Tuesday, 22 January 2019


Lesson 11 #refluxingbaby
Swaddling does relax the baby and helps them to sleep better. But sometimes excessive swaddling also increases the tummy heat and causes reflux.
Check the temp of the tummy, if it feels too hot just place a cold handkerchief on it. Dip a cloth or small towel in cold water, squeeze dry it to drain the excess water nd place it on the tummy. After one side becomes warm change to the other side.
Another option is to break water on the tummy the way I have shown in the video link
Take 2 steel bowls. A big bowl with flat base and a small one. Fill the big bowl with cold water and place it on the baby's tummy. Now take some water in the small bowl from the big bowl and pour it back into the big ball. In local language we call it "breaking the water over the tummy". Repeat this process ten to fifteen times and pat dry the tummy if any spillage occurs. This will cool dpwn the temperature pf the tummy instantly. Repeat this 3 to 4 times a day. Refluxes will be reduced considerably.

Monday, 21 January 2019

TDK BASAL BODY TEMPERATURE RECORDING THERMOMETER

Thermometers have kept pace with the changing times by evolving from the mercury bulb to a battery operated digital display and now it has grown up to be linked with an app. 
It is a clinical digital thermometer Linked with BbtHT app by tdk corporation.  It has high accuracy in decimal point precision of measuring temperature which is necessary while measuring basal body temperature. Basal body temperature is the lowest temperature of the body at rest in 24 hours of a day. It is usually measured in the morning just after waking up from sleep  everyday at the same time. This is done to chart the basal body temperature recorded on daily basis. Basal body temperature  charting helps to know the dates of ovulation and hence predict the fertile window period of the menstrual cycle as well as it Also helps to predict the date of menstruation exactly. It can also indicate pregnancy.  
Knowing the dates of ovulation is helpful for both conception and contraception.  
It is a very handy device and it comes with a transparent self design case cover which makes it carefree portability. Easy single button operation for measuring temperature as well as transferring data from device to the application on phone. The application itself will guide you for the necessary linking. It also has a user manual. 
The application is very useful as it charts and plots the graph with week’s recorded data giving clear analytical picture of the daily basal body temperature. A rise of temperature 0.2 to 0.4 degree Fahrenheit marks the occurrence of ovulation. It stays so for 3 days. The app is also a good menstrual tracker as you can record the start and end dates of menstruation . The Bbt Calender predicts ovulation and menstruation. It also has provision to record the weight on daily basis and charts it too. 
Menstrual cycles are so unpredictable some times that it can stress out a woman who is planning a pregnancy, a date, or an adventurous outing, or even a religious ritual or function. But this tiny device can help a lot to reduce the stress and overtime it ll become more and more precise in its prediction by following the body’s pattern. 
So grab your TDK thermometer soon, link it to the BBTappHT  application available on google play store and become carefree and stress free. No more doubts. No more unnecessary reluctance. Your life your


decisions. 

Wednesday, 15 August 2018

Worth reading pregnancy books

Books I read when I saw the two pink lines...
1)Pregnancy notes by Rujuta Diwakar-

Rujuta Diwakar is a leading health expert who helped kareena kapoor khan trough her pregnancy and even after delivery to be fit and back to work. This book recommends healthy diet plans, busts myths, suggests exercises and recipes. She advises to follow a diet which incorporates fresh local produce that is easily available over the packaged over rated products imported from other places. According to here our body is designed to upkeep itself best with the help of the local produce in sync with the climate and weather conditions we live in. She has also encouraged the importance of a balanced diet which includes ghee and natural sweetening sources like gur over artificial sweeteners. Pregnancy Notes: Before, During & After https://www.amazon.in/dp/9386224895/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_PLdrBbCPKM8T8

2)Fit pregnancy by Namita Jain. – Namita jain is also a wellness expert. This book is similar to the previous one and is in similar format too. I found pregnancy notes to be more useful interesting and handy. Fit Pregnancy : The Complete Health Plan For You And Your Baby https://www.amazon.in/dp/9350293447/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_9NdrBb1RAZ5T9

