Friday, May 31, 2013

Baby Homeschooling


When looking through the archive of the local mom forum, homeschooling for preschool and earlier was met with some contention.  Several posters asked, "Isn't this just parenting at that age?"  Yes.  Yes, it is.  It is parenting with the intention to educate and parenting with a child's potential in mind.  Even if parents don't consider themselves homeschooling their child this early, they may in fact still be approaching life at home with education in mind.  Parents can actually do nothing extra, and children will naturally develop and learn what they need to learn right now.  There's no pressure at this age.  But, the goal is to already be in a routine by the time it matters.  That we might already know some of our options and we're not going into homeschooling from scratch.  That we don't miss opportunities for growth when she wants them.  We will know our child's likes and dislikes better.  We will know how she learns the most effectively.

My nephew spent a lot of time with my mom, who used that time to teach him the basics.  He went into kindergarten knowing so much that the teacher set him up with first grade materials at home so that he wouldn't get bored.  His parents decided to not skip him ahead, because they were worried about his overall maturity level. Since we already know we are going to homeschool, it will only take a little extra effort to get started at this age.

How do you homeschool a baby, you ask? Simple! By exposing him/her to different things, such as different music, stories, poems, nursery rhymes, people, places, textures, games, sights, sounds, foreign languages, sign language, etc. Brightly Beaming Baby has a mock up curriculum for year one and year two, from which I pulled some ideas into our own.

Here are some ideas for this age:
  1. Show baby hand signs
  2. Play different music
  3. Dance to different music with her and for her
  4. Create time for her to spend on her tummy, sitting up assisted and unassisted, and standing assisted
  5. Play games, such as peek a boo, itsy bitsy spider, and others.
  6. Read stories to her
  7. Read nursery rhymes to her
  8. Read poems to her
  9. Gymboree class
  10. Baby yoga class
  11. Swimming class
  12. Music class
  13. Play dates
  14. Sing songs, especially educational songs that she can eventually sing with us (such as ABC's, the 50 state song, etc)
  15. Provide something with different textures on it
  16. Play music or speak in a foreign language often
  17. Story time at the library
  18. Name and describe things for her 
  19. Get baby outside as much as possible by taking walks, sitting on the porch, and laying on a blanket at the park or in the backyard
Something like reading to her can be done every day, but we're staggering out the various class options.  Right now, we're just doing two classes/activities outside the house beyond the occasional play date. I also have a plan to put the alphabet, numbers, and maps on the walls of one of the rooms in the house shortly.   My mom said that my nephew, Isaiah, loved to play with the magnetic letters on the fridge, too.

Thursday, May 30, 2013

Why Homeschool?


There are many reasons to homeschool, and the reasons vary from family to family.  Sean and I knew we wanted to homeschool not long after I became pregnant. He was adamant about it, and I got on board after researching the answer to the socialization question. Do homeschooled kids socialize less? Not if parents put effort into connecting their kids with other kids through activities and play dates. With this in mind, Lily has had more opportunities to socialize at 7 months than most.

We have many reasons to homeschool:

1. Her potential is limitless. We can start teaching her now.   Instead of being limited by her age/grade, she is only limited by time and her interests. At 5 years old, she could have kindergarten social skills, read at a second grade level, but be at a third grade level for math. This is her program, and as long as she learns the required basics, she can explore what interests her next. 

2. We can pick up and go on vacation whenever we want.  And, we can incorporate educational elements into those trips.

3. Learning is fun and school often makes it a chore. Forget busy work. Let's go on a field trip or cuddle and read a book! 

4. Learning does not have to take place in a classroom. We can learn anywhere and everywhere. Anything has the potential to become a learning opportunity. We can visit Mount Vernon to learn about the life of George Washington.  We can visit the Museum of the American Indian to learn about Native Americans.  We can fly to France (or any country) to learn about another culture.  We can read a book to explore the Wild West.  We can go to the grocery store to learn about math.  We can watch a video to learn about the color yellow.  We can play a game to learn Spanish.  There are so many options.

