Great post, Judy!
I've been saying this for ages: colic (koliek in Dutch) is a weird word.
You give good analogies and I can totally see what you mean and do agree
with it.
It does make sense! :-)
Bye,
Marianne Vanderveen IBCLC, Netherlands
----- Original Message -----
From: <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Tuesday, November 03, 2009 3:54 PM
Subject: [LACTNET] Re; Colic and the breastfed baby
> Tania writes:
>
> The worst of the colic passed at around 7 months, but he continued to be
> an intense baby and a
> demanding toddler. As he grew into a child and could communicate he
> needs
> more clearly I learned that he had strong aversions to certain fabrics,
> textures, loud noises, changes in routine etc.In our case I feel that th
> e colic was a combination of my excessive milk production and his sensory
> issues.
> ~~
>
> ~~ Hello everyone,
> See this is where it gets tricky with the terms. In Breastfeeding
> Management for the Clinician ( Walker, 2006) it reads: "Infantile colic
> is a set of
> behaviors described in healthy infants as episodes of irritability and
> hard, unexplained, and inconsolable crying...",
>
> So I'm thinking, there is a difference between unexplained, and
> unexplainable. Thanks to those of you who shared your experienced with
> your stressed
> out and often challenging little ones. If a baby does have sensory
> issues,
> or mom has a letdown like Niagara Falls (me) or a massive supply volume,
> or
> baby is just expected to behave in a certain passive and noncommunicative
> way and doesn't, then this is technically not colic. When I think about
> colic, and I can come up with a reason for baby's behaviors, I don't use
> the
> word colic, because there is an explanation. Doctors talk about
> "digestive
> immaturity" being related to colic. Isn't that an explanation/ reason,
> though
> it is often suggested as a reason to ignore the baby's crying because
> "they're just immature and will grow out if it. " Is the term colic like
> the
> term SIDS, where people worry about their baby dying of SIDS if they roll
> over on him/her, but then that's really not SIDS, right? If we say a baby
> is
> crying, and maybe has mucusy stools and arches and cries until mom takes
> out
> dairy and/or baby gets CST or other strategies, would we say that baby
> was
> colicky? I see a big difference between a baby whose behaviors are beyond
> explanation, and baby whose behaviors may have an explanation but the
> explanation is not figured out or accepted. (your baby thrives best when
> held
> vs. your baby is colicky, just put her down til she grows out of this
> colic.) Does that make sense? Maybe my idea of what colic is, is
> unexplained!
>
> Peace,
> Judy
>
> Judy LeVan Fram, PT, IBCLC, LLLL
> Brooklyn, NY, USA
>
>
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