PARENTING FREEDOM

attachment parenting, homeschooling, gentle discipline
  • .: My Children :.

  • .: Status Updates :.

    Friday, December 21st, 2012 10:23 am

    Hundreds of hurting people visit here every day, most of whom are searching for comfort after loss. Please reach out for emotional support as you begin the healing process. Be patient with yourself. Allow yourself to grieve. Let it out. May God be with you.

  • .: Quotes :.

    “Condemnation without investigation
    is the height of ignorance.”
    Albert Einstein
  • Nursing Past One? Are You Nuts?

    | January 8, 2012

    I remember the first time I saw a mother nursing a toddler. The baby couldn’t have been much past twelve months old, but when the mother scooped her up and began to nurse her, she looked so big! My mother and I exchanged glances and later commented on how crazy it was for her to still be nursing. That was something that was not done in our community. Rarely did mothers choose breastfeeding, and if they did, they only nursed a few months at most. This particular nursing couplet was from out of town. As a young minister’s wife with three little daughters, she didn’t know the rules in our community.

    I never gave a lot of thought to breastfeeding. My brother and I had been bottle-fed in the early seventies, but my baby sister (thirteen years my junior) was nursed, ever so discreetly. Back then, the hospital nurses attempted to sabotage the breastfeeding right off by providing and encouraging bottles of glucose water. For the most part, our community was ignorant on the subject of breastfeeding.

    When I became pregnant with our first child, my husband and I attended birthing classes taught by a lovely pro-life Catholic nurse. She recommended a book called The Womanly Art of Breastfeeding which I read cover-to-cover. I recall borrowing her copy before ordering my own. I was definitely going to breastfeed. And I expected to do so for a year. (On an aside note, this is when I began my journey of self-education.)

    When my baby was born, I faced the challenges of cracking and bleeding, but I was determined I was still going to breastfeed. Even if it killed me. Even if it was going to hurt like that for the duration. I would do anything for my child. Thankfully, by the time he was three weeks old, the nursing was going smoothly. Completely pain-free. Just as it should be.

    Breastfeeding proved to be a treasured comfort because my baby ended up being colicky. In an effort to help him, I began to read everything I could find about babies. Since this was before the days of the internet, I recall that a lot of my research came from books I ordered from the La Leche League catalog. Dr. William Sears introduced me to a whole new parenting paradigm – a world that combined logic and instincts. I soaked up the information in his books and practiced what he preached. Attachment parenting. Awesome. It was oh-so right.

    During my first year as a mother, I read a couple more inspirational and educational books about breastfeeding: Mothering Your Nursing Toddler and Breastfeeding and Natural Child Spacing. Add in The Family Bed and The Continuum Concept, and you get the small library that originally inspired me to create an attached environment for my babies. The authors, in their wisdom, introduced me to a road less traveled. Since I lived in a community that was unaware of that road, I journeyed forth alone, and immediately began to experience the rewards and benefits of this new direction.

    If you can accept breastfeeding, and understand its biology, then continuing to nurse past infancy is a perfectly normal progression of mothering. When I became educated on extended nursing, I was completely convinced and confident that it was the right thing to do, even if I didn’t know one other mother who ever considered such a thing. Thankfully, for my children’s sake, I am the kind of person who doesn’t need others’ approval when I know I’m right. As time went on, the added bonus of practical experience simply reaffirmed my parenting decisions. I knew, without a doubt, that my toddlers needed to nurse. No question.

    The strength of the nursing mother/child attachment is incredibly powerful. The depth of the connection between mother and child is not just physical, but can become a truly profound spiritual relationship.

    I am very thankful for breastfeeding. I won’t go quite so far as to say I wouldn’t want to have had babies without being able to breastfeed, but I know for certain that not breastfeeding would be much more difficult and would require much more energy. I am so glad I didn’t have to go the substitution route. I can see how not breastfeeding might result in a mother choosing to have fewer children. They miss out on the easy-breezy, chill-axing part of mothering. I don’t know if I could have physically handled getting out of bed to tend to artificially feeding a baby. I don’t know if I would have been able to mother without the natural hormones that induce nurturing: oxytocin and prolactin. What a design concept! God created nursing mothers to feel oh-so motherly toward their offspring. Breastfeeding is worth it just for the natural hormones!