3)Awakening in womb by Dr. Monika Singh- Inspired from the tale of Abhimanyu in Mahabharat, this book promotes the school of notion that the mother’s thought process and subconscious mind is responsible in shaping the subconscious of the unborn baby in the womb itself or as Dr.Monika likes to call it ‘blueprinting’. She calls them miracle babies. She has written about her own life, various case studies, her experiments and results, everything in detail. More information about this can be found on her website (www.miraclemedicalmission.com). Awakening in Womb: Science of Blueprinting the Subconscious Mind of Your Unborn https://www.amazon.in/dp/1977863051/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_0OdrBbN6G7Q5W

A similar source I found on YouTube channel named ‘virtue baby’ which is by dr. Nitika sobti in collaboration with brahmakumari sister Shivani. (www.virtuebaby.com)

4)Chicken soup for the soul New Moms.- This is a light read for first time moms second time moms, moms to twins etc. comprising of 101 inspirational short stories of joy, love and wonder. These are too short stories of a page or two which you can easily read and sleep without worrying about giving a earmark, or even when you are lacking focus to keep yourself distracted from any uneasy pain or even between frequent washroom trips. New Moms: 101 Inspirational Stories of Joy, Love and Wonder (Chicken Soup for the Soul) https://www.amazon.in/dp/9383260831/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_i_QQdrBb0X9NTXR

Home remedies for monsoons

My father's home remedies for cough and cold during monsoon.
1) Try to make this medicine out of tulsi and ginger. Take 7 to 10 tulsi leaves and wash them nicely. Take 1inch ginger, wash it and remove the skin. Crush the leaves and ginger with a pestle and mortar. Do not grind it. Crush it nicely and then squeeze it to get the juice with ur clean bare hands. To this juice add a tsp of honey. Only 1 or 2 tbsp it will become. Have this tincture first thing jn the morning on empty stomach. This remedy cures as well as prevents cough and cold. My father used to make it for me and my sister.

2) U can also make a tea out of tulsi, ginger, black pepper, cloves, bay leaves, cardamom. Add salt to taste and mishri. Store this ale in a thermoflask and sip it all day.

3) Try to suck on half a inch ginger coated with salt or only a clove for long time by placing it under the tongue near the molars. The juice will be released slowly and soothe the throat.

4) U can also try sunthi ( powder of dried ginger) along with some warm ghee. Mix it with ur steaming hot rice in lunch time.

5) when I was in hostel and not too well to do all this, I used to rely on only hot water. I would carry my thermoflask like a kid to every where for those 3 to 4 days. And just chew 7 to 8 tulsi leaves if available.
Initially i didnt know that these remedies were actually so helpful. When i caught cough and cold in college, i visisted a lot of my professors who would give me various cough syrups with codeine, dextromethorphan, guaphensin, ephedrine etc but with no relief. Finally one of them gave me cough syrup reswas which was effective after finishing 2 bottles. So when ever i used catch cold, the persisting cough tooke two weeks to go even with this syrup. Then i became irritated with such long duration and tried to remeber my father's remedies. Amazing when i started doing it, i was relieved within 3 to 4 days. By the time the cold has gone, cough is also gone. No residual cough!
All these natural ingredients are also safe in pregnancy and help to build immunity also.

Nausea in pregnancy

How I dealt with nausea and vomiting in first trimester?

One fine morning I woke up feeling weak and craving for nimbu paani. The craving was so strong that I skipped my morning routine of tooth brushing and drank up 2 large tumblers of nimbu paani instantly. Only then it struck me that I had missed my periods. The upt card test confirmed it with 2 pink lines. I was about to shout at the top of my voice but instead I puked, holding my tummy I hit the bed and called for help. Happily in distress I was. Little did I know that this is going to be the story for next 3 months. But by the end of it, I had a list of items to alternate along with meals as I got too bored with only lemons. Some were easy and instant and some needed a few preparations. I have listed them down here.

1)The most easy peasy one is half a lemon juice with a pinch of salt and one smashed chilly. The smell of it relieves nausea instantly and improves the ability to take the food bite into the mouth.

2)Tomato chutney- 1 tomato fried lightly in oil and smashed with finely chopped onions, amada ( a type of ginger with raw mango essence in it) , finely chopped green chillies, finely chopped coriander and one finely chopped garlic. I had aversion to the smell of onion garlic also, so I used to skip them. And not to forget salt to taste. U can also put aamchur and chat masala.

