[House] San Francisco Parents of Multiples SFPOM General Discussion forum digest - 3/1/2013

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Fri Mar 1 02:15:03 PST 2013


San Francisco Parents of Multiples SFPOM General Discussion 2/28/2013
10:14 am - 3/1/2013

1. Comment: "Ferberizing" Twins (HollyBuchanan)
2. Comment: "Ferberizing" Twins (juliel08)
3. Comment: Pediatric Dentist (linoleum)
4. Comment: Pediatric Dentist (JudyDaniel5)
5. Comment: Pediatric Dentist (juliel08)
Topic: "Ferberizing" Twins

 We are planning on sleep training our twins using the Ferber
 method. (They each wake...

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With subject line: "Ref#76446219 - "Ferberizing" Twins"

 1. HollyBuchanan says...
 --------------------------------------------------------
 2/28/2013 10:30 am
 
 I agree, I'm a BIG fan of the dream feed technique. A
 10pm feeding which will get them through the night to
 5am'ish, then eventually they'll sleep in a little
 later, and you'll wean them off the Dream Feed.
 Email author: h.buch at hotmail.com
 --------------------------------------------------------

 2. juliel08 says...
 --------------------------------------------------------
 2/28/2013 1:25 pm
 
 I think the term "Ferberizing" has been misused quite a
 bit. While I'm not one to read lots of parenting books
 and like to trust my instinct more often than not, the
 one book I do recommend that you read is Dr. Ferber's
 book.
 
 http://www.amazon.com/Solve-Your-Childs-Sleep-Problems/dp/0743201639/ref=rec_dp_2
 Once you get a better understanding of how sleep works
 and how babies needs are constantly changing, you'll
 likely get a better idea of what to do and when.
 There's a time and a place for CIO (if that's your
 thing), and he'll explain all that. There's also a
 chapter on multiples which I'll be sure to read once
 the babinos arrive. We had a big sleep regression
 around 6 months with my fist singleton, and I realized
 after reading the book was because I'd feed her in the
 middle of the night, her organs were working overtime
 to digest the food, when they're really supposed to be
 resting. After about 3 nights of rocking her instead of
 feeding her, we were golden. Anyhow, the book is really
 awesome and flexible to different parenting styles, and
 I still refer to it in figure out nap schedules,
 bedtimes, etc. as my LO grows.
 Email author: julielegrand08 at gmail.com
 --------------------------------------------------------

-------------------------------------------------------------
Topic: Pediatric Dentist

 It's time for the first trip to the dentist! I'm looking for
 recommendations - especially...

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With subject line: "Ref#76441837 - Pediatric Dentist"

 3. linoleum says...
 --------------------------------------------------------
 2/28/2013 6:40 am
 
 We have been seeing Dr Rothman on Ocean Ave near City
 College in Mission Terrace, we highly recommend him.
 Reading books about going to the dentist really helped
 us. Describing what to expect, playing dentist at home
 to make it fun, etc. Good Luck!
 Email author: sfnyclin at yahoo.com
 --------------------------------------------------------

 4. JudyDaniel5 says...
 --------------------------------------------------------
 2/28/2013 8:09 am
 
 We live in Bernal Heights, and drive 17 minutes
 (including free and plentiful parking) to Shoreview
 Dental in Pacifica. Dr. Sepi Vafi is the pediatric
 dentist (she and her husband -- who handles the
 grown-ups -- run the practice). The practice was
 referred to me by one of my longest-time friends who
 has two boys and lives in Pacifica.Dr. Vafi and her
 team are super kid-friendly, and have a
 special-for-kids care zone (the practice designed their
 new building just last year). A video library keeps the
 kids entertained, and the staff is well-trained, has
 excellent bedside manner, great with kids and parents,
 and our kids teeth are well taken care of.Sepi Vafi,
 DDS731 Oceana BlvdPacifica, CA 94044Phone: (650)
 738-2100info at shoreviewdental.net (Please tell them we
 sent you!)FYI, we considered Kids Smiles, but they
 weren't in our insurance care provider network -- which
 is OK for standard care, but what happens when the kid
 cracks a tooth, has a cavity, or needs additional
 dental care? Potential costs abound.Best,- Judy(Ella
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