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Can you feel the head or arms as well? The baby could either be lying down along the bottom of your uterus, so legs at lower left side and head at lower right side. Are you carrying quite low? If you are, then I expect that's the position the baby is in. If not, the baby could be at diagonals, with his/her feet at the lower left side and head at the top right
When they were baby's they slept on one side of there head
you say her name and put the rattle in front her face and shake it from to the side
Abnormal front-to-back and side-to-side curvature of the spine
The baby is laying side-ways across the cervix instead of head first
Sternocleidomastoids flex the head toward the chest when acting together but alone, one sides bends neck toward shoulder and turns face to opposite side.
Tony
It just means that the baby's head is not yet fixed in your pelvis, it can still move from side to side. If you are 36 weeksor less this is quite normal, as it is if it is your second or subsequent baby. If it is your first baby it MAY mean that your pelvis is a bit on the small side. However as a midwife I once looked after a woman where at term the baby's head was free at 9am (in hospital as the baby kept moving to different positions), at 3.30pm her husband came and told me she was having contractions, a bit of a panic ensued in case she was in labor with the baby laying crossways or similar, at 5.30pm she had her baby quite normally, head first, so a 'free' head is not necessarily a problem. Hope this helps (englishangel)
make noise with the rattle in fornt of the baby's face to get her attention then make noise with the rattle on either side of her head
Lauren Knowles
Not usually unless they start touching/tugging on their ear
Fistula or Ectopic