3)Raw mango chutney- It was beginning of summers and raw mangoes were abundantly available in market. One finely chopped raw mango ground with 2 green chilies, a twig of coriander, half inch amada, one tsp cumins (jeera) and salt to taste. If the mango is too sour then you can add some sugar or jaggery. This chutney can be stored in refrigerator for 4 to 5 days and consumed as and when required.

4)Amla (gooseberry) can be cut into long pieces sun dried for to 5 days and then coated with salt and black salt. It is to be sun dried for 4 to 5 days more until the water has dried up completely and then stored in an air tight container. One piece of amla can be kept under the tongue near the molars for sometime and then chewed.

5)Ginger dipped in honey can also be placed under the tongue near the molars and sucked onto for sometime and later on chewed.

6)Thick yogurt with salt to taste and one green chilly smashed in it. But be careful not to eat yogurt directly from the refrigerator. Take the yogurt out of refrigerator at least one hour before your meal time.

7)Dahi chhas- The thick yogurt can be churned mildly by adding water in small amounts. A few tender lemon leaves, a twig of coriander leaves one green chilly, half inch ginger, half a lemon juice to be crushed roughly using a pestle and mortar. This mixture is added to the watery yogurt followed by salt to taste, a pinch of black salt, a pinch of amchur, chat masala and jeera powder. Stir it well to get the perfect blend. A sip of this drink will help to gulp down the food slowly.

8)Coriander tamarind chutney- A handful of finely chopped coriander leaves grounded with 1 tsp of pre-water-soaked cumin seeds, half inch amada/normal ginger, half cup of tamarind water, jaggery/sugar and salt to taste. The tamarind has to be soaked in hot water for an hour and then the flesh has to separated from the seeds manually and taken out. This chutney can be stored for 4 to 5 days in the refrigerator and consumed liberally along with meals. The taste of this chutney gets enhanced after one day.

9)Sun dried salt coated raw mango pieces (a.k.a ambula in odia) can be soaked in warm water for an hour and then crushed with a spoonful of yogurt, green chilly, few curry leaves and garlic. Raw mangoes have to be cut into long pieces and sun dried for a 4 to 5 days. Then they are coated with salt and again sun dried for 4 to 5 days until the water has dried completely. The mangoes become black in colour after being completely sundried. This mango can be used in various ways like in dal, with lemon juice, crushed garlic and green chillies, sambhar, etc. In odisha, a dish called ambula rai is also prepared using it with yogurt and mustard paste.

10)Readymade mango pickles and lemon pickles can also save the day if nothing else is available.

11)Peanut chutney- This is another of my favourite chutney which I prefer to have with all south Indian dishes. A handful of peanuts to be roasted and the red skin is to be removed. The peanuts are then grinded along with 1 tsp of cumin, 2 green chillies and salt to taste. This has to be freshly prepared and consumed immediately. It doesn't taste that good if stored.

12)Finely chopped fresh raw mango sprinkled with salt, black salt, jeera powder, red chilli powder, and chat masala. The smell helps to fight the nauseous feeling and chewing the tangy mango pieces feels heavenly. As kids also, along with my friends I used to steal raw mangoes by throwing stones and ask mumma to make this for us. We used enjoy it during the evening kaal baisakhi rains making various kinds of noises while eating.

13)Tomato khatta- This is an interesting side dish recipe which I demanded every alternate day. For this simple recipe, 1 tsp cumin seeds, paanch phoran, finely chopped green chillies and few curry leaves are to be spluttered in 1 tbsp oil in a wok. Then finely chopped onion is added and fried until golden. Then freshly chopped tomatoes, dates/ kissmiss, salt to taste and jaggery/sugar is added and covered over a low flame. After 10 minutes when the tomatoes become mushy, half a glass water is added and covered again for 5 more minutes. It is garnished with sprigs of coriander and grated coconut if avaiable and served hot with chappatis, parathas or even as side dish with rice.

14)Dahi baingan- this is a very common recipe, every household prepares it in its own way. Instead of deep frying the baingan, I prefer to shallow fry the baingan, in order to keep it healthy, along with jeera, paanch phoran, red chillies, curry leaves and salt to taste. Once it cools down, I add it to the smooth yogurt prepared by lightly churning the thick yogurt with small amounts of water. To enhance the taste, red chilly powder, jeera powder, aamchur chat masala etc can be added as per availability and garnished with coriander leaves.

