Developing Attachment: Inconsistent Response to a Baby's Distress
An example of an inconsistent response to a baby's distress. Find out more at: https://www.aboutkidshealth.ca/health... Developing Attachment: Inconsistent Response to a Baby's Distress This is a sample from a full dvd called "A Simple Gift: Comforting Your Baby" which is available to purchase at: http://www.imhpromotion.ca/Resources/... Follow us on: Facebook: / aboutkidshealth Twitter: / aboutkidshealth Pinterest: / aboutkidshealth Subscribe to the AboutKidsHealth YouTube channel: http://ow.ly/CzrN50ClHN3 This video does not constitute medical advice, and is not meant to be used or relied upon by anyone without additional guidance and supervision from a qualified physician. Do not perform the procedures described in this video unless your child's physician has reviewed this video and provides you with specific instructions and directions about performing these procedures. VIDEO TRANSCRIPT Parents often react inconsistently to their baby's distress. Sometimes they can be loving. Other times they are angry, and at other times they may ask their child to worry about them. Watch this mother's response to her child's cries. "Stop that! I don't want you to do that. Stop it!" Here's another example, "Come here, honey. You scared me. I thought something terrible had happened. Come here now. Mommy was just so scared. You make mommy feel better. Give mommy a hug. Make mommy feel better." As you can see, once when this baby hurt himself, his mother got angry. And another time the mother got more upset than the baby. "You scared me. I thought something terrible had happened." By doing that, whether she meant to or not, the message the mom gave her baby was that her own needs were more important than her baby's. These babies stopped going to their parents for comfort because they don't want to upset their parents. It's important to remember it's not up to a baby to meet a parent's needs, it's the other way around. It's up to you to meet your baby's needs. A child who gets a loving response only some of the time, has to work very hard, often by clinging and whining to get their mother's attention. They don't know what to expect from the parent and are not sure how to get love and affection. They can become very demanding. In the long-term, children who are unsure about themselves, and their parents, are likely to have problems getting along with other people. Here's another way this mother could have responded to her child. "Shhh." [mother rocking child] See how this time the mum focuses on the baby's needs. See how she paid attention to her baby. Calmly picked him up, held him close, and reassured him. She responded to her child on a loving way, and a baby whose parent responds in this loving way, learns that he can count on his parent to be there when he needs her. Babies, whose mothers respond in a loving way, learn to trust that their needs will be respected and valued. And they in turn learn to respect and value other people's needs. In other words, they can go on to form good, close relationships with their parents and with others.

Study of Maternal Deprivation | Before and After Therapy

Developing Attachment: Rejecting a Baby's Distress

Secure, Insecure, Avoidant Ambivalent Attachment in Mothers Babies

The Impact of Anger on Young Children

7 Subtle Signs Your Child Lacks Secure Attachment

The Attachment Theory: How Childhood Affects Life

Disconnection and the Still Face Paradigm

Still face experiment

The Truth About Daycare, ADHD, and Attachment Issues

The Japanese Parenting Habit That Raises Babies With Extremely High IQ

Jealousy Bites | Brain Games

How To Calm A Crying Baby - Dr. Robert Hamilton Demonstrates "The Hold" (Official)

My Golden Retriever Heals a Terrified Rescue Kitten in Just 3 Meetings!

Baby Human To Belong Separation

Child Psychology - Developing Empathy

ADHD Child vs. Non-ADHD Child Interview

The "Still Face" Experiment by Dr Ed Tronick

Ten Things You Do Every Day That Your Baby Will Remember for the Rest of Their Life

Attachment - avoidant

