Tag Archives: poop talk

Tummy Massage for Gas

Tummy massage for gas

Unlike other types of infant massage, this one has very specific hand movements and a very specific purpose. To gently stimulate peristalsis, to encourage motility of intestinal contents (BM and gas),  to provide a “cueing sound”, and finally to offer something for baby to strain against.

Here’s how to do my very specific “Tummy Massage for Gas”

  • Hand-Over-Hand on the Lower Belly: Gently stroke your baby’s tummy from top to bottom using first one hand, then the other, like a paddlewheel. As the belly first tenses, then gradually relaxes, press your hand deeper using a scooping motion.
  • Whoosh! Add your ‘whooshing” sounds during the which soon baby will recognize signals relief or relaxation.
  • Straight Across: Now stroke from YOUR left to YOUR right – straight across, gentle but moderate pressure, just at or below the belly button.
  • Now, Across and Down: Continue the Straight Across stroke, but now ADD the downward stroke, now moving across and down, ending inside the baby’s thigh crease. It’s like a sideways “L” or “7”.
  • Legs Up and Hold’em In Place: Flex baby at the hips and knees toward the tummy, gently press and hold in place, counting slowly to twenty. Repeat the entire sequence two or three times.
    (video coming soon)

Many babies will pass gas during the exercise or have a BM a few minutes later – success and relief for everyone!

Common Freaky Newborn Behaviors NOT to Worry About

Normal newborn behavior can seem concerning and sometimes alarming to the uninitiated. Is she eating enough? Is she eating too much? Why is she crying? Why won’t she sleep? How much spit up is normal?  With so much to worry about, it might be refreshing to learn about some newborn behaviors that often make parents wonder, but are usually nothing to worry about. Of course, if you like to worry, here are Freaky Things Parents of Babies and Toddlers CAN Worry About.

Don’t worry (much) about…

  1. Breastfed babies over 1 month old that don’t poop every day, or even every few days. As long as they’re eating well and wetting plenty of pee-diapers, poop will happen, eventually – Probably requiring a full bath and several changes of clothing. Some dramatic babies poop only once or twice a week (but continue to eat and urinate as usual).
  2. Happy babies that spit up a lot. Whether it’s a lot of milk or a little, if the baby is otherwise happy and thriving, consider spit-up a Laundry Problem, not a pathology. If milk’s been down less than an hour, it will look and smell like milk. If it’s been down there longer, it will probably look and smell like curdled cottage cheese. Normal.  Spitting up – even 20 times a day –  is a normal baby behavior, and some healthy babies spit up far more than others.
  3. Infants who love the pacifier (once breastfeeding is well established). Give it or don’t give it, as you see fit. Don’t stress and agonize too much. It’s a just little piece of plastic, not crack cocaine. If it works for your baby, go with it. Around six months, your baby will begin to learn to self-comfort herself by sucking her fingers or thumb, and you can remove the binky altogether if you desire. If you choose to keep the pacifier, begin to restrict use to the car and crib once your baby is mobile.
  4. Occasional random projectile vomit. Yes, Exorcist Baby just likes to keep you guessing. And mopping up. As long as baby seems comfortable and is able to later eat normally without further projectile vomiting, just shrug it off  and mop it up. Repeated projectile vomiting, when milk seems to “shoot out” with volume and force, means a call to the pediatrician but a one-time occurrence doesn’t have to mean anything.)
  5. Sneezes and snuffly noses. A baby’s nose is a (mostly) self-cleaning device. Babies produce lots of thin mucus and a have reflex which causes them to sneeze a few times in a row when you step out into bright sunlight, essentially causing them to “blow” their cute little noses. Thin clear mucus, sneezing and snuffly sounds are normal for infants and are not the sign of a cold.
  6. Babies who spit up through their nose. Rarely discussed in baby books, and very normal (albeit kind of freaky). It must not be too comfortable for your baby, but there’s not much you can do about it. Remember when your friends made you laugh while drinking Pepsi and it would come out your nose? Yeah, like that. It’s all connected back there.
  7. Newborns who fall asleep but forget to shut their eyes, leaving only the whites showing. You can gently close their eyelids, it won’t bother them. They’ll grow out of this one fairly quickly. Thankfully, right? Looking for things to worry about? Here’s some Freaky Things Parents of Babies CAN Worry About.