5. Traditional schooling does not prepare people for adulthood. There are so many missing, poorly covered, or controversial topics that are not taught how we would like to see them taught. Finance, business, people skills, manners, self-defense, sex education, street smarts, body image, work ethic, running a household, and nutrition are just the ones off the top of my head.

6. We should be spending every day helping her with her homework anyway. Why not skip the stuff other people assign and teach her instead?  And, if she was able to do homework on her own, we could be spending that time together.

7. There is potential for kids to finish some college courses before graduating high school.  I finished a whole year of college before I graduated high school.

8. Many kids have big dreams.  And, if Lily has big dreams, we want to set her up to be successful.  What if she wants to be a dancer, a singer, a painter, a musician, or something else that is usually considered impractical?  We would rather give her the tools to be successful than to tell her to forget her dreams and be practical.   In some of these instances, you have to know how to run a business or at least know the basics of branding and marketing to be successful.  If she decides later that it's not working for her, she'll come out of it with business experience.

9. Minority religions are often SOL in traditional schooling. We don't automatically get school days off on our holidays.  In some jurisdictions, that could turn into a legal battle, especially if we wanted to plan a family trip around one of our holidays.   We might have to deal with secular prayer. We might have to deal with other kids and their families discriminating against us and not being able to just cut out contact with those people without changing schools. 

10. This layer of online social media and the danger it brings to kids is just ridiculous.  I was one of the first kids in school to be online with our computer.  I had no idea the risks of trusting people online, and it is scary to think about the danger I put myself in at times.  Now, I know the danger, and that's something I don't think the next generation is prepared to handle either.  I read a Huffington Post article about one mom's take and the balance between privacy and protection for her 13 year-old daughter online.  Children are more easily manipulated by people they think they can trust, and homeschooling will allow us to help her learn when to trust people and when to be more cautious.

11. We greatly decrease the number of situations in which a trusted adult or other kid has the opportunity to abuse our child.

12. Bullying in school is bad, and it is now worse with its migration to social media.  She will still encounter bullies outside of school, but we can identify them and help her deal with them appropriately. We can also cut ties with bullies more easily without changing an entire school, if it gets that bad.

13. We will avoid the possibility of a school shooting, though this does not lessen other dangers.  We could have very well been at Costco during the day when a crazy person threatening people with a knife was shot by police.  Or, we could be home during the day when someone tries to break in.

14. We want Lily to have as much access possible to healthy foods and snacks.  Organic, whole foods are important to us.  Food options in schools are sub par via cafeteria, vending machines, and candy sales. 

15. We don't believe the world is accurately represented in traditional schooling, and many truths about the world are not revealed until college.  On top of that, some form of critical thinking is stressed in school, but as they get older, students should be taught to think critically about everything they are taught, told, read, or hear.  We are not taught that the textbooks, teachers, government, and companies that sell us products have reasons to misrepresent information or outright lie to us.  That we cannot take all information we receive as truth, and we have to wade through all of the evidence to figure out what we feel is the most accurate story.

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Mommy and Baby Yoga on Youtube

On and off for the past 14 years, I have attended regular yoga classes or practiced yoga at home.  Yoga is great for flexibility, toning, and balance.  I love making yoga a part of my life, but some things have to go out the window when you have a baby.  Most of the mommy and baby yoga classes around here are during the work day.  One mommy had commented in conversation that she picked up a mommy and baby yoga DVD.  Brilliant idea!  But, since I'm pretty attached to one style of yoga (vinyasa), I didn't want to spend the money if I wasn't going to like the routine.  So, I searched through some youtube videos to find something that would work.  It's a short routine (about 20 minutes), which is perfect for our attention span in the morning.  And, I've got some ideas on how to vary the routine.  If you're not familiar with yoga, you can always browse other videos on Youtube or try out one of the DVD's.

