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Missing Trimester. Surviving the First Three Months of Your Baby's Life Outside the Womb
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Disponible dans votre compte client Decitre ou Furet du Nord dès validation de votre commande. Le format ePub est :
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- Nombre de pages199
- FormatePub
- ISBN978-3-565-25531-3
- EAN9783565255313
- Date de parution17/02/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Taille624 Ko
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurEmphaloz Publishing House
Résumé
We spend nine months preparing for the birth, decorating the nursery, and reading about labor. But almost no one prepares for what happens the moment they get home. "The Missing Trimester" addresses the concept that human babies are born "early" compared to other mammals, due to our large brains. The first three months of life are essentially a "fourth trimester" where the fetus is outside the womb but still needs a womb-like environment to survive.
This book is a survival guide for exhausted parents navigating this biological bridge.
It explains why newborns cry, why they can't sleep alone, and why the "cry it out" method is developmentally inappropriate at this stage. It offers practical techniques for recreating the sensory experience of the womb-swaddling, white noise, and rhythmic movement-to trigger the "calming reflex." Beyond baby care, it focuses on the mother's physical and emotional recovery, a topic often neglected in modern healthcare.
From healing after birth to managing the hormone crash, this book validates the struggle of the early days and provides a roadmap for turning chaos into connection.
It explains why newborns cry, why they can't sleep alone, and why the "cry it out" method is developmentally inappropriate at this stage. It offers practical techniques for recreating the sensory experience of the womb-swaddling, white noise, and rhythmic movement-to trigger the "calming reflex." Beyond baby care, it focuses on the mother's physical and emotional recovery, a topic often neglected in modern healthcare.
From healing after birth to managing the hormone crash, this book validates the struggle of the early days and provides a roadmap for turning chaos into connection.





