Search for the secret of your baby's inconsolable crying in your own milk
t always, but sometimes, colic, restlessness, diarrhea, or eczema in a baby stems from something the mother eats. The foods you consume reach your baby through your milk. If your baby has a sensitivity or intolerance to any of them, their body responds with inflammation, pain, or skin discomfort. The problem is that without precise information, identifying the offending food is like finding a needle in a haystack.
The Mother's Milk Code package illuminates this ambiguity by examining three distinct yet interconnected layers.
First: Map your baby's hidden sensitivities and intolerances
Above all, you need to know what your baby is sensitive to. Some babies are genetically predisposed to cow's milk protein allergy. Others react to eggs, soy, or peanuts. Some lack the enzyme needed to digest lactose. This package, through its clinical core, examines your baby's genetic predisposition to the most common allergens.
The result is a clear list: "Your baby is sensitive to cow's milk protein, but not to eggs or soy." Armed with this knowledge, you no longer have to eliminate everything from your diet. Only the problematic food is removed. The rest can be consumed freely. This means better nutrition for you and greater peace for your baby.
Second: Enhance your milk quality through personalized nutrition
But eliminating a single food is not the whole story. Even if your baby has no sensitivities, the composition of your milk may, for genetic reasons, be deficient in certain micronutrients. Vitamin D, iron, calcium, and omega-3 fatty acids – these elements directly affect your baby's brain development, bone structure, and immune system.
Some mothers, due to specific genetic variants, have poorer absorption of these nutrients. The second part of this package examines your nutritional and metabolic profile and tells you which micronutrient deficiencies are more likely in you and at what dosage you should take supplements to compensate. The result: richer milk, a healthier baby, and a more informed mother.
Third: Understand your baby's skin barrier and prevent eczema
Colic and restlessness are not the only signs of sensitivity. Sometimes the first warning is dry skin, redness, or eczema. Some babies are genetically born with a weaker skin barrier, allowing allergens to pass through more easily and trigger the immune system.
The third part of this package examines your baby's genetic predisposition to eczema, atopic dermatitis, and dry skin. With this information, you can begin appropriate skin care from the very first days of life – from choosing the right moisturizer to preventing skin irritations – and manage eczema before it becomes a chronic problem.
Why are these three perspectives placed together?
A problem that seems simple can have multiple different roots.
Sometimes the root is a food sensitivity. Your baby is reacting to something you eat. The first layer of this package shows you exactly which food.
Sometimes the root is a nutritional deficiency in your milk. Not because your milk is "low quality," but because your body, for genetic reasons, absorbs certain micronutrients less efficiently. The second layer provides you with a personalized compensatory plan.
And sometimes the root lies within the baby themselves – in their weak skin barrier. The third layer identifies this predisposition and offers preventive strategies.
Three layers, three potential roots. The Mother's Milk Code package examines all three at once because you cannot afford months of trial and error. Your baby needs peace, and they need it now.
An important question: Is a sample also taken from the mother?
No. In the Mother's Milk Code package, only the baby provides a sample, not the mother.
The reason is simple and scientific: all the information this package needs to adjust the mother's diet and the baby's care plan is extracted from the baby's DNA. The baby's genetic predisposition to food sensitivities, lactose intolerance, and skin issues – all of these can be identified in the baby's own genome.
However, the part of this package that refers to the "maternal nutrition and metabolism profile" is completed without sampling the mother, based solely on a specialized lifestyle and medical history questionnaire filled out by the mother.
In other words:
- Baby's sample: used to examine genetic predispositions to sensitivities, intolerances, and skin health
- Mother's questionnaire: used to assess dietary patterns, history of previous deficiencies, and supplement use
The combination of these two sources of information (the baby's genetic data + the mother's lifestyle information) allows us to design a personalized plan for the mother – without any need for a separate sample from the mother.
This approach makes the process simpler for you (only one sample, from the baby) and reduces costs, without compromising the accuracy or comprehensiveness of the results.
What do you gain that you would not get from ordering separate reports?
If you order each of these three areas separately, you will receive three separate files. You yourself will have to sit down and try to connect "your baby's cow's milk sensitivity," "your own vitamin D deficiency," and "your baby's predisposition to eczema." This is not only time-consuming but may also lead you to incorrect conclusions.
But in the Mother's Milk Code package, these three pieces are assembled together and interpreted for you. You receive one integrated report that tells you: "Given your baby's cow's milk sensitivity and your vitamin D deficiency, here is your plan: eliminate dairy, get calcium from non-dairy sources, start a specific dosage of vitamin D supplements, and use fragrance-free moisturizers for your baby's skin."
This "cross-interpretation" is the true added value of the package – something you will never achieve with three separate reports.
Summary: What exactly do you know after ordering this package?
- Does your baby have a sensitivity to cow's milk, eggs, soy, peanuts, or lactose? (You identify the real culprit)
- Which food should you eliminate from your diet and what nutritional substitutes should you take? (A practical plan for you)
- What nutritional deficiencies do you have that affect your milk quality, and what supplements should you take to compensate? (A personalized supplementation plan)
- Does your baby have a genetic predisposition to eczema and dry skin, and what preventive skin care is needed? (A skin care plan)
- And above all, the "peace of mind" that comes from ending fruitless trial and error – starting today, you know exactly what to do