Furnish a Space for Your Little Girl You Can Be Contented With
Furnishing your baby’s nursery and buying things for your baby are two of the most thrilling aspects of expecting a baby. There are simply an almost unlimited number of choices in designs, colors and themes to use to finish the baby’s nursery. You may not even realize how vast the choices until you begin conceptualizing the room and start looking into not only furniture, clothing and products but also the unbelievable amount and types available even for baby bedding.
There are so many choices you will have to face - bumpers or no bumpers, what to do with the included quilt, is the color too masculine or feminine and many more. Do you need a bouncy seat as well as a swing? How important is visual stimulation to your baby, and would specially painted walls enhance this?
Each decision about your nursery decor may teach your child the wrong values, prevent its brain from developing naturally, or simply make your life tougher. Parents can feel guilty when they make decisions about their baby’s nursery as every decision affects their baby’s nascent and impressionable life and most important of such decisions is the type of crib bedding.
Try to relax as you come to this parenting realization. Learn to trust yourself and throw away those must-have nursery decor lists, thrust upon you by magazines, well-meaning friends and baby super-stores. Your mother-in-law may crack jokes about the playpen or bouncy seat or some other item that you buy for your child, but you’ve made the right decision if your child is happy, and you’re a better mother because of it.
Sure you may grow to hate the color of baby bedding you chose or never use the quilt that came with it but your decision to read three books a night to the child in that crib could turn out a lifelong, avid reader. Girl nursery bedding is another important decision of the many you will need to make to welcome your child. Don’t fret over the voluminous number of choices, just pick a theme or design that appeals to you to welcome her to the family.
Before you know it your “baby” will be in third grade, and you will wonder why you ever agonized over designing her nursery, or choosing baby bedding. You may wonder if your child might be better at math if you’d gotten those lithographs that supposedly make your child smarter, but guilt is a natural and somewhat healthy part of being a parent.
