RichmondMom.com » Newborn http://richmondmom.com Where Hip Moms Click! Tue, 31 Mar 2015 18:06:13 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=4.1.1 Products that Keep Moms and Babies Happy -As Seen on Virginia This Morning http://richmondmom.com/2014/07/14/products-that-keep-moms-and-babies-happy-as-seen-on-virginia-this-morning/ http://richmondmom.com/2014/07/14/products-that-keep-moms-and-babies-happy-as-seen-on-virginia-this-morning/#comments Mon, 14 Jul 2014 22:30:42 +0000 http://richmondmom.com/?p=58444 Did you catch us on TV last week?
I got a chance to spend some time with Jessica Knoll and her adorable 16 month old daughter, Pearl talking about some fabulous products that help fussy babies.

Click here or on the image below
to see the segment on the CBS6 website
.

These products are sure to keep both moms and babies happy | WTVR.com 2014-07-14 18-04-27

We were really excited to be on Virginia This Morning and share these great products:

Mommy’s Bliss Gripe Water

Mommys Bliss Gripe Water -#1 selling natural colic remedy in the U.S.
-Safe, gentle and effective liquid formula contains organic ginger and fennel, which are historically known to ease the nausea and discomfort caused by stomach gas and other colic symptoms
-Recommended by Pediatricians nation-wide as a safe and natural alternative to simethicone-based gas drops
-Does not contain alcohol, parabens or harsh chemicals
-Available for purchase at Walgreens, Rite Aid and Wal-Mart for $11.99

 

 

 

Kids Relief Teething Oral Solution

Kids Relief Teething liquid-Homeopathic Medicine
-Eases pain during the teething process
-Alcohol, dye, and sugar free
-Helps to relieve fever, gum pain and inflammation, restlessness, irritability and diarrhea
-No side effect risk or overdose risk
-Made from natural ingredients
-Safe and easy administer
-Available for purchase at CVS locations nationwide for $6.99

 

 

 

 

Xlear Baby Banana Brush with Strawberry Banana Tooth Gel

Xlear-Baby-Banana-Brush-with-Tooth-Gel-700596000742-Toddler friendly tooth gel that comes with a banana tooth brush
-The key ingredient is xylitol, which has proven health benefits
-Promotes calcium absorption and builds up tooth enamel
-Fluoride free and safe to swallow
-Delicious strawberry banana flavor
-Available for purchase at health and natural product stores and online at xlear.com for $12.99

 

 

 

 

 

 

Blooming Bath

blooming-bath-yellow-Plush flower insert fits in your sink to create a soft cradle for baby’s bath time
-Made from natural antimicrobial foam
-Can be used in the sink for newborns through six months
-Can also be used as a bath mat in your regular tub once baby outgrows the sink
-Included tag on the back makes it easy to hang dry
-Safe to toss in the washer and dryer
-Retails for $39.99 on bloominghbath.com, as well as at Buy Buy Baby, Babiesrus.com and Target.com

 

 

 

The unopened (and un-dropped) products will be a part of the prize package for a big upcoming contest to be revealed soon!

In consolation, I leave you with two absolutely ridiculous screen shots.
Feel free to “caption these” in the comments below.

Enjoy.
These products are sure to keep both moms and babies happy | WTVR.com big arms

These products are sure to keep both moms and babies happy | WTVR.com funny face

We had so much fun we’re already working on another one for fall…

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Confessions of a Mainstream Mom (Who Happened to Breastfeed) http://richmondmom.com/2014/03/17/confessions-of-a-mainstream-mom-who-happened-to-breastfeed/ http://richmondmom.com/2014/03/17/confessions-of-a-mainstream-mom-who-happened-to-breastfeed/#comments Mon, 17 Mar 2014 21:35:57 +0000 http://richmondmom.com/?p=56353 Guest Blogger: Megan Hartless

I always knew I would breastfeed. It never occurred to me not to. It never occurred to me that there was some question, because everyone I knew did it. My mom did it. My sister did it. My friends did it. It made perfect sense to me that my body made perfectly good, free food for my babies, and that I would give it to them.

I remember in my early 20’s, though, seeing that mom. The mom with a baby nursing in a sling and a toddler strapped on her back, her broomstick skirt swishing through the organic foods aisle at the grocery store, her hemp sandals flip-flopping with each step, her bangle bracelets tinkling beautifully with each graceful. As she swept her pile of reusable bags aside to make room for her Pirate’s Booty snack and variety of Yogi Teas, she absentmindedly nuzzled her baby’s cheek, her patchouli scent wafting my way as I pushed the mini-cart containing bagged salad and chips and salsa.

It never occurred to me until years later that that mom was the picture of breastfeeding in America.

Apparently, breastfeeding is viewed as something engaged in by a certain type of woman. Moms who stay at home and espouse themselves to ideals very far outside the mainstream – those are the breastfeeders. Moms who work, who watch TV, who let their kids listen to rock and roll, eat gluten, drink pasteurized milk, moms who buy Gerber baby food…those moms don’t breastfeed. And if they do, they don’t do it for long. So society tells me.

