Lucky first again!
I'm thinking Ci is fluxy, esp if I have dairy so I'm cutting it out again. It wasn't easy to do either, dairy and its derivatives are in bloody everything! But I got reflux the other night, the same night Ci kept fluxarooning also. Weird, cos I never get reflux unless I'm pregnant, so I think it was a signal for me to take note of. After icecream, dammit! So I'm giving him the slippery elm and he was calm then. I'll keep him on that if he fluxes up unless he shows signs of it becoming more profound. He is very unsettled after feeds though, it makes sense. Can't wait until this first 12 weeks are over (although I'm trying not to push time away, as DH reminds me, I still can't wait). He'll be more mature and sitting up, I'll be able to ditch the frontal sling (hurrah!) and go for a hip sling or an ergo for back slinging. Yessireebob. Bring it on.
Aside from waking for feeds, he sleeps so well though. I just realised that recently. Once he's asleep at night, we don't have to settle him again. So he feeds frequently but that's ok, I could have to settle him after each of those feeds which would be worse. Although I guess sleeping in my arms is a kind of settling, but I don't have to be awake for it, so I won't complain (for a while!).
I found this interesting research paper for those who dig research (not that you'd know I dig it *sheepish*):
Journal of sleep research
It also talks about the "evening cries" etc.The relationship between daytime exposure to light and night-time sleep in 6–12-week-old infants
This project investigated the relationship between exposure to light and 24-h patterns of sleep and crying in young, healthy, full-term babies living at home and following a normal domestic routine. Measures included an ankle worn activity monitor, an external light monitor and the Barr Baby Day Diary in which parents recorded periods of sleep, crying, feeding and other behaviours at 5-min intervals throughout the 24-h period. Fifty-six babies (26 males and 30 females) were monitored across three consecutive days at 6, 9 and 12 weeks of age. There was an early evening peak in crying which was associated with reduced sleep at 6 weeks. Across the trials there was a gradual shift towards a greater proportion of sleep occurring at night. Sleeping well at 6 weeks was a good indication of more night-time sleep at 9 and 12 weeks. Babies who slept well at night were exposed to significantly more light in the early afternoon period. These data suggest that light in the normal domestic setting influences the development of the circadian system.


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it will be nice when he starts to sleep through till 6am as that will be about the time I would need to get up on a weekday to start getting ready for school drop off.
I really love the one where he is pulling the face!!!!
. really must spend that money and buy those books, been too busy listing on ebay to buy much. Not that I've made any money from it, but the clutter is going.
I am a complete nut!!!!!!!!
I do it still, even though it's rebalanced and will continue to because the DHAs are so good for brain development (and for my bod too). You can get really serious if it is an imbalance and block feed? But it's probably something worth checking with a doc really. 

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