Okay - so I thought I definitely wanted a bassinet - have one registered for and everything, but now I'm not so sure. Everyone I've spoken to says you want to tranition baby into crib as early as possible - even as early as 3-4 months, so seems a lot to spend just for as short time. My friend is giving me her Rock-n-play and was planning to use that downstairs while keeping the bassinet upstairs just for at night sleeping, but now wondering if i should use the rock-n-play for all sleeping an skip the bassinet? I've heard some concerns about safety of rock-n-plays for night sleeping and sids, but so many seem to use them, i wonder if that's just safety sites being over cautious. My mom wants to buy the bassinet, so the cost wouldn't necessarily be ours, but wondering if I should let her save her money. Would love some already mom thoughts? Thanks a bunch!
Then there's the whole organic thing - I'm pretty close to 100% organic on a lot of my food, but wondering about sheets, towels, etc.... Seems a lot of money to spend and is it really that impt. Most of my friends do not use all organic stuff, and their babies and toddlers seem fine. I'm getting a crib mattress that is a top one with all the best certifications and chemical and vinyl free and thinking I should stop there. Again though would love some thoughts. I have a friend who is part of a local holistic mom's group and of course she is ll about organic everything....but not sure I'm sold on organic everything. Any thoughts?
Re: Bassinet's - How important? And what about organic cotton sheets, towels, etc..
I like organic sheets and blankets if the price is decent but it's not a must for me. I will just wash with a natural soap. I love the muslin swaddling blankets though! My daughter is 3 and still loves hers as a light blanket. They're so nice and big
I think the organic, chemical-free mattress is very smart (off-gassing is scary!) I wouldn't worry overly about chemicals in non-organic cotton, however, and that's coming from someone who's very persnickety about conventionally-grown produce. I just don't see how chemicals in fabrics have a point-of-entry into baby's body, unless they're chewing on the fabric...
ETA: this is the crib we got: https://www.amazon.com/DaVinci-Emily-Mini-Crib-Ebony/dp/B000FT9J3U
As for organic sheets and such, I don't think its necessarily that important. I agree with HappyCianci and I know you can still absorb toxins through your skin but I would think that processed or non-organic food would be more harmful as you're ingesting it? Does that make any sense?
I loved it, if you can't tell.
https://www.armsreach.com
That's not actually true. Our skin is a barrier, and it's not always porous. My doctor game me permission to handle lead in my chemistry class while pregnant, for example. (For the record, I still said HELL NO.)
Breathing in toxins is still a concern for me, but I'd be more worried about upholstered fabrics (like the mattress, as OP mentioned) than thin, washable clothing fabrics.
Another oft-ignored option for avoiding the nasties of the manufactoring process of simple fabrics like clothing and blankets is to buy second-hand. Anything in a thrift store is likely to have gone through many washes. From my experience, most baby clothing in thrift stores is in perfect condition, because we all know how long babies fit into the 0-3 month (or any) size.
Re: organic sheets, bedding - lots of good info here - I think I'm not going to worry about it too much. I bought some just cause it was so soft - but in general I think about the fact that I didnt have organic bedding nor did many of us growing up and we all seem to be okay
Married 8/27/2011
BFP #1 9/28/2011 DS born 5/22/2012
BFP #2 4/24/2013 m/c 4/25/2013 at 4w
BFP #3 1/31/2014 DD born 10/14/2014
BFP #4 1/20/2016 m/c 2/12/2014 at 7w2d
BFP #5 8/19/2016 DS2 born 4/29/2017
BFP #6 3/7/2018 EDD 11/18/2018