15)Ambula rai- for this recipe the sundried salt coated mango pieces as explained earlier have to soaked in water over night. In a wok, 1 tsp cumin seeds, paanch phoran red chillies and curry leaves are splutterd. 1 tbsp paste of white mustard seeds is added to it followed by the pre soaked mango pieces. It is covered and allowed to cook over a low flame for 10 minutes and then it is cooled down. Yogurt is lightly churned by adding small amount of water to get an adequate consistency. Freshly grated coconut, salt to taste, red chilly powder, jeera powder, aamchur and chat masala are added to taste and mixed. The cooled down mangoes in the wok is then added to the yogurt mixture.

16)Boondi raita- Unsweetened boondi added to smooth yogurt with salt, sugar, red chilly powder, aamchur, black salt and chat masala also tastes good.

17)Freshly chopped cucumber and onion raita is also an option

18)South indian rasam.

19)Pre soaked tamarind smashed with green chillies and garlic.

20)Classic nimbu paani ( not to forget) with or without jaljeera.

All these various forms and types of sourness helped me to fair through those difficult 3 months. Even the smell of boiling rice used churn my gut out. So I have survived most of the nauseous days on only one large spoon full of cooked rice soaked in water with a half lemon squeezed in it and salt commonly known as pakhala in Odisha for the lunch and dinner. These chutneys used to b my side dishes as the taste of oil would also throw me up. I hope this list helps all the nauseous mothers to be able to eat their small meals with some relief atleast. Please add more to the list as variety is the need of the hour in the first trimester

#sourrecipies
#nausea
#firsttrimesterwoes

Constipation in pregnancy

How I fought with constipation and flatulence in first trimester?

I had constipation even before I was pregnant. I used have a strong cup of coffee in the morning and that usually helped. But in pregnancy we can't have so heavily caffeinated drink. Also the nausea and vomiting created an aversion towards coffee in the first trimester. And the problem of constipation loomed large for me. I used to feel a lot of abdominal discomfort and cry out of the pain. My elder sis in law is also pregnant now for 2nd time, she gave me some useful tips and suggestions to deal with it. I took her advice and tried them out my way. So I am listing here whatever works for me.

1)Psyllium husk works wonders for me. I soak 2 tbsp. of psyllium husk in half glass of water overnight ( stir it after adding water). In the morning i add hot water to it, so that it becomes a full glass of luke warm water with fully soaked husks. I drink it even before brushing my teeth. If u feel vomiting because of its sliminess you can squeeze in half a lemon in the morning. You can also add mishri/ sugar to it in the night itself so that it gets properly dissolved. I have gdm so I avoid it. May be on the first day u will not be relieved. But by the 3rd day you will definitely be relieved. It will also help to calm the churning stomach and gassiness.

2) Fibre rich fruits are also of great help especially ripe bananas( the best one ) and apple. All green leafy vegetables are also good source of fibres like bhindi, parwal and drumsticks. You can check out interesting recipies of these vegetable on babychakra.

3)Oats and meuseli are also fibre rich. You can also try chia seeds soaked over night.

4)Chewing one tbsp. of ajwain completely in the mouth and then swallowing it with mouthful of water helps to reduce flatulence a lot.

5)Raw papaya- Eating raw papaya curry for dinner also relives constipation. But its controversial . As per the older ladies of the house and common belief papaya is to be avoided during pregnancy. But in Rujuta Diwakar ’s book ‘the pregnancy notes’, I found that she has tagged it as a myth and busted it. So about this I am not so sure yet I ate it when I was in lot of distress and nothing was working out.

