Mothers & Others for a Livable Planet Guide to Natural Baby Care: Nontoxic and Environmentally Friendly Ways to Take Care of Your New Child
category: Going Green
Product Description
A friendly, step-by-step parent’s resource for safe, practical, and affordable baby care.
No job is more important to you than taking care of your child. Mothers & Others for a Livable Planet understand this, and they want to help. For the last ten years, they’ve been a leading voice for raising children in natural, nontoxic, and environmentally friendly surroundings. Mothers & Others for a Livable Planet Guide to Natural Baby Care puts all of their pioneering research, advocacy, and support right at your fingertips. This wonderfully practical and accessible resource offers straightforward information and simple advice on how to reduce babies’ and children’s exposure to environmental toxins and embrace safer practices and “greener” products. Engagingly written and clearly organized for quick and easy reference, the book discusses:
- caring for yourself during pregnancy
- eliminating dangerous chemicals from your home
- breast-feeding and bottle-feeding
- affordable organic baby food
- nontoxic rugs, paints, clothing, toys, and furniture
- avoiding pollutants such as pesticides, dust mites, molds, microbes, chemical fumes, and cigarette smoke
- safe soaps, shampoos, and lotions
- environmentally sounder diapers, furniture, and other greener product choices. Amazon.com Review
For a decade, the nonprofit organization Mothers and Others for a Living Planet has been an advocate for raising children in natural, nontoxic, and environmentally friendly environments. Now, the editors of the Mothers and Others newsletter The Green Guide, Mindy Pennybacker and Aisha Ikramuddin, have compiled hundreds of suggestions into a comprehensive guidebook ideal for all parents concerned with providing their children with safe, “green” surroundings.Pennybacker and Ikramuddin provide details and suggestions for preparing baby’s room, taking care of yourself during pregnancy, diapering the natural way, feeding your child, avoiding PVC in toys, avoiding the dangers of installing new carpets in baby’s room (nonnatural carpets “offgas” VOCs–volatile organic compounds–and all carpets can become a trap for allergens and dust mites), and much more. It’s not all warnings and cautions, though; the “Raising (and Protecting) Your Naturalist Child” chapter discusses the importance of exposing your child to the natural world, including ways to encourage empathy for animals. A thorough listing of “green” resources, information, and Web sites rounds off this highly useful guide. –Ericka Lutz


I did not find the information in this book to be accurate or helpful.
Rating: 1 / 5
We are exposed to thousands of chemicals in furniture, clothes, cleaning products, air, food, water. For babies’ sensitive, developing bodies these chemicals can pose life long developmental problems and introduce illness and disease. There are many choices you can make as a parent to reduce and eliminate your child’s exposure to harmful chemicals and this book shares those. Most are simple choices like choosing non-toxic paints and using natural household cleaners. Others, like paying a little more to buy an organic mattress to avoid the harmful fire retardant chemicals (recently banned in California) on conventional mattresses, may seem harder. But what wouldn’t you do to protect the health and well-being of the most precious person in your life? I’d do anything with in my ability.
This book has been a constant reference for me since having my baby. It’s an invaluable resource. If your pregnant or planning a baby, buy it now.
Rating: 5 / 5
Mothers & Others for a Livable Planet, presents Guide to Natural Baby Care by Mindy Pennybacker Aisha Ikramuddin. 4 out of 5 Stars!!
Overall, I found it to be a fantastic read, enjoyed the layout, and the freedom from seeing naked, or semi naked pregnate ladies. The book mentioned alot of things and this is the book that can go with you during your prengancy and after. It goes over designing a baby room, choosing products for your baby, and how to take care of the baby (i.e. bath, change diaper, etc).
I did find it to fall short in the area of “alternative” parenting or “village” parenting wherein the children are encouraged to sleep with the parents, have only breast milk, carrying a baby in a wrap/syrong, raising vegan children, etc etc, but aside from all of this, I’d recommend the book and I would purchase it myself.
Rating: 4 / 5
I am not to good with words but this book is great for anyone that loves their child as well as the environment. It has websites all through the book if you want to buy some eco-friendly products. I really enjoyed this book and have learned alot from it.
Rating: 5 / 5
While this book does have many resources for parents trying to incorporate non-toxic and environmentally-friendly practices into their parenting, it assumes a very traditional Western approach to parenting, one in which one of the biggest jobs new parents face is acquiring the right STUFF to parent. Although there is a lot of information on cribs, there are few recommendations for parents who might want to co-sleep or have a family bed, such as three-sided cribs that attach to the parent’s bed, or equipment to make the family bed safer. The book presents the pros and cons of cloth diapers vs. disposables but does not mention anything about natural infant hygiene or elimination communication. Even the cloth diaper section is pretty skimpy, about a page and a half. Nor is there much information on baby carrying and wearing products, such as the huge variety of fabric slings now available.
It’s not that parents who want to protect the enviroment need to adopt all of these practices, but a book that is supposed to offer ‘safe, practical and affordable baby care’ for ‘a livable planet’ should at least mention some of these options in some depth and help make parents aware of them. This seems especially important in that these choices will determine what and how much you need to buy for your baby. If you plan to keep your baby in the same room or bed with you, you won’t need worry about stripping lead paint in the baby’s room. If you plan to use an infant potty after naps, you may not need to invest in a changing table. If you wear your baby in a sling for most of her first 18 months of life, you may not need a stroller, bassinett, playpen, walker or rocker.
Use this book as a helpful guide to finding good, natural baby products once you’ve researched the most eco-friendly parenting practices (somewhere else).
Rating: 3 / 5