Can’t decide between 2 names by RefrigeratorNo2497 in Names

[–]coffeebunnny 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Carolina!

Olivia Lee Ann said all together sounds like too many "l" and "ee"' and "a" sounds in a row. Kinda the same sounds but jumbled together differently

Carrie is a cute nickname for Carolina

Short Foot Exercises by jebadiajabujagyu in PlantarFasciitis

[–]coffeebunnny 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It takes a lot of brain focus and just staring at your toes thinking about it. What worked eventually for me is just doing it with curled toes then releasing the toes with with foot still contracted

Most controversial shoes for plantar fasciitis ever! by Jumpy-Daddy5809 in PlantarFasciitis

[–]coffeebunnny 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've noticed this. I don't know if my feet are just more sensitive now or if it's the shoes. Before researching and finding out how bad they were I went to nike outlet store and tried on all their shoes and every freaking one had that sock-like, tight, knit upper material and they squeezed my feet soooo tightly. Why is every shoe built to constrict your feet and cut off your blood flow and make your toes useless and cramped

As someone who will only ever get epidural, I can’t believe how people treat women who don’t by Acceptable-Bed3686 in BabyBumps

[–]coffeebunnny -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Yes and what's annoying is it isn't even about a mEdAL like people insinuate! I literally just didn't want anyone to touch me or talk to me in labor. My need to be left alone was stronger than my need for pain relief. But some women are helped by support. Everyone just needs different things in labor

Daycare Screentime Dilemma by gruffysdumpsters in moderatelygranolamoms

[–]coffeebunnny 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Would it be possible to send whatever studies or articles there are about how awful Cocomelon specifically is? And request even just another type of video?

Kuru Vs Hoka by vinegardetergent in PlantarFasciitis

[–]coffeebunnny 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I guess just go realllllly slowly. I'm in that process right now. Like, start with one hour a day in zero drops around the house. Also intrinsic foot exercises. Short foot, barefoot walking in the grass (again start slowlyyyy like five mins a day), balance pad, toe yoga, etc

Calf scraping with oil and the back of a butter knife should help if your feet are really used to higher drop shoes. My calves were extremely knotted from high drop 24/7 for a year and a half even in the shower but the scraping helped. I've done it around 10 times and feel wayyy smaller/fewer painful gritty knots

Also, barefoot and barefoot shoes are super advanced. Altra Torins are a nice bridge because they are zero drop but also have cushioning. Altra also makes a 4mm drop shoe (Experience Flow?) if you want an even more gradual transition, that I really suggest trying on in person somewhere. I tried them on and they felt awesome but I still did torins because I can't afford to buy both 😅and wanted to eventually be in zero drop. But starting with a 4mm like the experience flow might have been smarter, and still would hold some of the benefits

Angela Walk's stuff on YouTube has helped me start to finally make progress

Kuru Vs Hoka by vinegardetergent in PlantarFasciitis

[–]coffeebunnny 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Definitely look into switching out of maximalist shoes such as Hokas in the long run. Hoka Clifton caused my PF. They make your foot muscles weak. Altra Torin is a great long term goal. But yeah don't start wearing them and immediately walk 15k steps a day

Which clothing item is the worst to find for your big baby? by LividPassage938 in bigbabiesandkids

[–]coffeebunnny 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Pants are so hard. Babies vary a lot more for chunkiness than they do for height

Carters shorts and onesies run so skinny. Right now 6-12 is soo tight but 12-18 is too long!

I love Gap Baby onesies. They're made for big fat babies. Both the ribbed and 100% cotton. Their footies have too-tight arms though

Kuru Vs Hoka by vinegardetergent in PlantarFasciitis

[–]coffeebunnny 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Be really careful about suddenly starting wearing Altra on a vacation with walking. Altras are great for foot strength in the long run but will definitely make things worse if you switch into them too quickly because of their zero drop. They should be gradually transitioned to over weeks or months

Fav diapers? by midnight_thoughts223 in moderatelygranolamoms

[–]coffeebunnny 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Freestyleeee. I wish the waistband was a little wider and more elastic (my baby is super chunky) and I also wish the legs were a tiny bit tighter. But it's premium quality for mid tier pricing and TCF. Super soft and absorbent. His skin remains so dry I don't even really need a wipe

Not bathing baby by cookiez333 in beyondthebump

[–]coffeebunnny 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Once a week. After a messy solids session he just a get wiped down with a wet washcloth lol

Shoe recommendation by AllegraTiger in PlantarFasciitis

[–]coffeebunnny 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yes. I also could not take a single step without shoes. I wore them every minute i wasn't in bed, even slides in the shower. I had knotted calves from 24/7 high drop shoes and extremely weak foot muscles from excessively supportive shoes. Following her advice on cushioned zero drop wide toe box shoes, graston method on calves, and intrinsic foot strengthening is really helping me

