’t get actual turds until they start eating solids.
Seriously though, it’s good that you recognize you have some anxiety here and as a result, don’t do anything like a crazy diet until you check with an expert. They’re supposed to be squirmy and uncomfortable when they’re pooping. That’s just being a baby. Pooping is hard - they have to learn to coordinate the muscles to push and relax at the same time.
Do you have a good baby book like the one from the pediatrician’s association? A lot of this kind of thing is in there.
Seriously though, restricting your diet like that is a big step. Don’t just do that sort of thing on a whim.
Googled and sent to a friend who said it looked exactly as it should.
I feel like an idiot. I am not a kid/baby person so I’m afraid if I ask too many questions or don’t seem like that I know what I’m doing or taking the initiative people will think I don’t know what I’m doing. But I guess I really don’t.
Don’t beat yourself up, OP. You are a new mom, and it is a very steep learning curve. Anyone who tells you otherwise is lying.
Anonymous wrote:The consistency sounds like normal newborn poop for breastfed babies, but the frequency seems high. My breastfed baby pooped once every 2-3 days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This sounds very normal. I would stop restricting your diet and not take any steps like that again unless your doctor tells you you need to. Send a photo of the poop to your pediatrician but it sounds completely normal. They don’t get actual turds until they start eating solids.
Seriously though, it’s good that you recognize you have some anxiety here and as a result, don’t do anything like a crazy diet until you check with an expert. They’re supposed to be squirmy and uncomfortable when they’re pooping. That’s just being a baby. Pooping is hard - they have to learn to coordinate the muscles to push and relax at the same time.
Do you have a good baby book like the one from the pediatrician’s association? A lot of this kind of thing is in there.
Seriously though, restricting your diet like that is a big step. Don’t just do that sort of thing on a whim.
Googled and sent to a friend who said it looked exactly as it should.
I feel like an idiot. I am not a kid/baby person so I’m afraid if I ask too many questions or don’t seem like that I know what I’m doing or taking the initiative people will think I don’t know what I’m doing. But I guess I really don’t.
Anonymous wrote:This sounds very normal. I would stop restricting your diet and not take any steps like that again unless your doctor tells you you need to. Send a photo of the poop to your pediatrician but it sounds completely normal. They don’t get actual turds until they start eating solids.
Seriously though, it’s good that you recognize you have some anxiety here and as a result, don’t do anything like a crazy diet until you check with an expert. They’re supposed to be squirmy and uncomfortable when they’re pooping. That’s just being a baby. Pooping is hard - they have to learn to coordinate the muscles to push and relax at the same time.
Do you have a good baby book like the one from the pediatrician’s association? A lot of this kind of thing is in there.
Seriously though, restricting your diet like that is a big step. Don’t just do that sort of thing on a whim.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you sure it's not just normal newborn poop? It's supposed to be pretty unformed/liquidy.
I don’t know. I changed my friends babies diaper before and his poop just looked like regular poop. Brown m, like clay. But he was older I guess (8 months).
My babies poop looks like Dijon mustard. I thought any stools they weren’t solid qualified as diarrhea.
Anonymous wrote:Are you sure it's not just normal newborn poop? It's supposed to be pretty unformed/liquidy.
Anonymous wrote:Are you sure it's not just normal newborn poop? It's supposed to be pretty unformed/liquidy.