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Index
Cover Page
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Contents
Introduction
1. Communicating with Your Baby: Reading Your Baby’s Cues
Crying: An Early Form of Communication with Parents
Baby Colic
Periodic Irritable Baby
Fretful Baby
Cries of Hunger
Hypertonic Baby
Crying Associated with Diaper Rash and Teething
Responding to Your Baby’s Cry: A Few Specific Suggestions
Is the Baby Sick?
Sucking
Reaching Out
Kicking Legs
Grunting
High-pitched Squealing
The Parent’s Response
Happy to Crying
Enjoy Your Baby
2. Parents’ Biggest Newborn Concerns
Umbilical Stump
Floppy Head
SIDS
Exposure to Germs
Breast-feeding
Swelling of Babies’ Heads
Breathing Patterns
Soft Spot
Playing Too Vigorously
Spitting Up
Jaundice
3. Choosing a Doctor for Your Baby
4. The Arrival of the New Baby
Feeding and Behavior
Breast-feeding
Formula feeding
Preparing for the New Baby
Preparing Sibling for the New Baby
Preparing the Parents for the New Baby
Arranging Help for Mom
If I Have a Baby Boy, Should He Be Circumcised?
5. How Much Regularity to Infant Feeding?
When a Mother Thinks About Going Back to Work
6. Beginning Solids
Which Solids, in What Order?
7. Poor Eaters
8. Common Physical Problems
Teething
Sneezing, Coughing, and Dripping … the Common Cold
Ear Infections
9. Stranger Anxiety
10. Transitional Objects
Thumb-sucking
11. Sleep Problems
Newborns
Six to Sixteen Months: Demanding and Walking
Naps: Six Months to Two Years
Co-sleeping: Children Sleeping in the Parents’ Bed
Bedtime Rituals
Bottle in the Bed: Age Six to Twenty-four Months
Separation Anxiety: Six Months to Six Years
12. Toilet Training
13. Discipline and Temper Tantrums: An Opportunity for Parent-Child Communication and Learning
Anger and Temper Tantrums
Physical Punishment
Humiliation, Shame, and Guilt
14. Can You Spoil a Child?
Index
Look For The Companion Volume
About The Author
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