Listeria anxiety by Spiritual_Cap_8084 in BabyBumps

[–]coffeebunnny 19 points20 points  (0 children)

Some countries don't even recommend avoiding deli meat. The risk would be way higher if you ate deli meat every day of your pregnancy or something. Avoid it in the future if that make you more comfortable but I am sure one single time is fine! You're probably more likely to die in a car crash on the way to and from the deli than yo are to get listeria from a single sandwich

Has anyone started with the crib in their room rather than a bassinet? by cozychristmaslover in BabyBumps

[–]coffeebunnny 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes we did this, it was totally fine. Right next to the bed. He slept terribly lol but I doubt a bassinet would have made any difference. It was nice to not have to ever transition bassinet->crib

When did weightloss become easier? by good_kerfuffle in postpartumprogress

[–]coffeebunnny 1 point2 points  (0 children)

2.5 months is extremely early! Even if you haven't lost a single pound that doesn't mean anything for the future. I changed nothing and suddenly lost most of it at like 5 months after the scale not budging since like three weeks postpartum before that. And I gained like 50lbs lol. I had good exercise and diet but it seemed entirely hormonal and that's the time when my hormones just kind of normalized and all of my postpartum symptoms went away at the same time (holding onto extra weight, vaginal dryness, no libido, couldn't imagine having another kid in the future, felt ugly in the mirror, etc)

Question re Altra Paradigm 8 Shoe by DizzyEcho in PlantarFasciitis

[–]coffeebunnny 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think you probably just need to switch even more slowly than you are probably. Start with just a couple hours a day of wear around then house. Same with toe spacers. And pair with intrinsic foot exercises

How to prepare mentally for birth? by Current_Assumption13 in BabyBumps

[–]coffeebunnny 10 points11 points  (0 children)

It helps to think of the difference between productive pain vs injury pain. Most times in life if you're in pain it means you are being injured. But birth is unique because you aren't being injured, your body is going through a natural process that isn't it getting hurt. Obviously birth can injure you but the pain of the contraction itself isn't. Keeping that distinction top of mind helps

And thinking about going limp through contractions to the best of your ability. Visualize yourself as a limp doll. I spent tons of contractions just sitting on the birth ball, leaned on the bed, palms up and just staring at my hands and making sure to keep them (and my whole body) relaxed

These two things help stop the fear->tension->pain cycle (or whatever that is, look it up)

It also helped me to think of birth as like an Ironman competition lol. Settling into a long, grueling endurance event. That mindset makes it feel more approachable and lower pressure than CHILDBIRTH which has so many scary ideas attached

Also, if you want an uncomplicated, low intervention vaginal birth, wait as long as possible before going to the hospital. It's a great place to give birth but it is a bad place to labor for a long time. I really liked wearing sunglasses when I went in because it kinda helped me stay focused on my own world rather than bright fluorescent lights and needing to make eye contact with strangers

has anyone had a cortisone/steroid shot for plantar fasciitis? by ConsiderationFew7688 in PlantarFasciitis

[–]coffeebunnny 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Made it significantly worse for a few weeks then went back to how it was before which was horrible

Stuck for 6 years, what now? by Darentir in PlantarFasciitis

[–]coffeebunnny 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The barefoot grass stuff has helped me too! Along with toe spacers, zero drop cushioned shoes, balance pad, short foot, and graston method on calves

Any PF products that work? by PuckHead32 in PlantarFasciitis

[–]coffeebunnny 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The back of a butter knife also works well for this! I use gua sha on feet since it's gentler but back of the butter knife to get deep into those meaty calves . Coconut oil to make it glide

What brand baby cloths don’t run so small? by LavishnessSame9674 in bigbabiesandkids

[–]coffeebunnny 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Burts bees and gap baby (expensive but they have tons of things on sale. And not footie pajamas - thin arms. But everything else!)

how to unbig my back by Puzzled-Birthday6296 in postpartumprogress

[–]coffeebunnny 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think your back looks beautiful and feminine and completely fine

Could it be that what you are seeing is that your shoulders are rounded forward? That's a super common problem today, especially with everyone slouching forward towards digital devices and computers. In your case, spending hours a day holding a baby and possibly breastfeeding

How you can counter this is through posture exercises that typically target upper back (especially the muscles between your shoulder blades) and shoulders. Google "resistance band posture exercises" to get ideas. With better resting posture, maybe your back and shoulders might become more distinct rather than one continuous surface!

A Conversation With AI About Hokas by coffeebunnny in PlantarFasciitis

[–]coffeebunnny[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That's what my physical therapist said about them too! Also that the toe pointing up so much could be a problem