If you ask most parents, finding all the accessories to keep a baby safe and comfortable in the car is no mean feat and it will stretch your mind and pocket. You are not sure what to include and what to leave.
It’s a similar fate with baby car mirrors. You know it’s a regulatory requirement that kiddos should be carried in the appropriate age, weight and height specific baby car seat placed at the backseat. You also know infants should be in a rear facing car seat up to the age of about 2 years.
But it’s a common debate at homes, and among parent friends: do we or do we not use a baby car mirror?
Those against it will tell that in case it flies off in an accident, you have a dangerous projectile that will crash your baby’s head. That the scattering fragments will leave everyone with bruises and deep cuts, including pets. The scattering fragments will also tear your car upholstery.
They are those who find the mirror an unnecessary or dangerous distraction, what’s with the temptation to steal a glance into your LO reflection instead of concentrating on the road.
Let’s think about the many situations you find your baby when you leave him unmonitored for a dozen minutes. He or she gets hungry, soiled, bored, tired, and they may even get sick. A playful child may hurt himself on something, choke or sustain an injury, while a sleepy one may sleep hunched up, in a strained or precarious position.
Of course the child can’t help himself and sometimes they may not raise a signal that they need attention.
Going by this thought, my take is that the baby car mirror is a must-have item when on the road with your little one.
Even if you don’t have a backseat headrest, it's unadjustable or find it inappropriate, innovation has got you covered. We now have baby car mirrors that perfectly fit on the windscreen or sun visor.
Lacking the mirror would force you to keep on checking back to see your kid as you drive, thus trading one hazard for the other.
Another important fact to note is that the best mirrors are now made of acrylic plastic, equally or more reflective than your ordinary glass mirrors, and yet it cannot break into fragments under the strongest car crashes.
Needless to say that the reflective mirror will keep your baby entertained as he views himself in there. He also sees you in the mirror and gets reassured, thinking mummy is still with me. See, you get less yells until you reach your destination.
Edited by Avant on 09/05/2019 at 00:05
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