@nataliaavalenzuela:

nataliaavalenzuela
nataliaavalenzuela
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Region: US
Wednesday 20 May 2026 14:11:30 GMT
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elias_tour
PUERTO LÓPEZ TURÍSTICO 🌊🏝️ :
Y esa foto de perfil?
2026-05-20 14:26:45
20
eldesc73
EL_DESCONOSIDO_078 :
alguien sabe cómo sale en Google
2026-06-02 07:05:37
0
fernando.martinez9033
Fernando Martinez Sanchez :
mi vidaaa💓 me quiero casar 🥰💕😍😍😍💕
2026-06-03 06:22:09
0
crisstal200
Cristian :
Chulada de verdad 🥰
2026-05-27 23:18:30
0
carloscharly125
charlyRelaxer :
juguemos 😁
2026-05-27 19:41:38
0
casador_77
𖣘ᴰᵃʳᴋ᭄ꮯꮎᏼꭱꭺ :
2026-05-21 04:36:01
0
piqueomiedo2
ìṣââç✈️😏☠️ :
primero ok
2026-05-20 14:12:57
1
piqueomiedo2
ìṣââç✈️😏☠️ :
salúdame porfa
2026-05-20 14:13:11
0
dani.xiloj0
Dani Xiloj :
Holaaa
2026-05-20 14:34:44
0
renteria6777
Angxl_davxd♣️ :
A como?
2026-05-20 20:39:41
0
angelitoh1003
El prototipo :
Que
2026-05-27 07:16:33
0
sck_bravo
zaid⚡ :
ya tengo 2 grandes razones para faltar hoy
2026-05-20 17:25:20
3
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Other Videos

We often see babies skin-to-skin in the first hour after birth. Beyond the first hour, it may not be suggested again, and it falls off our radar. However, the benefits of skin-to-skin contact do not disappear. In fact, continuing skin-to-skin contact with your baby often, especially while breastfeeding, helps improve the breastfeeding relationship.
‌ Being skin-to-skin with your baby during feeding gives them the freedom to move their body more easily, unrestricted by clothing. Mittens on their hands can get in the way. Babies use their hands to feel their way and massage the breast before and during nursing. Without clothing, they receive more sensory input and can move along your body more easily to reach your chest.
‌ Skin-to-skin contact releases oxytocin, known as the love hormone, increasing the bonding experience between you and your baby. As oxytocin increases, cortisol, the stress hormone, decreases. Oxytocin is the hormone responsible for milk release. Even past the newborn stage, when skin-to-skin with your baby, you and your baby can better relax and encourage milk let down.
‌ Movement is crucial for babies. When they are skin-to-skin, it stimulates the specific part of their brain to move toward the chest and find your breast. Using their reflexes, they continue to wiggle and crawl until they reach the nipple, latch on, and begin to feed. During the latching process, they will gaze up towards your eyes and start the social interactions that teach them they are safe and emotionally supported. Skin-to-skin babies often gain weight more quickly and have more success with breastfeeding long-term. Skin to skin helps with latching because:
‌ Baby cries less and can calm down faster. Raises oxytocin level responsible for the milk ejection reflex. Increases bonding between parent and baby. Dads can do skin-to-skin as well! Allows the baby to use their sense of touch and smell more easily during latching. It helps older babies who have had latching difficulties have latching success. Touch input to the brain drives movement and makes neural connections. Repetition of skin-to-skin further strengthens muscles working together and their patterns for latching.
‌ Have you tried skin to skin while breastfeeding? Let us know what works for you and like this post if you learned something new. #breastfeeding #nursinghacks #newmom
We often see babies skin-to-skin in the first hour after birth. Beyond the first hour, it may not be suggested again, and it falls off our radar. However, the benefits of skin-to-skin contact do not disappear. In fact, continuing skin-to-skin contact with your baby often, especially while breastfeeding, helps improve the breastfeeding relationship. ‌ Being skin-to-skin with your baby during feeding gives them the freedom to move their body more easily, unrestricted by clothing. Mittens on their hands can get in the way. Babies use their hands to feel their way and massage the breast before and during nursing. Without clothing, they receive more sensory input and can move along your body more easily to reach your chest. ‌ Skin-to-skin contact releases oxytocin, known as the love hormone, increasing the bonding experience between you and your baby. As oxytocin increases, cortisol, the stress hormone, decreases. Oxytocin is the hormone responsible for milk release. Even past the newborn stage, when skin-to-skin with your baby, you and your baby can better relax and encourage milk let down. ‌ Movement is crucial for babies. When they are skin-to-skin, it stimulates the specific part of their brain to move toward the chest and find your breast. Using their reflexes, they continue to wiggle and crawl until they reach the nipple, latch on, and begin to feed. During the latching process, they will gaze up towards your eyes and start the social interactions that teach them they are safe and emotionally supported. Skin-to-skin babies often gain weight more quickly and have more success with breastfeeding long-term. Skin to skin helps with latching because: ‌ Baby cries less and can calm down faster. Raises oxytocin level responsible for the milk ejection reflex. Increases bonding between parent and baby. Dads can do skin-to-skin as well! Allows the baby to use their sense of touch and smell more easily during latching. It helps older babies who have had latching difficulties have latching success. Touch input to the brain drives movement and makes neural connections. Repetition of skin-to-skin further strengthens muscles working together and their patterns for latching. ‌ Have you tried skin to skin while breastfeeding? Let us know what works for you and like this post if you learned something new. #breastfeeding #nursinghacks #newmom

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