. How I kept my baby well . ilk supply. This wouldhave been the right time to have begun to wean him,but I was very anxious not to introduce the new foodtill the warm weather was well past, so I still nursedhim, at the risk of underfeeding, and avoided therisks of j)repared food. 9. Ninth Month. (October.) (See Chart IX.) llie Beginnhig of Weaning. Beief summary of the month. This was a monthof problems. The babys customary long night napswere broken two-thirds of the nights, so that he wassleeping only 54% of the total time, as against 58%of the j)revious month. He was nursing two minuteslong


. How I kept my baby well . ilk supply. This wouldhave been the right time to have begun to wean him,but I was very anxious not to introduce the new foodtill the warm weather was well past, so I still nursedhim, at the risk of underfeeding, and avoided therisks of j)repared food. 9. Ninth Month. (October.) (See Chart IX.) llie Beginnhig of Weaning. Beief summary of the month. This was a monthof problems. The babys customary long night napswere broken two-thirds of the nights, so that he wassleeping only 54% of the total time, as against 58%of the j)revious month. He was nursing two minuteslonger at each meal than during the previous month(101/4 minutes per meal), and I had begun to giveother food in a bottle, average six and one-halfounces, 59 meals, out of 195. (For formulas, seechart.) The feces were coming almost twice as fastas during the previous month (one in 141/^ hours);he was crying nine minutes a day, on an average, *The regular order of writing up the 13 items is omitted tliistime to avoid Fig. 7. Studying a new toy. (Age, eight and a quarter months.) 52


Size: 1398px × 1787px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectinfants, bookyear1913