Funniest Kids and baby Videos of the week – Try Not To Laugh

50 FUN FACTS ABOUT BABIES YOU WANT TO KNOW BEFORE YOU HAVE ONE ( Video is in the end)

  • NO KNEECAPS
    Babies are born without kneecaps. Well, technically they have kneecaps but they are still soft cartilage and only appear as little smudges on an x-ray. You babies knees won’t be completely ossified for 3-5 years!
  • LOTS OF BONES
    Babies have more bones than adults do, 300 bones to be exact! When babies are born not all of their bones have fused together, so as they get older, and their bones fuse together, they will have 206 bones like every other adult.
  • NOSE BREATHERS
    Babies are often called obligate or preferential nasal breathers. For the first few months of life, babies only breathe through their month when crying.
  • CUTE FOR A REASON
    Newborns are designed to elicit a strong emotional and protective response in their parents. Their big eyes, chubby bodies, and sweet little noses give parents the need to provide comfort and safety. Apparently, cartoon artists intensify those exact features when they want a baby to look cute on screen.
  • NO COLOR
    For the first 3 months of life, babies can only see in black and white.
  • MATH GENIUSES
    Babies have an elementary knowledge of physics and math! They know how to tell the difference between a set of objects and will notice if one is taken away, added, or even how many remain.
  • NEARSIGHTED
    For the first three months, babies can only see things approximately 8-12 inches away from their face. This allows them to be able to see their own hands and body. It’s also the distance between their face and their parents face when being held or breastfed.
  • TONE READERS
    Babies can recognize the tone of your voice and respond to it appropriately. So even if you are saying something nice with a smile on your face, if you tone is angry they will react to the anger.
  • PROFESSIONAL GROWERS
    If your baby continued his first year’s growth rate, he would be 170 feet tall by the time he becomes an adult!

  • BIG BRAINS
    A babies brain will double in size in their first year of life. That means that by the time they are 1-year-old their brain will be 60% of an adult size brain.
  • TEMPERATURE CONTROL
    New babies have instinctive reactions to temperatures. If they get too hot, they will stretch their arms and legs out. If they get too cold, they will move around more to warm themselves up.
  • SURPRISE!
    A baby is born on their predicted due date only 4% of the time.

  • SLOW TO WARM UP
    Right after a baby is born, it takes them 5 to 10 minutes to become used to something new in their environment. When a baby is around 3 months old, they are able to adapt in between 30 seconds and two minutes. By the time a baby is 6 months old, they can adapt in around 30 seconds.
  • SMILES ALL AROUND
    A baby’s smile in instinctive and not from watching and learning, like originally believed. We know this because even blind baby’s know how to smile.
  • SUPER SMELL
    A baby’s sense of smell is much more advanced than adults. They use this acute sense of smell to get to know their parents.

  • MAMA’S VOICE IS MAGICAL
    During the last 10 weeks of pregnancy, babies are listening closely to their mother’s voice. So after they are born, babies are able to recognize their mother’s voice.
  • MILK LOVERS
    The instinct to breastfeed after being born is so strong that babies have actually been known to crawl up their mother’s chest to nurse.
  • BABY TALK
    According to psychologists, parents instinctively talk to their babies in a low-keyed speech rhythm called “Motherese” which babies naturally respond to in a positive way.

  • HOLY CRAP…LITERALLY
    From birth to being potty trained, a child goes through roughly 8000 diaper changes!
  • EMOTIONALLY PERSPECTIVE
    Even inside the womb, babies respond to their mother’s emotions and feelings. During a study, researchers found when mothers listened to music they enjoyed through headphones the babies the babies were more active. This means they were responding to how the mother was feeling about the music and not the music itself.
  • SWEET TOOTH
    Babies can’t salt until about 4 months old, but they have a keen sense for sweet, bitter, and sour flavors. Breastmilk is very sweet, which is why babies love it.
  • IT’S NORMAL. PERIOD.
    Female babies can menstruate after birth. In the womb, babies are exposed to extremely high levels of estrogen. After a baby is born and those estrogen levels drop significantly and quickly, which causes something called pseudomenstruation. This means you might find a little blood in your babies diaper during her first week of life, but don’t worry because it’s completely normal.

  • ANGEL KISSES
    Birthmarks on babies are very common and about one-third of all babies are born with one or more of them.
  • MOM ISN’T THE ONLY ONE LACTATING
    Baby boys and girls can lactate. Sometimes that post-birth quick drop in estrogen can also cause something called galactorrhea, which is when newborns develop small breast buds and produce tiny amounts of milk from their nipples. It happens to about 5% of all babies and can last up to 2 months.
  • MUSIC LOVERS
    Babies remain calm twice as long when listening to a song as they do when listening to speech.

  • EXPERIENCED TASTE BUDS
    The taste of what a mother eats while pregnant is transferred to the amniotic fluid that the baby floats in. Because babies develop taste buds very early on in the womb, they can taste what the mother eats. Then, after they are born babies will remember those tastes and be drawn to those types of food later on in life. No wonder my daughter loves sour candy!
  • HAIR EVERYWHERE
    During their time in the womb, babies bodies are covered in a thin layer of hair called lanugo. During the last few weeks of pregnancy that layer of hair starts to shed. However, some babies are born before all that hair has fallen off. It’s actually pretty common, so don’t be worried if your babies is a bit hairy for the first few weeks.

