The smelly baby problem

(worksinprogress.news)

88 points | by dionysou 2 days ago

12 comments

  • jonathanlydall 2 hours ago
    I enjoyed the article. Nappies are very impressive and something I never really thought about before becoming a parent.

    Reminds me of something I often slightly chuckle about as a parent.

    I’ve often encountered non-parents, particularly teenagers, who remark how the thought of changing nappies horrifying and a really big deal. But as any parent knows, changing nappies is really one of the easier parts of looking after babies and toddlers.

    • Aurornis 1 hour ago
      I had read so many casual internet comments about infants being horrible and how unbelievably difficult it was that by the time I actually had kids, it seemed almost mild by comparison.

      It's not an easy thing, but some of the histrionic claims about child raising on the internet are really out there. It's no wonder kids are horrified by the thought.

    • munchbunny 1 hour ago
      > But as any parent knows, changing nappies is really one of the easier parts of looking after babies and toddlers.

      For sure, probably because stinky diapers are visceral but psychological challenges aren’t, yet I think most parents would agree about having to dig far deeper into our inner resolve to deal with age-appropriate behavioral issues.

    • Andrex 2 hours ago
      A soldier adjusts to the horrors of war in the same way, fwiw. ;)
    • ignoramous 1 hour ago
      > But as any parent knows, changing nappies is really one of the easier parts of looking after babies and toddlers.

      When you have twins, or triplets, or more... Nothing at all is easy. Unless you're privileged (or have help), their early years become your living life's only work.

      > ... encountered non-parents ...

      One reason why I hold anxiety for infants at orphanages or under care.

  • forcedfakelaugh 7 minutes ago
    Our family uses cloth diapers (except when we’re traveling). We chose them because we don’t trust the chemicals in disposable diapers that come into contact with such a sensitive area. They’re a bit labor-intensive, but having a washer and dryer helps a lot.
    • intrasight 0 minutes ago
      We did as well. We were fortunate to have a good diaper service in the neighborhood. I think it was less expensive than disposables.
  • mrcsharp 2 hours ago
    This is the first thing I read this morning and I'm not even a dad yet (or maybe never).

    I miss this side of HN nowadays.

  • arjie 2 hours ago
    Spock! A classic. My parents, when raising me in the '80s and '90s, had a copy of his book and tried their best to follow what it said. I still recall the cover with the smiling baby. An amusing anecdote my father now has retold many times over (as fathers do) is that despite Spock's best advice there was something that I refused to do. His friend, a psychologist, pointed out that while Spock's advice might be good, my father could not expect me to behave as described because I had not read the book.

    Another thing that's interesting here to me is the two fingers below the diaper to avoid sticking the infant with the pin. Two fingers under the diaper is still standard enough guidance that we and others we know received it at the hospital when diapering our child, though the reason expressed was one of tightness. I wonder if perhaps the former is the origin and the latter is a backformation.

    And finally, the environmental question. Since my wife and I are quite old[0], and I want us to have more than one child I have pushed our household to the extreme end of consumerism[1]. We live in a 2 story flat in San Francisco, and until recently we had a changing station downstairs and two upstairs, with a diaper pail by each.

    Here I encountered the problem that plagues anyone who has many battery-powered appliances - what convenience you gain in use, you lose when it comes to replace batteries. The Diaper Genie tall can we have is a very effective device at keeping smells in, but multiple cans means the time between replacement is doubled - something which you are rapidly made aware of by your senses[2], when it's time to replace the bag. The convenience is still worth it.

    I do have a friend with more children than us, who will probably continue to have more children than us, whose family uses cloth diapers. So it is not an impossible task, and for someone adequately concerned about the environment and appropriately disciplined, perhaps quite straightforward to do.

    0: if you want to see what happens when you have a baby near 40, https://wiki.roshangeorge.dev/w/Pregnancy

    1: my rationale was that by easing the difficulties of pregnancy, I might reduce any resistance my wife might have to having the next child.

    2: "Pain, even agony, is no more than information before the senses, data fed to the computer of the mind. The lesson is simple: you have received the information, now act on it. Take control of the input and you shall become master of the output" - Chairman Shen-ji Yang.

    • sikozu 1 hour ago
      Thanks for the link! I've never seen this documented in a wiki format on the internet before, truly cool.
    • m463 2 hours ago
      > plagues anyone who has many battery-powered appliances

      costco sells these AA+AAA coast lithium ion batteries that are 1.5v and seem to have high capacity and long charge time.

      Seems better than either duracell disposables or the nimh rechargables that I use.

      • XorNot 1 hour ago
        Oddly enough I have a whole bunch of the lithium-ion ones with a USB-C connector in the side. Keeping a specific charger around for batteries sucks but I have a lot of Anker chargers so this works quite well.
        • m463 28 minutes ago
          These batteries have usb-c charging with a charging LED and come with a usb-a to 4x USB-C cable. Pretty convenient.