I was on a real roll doing this routine with Lily every morning, but things got a little crazy, and I stopped for awhile.  I wanted to get up yesterday morning and do this, but Sean took one look at me and said, "Do you want me to take her while I work out, so that you can go back to bed."  I said, "That sounds like a great idea."  And, I handed him the baby and put my face down in a pillow.  LOL.  This morning, he kept popping in and out of the living room while he was getting ready trying to catch us doing some yoga together.  It was very cute.

There are two parts to this routine:




Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Gymboree Classes

In search of activities to do with Lily, another playdate mommy suggested a Gymboree class.  I thought it was just a kids clothing store, but apparently they have activity centers around town.  We signed up for a free class, and we had a blast.  Well, Lily had a blast, and we had the best time watching her.  My dad was in town to visit, and he really enjoyed getting to do this with her.  There were at least 10 other babies from 5 months to 9 months in class with her.  Ball play was the theme of the class.  The instructor ran us through several activity options, including rolling around on a big ball, balancing on a platform ball, throwing balls in a bucket, and throwing balls down a slide.  We came back together and played soccer, using the baby as a fuze ball piece to show them how to kick.  There were also bubbles and a parachute.

We really liked the Gymboree class, because it moved along before baby girl got bored.  It had group play as well as allowed us time to play on our own.  Transitional songs were built into the class, and I know those will help kids as they get older.  There were lots of bright colors in the room.  There are activities that we cannot do or would not think to do at home.  And, it's a make-shift play date.  It included a parent discussion at the beginning, and at the end, we had time to sit and chat with other parents. 







Friday, May 24, 2013

Colorized Photos

Every now and then, I get a few minutes to just sit with Sean.  Sometimes, we sit and talk.  Sometimes, we watch a movie.  Sometimes, I just watch him parroose funny an interesting things on Reddit.  I don't often have time to parroose the internet, and we have interesting conversations about the interesting things that we find.  Last night, there was a colorized photo on Reddit.  It blew my mind.  So, we spent our time together looking through and talking about more colorized photos. 

I find the colorized photos change my understanding of history.  They put me in history.  In the room where historic events are taking place.  The really good ones are like a living history.  I like this colorized photo of someone's grandmother getting married.  My favorites were the ones of the Civil War and  President Lincoln.  There is just so much that can be gleaned in color.  I thought Lincoln looked distinguished in black and white.  In color, he looks like what I would expect a president to look like--beat down and broken from having the weight of the world on him.  In the colorized photo, it feels like I could touch the fabric of his suit and understand how it might feel.   I can imagine the process of tying that tie.  I really get a sense of being there.






I just imagine the possibilities when sharing stories of historical events and people with Lily.  She has the opportunity to experience the past in a whole new way.  Very cool.

Thursday, May 23, 2013

Seven Months Old


When I returned to work six months ago, one of the other pumping moms had a little boy who was five months old.  At that time, Lily was just 5 weeks old.  I couldn't imagine life with a 5 month old baby.  I was thinking about those early feelings the other day, how I tried to imagine how different life would be with a 5 month old.  She was so experienced.  I couldn't wait to be an experienced mom with an older baby.  And now, Lily is going to be 7 months old in a few days!  I didn't ever think that we'd get this far so quickly.  It seemed like this was an unattainable moment.  And, I imagined that it would be so different from the actuality of our life today.  I still feel inexperienced. You can't plan for what life is really going to be like, because you're missing an ingredient: the personality of your baby.  You cannot possibly know who this person is going to be.

