Anonymous wrote:That kekaroo peanut changing pad. Seriously.
Bumbo.
Anonymous wrote:I get that wraps/carriers work for lots of people but the thing that drove me nuts was people questioning whether I was doing it wrong/didn’t try enough wraps/needed to just stick with it. When I tried to wear a baby carrier it caused terrible hip pain and no wrap or adjustment resolved it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Ergo. I never used or needed a baby carrier. I like my kids strapped in a stroller!
I’m the opposite, we never used the stroller. The strollers were always too bulky, and it felt rude to take in stores/restaurants. All my kids preferred to walk/run once they could.
Anonymous wrote:My kids hated baby carriers too. I had a really nice Ergo that was barely used when I was done with it! Came in handy here or there, but definitely not a workhorse.
The best swing we had was not the $140 Mamaroo modern looking thing. It was a $10 consignment find from the early 2000s. It went back and forth FAST and was probably dangerous, but damn my baby loved that thing. It was HUGE. Got rid of it immediately after being done with it haha.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There were a bunch of common items that:
-I totally understand the appeal of
-Don't annoy me in any way (or rarely)
-I was laughed at for not buying
-I ended up never buying and never using
It wasn't the products, which are popular for good reason! It was the weird insistence (among a vocal minority) that I would regret not buying them, and definitely "break down" and buy them (??) etc.
PP, what were the items? I feel like the carrier people are the worst.
Oh, lots of standards.
Crib
Pacifier
Stroller
Disposable diapers
Baby food
We just didn't use them.
You didn’t use a crib or a stroller? Like, EVER?
Never. Just didn't end up needing them. If I'd have found a need for one, I'd have had no problem buying one. We just didn't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That kekaroo peanut changing pad. Seriously.
Bumbo.
Thems are fightin’ words. LOVED our keekaroo changing pad. My kid was so messy and it was a lifesaver.
Also hated strollers and preferred a carrier or wrap, but that’s personal preference. Totally get strollers, just not my thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Slings. I'm not carrying a toddler in a sling. Slings are for babies. I see women hauling children around in them. Once they can walk, let them walk.
I get how it looks and never expected to be this mom, but a sling was the only thing my baby enjoyed being carried in and I quickly discovered that it was a handy thing to have around even once my kid could walk. Sometimes a toddler wants to be carried or just needs some comfort, and it was so much easier to just put her in the sling than try to carry her without one. And I carried her in a backpack carrier for our morning commutes until she was nearly 3 -- faster than having her walk and easier than having to haul the stroller to daycare.
But I get that it seems super crunchy and "I have to hold my baby at all times!" But it really just turned out to be convenient for my specific kid.
Not directed at you, PP, but I feel like NOT doing things because one is afraid they might "seem super crunchy" is just as problematic as the opposite. Lots of people (most?) do those things that have been coopted by UMC white "crunchy mamas" because they just work, are more convenient, etc. That's exactly why so many of them are "traditional."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Slings. I'm not carrying a toddler in a sling. Slings are for babies. I see women hauling children around in them. Once they can walk, let them walk.
I get how it looks and never expected to be this mom, but a sling was the only thing my baby enjoyed being carried in and I quickly discovered that it was a handy thing to have around even once my kid could walk. Sometimes a toddler wants to be carried or just needs some comfort, and it was so much easier to just put her in the sling than try to carry her without one. And I carried her in a backpack carrier for our morning commutes until she was nearly 3 -- faster than having her walk and easier than having to haul the stroller to daycare.
But I get that it seems super crunchy and "I have to hold my baby at all times!" But it really just turned out to be convenient for my specific kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There were a bunch of common items that:
-I totally understand the appeal of
-Don't annoy me in any way (or rarely)
-I was laughed at for not buying
-I ended up never buying and never using
It wasn't the products, which are popular for good reason! It was the weird insistence (among a vocal minority) that I would regret not buying them, and definitely "break down" and buy them (??) etc.
PP, what were the items? I feel like the carrier people are the worst.
Oh, lots of standards.
Crib
Pacifier
Stroller
Disposable diapers
Baby food
We just didn't use them.
You didn’t use a crib or a stroller? Like, EVER?
Anonymous wrote:Slings. I'm not carrying a toddler in a sling. Slings are for babies. I see women hauling children around in them. Once they can walk, let them walk.