Dear Spike:
The little rag doll looked up at me with his dark drawn-on eyes and begged me not to humiliate him again.
But I had to do it. Over and over. Fold, fold, lift, sit, fold, tuck, fold, pull, pull, pin.
And repeat.
Fold, fold, lift, sit, fold, tuck, fold, pull, pull, pin.
Just about every stuffed animal and doll in your room had been diapered — and I’m still no closer at being good at this.
Love,
dad
9 comments:
Maybe a Snappi?
When I used to do cloth diapers I always had one safety pin above each hip. Maybe that folding method would be easier for you. One pin isn't any harder than two either. It was helpful to have them open and ready in your mouth. Love the blanket too. Did my sister wife make it? Katie
I saw these things called G diapers on Martha Stewart the other day. You should look into them. Flushable diapers. Crazy!
In this case, there's nothing quite like on-the-job training. You'll get the hang of it!
it sucked at first...but, for some reason a real baby is actually easier...and you know what, you learn just like you do anything else....i remember the first time i changed the oil in my car....wow.
- Jon
- Daddy Detective
- www.daddydetective.com
and i'd like to add...it looks like you did a pretty damn good job with those dolls too! No worries man!
- Jon
- Daddy Detective
- www.daddydetective.com
Easier on a real baby? It wasn't for me. Try doing it on a doll that moves.
The hospital had me put Clare's very first diaper on actually. It wasn't so hard. And by the time they can move you'll get the hang of it. We didn't use cloth though, so I had it easy and didn't have to deal with the folds and pins.
gDiapers are fantastic. I use a prefold instead of a flushable (for cost effectiveness).
I just have to know. It's been so long. Is it...Soccer Boy? He looks great in a diaper, but I'm a bit concerned about his foot falling off!
Grandma L
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