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Babies: Video of baby’s pulsing head video goes viral after freaking out the internet: ‘What is that?’

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Parents make plenty of weird and wonderful discoveries when they first bring a newborn baby home from the hospital.

How is it possible for that much poo to come out of a tiny body? How do I clip their fingernails without cutting off a digit? Why is my baby’s head pulsing? Wait, what?

Yes, you read correctly.

READ MORE: Mum shares hilarious fake tan fail

A mum’s video of her baby’s pulsing head has gone viral. (TikTok)

The phenomena was recently captured by TikTok user darianschick. The US woman, who calls herself Eilee’s mum, shared a brief 10-second video of her baby’s pulsing fontanelle with her followers.

The video started with her five-month-old baby in her highchair before she zoomed in on the pulsing fontanelle. The video then cut to her own face looking deeply troubled and perplexed.

She uploaded the video with the comment, “Please make it stop” and the hashtags #ftm, #firsttimenmom #softspot and #baby.

The video, which has so far been viewed 10.8 million times, also received 1.7 million likes and 21,000 comments. “I have three kids and I’ve never seen that before lol,” said one. “I saw it the first week with my son home and freaked,” added another.

READ MORE: My first baby’s birth went smoothly – but I’m dreading doing it again

A perfectly normal looking baby. (TikTok)

A follow-up video she posted two days later featured a reply to a commenter who had asked “What is that?”

“Because people who don’t have babies, I guess, or never saw this happen are wondering what’s wrong with you?” she said, glancing at her baby. “Nothing’s wrong. It’s just her soft spot. She’s OK.”

So what is going on?

READ MORE: Why Hannah ‘cried every day’ after her terrifying first birth

Wait, what? (TikTok)

There are two soft areas on the top of a baby’s head, called the fontanelles. They are basically areas where the skull’s cranial bones are yet to meet up. The reason they are not fused together prior to birth is to allow the baby’s skull to pass through the narrow birth canal.

The anterior fontanelle at the front of the head closes sometime between four months and two years.

Before that happens, you may see the baby’s fontanelle pulsating as their heartbeats. And that is perfectly normal, albeit a little freaky.

READ MORE: Mum shows hack to help your baby burp ‘every time’

Ummm. (TikTok)

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Australian beaches inspiring sun-loving baby names


Parents make plenty of weird and wonderful discoveries when they first bring a newborn baby home from the hospital.

How is it possible for that much poo to come out of a tiny body? How do I clip their fingernails without cutting off a digit? Why is my baby’s head pulsing? Wait, what?

Yes, you read correctly.

READ MORE: Mum shares hilarious fake tan fail

A mum’s video of her baby’s pulsing head has gone viral. (TikTok)

The phenomena was recently captured by TikTok user darianschick. The US woman, who calls herself Eilee’s mum, shared a brief 10-second video of her baby’s pulsing fontanelle with her followers.

The video started with her five-month-old baby in her highchair before she zoomed in on the pulsing fontanelle. The video then cut to her own face looking deeply troubled and perplexed.

She uploaded the video with the comment, “Please make it stop” and the hashtags #ftm, #firsttimenmom #softspot and #baby.

The video, which has so far been viewed 10.8 million times, also received 1.7 million likes and 21,000 comments. “I have three kids and I’ve never seen that before lol,” said one. “I saw it the first week with my son home and freaked,” added another.

READ MORE: My first baby’s birth went smoothly – but I’m dreading doing it again

A perfectly normal looking baby. (TikTok)

A follow-up video she posted two days later featured a reply to a commenter who had asked “What is that?”

“Because people who don’t have babies, I guess, or never saw this happen are wondering what’s wrong with you?” she said, glancing at her baby. “Nothing’s wrong. It’s just her soft spot. She’s OK.”

So what is going on?

READ MORE: Why Hannah ‘cried every day’ after her terrifying first birth

Wait, what? (TikTok)

There are two soft areas on the top of a baby’s head, called the fontanelles. They are basically areas where the skull’s cranial bones are yet to meet up. The reason they are not fused together prior to birth is to allow the baby’s skull to pass through the narrow birth canal.

The anterior fontanelle at the front of the head closes sometime between four months and two years.

Before that happens, you may see the baby’s fontanelle pulsating as their heartbeats. And that is perfectly normal, albeit a little freaky.

READ MORE: Mum shows hack to help your baby burp ‘every time’

Ummm. (TikTok)

For a daily dose of 9Honey, subscribe to our newsletter here

Australian beaches inspiring sun-loving baby names

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