Pee-yew! I think I do! Even from all the way across the room here, I can smell your stinky, messy diaper! You know what that means, don't you? You are in need of a mommy willing and ready to lay you down on that changing table and take her time wiping you clean and powdering you nice and fresh before putting a clean nappie on you!
DiaperGirlBrittney, I must be able to smell it from so far away because of my finely trained mommy sense of smell! Hehehe. You know that we mommies are always supposed to be on top of our game when it comes to those things. If we can't smell it, we might not realize and then our little ones will have to stay stinky. It is definitely time for a clean diaper! And ohhhh, I will catch you sweetie! I have long legs and mommy is ready to scoop you up and get you nice and clean!
Without a finely tuned, "Mommy Nose", baby might have to stay in a dirty diaper.
If you think about it, that foul odor in baby's pants, is actually "mommy's best friend." In most cases, it is the familiar, foul odor in the seat of the diaper that tells mommy that baby needs changing. Sometimes Mommy gets lucky and sees baby turning red in the face, or hears baby making grunting sounds. But 90% of the time, it is the smell, the odor of a freshly filled diaper that always gets Mommy's attention.
A baby can't tell Mommy that he's poopy, so the odor in his pants always lets her know that he needs changing.
Hehe, yes! My nose has saved me from a lot of messy baby trouble on more than one occasion! I guess in a way, we should be thankful for the smell because otherwise unless we are checking, it certainly might take a while to realize!
Oh, you are very right, Mommy Janey! Some babies need to be a little embarrassed! Of course, some babies like that stinky diaper, so you need to know your baby really well!
I do love to put little naughty babies in their place!
of course they needs to be changed and nots sits in it....i mean yes it does make the baby feel more babyish, but I suppose it depends where you are too and the amount of wrinkled noses, as well as how the caregiver feels at the time about changing the baby.