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The Watercooler
Stay-at-home mom or not?
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<blockquote data-quote="Pink Elephant" data-source="post: 734860" data-attributes="member: 21572"><p>I never realized until I found the ad and read it, that the padding was thicker in the front (for boys), and thicker in the middle (for girls). I thought they were just coloured.</p><p></p><p>Indeed I do remember how disposable diapers sometimes leaked at the waist with boys. I never had that problem with cloth diapers, I think because if wetness made it's way to the waist of the diaper, the elastic waistband of the rubber pants kept the wetness from escaping. Often (especially in the morning) my kids diapers would be soaked right to the safety pins.</p><p></p><p>My trick for dealing with drenched diapers in the morning was to pull back the front waistband of the rubber pants, remove the pins from the diaper, and pull off the rubber pants and diaper together as one. Straight into the diaper pail the sopping-wet bundle would go.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Pink Elephant, post: 734860, member: 21572"] I never realized until I found the ad and read it, that the padding was thicker in the front (for boys), and thicker in the middle (for girls). I thought they were just coloured. Indeed I do remember how disposable diapers sometimes leaked at the waist with boys. I never had that problem with cloth diapers, I think because if wetness made it's way to the waist of the diaper, the elastic waistband of the rubber pants kept the wetness from escaping. Often (especially in the morning) my kids diapers would be soaked right to the safety pins. My trick for dealing with drenched diapers in the morning was to pull back the front waistband of the rubber pants, remove the pins from the diaper, and pull off the rubber pants and diaper together as one. Straight into the diaper pail the sopping-wet bundle would go. [/QUOTE]
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