    I can’t imagine choosing to prepare bottles when I can just sit and hold her close. The convenience is incredible. It’s hard to believe God came up with such a crazy, fast-food for babies. And even though it is instantly available, it is also perfectly formulated nutrition. Unbelievable.

    I won’t list all the physical and emotional advantages of breastfeeding here, but please research the topic and pray that your heart and mind will be open to accepting God’s creative gift of breastfeeding. Mammals around the world rejoice!

    Rarely have my babies fallen asleep or woken up without nursing. Why would I bother to use other methods when nursing worked like a charm for all five babies? Breastfeeding is the best sleeping potion available for little ones. And nursing to wake up gives them that extra boost, like an “Oh, What a Beautiful Morning!” energizer. Nursing is better than any band-aid. It soothes and comforts. Nursing is also an incredible discipline tool for toddlers. It calms them, provides them stress relief, and helps them refocus, like a good attitude pill.

    One of my reasons for writing about extended nursing is to give you a picture of a typical day in the life of a nursing sixteen-month-old.

    Bedtime is a pleasure. After completing some bedtime chores around ten (like making sure the pets go out and in, and locking the doors), I scoop up my baby and do the “change” and “diaper” baby sign language while changing her. She starts smiling and pumping her little fists (“milky” in baby sign language), we hop onto the king-sized bed, and lean against the comfy foam wedges to nurse. As is her habit, she grasps my hair, excitedly pats my back (murmuring her enthusiasm), and settles down for a good long nurse on both sides. I usually watch TV or look at my laptop. I don’t hurry to lay her down next to me when she falls asleep.

    Since I am still recovering from Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, we typically stay in bed a good eleven hours. During that time, she usually wakes twice to nurse during the night. She is more vocal than she used to be in getting me to nurse her (probably because I am lazier), but she still keeps her eyes closed. It is cute to see her rapidly making her “milky” sign with both fists, even though it is hard to see in the dark.

    By the time morning comes, she may or may not want to wake up after a morning nursing session. Same as her mother. We are usually out of bed some time after nine, and head to the kitchen for breakfast. After or during some schoolwork with her brother, she might have a nursing snack between her independent playtime. Lunch usually follows around noon. More play and school, and then she has a nursing session that usually leads into a nap. She nurses another time in her sleep and nurses again to wake up from her nap. Then she is off to play again. Supper is typically between five and six, and she plays pretty hard until about ten. Usually she nurses at least once during the evening, but sometimes she is too busy. She, like her siblings, has more than her fair share of snacks during the day. Her favorites are raspberries, strawberries, and cut-up grapes.

    She rarely has a crisis or conflict that needs a “milky” fix, but when she does, I quickly offer to nurse her, and her discomfort is soon relieved. She learned how to suck her thumb early on, so that helps her recover almost immediately from any baby hardships. At least once every day, she comes to me communicating with her “milky” sign, and is so excited when I completely understand her. Outings, appointments, and activities definitely change the daily routine, and at this age, she no longer needs to nurse when we go out (unless it is a full day trip).

    I often mention one of the most excellent benefits of extended nursing – and that is extended post-partum infertility. The fact that breastfeeding can help space children naturally is a well-kept secret. I think many people view having more than two or three children as highly undesirable, simply because they space their children too closely together. Having two babies at once is hard! Breastfeeding around the clock beyond infancy and sharing sleep will help extend natural infertility. A mother’s ability to cope becomes easier because of the greater spacing between the children.

    An old acquaintance just asked me on Friday how many children I had. When I told her I had five, she nearly fainted and told me she had two, a year apart and could hardly cope. She couldn’t imagine having five. She doesn’t understand that it is a completely different story when the spacing of children is spread out. (I am not saying we shouldn’t welcome all children, it’s just that I believe extended nursing helps to naturally space children in a more manageable, healthier way.)

