#1.
You have to toilet-dunk.
This was the #1
reason I went with disposables (yes, I
confess!) with my daughter when she was
first born. The belief that you must dunk
your diapers
in the toilet and flush repeatedly or use
a "diaper duck" to clean them is
simply not true. Toilet dunking is for
the birds! Diaper services don't
require you to dunk your diapers, so why
should you? Let your machine do the work
for you -- most moms these days do. If
your baby or toddler has well-formed solid
poops, sure, you can toss the solids into
the toilet -- but for messy jobs, don't
fret it. If we can do it, so can you!
Little
known fact: Did you know that you
aren't supposed to dispose of human waste
from any diaper, disposables included? It
says so right on the package.
#2. Cloth
diapers don't keep your baby dry.
Disposable diapers
have helped proliferate the myth that
"a dry baby is a clean baby".
Disposables use the super-absorbing
chemical polyacrylate (why disposables
often feel like a squishy "gel"
inside the inner panels), which makes the
diaper "a wearable toilet" of
sorts. Parents are supposed to change
their baby's diaper when they soil
themselves, however with the advent of
these super-absorbent and many times dry feeling
chemical-laden disposable diapers, they
get changed, typically, much less
frequently. I have actually heard of
parents who feel changing a baby five
times a day is adequate! Sad, but true.
With cloth, not only is it easy to tell
when your baby is due for a change, they
also potty train much sooner because
toddlers can actually feel when
they wet themselves (imagine that!). The
gel in disposables also will draw moisture
from your baby's skin! I remember when my
daughter was in disposables (yes, I
confess, I was a disposable user!), I
would actually find these gel
"beads" on her diaper area.
#3. You have to
change cloth diapers more often.
With disposables,
babies sadly don't always get changed when
they soil themselves (because they
"feel" dry, see myth #2, above).
However the American
Academy of Pediatrics states, "Regardless
of which type of diaper you use, diaper
rash occurs less often and is less severe
when you change diapers often."
Changing your baby's diaper when they wet
themselves seems an easy and common sense
enough approach for all parents to be able
to adhere to.
#4. Cloth
diapers, and diaper pails, smell.
Cloth diapers
smell no worse than disposables, in fact
many new-to-cloth moms have told me that
their disposables smelled far worse than
their new cloth diapers do (I guess that's
why the Diaper Genie was invented...). And
a good air-tight diaper pail that uses
non-toxic deodorizer disks like "Deodisks
?"
keeps an unwanted odors at bay.
#5. Cloth
diapering is more difficult.
Doing my diaper
laundry one or two times a week is much
less trouble than having to get dressed,
get the baby ready and make a run to the
store for disposables when I suddenly
realize I am out. In a pinch, you can even
use doublers as a diaper substitute while
you do your laundry. You are truly never
out of diapers. Imagine never having to
leave your living room for diapers in the
middle of the night!
#6. Cloth
diapering is more time consuming.
I can get my
diapers washed and dried while me and my
daughter eat our lunch and play around the
house. There is
no need to run out to the store or waste
time in the car when we could be playing
or learning! Folding diapers, while not
necessary (many people use a decorative
basket in the nursery for this purpose),
is a fun activity for me and my 17 month
old to do together. It makes her feel
important as she helps Mama with the
folding, and we practice her numbers by
counting as we stack the diapers.
#7. You have to
use diaper pins.
While some moms still love the art of
pinning with the quaint appearance and
snug fit it provides, others, including
me, were frightened by it! If you are
scared of pins or simply don't even want
to try, fear not, CuddleBuns? has your
answer! Snap and Velcro fitted diapers are
as easy to put on as disposables, and
prefolds folded in thirds and then layed
down the middle of a snug Velcro wrap are
as easy as 1-2-3! There are also clips and
other fasteners available as diaper pin
substitutes.
#8. You have to
use a diaper service.
...and aren't they
expensive? Yes, they can be. In fact in
some geographical areas, they are more
expensive than disposables! Though this is
rare, you can still save significantly
over disposables and cloth diaper
services by home laundering your own
premium quality cloth diapers. Diaper
services for the most part only offer
prefolds, and not the attractive and
convenient fitted diapers that many moms
today have grown to love, and some can't
do without! Home laundering is simple and
easy, just wash the CuddleBuns? way!
#9. Cloth
diapering is more expensive (after
factoring the cost of detergent, water and
electricity).
Not even close. Disposables cost an
average of $1000-$2000 (depending on brand
and geographical area) over the course of
one child's diapering years. Cloth diapers
not only cost an average of only $150-$300
, but they can be used over and over on
subsequent children with only a handful of
replacements from wear and tear. The water
usage equals the same amount they would
use as a potty trained child who was
toilet trained, and the electricity usage
is minimal. Add to all this that it takes
more water, per diaper, to produce a
disposable diaper than a cloth one!
#10. Cloth
diapers are bulky.
Snug fitting wraps
and covers with a prefold folded in thirds
down the middle, a dense flannel or
interlock ("t-shirt") fitted
diaper (flannel tends to be trimmer than
terry, with interlock being the very
trimmest) can actually be quite thin --
and rival even the trimmest disposable!
*Have
you also read The
Top Ten Reasons About Cloth
Diapering?