Nobody tells you how much of early parenthood is spent worrying about things you'd never heard of before. You prepare for the sleepless nights, the feeding challenges, the sheer relentlessness of it. What you don't prepare for is the 2am Google spiral about positional plagiocephaly.
My name is Natasha. I'm 31, I live in Leicester, and my daughter Isla was born eight months ago. She is the best thing that has ever happened to me and also the source of more anxiety than I knew was possible to contain in one human body. I say that with complete love.
When Isla was about six weeks old, I noticed that the back of her head looked slightly flatter on one side than the other. I mentioned it to my health visitor, who reassured me it was very common — babies spend so much time on their backs, and their skulls are soft and malleable in those early months. She said to try varying Isla's head position during sleep and supervised tummy time during the day. All sensible advice. But I still lay awake that night worrying.
Looking for Something That Would Actually Help
I started researching flat head pillows — ergonomic pillows designed to gently distribute the pressure on a baby's head and support the natural shape as it develops. I found a lot of options, ranging from the flimsy to the overcomplicated, and I wanted something that felt genuinely well-made and safe.
The baby plus Baby Flat Head Pillow in Pink on ALTOE caught my attention for a few reasons. The ergonomic design was specifically described as gently supporting the head rather than just providing a surface — the distinction matters, because you want something that works with the natural shape of a baby's head, not against it. The fabric was described as soft and baby-safe, which for a newborn's skin is non-negotiable. And it was easy to clean, which with a baby is always a practical priority.
Using It for the First Time
It arrived quickly and I used it for the first time that same evening during Isla's supervised rest time. She settled into it immediately — the soft fabric and the gentle support seemed to suit her, and she looked comfortable in a way that was immediately reassuring to watch. The pillow is used under parental supervision, which I was careful to follow, and it fitted naturally into our routine during the periods when I was right there with her.
The pink colour was a small thing, but it mattered to me. Isla's nursery is soft pinks and creams, and having something that looked considered rather than purely clinical felt like a kindness to myself in a period when everything felt quite overwhelming.
The Difference It Made
Over the following weeks, combined with the varied positioning my health visitor had recommended, the slight asymmetry I'd noticed began to even out. By Isla's three-month check, her head shape was developing well and my health visitor was pleased with her progress. I can't attribute that entirely to the pillow — the tummy time and position changes were part of it too — but having a tool that actively supported her head shape during supervised rest gave me something practical to do with the worry, which is sometimes exactly what you need.
More than the physical benefit, it gave me peace of mind. As a first-time mum, the feeling that you're doing something — that you've identified a concern and responded to it thoughtfully — is genuinely valuable. The pillow is easy to clean (important when you're dealing with a baby who spits up with impressive frequency), has held its shape well through repeated washing, and is still part of our supervised rest routine eight months on.
What I'd Say to Any New Parent Who's Noticed the Same Thing
First: breathe. It's very common, it's usually very manageable, and you're not failing your baby by having noticed it. Second: talk to your health visitor or GP. Third: consider a flat head pillow as part of a broader approach — not as a magic fix, but as a practical, gentle support that gives you something constructive to do while you follow the other advice.
The baby plus Baby Flat Head Pillow was the right choice for us. You can browse more in the Baby Toys & Activity Equipment collection, explore the full Baby & Toddler range for everything you need in those early months, and check the Latest Products collection for new arrivals.
You're doing better than you think. And it's okay to ask for a little help — even from a pillow.
— Natasha Brennan, Leicester
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