    Other mothers often wish their babies would sleep through the night, but not me. Instead of a full night’s sleep, I prefer to delay the return of cycles when I already have a baby. And I absolutely prefer to respond to my child’s needs, regardless of the time of day or night.

    The notion that toddlers will never wean is ludicrous. Natural weaning begins with the child’s first bite of food and continues with the mother following the child’s cues to a mutually satisfying completion. Also, contrary to common myths, extended nursing gave me five very independent, secure, and advanced toddlers.

    Nursing past one is so natural and matter-of-fact for me that I can’t believe it is not part of the cultural norm. I guess it is because breastfeeding is just coming back after a couple of lost generations, and also, the stay-at-home lifestyle is not very common in our modern society.

    Parenting can be difficult enough without casting aside one of the most valuable and powerful tools given to a mother of a toddler. Through the gift of breastfeeding, mothers are able to nourish, comfort, and nurture from their very being. I don’t know who benefits more from the nursing relationship, the mother or the child.

    After practicing extended nursing with all five of my babies, I can say with all certainty that I believe breastfeeding a toddler is a very good thing, and thus makes my short list of “Things I Know For Sure”.

    For more on this topic, choose from the following:
    Essay ~ Bible Verses ~ Quotes ~ Blog Posts ~ Books

    Babywearing: The Answer to Crankiness

    | October 26, 2011

    If a baby is generally conflict free and happy most of the time, then it is much easier to deal with those rare days of teething or crankiness… Those are the times when babywearing pays off big time. Getting ahead of the game, by popping Baby in the sling or backpack keeps her distracted and comforted, especially when Mommy needs to keep up with the program. C1 even cheers when I get out the sling at home. This was yesterday when I had to get ready to go somewhere and nobody else could keep Baby content. The sling did the trick while I was putting on my make-up.

    Does she sleep through the night?

    | December 5, 2010

    The most common question I have been asked since the birth of Baby GC is, “Does she sleep through the night?” (I think “Does she sleep through the night?” and “Is she a good baby?” amount to the same concern. The expectation seems to be a baby who leaves the mother alone so the mother doesn’t know she has a baby.)


    Baby GC ~ 12 days old

    I think most of the people who ask this question have experience with “bottle-fed, baby-in-a-crib-in-the-other-room” parenting. Night feedings must be much more uncomfortable, unpleasant, and more difficult than what I experience as an attachment mother. I thankfully also don’t have to leave my children in the morning to work outside the home.


    Baby GC ~ One month old

    Nighttime awakenings usually go like this: When the warm milk that filled her tummy at bedtime is completely absorbed, she stirs and tosses and smacks her lips. I pat her back or lift her on to my chest in case it’s just a rogue burp which needs to be released. If she continues to turn her head and begins to root, often with “hurry-up-already” coughs, I begin to nurse her. The smile as she latches on and her sighs of complete satisfaction are worth the label of not “sleeping through the night.” Mother’s high of a mixture of oxytocin and prolactin is satisfying as well. Her little fingers are wrapped around my thumb, and my fingers are wrapped around her little forearm. I may drift back to sleep while she is nursing, but if I can, I stay awake to position her carefully beside me when she is contentedly full. I cuddle her next to me and stretch out while she sleeps peacefully. I often hold her two hands in one of mine while I join her in deep sleep. (This helps when she is getting settled because it keeps her hands from rubbing or accidentally scratching her face and waking herself.) She sleeps next to me, safely on a firm mattress with a sturdy, high guard rail, instinctively watched over by her sleeping guardian mother.

    I believe babies are smarter and healthier if they don’t sleep through the night. I understand the technical definition of “sleeping through the night” is six hours, but Baby and I usually stay in bed for eleven hours straight.

    Usually after night nursings, I don’t even want to stop holding her. For her sake, I don’t want to put her down on the cold sheets, and I selfishly don’t want to lose her comfy, cuddly warmth. I have had five babies, and I know this time passes quickly. Soon, there will be a baby no more.

    I can relate to the pain and suffering of having a colicky baby up every hour or two for months, stretching to sleepless years. Even with a healthy baby, there can be stressful nights of fatigue and frustration, but under normal circumstances, nighttime mothering isn’t much of a sacrifice. It is more like a gift. A mutual gift that brings joy and satisfaction to both mother and child.

