You must strictly make sure–far ahead of time–that all doctors and nurses involved are aware you do not want circumcision. Get it in writing as a legal document. This is particularly important in American hospitals so no one says, “No worries; no charge for you!” They will be forceful. You want delayed umbilical cord clamping. The standard is to clamp it immediately once the baby has come out. Ensure that all doctors and nurses involved know–long before the final moments–that you want delayed clamping with the child immediately on the mother’s breast.
Vitamin K1 is important after birth, but injections are standard. You do not want to increase pain or trauma to the newborn. There are oral options for postnatal supplementation, but if you must get the shot, demand the one without preservatives. Increasing the mother’s intake of vitamin K (5mg-15mg during breastfeeding) also increases K in the breast milk. It’s standard to put antibacterial ointment on your baby’s eyes. Since this is to prevent pinkeye caused by STDs encountered at birth, all you really have to do is… not be a degenerate and not have STDs. Since pinkeye can be caused by other bacteria, choosing to substitute erythromycin for colostrum is perfectly acceptable and can even be better for health.
You can get all modern postnatal vaccines without thimerosal (a mercury compound) or any other preservatives. They will then usually be packaged individually. You do not want any combination vaccines. One of the most common–DTP–has been shown to increase infant mortality by 5-10 times. Flu vaccines are absolutely unnecessary and have been shown to cause miscarriages. The flu virus mutates far too rapidly to effectively prevent active strains. There is always more than one strain in the public. In short, just keep people with flu symptoms away from the child and mother for some weeks after birth, even if they’ve had their shots. Flu shots are also recommended several times a year throughout childhood development. Refuse them all.
There is no reason to use “formula,” either. If the mother absolutely cannot breastfeed, schedule a wet nurse as you near the end of the third trimester. Keep a breastfeeding supply available and limitless for the child. Your child will rapidly pick up language and emotions. Ensure you articulate words and speak proper sentences to your child. Make sure no one wastes precious learning time by making idiotic baby noises. The child imitates parents and others around him, not the other way around. If you speak multiple languages or know a native speaker of another language you want to introduce to your children before they reach adulthood, spend several hours a week speaking that language near the mother and child–even before birth.
And most importantly, listen to people replying to this comment telling me I’m full of shit–as long as they have citations and sources.
Vitamin K1 is important after birth, but injections are standard. You do not want to increase pain or trauma to the newborn. There are oral options for postnatal supplementation, but if you must get the shot, demand the one without preservatives. Increasing the mother’s intake of vitamin K (5mg-15mg during breastfeeding) also increases K in the breast milk. It’s standard to put antibacterial ointment on your baby’s eyes. Since this is to prevent pinkeye caused by STDs encountered at birth, all you really have to do is… not be a degenerate and not have STDs. Since pinkeye can be caused by other bacteria, choosing to substitute erythromycin for colostrum is perfectly acceptable and can even be better for health.
You can get all modern postnatal vaccines without thimerosal (a mercury compound) or any other preservatives. They will then usually be packaged individually. You do not want any combination vaccines. One of the most common–DTP–has been shown to increase infant mortality by 5-10 times. Flu vaccines are absolutely unnecessary and have been shown to cause miscarriages. The flu virus mutates far too rapidly to effectively prevent active strains. There is always more than one strain in the public. In short, just keep people with flu symptoms away from the child and mother for some weeks after birth, even if they’ve had their shots. Flu shots are also recommended several times a year throughout childhood development. Refuse them all.
There is no reason to use “formula,” either. If the mother absolutely cannot breastfeed, schedule a wet nurse as you near the end of the third trimester. Keep a breastfeeding supply available and limitless for the child. Your child will rapidly pick up language and emotions. Ensure you articulate words and speak proper sentences to your child. Make sure no one wastes precious learning time by making idiotic baby noises. The child imitates parents and others around him, not the other way around. If you speak multiple languages or know a native speaker of another language you want to introduce to your children before they reach adulthood, spend several hours a week speaking that language near the mother and child–even before birth.
And most importantly, listen to people replying to this comment telling me I’m full of shit–as long as they have citations and sources.
Get him/her as far away from jewish "doctors" as physically possible