Hubby freaked me out tonight and said " did you see the teeth coming in?" And I was like WHAT? And look and it is just some left over spit up on her gums. Lol so yeah... No teeth here yet.
I wonder sometimes, but it's been said in previous threads that the teeth can move around a lot before erupting.
That being said they are also learning about their hands and developing saliva glands so who knows. She definitely has her days when I could swear something is going on in that mouth of her's.
I doubt it but it's possible. LO was born with keratin deposits on his gums, so it's always kinda looked like "teeth". Shouldn't have any lasting issues other than making it hard for me to tell when they do actually come in. Somehow I think he's going to let us know
Married DH : 7/7/12; 3 fur babies (2 dogs and 1 cat) DS born 9/3/13; DD born 7/22/15; LO due 5/28/18 FS (age 5) and FD (age 2) to become AS/AD very soon!
The drooling alone can also be part of them starting to learn about making sounds and 'talking', because we need saliva to be able to lubricate all the parts to do so (interesting fact: apparently we have as much saliva in our mouths as the seeming excess babies have, we just know how to keep ours in).
But drool aside, our LO definitely has little teeth buds showing, will chew on a cold washcloth or her frozen chewy keys more than any other toy, and has rosey cheeks a lot of the time.
I could be totally off the mark, but the signs say yes.
TTC Since March 2010 - 2 angel babies - BFP December 12 EDD 12 Aug 13
I think mine is. She is drooling a lot, has little white buds on her lower gums which look like rice trying to pop through, and rosy cheeks. All the signs say yes!
My other two didn't get teeth until 8-9 mo. She is chewing her hands, that's because she found them. She drools, because she just figured out she can move her tongue in and out. So, no teeth here.
The drooling alone can also be part of them starting to learn about making sounds and 'talking', because we need saliva to be able to lubricate all the parts to do so (interesting fact: apparently we have as much saliva in our mouths as the seeming excess babies have, we just know how to keep ours in).
But drool aside, our LO definitely has little teeth buds showing, will chew on a cold washcloth or her frozen chewy keys more than any other toy, and has rosey cheeks a lot of the time.
I could be totally off the mark, but the signs say yes.
Are rosy cheeks a sign of teething? LO has definitely started having rosy cheeks a but more lately and is constantly chewing on her hands (though not putting anything else in her mouth yet) and drooling, but I thought it was just her discovering her hands as others have said rather than teething.
I think DD has started. She is a constant puddle of drool and everything is going in her mouth, which I know is also normal for this stage, but her gums look really translucent and she'll go to town chewing on your finger or some of her smaller teething toys.
LO is drooling a ton, has big rosy cheeks on him, would give jaws a run for his money when we pop a finger in his mouth, and is quite cranky. Not to mention I kinda think I felt a little sharp tooth coming up under his gums this morning! Bf should be fun from now in! :-S
I don't think we are there yet. But DS1 started teething right around 4 months, got his first two teeth @6 months straight up. So I'd be willing to bet it's right around the corner.
Nope. She loves eating her hands and clasping them together. She also is excellent at sticking her tongue out. None of my mom's babies got teeth until about 9 months. For the sake of my nipples, I hope she is a late teether.
Re: Teething
Mommy to J: Born 5/11/2010 & B: Born 8/26/2013
Yes, he's drooling A LOT and it seems his hands are constantly in his mouth but that's normal for this stage.
DS born 9/3/13; DD born 7/22/15; LO due 5/28/18
FS (age 5) and FD (age 2) to become AS/AD very soon!
DS1 didn't get his first tooth until 8 months and never had any issues with teething. Hoping for the same this time!
I had a friend whose baby had two teeth at 3.5 months though. Kinda freaky.
The drooling alone can also be part of them starting to learn about making sounds and 'talking', because we need saliva to be able to lubricate all the parts to do so (interesting fact: apparently we have as much saliva in our mouths as the seeming excess babies have, we just know how to keep ours in).
But drool aside, our LO definitely has little teeth buds showing, will chew on a cold washcloth or her frozen chewy keys more than any other toy, and has rosey cheeks a lot of the time.
I could be totally off the mark, but the signs say yes.