    So the answer to your question is, “No. She doesn’t sleep through the night. She’s a baby! And I’m glad. I miss her when she’s sleeping!” (I hold my tongue from saying, “Do YOU sleep through the night?” because I already suspect the answer is no.)


    Baby GC ~ Almost three months old

    P.S. It is now 4:47AM and I am lying here, propped up in bed, with a pencil and paper in hand, writing by a dim light. Baby is sleeping peacefully on my chest. I listen to her soft, steady breathing. Her eyes are closed with dark eyelashes feathering her rosy cheeks. I breathe in her baby smells. Sweet milk has dripped down her chin into the creases of her roly-poly neck, adding to her scent. Her “baby-ness” encourages mother’s kisses. She smells and feels so nice. She was made to be irresistible to her mother. I don’t want to lay her down. I want to hold her forever. She is surely giving me a glimpse of Heaven.

    “He tends his flock like a shepherd: He gathers the lambs in his arms and carries them close to his heart; he gently leads those that have young.” Isaiah 40:11

    “As a mother comforts her child, so will I comfort you.” Isaiah 66:13

    “The King will reply, ‘Truly I tell you, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me.’” Matthew 25:40

    “People were bringing little children to Jesus to have him touch them, but the disciples rebuked them. When Jesus saw this, he was indignant. He said to them, ‘Let the little children come to me, and do not hinder them, for the kingdom of God belongs to such as these. I tell you the truth, anyone who will not receive the kingdom of God like a little child will never enter it.’ And he took the children in his arms, put his hands on them and blessed them.” Mark 10:13-16

    For more on this topic, choose from the following:
    Essay ~ Bible Verses ~ Quotes ~ Blog Posts ~ Books

    Related: http://parentingfreedom.com/2011/07/10/my-no-regrets-alternative-to-crying-it-out/

    “Babies feel and remember stress when parents don’t respond”

    | August 26, 2010

    Stressed out: Studies show babies become anxious if ignored for even two minutes by mother
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-1305892/Six-month-old-babies-stressed-ignored-minutes-mothers.html#ixzz0xigMhvbL

    “Six-month-old babies become stressed out when they don’t get the attention they feel they deserve.”

    “Levels of the stress hormone cortisol soar when they are ignored by their mother, and even a day later they are worried about the same thing happening again.”

    “A baby who is deprived of its mother’s love for just two minutes is anxious about being ignored.”

    “…repeated episodes of stress could have a huge effect on a youngster’s health and on his or her course in life.”

    “A troubled upbringing may also mean the child going on to become a less than perfect parent itself.”

    Babies remember moments of neglect, study suggests
    http://www.ctv.ca/CTVNews/Health/20100825/babies-emotional-stress-100825/

    “Babies were able to anticipate stress based on the expectations formed from the previous day about how their parents would treat them.”

    “Children as young as six months have the capacity to remember stressful events in “intimate contexts.”

    “Social and emotional deprivation in the first year of life can have profound long-term impacts on child development and mental health,” Hertzman said in the news release.”

    Babies feel and remember stress when parents don’t respond
    http://www.parentcentral.ca/parent/babiespregnancy/babies/article/851960–babies-feel-and-remember-stress-when-parents-don-t-respond

    For infant sleep, receptiveness more important than routine
    http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2010-08/ps-fis081010.php

    “Being emotionally receptive can reduce sleep disruptions and help infants and toddlers sleep better.”

    “Parents had the most success with their children’s sleep when they responded appropriately to their children’s cues.”

    “Understand the meaning of your baby’s cries.”

    | August 16, 2010

    I am looking forward to using the “Dunstan Baby Language” for the first time (in addition to experience and never giving up.) Priscilla Dunstan’s DVD didn’t come out until after my last child was too old.

