- Taken orally, it keeps the hormones under control... That means no mood swings! No morning sickness!
- Applied outside, rubbed on the belly, it prevented stretch marks... And her fat loss went easily afterwards!
- Why? It contains a more usable Vitamin E than gel capsules! And the body needs fat to burn fat!
- Note: Omega 3 fatty acids are what baby brains are made of! A bright, alert infant requires good fat!
- Our daughter was born almost 9 pounds and fit looking... Did I mention a full head of hair unlike other members of our family were born with very little...
- Lemmon's Oil is also wonderful for perineal stretching!
Q: I am trying to be the best parent I can. I already breastfeed, avoid eating junk food that might affect the baby... Will your Lemmon's Oil help?
A: YES... Watching what we eat is only part of the issue. My wife takes in over 300 different nutrients a day through supplementation. Simply avoiding junk food isn't enough. Lemmon's Oil will provide you, the mother, with what the baby requires and no formula can offer.
Usually a manufacturer won't announce that the competition's product is a better choice. But when the competition is breast milk, infant formula manufacturers concede -- right on the label -- that breast milk is best. Human breast milk is the ideal nourishment for human babies. Its protein content particularly suited for a baby's metabolism, and the fat content is more easily absorbed and digested. Breast milk also protects the infants against certain diseases, infections and allergies.
A mother's milk contains cells from her immune system and antibodies against diseases to which she has been exposed. Animals do not have human cells to offer the newborn and synthetic milk products do not either. For example, if a mother catches the flu, she develops antibodies to that strain of flu virus. The baby will get protection and probably not get the flu at all if she breast feeds. We are of course assuming the mother is eating healthy foods and not junk foods which the baby also is inadvertently subjected to.
The composition of infant formula is similar to breast milk, but it isn't a perfect match. Further, the exact chemical makeup of breast milk is still unknown. We're always discovering things in human milk that are there in small quantities that hadn't been looked at before. Infant formula is close to breast milk, by carbohydrate, protein and fat content, but not what the sources from a healthy mother provides.
More than half the calories in breast milk come from fat, and the same is true for today's infant formulas. This may be alarming to many American adults watching their intake of fat and cholesterol, especially when high saturated fats, such as coconut oil are used in formulas. While trying to apply a low-fat diet recommended for adults to infants will fail, the rule of where you get your nutrients from still applies.
Formulas based on whole cow's milk don't meet all of an infant's vitamin and mineral needs. In addition, the high protein content of cow's milk puts a strain on the baby's immature kidneys. Use of soy drinks (that normally contain GMO-Soy) can actually be life-threatening. While infant formulas are the most heavily regulated food that there is, FDA regulations only specify exact nutrient level requirements for infant formulas, based on recommendations by the American Academy of Pediatrics Committee on Nutrition.
The following must be included in all formulas: Protein, fat, linoleic acid, vitamin A, vitamin D, vitamin E, vitamin K, thiamine (vitamin B1), riboflavin (vitamin B2), vitamin B, vitamin B12, niacin, folic acid, pantothenic acid, vitamin C, calcium, phosphorous, magnesium, iron, zinc, manganese, copper, iodine, sodium, potassium, and chloride. Notice there aren't human enzymes or other healthy things only a mother can supply in that list. Give Lemmon's Oil a try.