Parenting: Babies
What DOES the Baby Need?
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Baby baths. Swings. Play pens. Play mats. Monitors. Changing tables. Baby-wipe warmers. Baby perfumes. Baby perfumes?
The amount of baby gear available to parents today is enough to shock your great-grandmother right out of her shoes. The number of products targeted at parents is comparable with the amount of free advice.
Well, almost.
Still, the assortment of things for infants and toddlers can be mind-blowing. How do you decide what you and your baby need? “The first thing you need is a car seat,” says Barbara Morgan, who has owned The Kidz Shoppe in San Jose, Calif., for more than 10 years. “If you don’t have clothes, you can wrap them in towels. But you can’t take them home from the hospital without a car seat.”
Getting Started
Other parents, however, think that gear and gadgets make baby-rearing easier. Especially if one parent is frequently home alone, it can be necessary to put the baby down in something safe and confining.
And of course, your budget and living space may help inspire you to a less-stuff philosophy.
What You Can't Live Without
What You Can Live Without
Up for Debate
Things Have Changed
She says she remembers when car seats lifted the child to the level of the window instead of securing them to the seat. The seats were no sturdier than high chair seats, she says, and two curved metal bars simply hung the baby’s seat over the backrest.
Now, when people bring used car seats to her consignment shop, she inspects them carefully. She watches the lists of manufacturer recalls and won’t take things that are damaged, dangerous or have outdated designs. She doesn’t take car seats that have been in an accident, even if they appear undamaged, because the stress on the equipment can still make them unsafe.
If you want to check out used and new gear for yourself, the Consumer Product Safety Commission and Consumer Reports are good places to start. Although you do need to pay for a subscription to Consumer Reports, it’s a good resource for all purchases.
Final Suggestions
And don’t forget to:
Your philosophy and your budget are going to be the starting point for thinking about your needs. Some parents avoid anything that comes between them and their babies: playpens, cribs, swings and even strollers are eschewed so that the baby can be held as much as possible.
Unless you’re lucky enough to be surrounded by a gaggle of other young parents, the Internet continues to be a great source of advice about current products. Scrolling through archives of chat rooms and message boards can give you a pretty good idea of what your fellow parents can’t live without. For example:
Then there are also some things that parents generally agree they could have done without.
And of course, there is an equally large category of things that divide parental opinion. It’s always important to remember that your choices on gear can come down to personal taste. The personal taste, that is, of the baby.
Since being a new mother herself 40 years ago, Morgan has watched the baby gear industry. “I’ve seen a lot of changes, and I don’t feel that old,” she says with a laugh. “Just in 40 years, you can look at how technology has changed. We didn’t have cars or freeways that went that fast. Things now are much more about the safety features.”
Morgan also says the cost of car seats and strollers has increased with the safety requirements. To make it more palatable, manufacturers are combining uses. For example, some seats can be used for infants and toddlers, and others can be used as a car seat, a carriage and in a stroller.
One of the benefits of shopping for baby gear is that you know in advance that you’re going to need it. Sort of like eating a snack before you go to the grocery store, you’ll shop better if you use your pregnancy to think about what you need and how you’ll use it.
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