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Date: | Sun, 7 Aug 2005 08:20:54 -0500 |
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For her first several weeks of life on the outside, my daughter slept tummy
to tummy on top of me, usually with the top of her head jammed against the
underside of my jaw. As she started to come to for a feed, I'd feel the
little critter snorfling on my collar bones.
Lying on their back, neither of my children slept without having something
firm to push their head against. My usual sleep position was curled on my
side, facing my baby, with my bottom arm extended over the baby's head. The
baby's head would wind up firmly wedged against my arm. My husband also
slept with our children like this.
As the kids got older, they'd move so that their head was jammed against a
parent's rib cage or backbone. They still do this. If they're sleeping
alone, they jam their heads against pillows or, in my son's case, against a
bare plaster wall. (I'm always amazed by this---it's an outside wall and
it's quite cold in winter).
My husband and I joke that it's a comforting bit of nostalgia for
them---both of them spent months head down in utero. My son was posterior
at birth. Maybe *that* is why he doesn't mind the plaster wall!
regards,
Julia
Julia R. Barrett
Freelance Science Writer & Editor
Mom to Sean (5) and Kira (almost 2)
Madison, Wisconsin
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