In our case, Lily is a ball of energy.  She loves walking and shopping.  She is constantly laughing and smiling.  She loves new noises.  The rustling of a plastic bag used to scare her, but now she loves it.  Grandma's nails tapping on the door elicits the best giggle.  She loves to eat anything and everything put in front of her.  Specifically, she loves to feed herself.  Avocado is her favorite food.  She loves to meet new people, but she doesn't really like to be held by strangers.  She loves playing with toys on the tray of her walker, but hasn't quite figured out how to walk in it.  She unintentionally scoots herself this way and that.  Her favorite song is the ABC's, and she loves to be sung to.  Sometimes, we start singing and she swoons like a teenage girl at a Justin Bieber concert.  Oh gawd, she loves her daddy.  As soon as she sees him, it's time to play, and they spend the next 10 minutes playing a mix of hide and seek, "Where's the baby?", and "I'm gonna get you!".  When there's nothing else to do, we turn on the music and dance for the rest of the morning.  At the end of a long, hard day of playing and learning, she loves to just curl up next to me and nurse to sleep.  She is generally a light sleeper and only sleeps short stretches before looking for a boob again.

I find that I have to give myself an attitude adjustment at times.  I had not realized that life would never be the same again, and anything I used to do before I got pregnant, I was probably never going to get to do again.  We would just love her so much that she would obviously just come with us and do whatever we do and be happy as a clam.  Yeah right.  Being such a short sleeper, I am often laying with her for 10-12 hours a night.  Last night, she woke up three times before I gave up and just went to bed.  I had managed to get in a bath, the dishes, and a pumping session before kicking my feet up with a beer.  Well, two minutes into that beer she woke up that third time.  As I slunk my way upstairs, grumbling about never getting any time to myself, I realized that's just silly.  I don't want my memories of this time to be angry.  I certainly don't want to not remember them at all.  So, I checked my attitude in the hallway and enjoyed spending the night cuddled next to my little lady.  She has the sweetest face.  I cannot believe how big she is getting.

I heard this girl at work describing her experience with her broken foot to a coworker.  I realized that she was in the broken foot club.  That she has a set of knowledge and experience that only people who have had broken feet can relate to.  I betcha she knows a lot more things about broken feet now than she ever did before.  It is that way with many things in life, especially having a baby.  There is a set of knowledge and experience that you have when going through pregnancy and childbirth.  And, once you have a baby, you're no longer in the pregnant club, because you've had these other experience that make you something else.  You're a mom!  

And, this week, I celebrate that we made it somewhere.  We made it here.  And, I have no idea where we will be in 5 months or in 5 years.  I cannot imagine life with a toddler or a kindergartner.  How scary and exciting.  On to the next adventure.

Thursday, May 9, 2013

Local Used Baby Stuff

Being green is not just about minimizing toxins in our lives, but it's also about minimizing our footprint on the Earth and not wasting as much as we otherwise could have.  Used items have the opportunity to loose chemicals or outgas before you get them.  Children move so quickly through clothes, toys, and items that it's not always worth buying new.  But, for one reason or another, we might choose to buy something new.  Sometimes it's hard to imagine being able to wash the past out of something, or we are looking for something so specific, we don't find what we're looking for.  There are lots of great stores and sales in this area to find used clothing.  We've also hit up a bunch of local yard sales and were graced with lots of hand-me-downs from friends. 

I picked up a stroller for $50 at a consignment sale a few weeks ago.  Last weekend, I snagged a whole 12 month to 2T spring/summer/fall wardrobe (probably 30 outfits) for $100.  I also bought a snap-n-go for $20.  I just saw a Johnny Jump Up go for free yesterday.  At our first consignment sale, I snagged a lightly used Pottery Bard $250 crib set for $25.

Kids Stuff Sales
Consignment Stores

Freecycle

In my neighborhood, there is a rocking Freecycle community.  Folks are always offering up kids items, clothes, and furniture.  We've disappeared a few things that would have otherwise ended up at the dump, and we've also snag a few things that we would have otherwise bought. 

Email lists

Local email lists have for free and for sale offers of kids clothes, supplies, and toys all of the time.  This including the local DC Urban Mom email list.  In my local area, the moms group has a lot of "porch alerts" and sales. Check around to see if your local area has a moms list.  The Mamistad meetup for first time moms publishes a newsletter in which folks can make offers of items for sale.  I even met up with someone who posted a local ad on Babycenter.com about wanting to sell her consignment leftovers.