  • ONE CUP
    A newborn baby has about one cup of blood in their body when they are born.
  • GOODBYE SLEEP
    Statistics state that on average, parents will miss out on 6 months of sleep in the first two years of their child life. Crazy!
  • TONS OF TASTE BUDS
    Babies have three times as many taste buds as adults, over 10,000 on sides, roof and back of the mouth. As babies get older, they will start to lose those extra taste buds.
  • TINY TUMMIES
    At birth, a newborns stomach is about the size of a hazelnut. At 3 days old, it’s grown to the size of a large marble. By 10 days old, it’s the size of a golf ball.
  • SKIP THE SWIMMING
    Some people think that babies are born with the natural ability to swim because of a reflex called bradycardic response, which is when babies naturally open their eyes and hold their breath when submerged in water. They will also naturally move their arms and legs around the when placed on water tummy-side down. However, despite these awesome reflexes because cannot actually swim on their own!
  • FLUCTUATING WEIGHT
    It’s normal for newborns to lose 5-10 percent of their body weight after birth. They are born with some extra fluid which is lost within the first few days. Healthy babies should be back to their birth weight within two weeks.

  • THE FIRST POOP
    For the first two days of their life, babies poop is very different than it will be later on. This poop is called meconium and is dark green or black, thick and sticky. It is made up of intestinal cells, the lanugo (hair) they shed in the womb, mucus, amniotic fluid, bile, and water. Makes me a little queasy!
  • FAMILIAR SOUNDS
    Babies will be soothed by sounds that remind them of the rhythmic sounds they heard in the womb, like their mother’s heartbeat. They may be why babies love falling asleep on people’s chests!
  • MEMORY BOOST
    Apparently, nap time helps with memory. According to a study, if a baby takes a nap after they learn something new they are much more likely to remember and retain what they had learned after they wake up.

  • CRAZY SLEEP SCHEDULE
    Newborns do not know the difference between daytime and nighttime. As a matter of fact, sometimes their sleep schedule will be completely reversed. They will sleep more during daylight and be more alert during the night. It takes about a month for babies to develop a more normal day/night sleep patterns.
  • BOYS VS. GIRLS
    There are differences between a baby girl and baby boy brains. Boy’s brains grow faster than girls in the first three months of life, especially the parts of the brain that control movement and coordination. Also, the senses of baby girls, like vision and hearing, are more sensitive than baby boys.
  • MULTITASKERS
    Babies can breathe and swallow at the same time until 7 months of age.

  • COLD FEET
    Newborns circulatory system is not completely developed when they are born. That means until babies are around three months old, their blood supply is more readily being sent to vital organs and hands and feet are the last priority. As a result, it is completely normal for babies fingers and toes to be very cold!
  • TEAR-FREE
    Although newborns cry a lot, they don’t have tears. Because newborn tear ducts can take 3-12 weeks to develop completely, they only produce nonemotional tears called basal tears to keep their eyes moist.
  • GESUNDHEIT
    Babies are known to sneeze a lot, but not because of being sick or having allergies. It is completely normal and just their bodies way of clearing their small nasal passages.

  • BIG HEADS
    Babies heads grow super fast! An average adult has a head has a circumference of 22 inches. Babies are born with an average head circumference of 12 inches and by one-year-old babies will have a head circumference of 18 inches. That means over half of their total head growth happens within one year!
  • HIGHLY OBSERVANT
    According to a study, babies who are 3-4 months old have the ability to notice small differences in similar images. This is an ability that is lost as we grow older to help us recognize the same objects in different scenarios and is an ability called perceptual consistency.

  • VERY SELF-AWARE
    Babies are born with a self-awareness that allows them to differentiate their bodies from other people.
  • BE CAREFUL WITH THOSE KISSES
    Kissing a baby on the ear can make them go deaf because of a condition that is known as cochlear ear-kiss injury. This happens when a kiss on the ear creates a strong suction that pulls on the eardrum resulting in hearing loss. Spread the word on this one!
  • MYTH BUSTED
    Despite the common belief that babies eyes are full grown at birth and never change, they are actually only about 75% the size of an adult eye.

  • SMOOTH MOVE
    Breastfed babies poop more frequently and easily than bottle-fed babies because breastmilk is a natural laxative.
  • HEY THERE FLO
    When your baby spends time in front of the mirror it may seem like they are basking in their own beauty. However, babies won’t realize it is their own reflection in the mirror until around 18 months old. Until then, mirror time is purely a social activity between two very similar looking friends. (Did you get my Finding Nemo reference?)
  • LISTEN CAREFULLY
    Apparently, babies have accents when they cry. That mean babies from around the globe will cry with the same cadence and melody as their native language.


Be the first to comment on "Funniest Kids and baby Videos of the week – Try Not To Laugh"

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published.


*


error: Content is protected !!