    “Understand the meaning of your baby’s cries.”
    neh = hungry, owh = sleepy, heh = discomfort, eair = lower gas, eh = burp
    Priscilla Dunstan

    Disclaimer: My advice is to keep trying to comfort your baby no matter what. In my experience, breastfeeding fixes most everything. :-)

    http://www.dunstanbaby.com/  

    Baby Talk

    “How Not to Raise a Bully”

    | April 21, 2010

    How Not to Raise a Bully: The Early Roots of Empathy
    http://www.time.com/time/printout/0,8816,1982190,00.html

    “The first stirrings of human empathy typically appear in babyhood: newborns cry when hearing another infant’s cry…”

    “Simple neglect can be surprisingly damaging… Nearly 90% of brain growth takes place in the first five years of life, and the minds of young children who have been neglected or traumatized often fail to make the connection between people and pleasure…”

    “The cold environment of an orphanage can be considered on a spectrum of punishment, at the other end of which is simple child discipline — an issue that sometimes confounds even the most mindful parents. How do you teach a child right from wrong without being too tough or slipping into abuse? Who among us has not raised our voice — O.K., screamed — while disciplining our children?”

    “But shouting at or, worse, hitting a child results in fear, rather than an understanding on the child’s part of why he or she is being punished, say researchers. Over the long term, the routine use of corporal punishment, like spanking, not only fails to change behavior for the better but has also been shown to increase aggression in children…”

    “Students are taught that a crying baby isn’t a bad baby, but a baby with a problem. By trying to figure out what’s going on, the children learn to see the world through the infant’s eyes and understand what it might be like to have needs but not be able to express them clearly…”

    iPhone interprets babies’ cries

    | January 21, 2010

    Why tot’s not appy, by
    http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/2817327/Why-tots-not-appy-by-iPhone.html#ixzz0dDPufOLv

    “AN iPhone application to translate a baby’s cries and tell parents instantly what they mean has been made available.
    Researchers discovered infants had five distinct, universal yells – regardless of language – indicating whether the tot is hungry, annoyed, tired, stressed or bored…”

    “The makers claim 96 per cent accuracy. But parenting experts believe it could make people rely on technology, not instinct and experience.”

    “‘Learning to interpret cries is part of the bonding process and forms the foundation for good communication.’”

    Sounds interesting as long as there is not a “He’s just doing that” option.

    http://www.crytranslator.com/

    Colicky Babies and Depressed Dads

    | July 2, 2009

    Colic in babies may be linked to depression in dads
    http://www.usatoday.com/news/health/2009-06-28-baby-colic-depression-father_N.htm?csp=34

    “Now, researchers are asking whether colic also may be more common in children of depressed men.”

    http://parentingfreedom.com/fussy-baby/

    Recognizing Babies' Need to Nurse

    | July 7, 2008

    Breastfeeding mothers should note baby’s hunger pangs in time
    http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/217172,breastfeeding-mothers-should-note-babys-hunger-pangs-in-time.html

    “Breastfeeding mothers can cut down on their baby’s crying by recognising promptly when the little one is hungry… Stretching, sucking motions, and restlessness are the first signs of hunger, the BVKJ said. Subsequent signs are wriggling and crying.”

    “Mother and child get to know each other as time goes by, which makes recognizing the signals easier.”

    “Breastfeeding on demand is generally recommended nowadays, the BVKJ said. That means the baby should be fed whenever it wants.”

    Babies have been created to make pre-cry sounds that mean different things. We just have to learn to listen.

    The website, http://www.dunstanbaby.com, lists five of the sounds that babies make to communicate their needs. They may look very similar, but the sounds are quite distinct. It just takes a little practice. It helps to listen closely for the first letter.

    neh = hungry
    owh = sleepy
    heh = discomfort
    eair = lower gas
    eh = burp

    Rather than ignoring your baby’s cries, learn to listen and recognize early communication skills. Babies make pre-cry sounds that tells us what they NEED. It is really amazing to consider the way God created babies with identical, recognizable communication sounds, regardless of nationality or language.

    Learn how to respond to your baby’s cries, especially before he gets worked up into a desperate plea for help. Learn to LISTEN and respond with empathy.

    More on breastfeeding and listening to your baby:
    http://parentingfreedom.com/breastfeeding/
    http://parentingfreedom.com/cry-it-out/

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