Wooden High Chair

I wish, I wish I could have been in the presence of a used wooden high chair at a consignment sale when I had an extra $100.  Alas, I did find a couple good ones, but never when I had the extra money. My grandmother wanted to buy Lily's high chair, because she bought my Jenny Lind high chair some thirty years ago.  But, they don't make the Jenny Lind anymore, and I wasn't having any luck locating a used one close to us.  So, we made a round to the shops, looked on Craigslist for months, and even looked at the chairs made by the Amish in Ohio, but nothing was floating my boat.  I wanted a wooden chair with a wooden tray in which Lily couldn't easily fall out of.

Jenny Lind high chair

I was stressed, because my grandma wanted to buy this chair STAT.  But, I knew if we just looked hard enough, we could find one in a consignment store again for cheap and may even UNFINISHED!  Alas, no such chair turned up again.  I kept going over and over the current wooden chair choices.  The Eddie Bauer has a plastic tray.  Boo.  Bad.  Very cute chair, though.  The Keekaroo wasn't it, because it didn't have a high back.  Could be safer, I thought.  I eventually settled on the Svan.  This especially when I looked at pictures of the Svan with a baby in it.  It looks pretty ugly until you put a baby in it.  Then, it's actually pretty great.  It is very safe.  A lot of the high chairs do not have belts, but this one comes with a full  harness, so she can't flip out.  Wooden tray, though finished.  We bought a silicone baking mat that we are going to cut to fit the tray.  Right now, we just set the mat on the tray.  And, it's completely adjustable.

 

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Weighing In

News Flash: I can button my pants.  All right, we're getting somewhere.  I refused to size up.  That meant accepting that I was now this size.  Forget it!  I will wear my maternity clothes until I can get back into my jeans.  I could almost button them when I got that stomach flu over New Year's. Thankfully, I remembered to button them before the station meeting last Friday, as I got a surprise award, and as everyone turned to look at me, that would have been embarrassing.

Before I got pregnant, I weighed 150 lbs.  When I had Lily, I most likely weighed 190 lbs, but I didn't want to look.  The baby just needed to come out and when the baby came out, I would loose all the weight, right?  A good 10 lbs was gained in her being 10 days overdue.  Before I cut out the grains and sugars last week, I was back up to 180 to 185 lbs.  I couldn't button my pants.  Not even the size up I bought when Target didn't have any maternity pants.  I tore a really big hole in the crotch of my last pair while standing in Babies R Us trying to shop with Lily for the first time by myself.

I realized that there is a low weight and a high weight for every day, and as my body is doing many of the incredible things that it's doing, my weight greatly fluctuates.  I have been trying to weigh myself in the morning after Lily nurses and before I eat.  Today, my low weight was 176 lbs with my high at 180 lbs.  And, I am eating like a horse.  At least two salads, multiple servings of chicken and vegetable stew, a couple of spoonfuls of coconut oil, a huge piece of lasagna, a beer for breastmilk, eggs, and kale chips  each day.  Toss in some grass-fed filets and burgers when we've got them on top of that.  My last brownie was 8 days ago.  But, I did go all out and eat whatever I wanted at the vine crawl potluck last Saturday.  No one is starving here.

I had been lying to myself that my body was collecting fat on my thighs, because it needed it for the milk.  My husband and I mused that grains and sugar might just be stored in the production of breast milk.  That when you eat grains and sugar while breastfeeding, it goes straight to your hips while it uses the fat, vitamins, and minerals to support breast milk production.  This is just a theory.  I would like to look into this.   



