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Attachment parenting
This article was written by Orhun Orgun.
Most (I wish I could say all) parents want the
best for their children. There is so much confusing and contradictory advice out
there, however, that most of us don't know what to believe.
Attachment parenting is a philosophy that
provides answers to the most basic questions you might have about parenting. You
may be surprised by how straightforward and sensible the idea is!
The basic idea is that you should respect your
child. If you always remember that your child is a fellow human being and that
her or his needs are real, the rest follows easily:
- Respecting your baby
- Don't forget: young babies' needs and wants
are the same. Babies cry when they need something.
- Never assume that your baby is
trying to manipulate you or becoming a tyrant or that you'll spoil your baby
by attending to her or his needs. On the contrary, a happy baby is a joy to
be with. An insecure, neurotic baby is the most tragic thing on earth. This
is what you produce by ignoring your baby's needs.
- Just think about it: if you were starving,
do you think other people would be spoiling you by giving you food? Would
they be helping you build character or independence by withholding food?
- I hate to mention this--tears come to my
eyes even as I type this--but here is a good lesson: responding to people's
cries for help inconsistently and only after the sufferer begs for help for
a long time is a trick that torturers use. They know that this makes their
victim dependent on the torturer. They know that it makes their victim
insecure, clingy, and weak. Believe me, I know what I am talking about;
people I personally know have witnessed this.
- When "experts" tell you that you should let
your baby cry to sleep, they are telling you that you should let a lonely,
perhaps scared, baby suffer. When they tell you to feed a baby on schedule
and ignore her or his cries, they are telling you to let your baby suffer
her or his hunger pangs alone. Don't torture your baby! Babies are meant to
be loved, not tortured.
- Breastfeeding on cue
- This is something you'll do automatically if
you sincerely respect your baby--if your baby signals that she or he needs
to nurse, you nurse her or him.
- It's also the best for you and your baby: by
nursing on cue, you make sure your milk supply never dwindles, your baby
never goes hungry, you reduce your risk of getting mastitis.
- Most importantly, you meet your baby's needs
promptly and consistently, which helps your baby to become a secure and
independent person.
- Extended breastfeeding
- If you respect your child, you'll continue
nursing her or him as long as she or he wants to.
- Most children will want to nurse for several
years.
- Extended nursing is known to be best for a
child, both physiologically and psychologically.
- Child-led weaning
- If you respect your baby, you will not force
her or him to wean from the breast. Leave it up to her or him to decide when
she or he is ready.
- Children who are forced to wean experience
varying degrees or psychological trauma. Some exhibit serious withdrawal
symptoms. Don't do this to your child.
- If you have to wean your child from the
breast before she or he is ready (perhaps for some medical reason), first
evaluate the reason. Get a second or even a third opinion. If you decide
that weaning is inevitable, do it gently and gradually.
- Child-led toilet training
- Parent-led toilet training is often a war of
wills. It involves use of embarrassment ("only a stupid little baby would
poop in her/his pants"), punishment and fear. It is not consistent
with respecting your baby.
- A little patience will make your life and
your baby's much more pleasant. If your child shows no interest in using the
potty, don't force her or him. It doesn't matter if your neighbor's child
was potty trained at two years of age and yours is still wearing diapers at
three. Your child will soon develop an interest in using the potty. If you
are gentle and encouraging, she or he will take care of most of the toilet
training by her- or himself.
- Parent-infant co-sleeping
- Most young children want to sleep with their
parents. Let them!
- Experts tell you that you'll develop a
terrible habit if you sleep with your child. Don't listen! All you'll
develop is a child with no fears, nightmares, and insecurity. Your child
will want to sleep in her or his bed at some point--all children want to
grow up and be independent. Those whose needs are consistently and lovingly
fulfilled can do this. Those whose needs are ignored become incessant
attention seekers, and may never grow independent.
- Responding to baby's needs
- This should be obvious by now--if your baby
cries or calls you for anything, she or he needs you.
- Attending to your baby's needs promptly and
consistently is the best investment you can make to guarantee a happy baby
and a happy family.
- Gentle discipline
- Yes, no spanking, no harsh punishment of any
kind.
- Reserve the word "no" to important
situations. When you do say "no", make sure you mean it!.
- Carrying your baby
- Carry your baby as much as possible. Use a
sling.
- Babies that are carried have a chance to
interact with their parents a lot more than babies who are abandoned in
those little prisons that we call playpens or cribs, or babies in strollers.
- Babies who are carried are also able to
observe the world from a much more interesting vantage points than poor
little imprisoned babies, or even those that are pushed around in strollers.
- Breastfeeding on cue is a lot easier when
you carry your baby. For that matter, attending to any of your baby's needs
promptly is a lot easier.
Suspicious of attachment parenting? Don't be! Do you
seriously think you will develop a good relationship with your mate by ignoring
her or his needs, by letting her or him suffer alone? Of course not! Well, your
baby is a person too, and her or his needs count just as much as yours and your
mate's (except that the baby's needs are more urgent, and need immediate and
unconditional attention).
You don't believe the "experts" can be wrong?
Consider this: they Were terribly wrong about breastfeeding for decades before
finally Realizing their mistakes.
- For the longest time, experts told mothers
that they should breastfeed on schedule, not on demand.
- Experts told mothers that they should limit
the time a baby spends at the breast during each feed.
- Experts told mothers that artificial infant
formula was just as good (or even better) than breastmilk.
- Experts told mothers that colostrum was bad
for a baby, and that they should withhold the breast for several days after a
baby's birth.
- Experts told mothers that they should not
nurse their baby for more than a few months.
- Guess what!? Every single
piece of advice listed above (given by "experts" to mothers for many decades)
turned out to be misguided. They have finally realized that breastfeeding on
demand, for as long as a baby wants to feed is best for the baby and for the
mother.
- If those "experts" had just let mothers pay
attention to their babies' signals, none of these mistakes would have been
made! Yes, if those experts had tried respecting babies, everything would have
been fine.
- Well, the experts have caught up on the
benefits of breastfeeding and on how to do it right, but it looks like they
are repeating their old mistakes in other aspects of parenting.
- Respecting your baby has always been the right
thing to do to insure successful breastfeeding. The experts thought that they
knew more about a baby's needs than the baby did. What arrogance!
- When the experts tell you that you should let
your baby "cry it out" (because it's good for the lungs, because it builds
character, because you need to show them who's boss, because otherwise you'll
spoil them...), they are thinking that they know more about a baby's needs
than the baby does. Are you going to believe them? Those poor mothers who
believed the breastfeeding advice "experts" gave them suffered unnecessarily,
and made their babies suffer too. If you believe the equally arrogant advice
that today's "experts" give you, you and your baby will be suffering too.
- Don't listen to the experts. Listen to your
baby!
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