Best products from r/StayAtHomeDaddit
We found 11 comments on r/StayAtHomeDaddit discussing the most recommended products. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 11 products and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the top 20.
1. Ten Things Every Child with Autism Wishes You Knew: Updated and Expanded Edition
- Future Horizons
Features:
2. Evenflo Feeding Classic Tinted Plastic Standard Neck Bottles for Baby, Infant and Newborn - Teal/Green/Blue, 8 Ounce (Pack of 12)
PREVENTS NIPPLE COLLAPSE - Evenflo Feeding's Patented Micro Air Vents help prevent nipple collapse, and promote a more comfortable feeding experience for baby.EASY TO HOLD - Evenflo Feeding’s classic and iconic shape now has a fun, ergonomic twist! These uniquely shaped Classic baby bottles are in...
5. OXO Good Grips Sweep Set with Extendable Broom
Broom extends up to a full-sized broom with a quick twist for any sweeping taskFull sized broom head and large-capacity dustpan perfect for sweeping large areasWhen retracted, broom is ideal for sweeping dirt piles into dustpanThe broom has flagged bristles resulting in a larger surface area and a s...
6. Baby Placemat, Portable Silicone Placemat for Toddlers, Waterproof Baby Placemat Travel Food Mat Non-Slip Silicone Placemat Reusable Easy Clean for Babies (Green)
7. Twelve Hours' Sleep by Twelve Weeks Old: A Step-by-Step Plan for Baby Sleep Success
- Dutton
Features:
9. Pirate Pete I Am a New Big Brother
- OS: Google Android 8.1 (Oreo), Memory: RAM capacity: 4 GiB ROM capacity: 128 GiB , CPU: HiSilicon Honor KIRIN710, 2018, 64 bit, octa-core, 12 nm, ARM Mali-G51 GPU , Display Diagonal: 6.3 ", Primary Camera: 16.3 MP, Secondary Camera: 23.8 MP 2nd camera.
- Unlocked cell phones are compatible with GSM carrier such as AT&T and T-Mobile, but are not compatible with CDMA carriers such as Verizon and Sprint.
- Please check if your GSM cellular carrier supports the bands for this model before purchasing, LTE may not be available in all areas: FDD LTE: Cellular Networks: GSM850, GSM900, GSM1800, GSM1900, UMTS2100 (B1), UMTS850 (B5), UMTS900 (B8), LTE2100 (B1), LTE1800 (B3), LTE850 (B5), LTE2600 (B7), LTE900 (B8), LTE700 (B28), TD-LTE2600 (B38), TD-LTE2300 (B40), TD-LTE2500 (B41).
- This device may not include a US warranty as some manufacturers do not honor warranties for international items. Please contact the seller for specific warranty information.
- The box contains: Your new device, USB cable, Charger (may be foreign), Documentation.
Features:
10. Baby Brezza Reusable Baby Food Storage Pouches, 10 Pack 7oz - Make Organic Food Puree for Kids or Toddlers and Store in Refillable Squeeze Pouches, Bulk Set is Freezer Safe & Washable
EASY FILL REUSABLE POUCH – pouch has large, leak-proof double zipper opening on the side & stands upINCLUDES FILLING FUNNEL: Holds pouch open to make it even easier to fillEASY TO CLEAN – no hard to reach corners to trap food. Wide, side opening allows for access to the entire pouchDISHWASHER-SA...
11. LVL LED Rotating Disco Light Bulb with E27/E26 Screw Base (Multi Changing Color,3W) Party Bulb
- 【Secure Connection】LINKUP patented housed Type E (USB-C A-key) connector provides secure connection and consistent performance.
- 【USB3.2 Gen 2 2x2 Supported】Constructed with extremely high speed wires that supports USB3.2 Gen2 2x2 20Gbps, also backward-compatible with USB3.2 Gen2 10Gbps type C devices.
- 【Compatibility】Panel-mounted Type C female connector enables you to connect all USB type C ready devices such as phones, tablets, flash drives, mouse, hubs, and other USB C peripherals.
- 【Quality】Gold-plated contacts for high quality performance. Fully double shielded EMI/EFI wires to prevent noise interference internally and externally.
- 【LINKUP Cares】Backed by a LINKUP Limited 1-Year Warranty and complimentary premium online support. *** This adapter is designed for fully secured connection to prevent signal loss. However, some motherboards may not have enough clearance for the connector to fully plug. Please contact us if you have such issue.
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oh man, i’m sorry. i’m chasing the younger (neurotypcial and just as much as a challenge as the ASD one lol) so this may be a half answer but:
I’m so sorry. it is kind of a shit hand in a lot of ways. there is a mourning period. it’s normal. there are stages. anger at his different behaviors and developmental challenges, sadness at the dreams YOU both had for him that may not (or they might still, don’t give up) happen. but IT WILL GET BETTER. there is also joy. and God help me I’m a bad person but it helped to be reminded in support groups: someone always has it worse.
