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Reason: None provided.

I'm not convinced. I saw two kids in the video with the black eyes that were not ordinary. It's called iridescent eyes, it happens to roughly 1 in 75000 births, and it is genetic. It's not harmful, and after a few months their eyes will change to their permanent color. There was one baby shown standing, not moving, at 3 months. It's not unheard of, its happened before. All the rest of the babies walking while being led, rolling over, holding their heads up, trying to crawl, these are all normal instinctual behaviors. My son always scared the crap out of me when he was born, I'd put him to bed on his back and he'd roll over and sleep on his belly. My fear of course was SIDS. After his first month after birth, he had done it more sleep episodes than not, so I slowly stopped worrying so much. I have always been most comfortable sleeping on my belly, and so does my son. I have video of my daughter at 4 weeks, belly down on a boppy pillow, lifting her head up to look at the ceiling fan and swinging her head in circles to follow the blades around until she gets dizzy/tired and drops her head back down to rest before picking up and doing it again. Some babies can hold their head up when they're born and some can't and usually start within a week.

I would believe if they found other issues though, like malformed brains and organs, breathing conditions, and vascular conditions.

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

I'm not convinced. I saw two kids in the video with the black eyes that were not ordinary. It's called iridescent eyes, it happens to roughly 1 in 75000 births, and it is genetic. It's not harmful, and after a few months their eyes will change to their permanent color. There was one baby shown standing, not moving, at 3 months. It's not unheard of, its happened before. All the rest of the babies walking while being led, rolling over, holding their heads up, trying to crawl, these are all normal instinctual behaviors. My son always scared the crap out of me when he was born, I'd put him to bed on his back and he'd roll over and sleep on his belly. My fear of course was SIDS. I have always been most comfortable sleeping on my belly, and so does my son. I have video of my daughter at 4 weeks, belly down on a boppy pillow, lifting her head up to look at the ceiling fan and swinging her head in circles to follow the blades around until she gets dizzy/tired and drops her head back down to rest before picking up and doing it again. Some babies can hold their head up when they're born and some can't and usually start within a week.

I would believe if they found other issues though, like malformed brains and organs, breathing conditions, and vascular conditions.

2 years ago
1 score
Reason: Original

I'm not convinced. I saw two kids in the video with the black eyes that were not ordinary. It's called iridescent eyes, it happens to roughly 1 in 75000 births, and it is genetic. It's not harmful, and after a few months their eyes will change to their permanent color. There was one baby shown standing, not moving, at 3 months. It's not unheard of, its happened before. All the rest of the babies walking while being led, rolling over, holding their heads up, trying to crawl, these are all normal instinctual behaviors. My son always scared the crap out of me when he was born, I'd put him to bed on his back and he'd roll over and sleep on his belly. My fear of course was SIDS. I have always been most comfortable sleeping on my belly, and so does my son. I have video of my daughter at 4 weeks, belly down on a boppy pillow, lifting her head up to look at the ceiling fan and swinging her head in circles to follow the blades around until she gets dizzy/tired and drops her head back down to rest before picking up and doing it again. Some babies can hold their head up when they're born and some can't and usually start within a week.

2 years ago
1 score