Normally, I used to peel the skin of papaya and cut it into cubical pieces. Then I usually wash it off 2 to 3 times and pressure cook it with salt to taste and turmeric powder for 3 whistles. Then in a wok I would splutter some whole cumin seeds, paanch phoron, red chillies, a few curry leaves with oil. And then I add finely chopped onions to it followed by hing/ asafoetida. Once the onions become lightly golden I add 1 tsp. Of ginger garlic paste. Once the paste gets cooked properly by leaving oil from sides as well as its smell I add finely chopped tomatoes. I cover it and let it cook for 5 minutes on low to medium flame. Finally I just add the pressure cooked papaya to the wok and let it cook covered for another 10 mins. I usually garnish it with fresh finely chopped coriander leaves if available. This recipe cooks in very less oil and is very healthy for normal people also. But during the first trimester as I was having aversion to oil and onion ginger garlic paste, I just used to boil the papaya with salt and turmeric powder for 3 to 4 whistles and add 2 to 3 pinches of jeera and red chilli powder. This powder is prepared by dry roasting whole cumin seeds and red chillies and then grinding it roughly like small chilly flakes.

6)‘WATER’ is the hero of constipation remedies- I can't stress enough on how much it is important to have at least 4 to 5 litres of water per day during pregnancy. As without increasing water intake, whatever you do, you will never be relieved of constipation. Because all the extra fibre that you will ingest, will gain mass only by soaking up water in the gut which will make the stool soft and slimy yet heavier enough to give you the urge for defecation. It is more effective and better to keep luke warm water in a thermo flask and drink out of it the whole day. Caution is to remember that it should be luke warm only not at all hot.

Besides for constipation, it is also necessary to drink adequate water to maintain a healthy level of amniotic fluid through out the pregnancy. It will also keep the skin sufficiently hydrated which will keep stretchy feeling and itching at bay and even reduce the amount of stretch marks. It will prevent urinary tract infection.

It can be substituted with flavoured drinks like dahi chas, lemonade, home made fruit juices ( musambi juice) or even tender coconut water which will cater both for nausea and weakness also by providing some form of glucose. Instead of making fruit juices for fruits like apple, orange , grapes or mangoes its better to have these as whole fruits as it gives the benefit of the dietary fibres which is lost upon juicing it.





If it is still not relieved then u can try syp looze, or syp duphalac or syp cremaffin after CONSULTING your GYNAECOLOGIST.

Please add to the list how you have fought with it. #firsttrimesterwoes
#constipation

Hing or asafoetida

HING or ASAFOETIDA

Hing is a well known Indian spice yet ideally ignored. In its raw form it has a very strong pungent smell which puts off many people even before they have used it. But, when the right amount of it is added to the tadka or masala of an Indian curry or even a drink it happily looses its smell to become so sublime as to be invisible. Since, it doesn't particularly impart any of its indigenous pungent smell or taste to the dish, it is easily forgotten or even ignored while cooking.

I was introduced to hing by my mom when I (paneer lover) complained to her that why paneer curries never tasted like her even when I was using the same recipe as hers and even more cashews. Infact while cooking any other Indian curry also I always felt that all the spices and ingredients that I used in the preparation retained their flavours and never really cared to come together and give the wholesome taste of the dish that I longed for. When I started adding a pinch of hing to the oil while spluttering the whole spices or tempering the paanch phoran or even while stirring the ginger garlic paste to perfection, I discovered the magic of hing. All the spices blended in each other to unleash the taste that I desired in my dish. So for me hing is the FLAVOUR BLENDER. It gives a smooth texture to the flavour of the curries and soups. Since then none of my dal tadkas or any curry go without a dash of hing in it. Yet its overuse may also ruin the taste by making it bitter.

Now coming to some facts about this mystic masala.

Hing is a dried latex extracted from the tap root of a perennial herb called ferula found in Iran and Afghanistan and is cultivated in India.

•Nutritionally it is rich I calcium, fiber, phosphorus, iron, niacin, carotene, and riboflavin.

•Antibacterial

•Antiviral

•Appetite enhancer

•Aides in digestion

•Aides in absorption of the nutrients from dal

•Reduces flatulence

•Relieves bloating

•Helps in respiratory infections

•Controls blood sugar

Besides tadka and curry, it can also be used in chhas and many other cooling drinks also.

Even topically massaging hing infused coconut oil on the tummy relieves gas an bloating.

A rolled ball of hing and jaggery is potent enough to stop hiccups.

This herb also holds Ayurveda importance in the treatment or remedies of many minor ailments.

All these properties of this mystic Indian herb make it a very important ingredient that must be included in a pregnant woman's diet during the 1st trimester especially as well as beyond.

So what are you waiting for, go and add this to your maid’s daily cooking routine!