Anyhow, I am reporting in really because I found this great thing for dessert.  I picked it up at Yes! Organic Market this morning.  I would like something desserty, and coconut oil has really been doing it for me.  However, I wondered if I could melt some chocolate chips in it and if that would be enough.  Well, I found this packet.  It has coconut butter, coconut oil, cacao, cacao butter, and agave syrup.  I really could make this at home, but with trying to pound out a lasagna, kale chips, and a bunch of bone broth stews every week, I probably shouldn't push my luck.

No Flame Retardant


Please leave the toxic flame retardant chemicals off my mattress.  That is where my baby sleeps.
Thanks in advance.  In an article bythe Chicago Tribune:
After years of study, scientists in the U.S. and Europe had reached an alarming conclusion: Flame retardants called polybrominated diphenyl ethers, or PBDEs, build up in blood and breast milk, interfere with natural hormones, trigger reproductive problems and cause developmental and neurological damage.
And...
If adopted, the EPA's proposed rules would be a major step toward eliminating chemicals that doubled in the blood of adults every two to five years between 1970 and 2004 and have shown no signs of declining since then. A typical American baby is born with the highest recorded concentrations of PBDEs among infants in the world.

People ingest PBDEs — which have been widely used in furniture, electronics, textiles and plastics — after the chemicals escape from products and contaminate dust. Levels are especially high among breast-feeding infants and young children who play on the floor and often put things into their mouths.
Yet...
But after promoting the rules as a significant public health achievement, the EPA has delayed making them final amid fierce opposition from influential industries. Trade groups for automakers, military contractors, aerospace companies, appliance manufacturers and clothing companies are fighting behind the scenes in Washington to scrap the rules, postpone when they take effect or rewrite them to allow PBDEs in certain products.

Adding another twist to the debate, the Pentagon also is urging the EPA to back off.

In moving us all into our new house, we decided to make the leap.  We purchased a king size green cotton mattress without the flame retardant from White Lotus Home.  A prescription is required to purchase a mattress without a flame retardant on it.  If you don't have a prescription, they will mix some wool with the cotton to make it flame retardant without using chemicals.  Even though you don't think you're ordering a custom mattress, I am pretty sure each mattress is made to order.  That means it takes 4 to 8 weeks to get your mattress.  In our case, it was 8 weeks.  The mattress is thick, came rolled up like an Ikea mattress, and was shipped special by the store.  It is extra firm, firmer than any other mattress that I've ever had, but it is very comfortable.  The king mattress is 80 x 80 and does fit into the standard king Ikea frame, but Ikea king mattresses are smaller.

And then, we top this baby off with Target's organic cotton sheets.  Hot damn. 

Monday, May 6, 2013

Baby Led Weaning


The local mom email list exploded last week with the conversation of baby-led weaning (BLW). We had been all set to prepare purees, but the BLW concept just seemed right for us, given Lily's reaction to food and spoons.   Here are some of the highlights:
  • Feed baby with breastmilk first before offering solids, so that she isn't frustrated and starving while trying to figure out how to eat.
  • With BLW, food isn't meant to be a source of nutrition this early.  It is about learning the mechanics of chewing and how to eat, with or without teeth.  Baby might not actually eat much of what's offered for a while. He might smear it all over, smell it or throw it on the floor, but not eat it.
  • Foods like applesauce, oatmeal, yogurt, and soup can still be fed with a spoon. 
  • Don't have to make special food for the baby.  She can just eat what we eat.
  • It is very messy.  Food has the potential to get all over her face, hair, hands, arms, outfit, the high chair, and the floor.  Dogs are good sweepers.
  • Parents worry about babies choking, but the parents on the email list didn't have any issues with that.
  • You give larger pieces of food at first, and the baby might cough to move food around their mouths.  
  • Give her something that is long enough that the baby can hold onto it in his/her grubby little hand and still get a piece in her mouth.
  • Can help settle into a routine meal time where the family eats together.
  • Spicy food is okay.  It may prevent a picky eater.  Then again, it may not.
Exploring more of this BLW stuff these past two weeks as we continue to experiment with solid food.  So far, Lily has tried banana, avocado, carrot, sweet potato, hasbrowns, chicken, hamburger, and bacon.  It is very much a success with our whole family, and we all love it.  Lily especially loves to feed herself.