WHAT THE HELL?

I started to hear one horror story after another about moms who tried to breastfeed and failed because they

photo: Daquella Manera

Photo: Daquella Manera

“couldn’t make milk” or whose “baby didn’t like their milk” or whose “baby had reflux on breastmilk and could only drink soy formula” or any number of other horrific stories.

I’m not saying they aren’t true, but we as a society stacked the deck against them. Chances are situation was a bigger factor than biology in mom’s low production or fussy child. If you took just the stories I heard about breastfeeding when I was pregnant, and nothing else, you would that no mom ever successfully breastfed.

So social media, and parenting sites, and just the world, created this crunchy mother earth image of breastfeeding moms that made them seem to do nothing but breastfeed and eat an occasional organic snack, dedicating their lives solely to nursing their children, all their other desires and ambitions going unfulfilled.

For a long time, I thought I was a crunchy person. If you don’t know what that means, you probably are not

one. A “CRUNCHY” person is defined by urbandictionary as follows:

Adjective. Used to describe persons who have adjusted or altered their lifestyle for environmental reasons. Crunchy persons tend to be politically strongly left-leaning and may be additionally but not exclusively categorized as vegetarians, vegans, eco-tarians, conservationists, environmentalists, neo-hippies, tree huggers, nature enthusiasts, etc.

Modified derivative of granola.

Nothing about that definition seems absurd to me, and for a long time, I thought I was pretty crunchy. I

make an above average effort to recycle. I think hybrid cars are awesome. I once used tea tree oil. I take probiotics. I don’t litter. I think that the preservation of our natural resources is our responsibility. Crunchy, right?

So I had a baby. There I was thinking I was this crunchy mama. And then… I met that mom in person (that

mom being a collection of those moms who truly do embody crunchiness). That Mom was so much crunchier than I was. I worked full-time after my maternity leave. I didn’t make baby food. Or clothes. I don’t buy organic anything. I believe that the market for supplements is a bit of a racket by the supplement makers that convince people that putting more things into their body is somehow more helpful than a healthy diet and exercise. I take a variety of prescriptions. I think homeopathic medicine can be hokey. I let my children watch TV. Before they were two. Kind of a lot. We eat chicken nuggets and pizza. And chocolate. Kind of a lot. My kids go to day care.

Compared to that mom, I was something I never would have described myself as before meeting that mom.

I was mainstream. Absolutely, positively mainstream.

You may wonder what I am getting at here. And, in fact, I have labored over how to phrase this writing so as to be inoffensive to both the crunchy moms and the mainstream moms (and those who fall somewhere in the middle).

I am not only a mom who breastfed, but a breastfeeding advocate. And it’s not because I think that formula

feeding is bad (GASP! The breastfeeding counselor just said formula isn’t bad!). I don’t honestly believe it is scientifically the better choice, but I also know plenty of awesome kids who had formula and are just fine.

But I also know that our mainstream world wants us to believe that breastfeeding is really hard and inconvenient. Especially for working moms. Especially for moms who aren’t that mom. That moms who work are doomed to fail, so why not just go ahead and use the “easier” choice?

Oh by the way, the formula companies (who sponsor the mainstream world) want you to believe that breastfeeding is harder than formula feeding.

But you don’t have to be crunchy to breastfeed. You don’t have to be a stay-at-home mom to breastfeed. You don’t have to eschew television and synthetic fabrics and meat and social acceptance. You do have to want to do it. You do have to commit to doing it, find a support system, and believe that it’s possible. And there are lots of people who are willing to help. Pretty much any breastfeeding mom I know would help you. And Breastfeeding USA has trained volunteer counselors ,  who are chomping at the bit to get your call and help you.  And lactation consultants, midwives, OB’s, and maybe even your mom.  And I assure you… none of them will tell you to wear hemp or eat tofu if you want to breastfeed.

So get it out of your mind that you have to fit some kind of mold to be a successful breastfeeder, because you just don’t. I don’t and didn’t. Breastfeeding moms are moms whose breasts make milk… so pretty much any mom who wants to.

 

Megan HMegan Hartless is a mom of two sons and one stepson. When the boys aren’t keeping her on her toes, she is volunteering as a Breastfeeding USA Counselor in Virginia’s Staunton-Augusta area, blogging about breastfeeding, and running a monthly support group for nursing moms. In her “spare time,” she has a full-time job as the Associate Director of Financial Aid at Mary Baldwin College.

 

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Bon Secours St. Francis Medical Center Expands CenteringPregnancy® http://richmondmom.com/2014/03/12/bon-secours-st-francis-medical-center-expands-centeringpregnancy/ http://richmondmom.com/2014/03/12/bon-secours-st-francis-medical-center-expands-centeringpregnancy/#comments Wed, 12 Mar 2014 19:44:11 +0000 http://richmondmom.com/?p=56280 Unique program gives women more control of their prenatal care
through group support

Women entering pregnancy can now benefit from an expanded, multifaceted group approach to prenatal care offered at Bon Secours St. Francis Medical Center.

