Just Had a Baby? A Six-Week Survival Guide

Your first weeks home with a new baby can be awkward and scary. Here‘s what to expect and how to stay sane.

Linda Estrin


1 | Page 2 | 3

Bathing
Bathing a newborn can be a challenge. You can either do this by holding her in a big bowl or plastic tub or by wetting a washcloth and washing her on her changing table. Here are some other tips: Baby needs a full bath only about once or twice a week, but she needs to be "topped and tailed" (a Penelope Leach term) every day. This means washing the baby's head, face and bottom.

Make sure she's been fed (but not right before the bath), that the room is warm and that you have everything at the ready (you can't leave her for even a nanosecond to retrieve something you've forgotten).

Shampoo the scalp first (only once or twice a week), shielding the water from Baby's eyes. Supporting her head, start washing Baby from the top down, using soft cloth and tap water or mild baby soap. Moving down, be sure to get in all those nooks and crannies. Be sure to wash her face well. Left around the mouth, milk and spit-up may cause a rash. Wash eyelids and under the chin. Rinse baby well and pat her dry with a towel.

Getting Through the Night
Since their tiny tummies cannot hold much milk, newborns must be fed often, which is one reason they wake so frequently. Still, you can begin the process of getting the whole household on the same schedule.

 

"Keep night feedings as sleepy and brief as possible," Leach also suggests. "When he cries, go to him immediately so he has no time to get into a wakeful misery. Don't play or talk while you feed him." Bring him to bed with you if you want to fall back to sleep quickly.

Newborns often sleep for four hours at a stretch and a total of 16 hours or more a day. As for how quiet the house should be while Baby sleeps, Leach says the following: "A sleeping baby need not mean a hushed household. Ordinary sounds and activities will not disturb him at this early age. However, if everybody creeps about and talks in whispers while he is asleep, there may come a time when he cannot sleep unless they do. It is therefore important to let him sleep through whatever sound level is normal for your household so that he does not come to expect a quietness that will make all your lives misery."

1 | Page 2 | 3

Linda Estrin, freelance writer and mother of two, lives in Culver City, California.

User Comments:

  1. wow! I GAVE BIRTH TO A BABY BOY ON JUNE THE 3RD AND THROUGH OUT MY PREGNANCY YOU HAVE GIVEN TRUE AND SOUND ADVICE AND KNOW HAVE CLARIFIED EVERY THING THAT HAS BEEN HAPPENING TO MY BIG BOY OVER THE PAST WEEKS THANK YU VETY MUCH I AM LOOKING FORWARD TO THAT SMILE
    — mbali dlamini
  2. i gave birth to a baby girl on june 15th and i am looking forward to the six week smile and i just want to say that fussy time is the hardest to get through each day
    — danyelle kizilian
  3. Your advice is great but only for parents having there first child. I need a survival guide for the second child. My son was born on June 28th and I have a 2 and a half yr old as well.
    — Brenda

More Comments