The Waiting Room

The Dr. Seuss in You
Essentially mom’s lifestyle before and during her pregnancy and the type of delivery the baby experiences provide the framework by which a baby’s immune system will be educated. 
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Take Dr. T's Gut Health Quiz
True or False  Babies born by C-section have different bacterial profiles than their vaginally birthed cohorts. A.  True. True or False You are more bug than you are human.  Human cells are outnumbered by an order of magnitude of 10 to...
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The Real "Genius" of Dannon
Metchnikoff would say we are what we eat. Research has proven that we are what we think and feel. I would go on to say what we eat determines what we think and feel and visa versa. We all have the ability to face the cholera in our lives by setting our houses in order. Eat, play and love well. The solution will then find you.
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How to Bring Calm to the Dinner Table

After a long work day or one caring for your children, the last thing you want to deal with is stressful meal times. Keeping meltdowns, whining, and rambunctiousness to a minimum is a chief concern for parents who have way too much to do and not enough patience to do it with.

Taking your dinner routine from chaos to calm is doable. Here are five things you could do to bring calm to the dinner table.

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Five Strategies to Help Become an Emotionally Supportive Parent

Love is a verb. This whimsical anecdote demonstrates why relationships ultimately rest on the way we act towards one another. For a parent-child relationship specifically, it is the really small acts that make a big difference. While emotional support may seem small in scope, it is a powerful game-changer in the family dynamic.

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