Baby Likes to Be Held
Anthropologists like James McKenna at Notre Dame have determined through their work that infants that like to be held represent a survivor trait in evolution. Infants content to stay by themselves would have been taken by predators, but those who demanded to be kept with mom or dad survived. This trait survives today, but unfortunately can be stressful or treated as pathological in our modern world. For parents of infants like these, I suggest enlisting all the help you can get (usually these babies just like someone to hold them, not necessarily mom), and figuring out which carrier or wrap works for you and baby so you can have your hands free in between feeds. And I remind parents that these are the future movers and shakers of the world – these won’t be kids standing on the sidelines!
Resources for Baby Likes to Be Held
Complete Topic List
- Bad Feeling with Letdown (DMER)
- Be Present and Avoid Apps
- Birth Control and Breastfeeding
- Biting
- Blebs
- Blood in Diapers
- Blood Streaks in Poop and Oversupply
- Bloody Nipple Discharge
- Bloody Milk
- Bottle Feeding to Get Baby to Sleep Longer
- Bottle Nipples
- Bras
- BRCA and Breastfeeding
- Breast Augmentation (Implants)
- Breastfeeding Basics
- Breast Cancer and Breastfeeding
- Breast Cancer during Pregnancy
- Breast Cancer while Breastfeeding
- Breast Growth
- Breast Lump
- Breast Masses and Conditions
- Breast Reductions
- Breast Surgery or Breast Biopsy
- Breastfeeding and Previous Breast Cancer Treatment
- Breastfeeding Supply List
- Breastfeeding While Pregnant or Undergoing IVF
- Breastmilk Content and Volume
- Breastmilk Research
- Burns on Breast
- Burping
- Calories in Breastmilk
- Cancer Screening during Pregnancy and Lactation
- Choking and Gasping at Breast
- Chronic Diseases
- Chronic Disease or New Onset Illness Impacting Milk Production
- Cleft Palate, Down Syndrome, Other Congenital Conditions
- Clicking
- Clumps In Milk
- Cluster Feeding
- Colic
- Colostrum
- Comfort Feeding
- Conceiving and/or Pregnancy While Breastfeeding
- Cries the Minute We Put Baby Down
- Cries While Feeding
- Cysts
- Galactocele
- Gassy Baby, More at Night
- Gender Affirming Surgery
- General Considerations for Plastic Surgery and Breastfeeding
- General Infant Concerns
- Gigantomastia
- Good Moms Have Scary Thoughts
- Granuloma Annulare
- Granulomatous Mastitis
- Mastitis Granulomatosa Idiopathic – Spanish
- Green Poop and Oversupply
- Growth Curves
- Growth Spurts
- Hair Loss Postpartum
- Hamartoma
- Hand Expression
- Health History and Medications
- Hidradenitis Suppurativa
- “High Lipase” Milk
- “Hindmilk and Foremilk Imbalance” and Baby Weight Gain
- Hives and PUPPP
- Home Scales
- Hospital Or Birthing Center
- Hyperlactation
- Hyperlactation (Oversupply) and Breastfeeding Stools
- Hyperkeratosis (“Warty Nipple”)
- Idiopathic Granulomatous Mastitis (IGM or GM)
- Mastitis Granulomatosa Idiopathic – Spanish
- If You Feel Silly Doing It…
- If You Have an Older Child at Home
- Increasing Production
- Induced Lactation
- Infant Allergies
- Infant Loss
- Infant Needing Surgery
- Infant Questions
- Inflammatory Breast Cancer Versus Engorgement
- Injectables and Herbs
- “Insufficient Glandular Tissue”
- Inverted Nipples
- Iron
- Irritable Breast Syndrome (IBrS)
- Is Baby Getting Enough?
- Labor
- Lactating Adenoma
- Lactational Amenorrhea Method (LAM)
- Lactogenesis I: You May Notice Colostrum Production
- Lactiferous Sinuses
- Latch
- Latch and Position
- Leiomyoma
- Letdowns
- Lichenification
- Likes to Be Held
- “Lipstick” Nipple Shape
- Long Feeds
- Lopsided Breasts
- Loud Baby/Baby Noise
- Low Supply
- “Low Supply”: Continued Early Supplementation
- Lymph Nodes
- Lymphedema
- Male Breast Cancer
- Marijuana, Other Recreational Drugs, and Breastfeeding
- Massage
- Mastitis
- Mastitis Granulomatosa Idiopathic – Spanish
- Maternal Health and Illness
- Maternal Questions
- Milk after Weaning
- “Milk Coming In” and Engorgement
- Milk Fistula
- Milk Stasis
- Mondor’s Disease
- Montgomery Glands
- Mood and Anxiety Disorders in Pregnancy
- Mucous Poop and Oversupply
- Mythbusters
- Paget’s Disease
- Pain
- Pain During Breastfeeding
- Pelvic Pain and/or Incontinence
- Periductal Mastitis
- Period/Menstruation Returning
- Pets
- Phlegmon
- Placental Encapsulation
- Plastic Surgery
- “Plugs”
- Poland Syndrome
- Poop Transition After Birth
- Pooping After Childbirth
- Position and Latch: It’s All About the POSITION!
- Postpartum Mom
- Pregnancy and Birth
- Prenatal Breastfeeding Education
- Prenatal Breastfeeding Support
- Probiotics
- Psoriasis
- Pulling Off Breast
- Pump and Dump
- Pumping
- Pumping for Engorgement
- Pumping for 24 Hours
- Sebaceous Cyst
- Seborrheic Keratoses
- Self-Weaning
- Sex Postpartum
- Sick or Hospitalized Infant
- 6 Weeks to 6 Months
- Sleep
- Sleep Training
- Sleeping Through The Night
- Sleepy Baby
- Short Feeds
- Silicone Breast Implant Rupture and Silicone Breast Injections
- Six Months to One Year
- Sleep Regression
- Sleep Training
- Sleepy Baby
- Skin Tags
- Skin to Skin
- Smegma
- SNS (Supplemental Nursing System)
- Solids and Complementary Foods
- Spitting up Blood & Bloody Diapers
- Still Looking Pregnant
- Stop Bottle Nipples
- Stopping Milk Production
- Stretch Marks
- Substances of Abuse
- Surgery and Breastfeeding
- Surgery on Breast or Chest Wall/Lungs/Heart
- Surgical Procedures while Breastfeeding
- Surrogacy
- Swallowing
- Sweating
- Swelling Under Arm (Axillary Breast Tissue)
- Syringe Feeding