          In comparison, the duracell batteries have a pretty good lifetime, but just go dead. They also don't work in the cold.

          the nimh batteries are rechargable and somewhat convenient, but have a short lifetime. This seems to be because they are 1.2v and the devices think they're low on power more easily, plus their self-discharge is lots faster than other batteries.

  • msuniverse2026 2 hours ago
    Seems easier to just sit em in the backyard and hit em with the hose
    • speed_spread 2 hours ago
      This has interesting side effects below freezing temps. Icicle babies don't smell at all until they thaw.
      • drfloyd51 1 hour ago
        They hold their poses better when they are frozen too.
  • wodenokoto 1 hour ago
    I’ve seen the cotton diapers my parents used for me and I don’t see how they could have competed with any lackluster version of the disposable diaper mentioned in the article.
    • yen223 44 minutes ago
      I use cloth diapers, but modern disposable diapers can hold a lot, a lot of pee. Significantly more than any cloth diapers can. This means a lot less blowouts with disposables.
  • schnitzelstoat 2 hours ago
    This was really interesting! I’d never considered how challenging it is to manufacture and mass produce them.

    The books it mentions of business/corporate histories look worth a read too.

  • dllu 2 hours ago
    Nowadays some parents went back to opting for cloth diapers. Apart from the obvious environmental aspect, there's the idea that ultra absorbent and comfy diapers disincentivize babies from signalling that they are about to poop. Apparently, babies can communicate when they need to go even quite early on, in what's called "elimination communication". This also makes them a lot easier to potty train later on.

    [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elimination_communication

    • mikestorrent 2 hours ago
      I used cloth diapers to great effect with my two kids. We'd use disposable ones when going out, but for around the house (and at daycare, bless them!) we were able to use cloth. I think we saved a pile of money, and yes, they were both trained pretty early.

      Nobody wants them, even free... I guess I'll just throw them all out eventually, I've offered to new parents and they're all horrified by the concept

      • yen223 47 minutes ago
        Haha, we got second-hand cloth diapers. Figured it can't be worse than what our little one is going to do to them!
    • hermanb 1 hour ago
      Our baby was capable of sending these signals when she was a few weeks. So most pees she does hanging above the sink. This saves so many diapers, crazy. And much more comfortable for her to never have a wet butt, not even a minute. Would recommend!

      I think within the next few months we can actually get her to go to the potty by herself. She’s 15 months now.

      This industry wasn’t just good. It did destroy babies sensitivity to soiling.

    • danielodievich 1 hour ago
      We had cloth diaper service for our two children, where they'd deliver a huge stack of nice soft thick cotton squares, and take away the dirty ones, once a week. They barely smelled, especially in the beginning before solid foods start. They were excellent as burpy cloths on the shoulder too. Disposable diapers were more excellent for outside, and at later times for sleeping through the night when we realized that the absorbency was better for sleep. We definitely felt better about the environment with the reusable cloth ones.
    • DonHopkins 1 hour ago
      I thought "Elimination Communication" was the technical term for Trump tweeting from the toilet.
  • cogogo 2 hours ago
    Our kids have been out of diapers for a couple of years. We loved these bamboo diapers[0] Nearly as good as pampers. Much softer and much better for the environment. I have no relationship to the company.

    And disposables dropping at 10cents a pair. Holy crap! I thought they were expensive now.

    Finally we had a crazy trustee in our condo assoc that wanted us to scrape the poop off before we threw diapers away in our community barrels (in sealed bags of course). We just smiled and nodded.

    [0]https://dyper.com/

  • greekrich92 1 hour ago
    Great read. Being an engineer in the mid 20th century must have been fun and satisfying.

    We pay for a diaper service. The price is comparable to disposables. The population density where I live helps with the price I'm sure.

    • fsckboy 1 hour ago
      it is recommended (search, you'll see) that at home you don't wash your underwear with your other clothes because there is a nonnegligible amount of fecal matter and associated bacteria remaining after washing.

      extending that notion to nappies being community washed in large vats (separated by mesh bags and kept separable?) is horrifying. I suppose they put in some chlorine bleach to sterilize? Still, chlorine bleach might whiten the masticated corn kernels but...

      • xyzzy_plugh 1 hour ago
        I think your imagination is much worse than reality. While your home laundry is arguably questionable (a lot of the sterilization occurs in the drier!) industrial laundry is a different ballgame altogether. How do you think hospital bedding gets cleaned? Most if not all industrial laundromats do regular testing of cleaned items to test for bacteria, organic matter, etc.

        A nappy service is very likely to do a much better job than you'd do at home.

  • AbcCartCurt 1 hour ago
    Sa
  • IncreasePosts 3 hours ago
    Is this the first written reference to having a poop knife?