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"I think that people should not give advice. Period," she said. "People see it as open license when they see someone with a baby to give them their opinion on how they should have socks on, or they should have a hat on, or they need sunblock, or you shouldn't be taking them out, they're too young. Some people make themselves armchair experts because they've read a lot of things." That, she said, is why the what-not-to-say problem is so out of control these days. Blogs, social networks and simple online search are the armchair expert's best friends, said Jordan, who has a 6-year-old. Instead of advice, how about not coming over for a visit when you have a cold, even though you think you and your kids are no longer contagious? How about not asking the new parents of multiples: "Are they natural or IVF?" But she has a suggestion for new parents, too: How about not rejecting outright the experiences of your own parents due to their grandparently status? "A lot of new parents discount what their own parents actually know, but a lot of grandparents do have good traditional things that work really well," she said. First, she said, parents need to realize that they really do need help. "Before, you didn't need help because your family was right there and did everything, but so many people are far removed from their families." But make sure help is help. Visits should be 10 minutes, not two hours, in the early days unless you plan to throw in a load of laundry, do dishes or cook a meal. Dr. Richard So, a pediatrician at Cleveland Clinic Children's hospital, has three kids of his own. The youngest is not yet 2. His advice for well-meaning loved ones: "Leave the lasagna or manicotti at the door." Among the what-not-to-say moments that set his phone ringing: "Oh my gosh, what is that rash on your baby's face?" And "Oh my gosh, what's wrong with your baby's head?" Rashes: They're common for newborns. The head: It often doesn't exit a woman's body completely round. So what should a well-intentioned visitor be doing? "Ninety percent is just reassuring that mother that she's doing the right things, that she's not going to harm her baby," he said. "All a new baby needs to do is eat, sleep, poop and grow."
[Associated
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