The Nod Shop28 May 20263 MIN

Having a baby? Send this list to every cousin flying back from the US before your due date

Some of these things make things easier, and some of them just look nice, and both are valid reasons

Elle Fanning in Margo's Got Money Troubles

Elle Fanning plays a new mom in ‘Margo’s Got Money Troubles’

Courtesy Apple TV

Somewhere around the second trimester, I started a Notes app document called “US list”. It began with three items. It currently has 26. The premise: things that either don’t exist in India, cost three times as much here, or technically ship here but arrive sometime after the baby has started solid foods.

A significant portion of what I know about new motherhood comes from people who’ve already been through it—friends who had their babies a year or two before me, older cousins who want to debrief, mum groups where strangers offer advice with the confidence of someone who has earned it. There’s a lot of noise in all of that, but there’s also genuinely useful signals. And one category of signal that keeps coming up, across all of these sources, is: things you should really try to get from the US.

Some of it will make things easier. Some of it will just look nice on your changing table. I’ve made peace with both.

My cousin Shloka, flying in from New York next month, received a voice note and a formatted Google Doc. She accepted both with more grace than I probably deserved.

The list (forward this directly)

01

NoseFrida snot sucker, Frida, ₹1,450 approx

A nasal aspirator that works via suction. You, the parent, provide that suction. With your mouth. I understand if you need a moment—I did too. My friend Harshana, who has two kids under three, called it one of the most useful products she owns. The filter means nothing comes back to you. When your baby can’t feed because they can’t breathe and it’s 3am, you don’t want to be refreshing a shipping tracker.

Nosefrida
02

Original nursing pillow, My Brest Friend, ₹4,900

The Boppy gets all the press, but My Brest Friend has a flat, firm surface, a back-support strap that stays in place, and a small pocket for your phone—which you’ll have, because breastfeeding in the early weeks takes much longer than anyone warns you about.

Nursing Pillow
03

Nursing cups, Silverette, ₹6,750 approx

Solid sterling silver cups that sit over the nipple between feeds. The silver is naturally antimicrobial, so they work as both protection and mild healing. They sound like a medieval remedy and, from everything I’ve heard, work like one in the best way.

Nursing Cups
04

Upside down peri bottle, Frida, ₹1,350 approx

For postpartum recovery, specifically the first few weeks when the bathroom is, as they say, a whole thing. The angled neck means you’re not contorting yourself for basic relief when you’re four days postpartum and running on three hours of sleep. Every person who has mentioned this to me has done so with a quiet urgency. I’m taking that seriously.

Upside down peri bottle
05

Baby sound machine, Hatch, ₹7,720 approx

Sound machine and night light in one. The red-light setting doesn’t overstimulate the baby or pull you fully out of sleep during night feeds. This is mostly a vibes purchase. Sometimes that’s enough.

Baby sound machine
06

Postpartum hair growth supplement, Nutrafol, ₹8,500 approx

One of the things nobody warns you about is hair loss—it happens a few months after birth when oestrogen drops, and for some women it’s significant enough to cause real anxiety. Nutrafol’s postpartum formula is a daily supplement designed specifically for this window. Worth knowing about before the baby arrives so you’re not scrambling to source it later.

Postpartum hair growth supplement
07

Smart baby monitor + flex stand, Nanit, ₹24,000 approx

The baby monitor that keeps coming up. Overhead 1080p with night vision, but the real draw is sleep tracking that analyses patterns through an app. Also notably well-designed for something that’s going to live in your nursery for years.

Baby monitor
08

All-over ointment, Tubby Todd Bath Co, ₹3,470 approx

The baby skincare product that’s taken over TikTok. Parents use it for baby acne, eczema, rashes, and general newborn skin drama, and the before/afters are genuinely convincing. It’s the kind of thing you’ll want stocked before you need it, because when you need it, you’ll need it at 2 am.

All over ointment, Tubby Tod

I don’t think there’s a way to fully prepare for something you haven’t done before. But there is something reassuring about the fact that people who’ve come before you have strong opinions about the peri bottle, have tested the nursing pillows, and will tell you exactly what’s worth the luggage space and what isn’t. I’m choosing to lean into that—the collective knowledge of people who’ve already been in the trenches—and the list is part of that. Shloka knows this. She’s bringing the Google Doc items, and probably a few things I hadn’t thought to ask for.

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