CenteringPregnancy® is a nationally recognized program led by certified providers usually nurse midwives; it augments individual prenatal visits with group sessions and gives expectant women better control of their pre-natal care, through a group setting.

“Expectant women are more empowered today than 10 or 20 years ago in making their own health care decisions, and CenteringPregnancy helps them achieve this by bringing women out of isolated exam rooms and into groups for their care,” said Mary Anne Graf, vice president of women’s services, Bon Secours Virginia Health System. “CenteringPregnancy has a proven track record of ensuring healthier babies and healthier, well-informed new mothers. While moms often desire to be in the driver’s seat of their pregnancy, labor and delivery by making their own choices, they also can find pregnancy to be isolating and intimidating at times. CenteringPregnancy provides a supportive setting of women who often share the same ‘pains and passions’ of pregnancy.”

Bom Secours Heather
After completing their first obstetrics appointment at a Bon Secours-affiliated practice or clinic, women receive information on CenteringPregnancy and are offered the choice to participate in the program. Women are grouped by similar due dates. In each weekly session, they receive a private, prenatal check up by a certified nurse-midwife, including weight and blood pressure monitoring. This is followed by a two-hour group educational session led by a certified nurse-midwife. The weekly sessions enable the women to discuss health concerns and expectations in a supportive setting. Weekly topics including nutrition and healthy lifestyles, labor and childbirth options, breastfeeding, pregnancy discomforts, newborn care, child development and more.

Through this unique model of care, women become empowered and feel confident to play a more active role in their pregnancy and overall health. They have access to all their charts, ultrasounds and lab work, and they are acutely aware of how their pregnancy is progressing. Each woman is supported physically, spiritually, psychologically and socially, through bonds that develop within the group.

Initiated in the early 1990s by a nurse-midwife in Connecticut, and today with sites nationwide, the CenteringPregnancy model has resulted in positive health outcomes for pregnancies, specifically increased birth weight, fewer preterm births, shorter postpartum hospitalizations, and fewer unnecessary visits to the emergency room. The satisfaction expressed by both the women and their providers support the effectiveness of this model for the delivery of care.

“Women often are each other’s best teachers, and groups enable them to share a wealth of information with one another,” said Jean Curtacci, RN, a certified nurse-midwife and a group leader of CenteringPregnancy at St. Francis Medical Center. “The women in my groups are more willing to express what they’re really feeling, and they feed off of each other. The experience also is enhancing the way I provide prenatal care in a traditional setting, because I am learning more about what these women are going through in any given week of their pregnancy.”

“CenteringPregnancy has proven to be a really powerful process for a woman’s pregnancy, and it’s changing the way women are receiving their prenatal care,” said Graf. “New mothers especially are seeing this group approach as what prenatal care is, and will be in the future. The support setting will enrich their prenatal health, and the bonds they form will play an important role in each other’s lives. We see this as a new paradigm in the way prenatal care is delivered in the future.”

CenteringPregnancy comes to Bon Secours as a result of its 12-month qualitative and quantitative research, revealing how women today are more empowered than the previous generation of women to seek options and resources to pursue their own health needs. To support this, Bon Secours also is introducing other new programs this year, including Moms in Motion®, a nationally recognized fitness program.

Bon Secours Logo

Bon Secours is an advertiser with Richmondmom.com

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FREE Classes for Baby at Romp n’ Roll http://richmondmom.com/2014/03/10/free-classes-for-baby-at-romp-n-roll/ http://richmondmom.com/2014/03/10/free-classes-for-baby-at-romp-n-roll/#comments Mon, 10 Mar 2014 14:17:17 +0000 http://richmondmom.com/?p=56188 Free baby class
Yeah, you know WE love Romp n’ Roll, but you and your kids will love Romp n’ Roll too!
Try out a class FREE and get your babies moving (and meet other moms) at one of these awesome Romp n’ Roll Classes.
BabyPalooza at Romp n’ Roll
All Richmond Locations
March 17th to 23rd
All children 12 months and under are invited to visit Romp n’ Roll 
for a FREE CLASS during BabyPalooza from March 17th to 23rd!
Spend some one-on-one time connecting and encouraging your baby!
Through fun stories, songs and activities, our “Babies” class will help your child  reach developmental milestones during a special time that’s just for you.
West End
Tuesday – 9:15am – 10am
Wednesday – 12:30pm – 1:15pm
Wednesday – 4:30pm – 5:15pm
Sunday – 9:30am – 10:15am
Midlothian
Wednesday – 12:30pm – 1:15pm
Thursday – 9:15am – 10am
Thursday – 5:15pm – 6pm
Mechanicsville
Monday – 5:30pm – 6:15pm
Tuesday – 10:30am – 11:15am
Wednesday – 4:15pm – 5pm
Call (804) 364-6363 to register for your free class! 
(Pre-registration is required.)
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