ASD kids are HARD on marriages. they don’t mean to, they don’t even know but even the greatest, best communication-sex all the time-always in sync ones should be labeled as immediately at risk once this diagnosis comes in. fight for yours. two partners are better. you NEED one another. AND you both NEED a regularly scheduled break. but it if you have to go it alone he’ll still love you too.
so sorry about the friend and family situation. we’re in a similar boat. my parents are nearby but they’re a little old school and limited physically so we use them sparingly. we can’t afford a babysitter on one income.
i hear you on therapy. it was a blessing we found ourselves in a very resource rich school district. but contact yours immediately. we did and we’re quickly accepted into an Early (intervention) Childhood School that was part of the public school system (free) and provided speech and social/emotional (and occupational therapy but he didn’t qualify for that) therapies. he was at a church preschool but he was miserable. bless them, they were untrained and clueless. but at the ECS he blossomed. became a leader and gained so much confidence.
btw, check your local library for some “sensory friendly programs.”
last thing, reading. you’ve found tons I’m sure. this helped me and my family kinda get oriented with my essentially new son. God bless you. hit me up with questions or just a need to bitch bc that’s important too. lol
yeah our little guy was late as well. We went in to be induced, stayed the night, and then the next morning shit got real fast and they had to do an emergency c-section. I was freaking out cause I wasn't sure what was going on and if my wife and/or unborn baby were going to be ok. On the plus side everything went fine and we didn't have to do any labor.
As others have said day 1 is awesome. The baby is super sleepy and you can just cuddle them. The following days are a bit crazy cause baby is hungry and mom's milk is still slowly coming in.
Also if y'all are breastfeeding, whenever you start introducing bottles avoid any of the ones that claim they are like a boob or good for breast feeding. The ones that best for breastfed babies are the cheap ones like these https://www.amazon.com/Evenflo-Feeding-Classic-Tinted-Bottles/dp/B00N9X4YZW
The reason why is that they allow the baby to latch on like the breast(our lactation consultant informed us after we had already bought all those other bottles. Doh!) Also Gerber bottles and Dr. Brown bottles with the same nipples work as well, but Dr. Brown is rather expensive. Ok I'll shut up now. Good luck I hope all goes well! Keep me posted!
My daughter is six right now, and I was (and still am) the main stay at home/work from home parent ever since my wife’s maternity leave ended when she was five months old.
I’ve long called her “chaos with a pony tail”. She was sprinting soon after walking, and at times on the playground I felt like the word I was saying most to her was “Careful!” She’s had tons of spills and I always felt like my reaction to those spills would teach her how to react to scrapes and falls, etc. I likened her falling down to a coin that landed on its edge, and whatever I did in that moment would dictate which way it would fall.
Now she’s in kindergarten, and has had a ton of scrapes during recess. Visits to the nurse are common for her, but nothing too serious, we usually only hear about them from her that night. One time just two weeks into her school year I got a call from the nurse, as she had collided with another kid by accident and ended up landing in a shrub with her neck getting scratched. After I talked with my daughter during the call (who told me she didn’t want to get picked up, and wanted to finish the day, bus ride home and all), the nurse got on and assured me that she’d be fine to continue at school but remarked that she was One Tough Little Girl.
She definitely loves dresses and princesses and pink sparkly girly stuff, but she also flips over rocks and revels in finding bugs we’d rather she avoid, like grubs and slugs. Her aunt gave her the book Not All Princess Dress in Pink, but she didn’t need to be taught that from a book. She figured that out on her own.
Our favorite was Joanna Cole's I'm a Big Brother. It will be too young for your 5yo, but probably about right for your 3yo. The language is pretty simple, but it introduces the sorts of things babies do and don't do, and what big brother can do and how to treat the baby.
I use three gallon plastic pails and fill them with common toys (duplos, Lincoln logs, potato head, barbies, etc). They have lids and stack easily. I store them around the side of the couch. It’s easy to sweep large swaths of toys into the container.
Also a hand sweeper with upright catch. It sounds stupid but half of the issues with cleaning up toys is the impending doom of throwing your back out.
For house keeping just rotate bathrooms through the week and clean before you leave.
Sweeping takes no time. I always do dishes when dinner is done before I go off and do anything else.
If you have a local neighbor kid who will babysit for an hour while you clean, it can be the best $15 you spend.
Also babywear the little one while you do house work. The older one can fend for themselves while you work for a few.
We followed the instructions in the book 12 hours' sleep by 12 weeks old. Sure, we bent the rules, but I'd say we stuck to it around 80% of the time. And, instead of 12 weeks, we probably ended it around 4 or 5 months. At the end, our kids were down to one wake up incident per night, so we furburized (spelling?) that out. From 6 months on (my kids are 6 and 3 now), both kids go to bed when we tell them, sleep through the night with zero issues, and never have a single problem getting up in the morning. Things in that department worked out better than I ever hoped for.
We had our second around the two year mark and Pirate Pete was the favourite book of the time (exciting new things, focus on the child not the baby)
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Im-New-Big-Brother-Princess/dp/1409313743
But these days (age 5) the Osborn series of lift the flap books would be better received (i.e. whats happening inside) - Ive not read this one, but we have others from Osborn
https://www.amazon.co.uk/How-Babies-Made-Flip-Flaps/dp/0746025025/ref=cm_cr_arp_d_product_top?ie=UTF8
Note:
The Osborn book has been flagged for inappropriate language by one reviewer, to which I would say, "What world do you live in where you can skip the body parts that having a baby requires?".
Also, one review says the "See inside the body" book contains the same pictures, but ours does not cover pregnancy (but is a worthwhile book to buy in any case)
I didn't even know those were a thing! Something like this?