Friday, May 3, 2013

Cutting Back on Grains and Sugar

This because I am endlessly starving and my solution was to eat cookies.  And, muffins.  And, brownies.  Yummy.  So, even though breastfeeding is said to make the pounds melt off, my weight had started to creep up and up again.  I was nearing what I weighed when Lily was born.  The advice given by other women in the same situation was to cut out the grains and sugar.  Forget that!

Eventually, I got a cavity (from all the nights of choosing to fall asleep with the baby instead of uncomfortably making time to brush multiple times per day) and decided that while I was waiting for my appointment, I was going to try to heal my tooth a little.  That would require me to stop feeding the bacteria with grains, sugar, and starches.  This as well as reinstating a couple of supplements and foods into my diet, such as vitamin D and bone broth.

So, I stopped eating as much grain and sugar at the beginning of the week.  The weight has already started to come off a little bit, which is good.  We don't want it to come off too fast while breastfeeding, as I've read that can lead to toxins entering the breastmilk.  I am still grumbling about not getting to eat that brownie I really want.  Grumble.  Grumble.  Grumble.  I had the idea today to look up some paleo recipes for desserts, because those should be low in sugar and made with whole foods. 

An unintended effect of cutting back on the grains and sugar is that inflammation in my hip aggrivated by cosleeping has completely disappeared.

It's better that I don't eat as much grain.  It's so difficult to get non-GMO corn anymore, and wheat is up there with GMO junk.  And, I was kidding myself that cane sugar was good for me.  In reality, ODing on sugar in any form isn't good.  While it's better than HFCS, I've read studies that found that lots of cane sugar can also lead to long term health problems.

Thursday, May 2, 2013

Wary of Green Sprouts

When looking for safe options for feeding and teething eco stuff, in both Whole Foods and on Amazon , Green Sprouts keeps coming up.  But, I won't buy most of this stuff.  While they do have a line of silicone products, and a few unfinished wooden rattles that I would buy, most of everything they offer is plastic.  The eco-friendly trend is to promote plastic products that are BPA and PVC free, but that doesn't make the plastic any more safe.  In an article posted by Time:
In a new study for the journal Environmental Health Perspectives, researchers found that most plastic products leach endocrine-disrupting chemicals—and that was true even for products labeled “BPA-free.” Scientists led by George Bittner, a neurobiologist at the University of Texas, looked at 455 common plastic products and found that 70% tested positive for estrogenic activity. Once those products were subject to real-world conditions—microwaving or dishwashing—that proportion rose to 95%.

In talking about the same study, Discovery.com had some advice about how consumers should deal with plastics:
For now, it is literally impossible for consumers to know which plastics might contain hormone-disrupting chemicals, so the old advice holds: Avoid heating plastics, leaving them in the sun, putting hot materials in them or putting them through other stresses if you're planning to eat or drink their contents.

Perhaps the best thing consumers can do, Yaniger said, is to put the pressure on businesses, just like they did with BPA. Instead of BPA-free, his hope is for future labels to be marked EA-free to signal a lack of all kinds of estrogenic activity.

I agree that we don't know what these other chemicals in plastic will do to us.  And, we don't know what chemicals these manufacturers are using.  Regardless of the concerns about estrogenic properties, what else can the leeching these plastics do to our bodies?  Are we plastic repositories?  So, I choose to try to remove as much plastic from my life and home.  So, when folks, such as Green Sprouts, try to sell me some eco-friendly plastic over and over again, I don't buy it.    I especially don't buy it for my baby girl.

And, cornstarch isn't something I'm going to let my baby chew on either.  Corn is the #1 GMO food in the United States. So, unless it's organic, it's not going in baby girls' mouth.