| Japanese children sleep between their parents until
adolescence. Korean infants spend more than 90 percent of their
time being held. In contrast, American babies spend two-thirds of
their time alone, in infant seats, strollers, car seats, cribs or
swings. and American mothers deliberately don't respond to their
babies' cries 46 percent of time in the first three months,
according to a study cited by Anthropologist Meredith Small in her
book Our Babies, Ourselves: How Biology and Culture
Shape the Way We Parent (Anchor Books, 1998).
Furthermore, in most countries other than the US, colic –
prolonged periods of inconsolable crying that usually happens in
the evening - is unknown, according to pediatrician Ronald Barr,
M.D., of Children's Hospital in Montreal, who conducted numerous
studies on infant crying between 1988 and 1997. In fact, in most
other parts of the world, babies rarely cry for long periods of
time, perhaps because their needs are met immediately by their
mothers, who are in constant contact with them.
Small cites these and many other examples of how different
cultures parent, based on studies conducted during the past 30
years. As she points out, our closely held beliefs about raising
children are vastly different from those of most of the world. In
many other cultures around world, including other industrialized
societies, babies are held in slings or front packs all day long,
and are rarely observed to cry.
But now there is a growing movement in the U.S. toward
"attachment parenting", a theory of child-rearing
centered around responsiveness to children's needs and close
physical contact between baby and mother. In practice, this means
extended breast feeding and child-led weaning; sleeping with your
child and allowing her to nurse throughout the night; and carrying
or wearing your baby in a sling for much of the day. This type of
parenting closely mimics the practice of "primitive" or
"natural" societies – and flies in the face of modern
Western notions of fostering independence in children.
The Powerful Bond
The term "attachment" was coined in the 1960s by
British psychiatrist John Bowlby, when he proposed a
biological-bonding theory between a mother and her baby. While
studying children under age 3 who were separated from their
mothers for days or weeks during hospital stays, Bowlby, along
with fellow researcher Mary Ainsworth, found the mother-child bond
to be more powerful than previously realized. Bowlby and Ainsworth
were struck by the depth of the children's attachment and their
despair upon separation.
To nurture the mother-infant relationship, attachment parenting
promotes close contact between baby and mother. This includes
extended breastfeeding and child-led weaning, co-sleeping,
"baby wearing" in a carrier during the day, and constant
attention to the baby's physical and emotional needs.
Easier Than it Sounds
Although attachment parenting may sound like "New
Age" thinking, it's actually the oldest style of
child-rearing, and one that is widespread. For example, in
two-thirds of the world, children sleep with their mothers,
according to several studies cited by Small. A 1996 study of young
children's sleep habits in Japan, Italy, and the U.S. revealed
that Japanese children actually sleep between their parents until
adolescence. Similarly, when a researcher queried mothers in Fiji
about their sleeping arrangements, the Fijians were surprised by
the question, and asked, "Is it true American mothers put
their babies in cages at night?" While our society tends to
judge how "good" a baby is by whether he is sleeping
through the night, Italian mothers couldn't answer questions about
how long their babies slept or how often they got up - their
babies slept with them, and they simply didn't keep track of when
the babies awoke.
The other main precept of attachment parenting is
responsiveness and respect for children's needs. Although giving
yourself over entirely to your child's needs may sound
overwhelming, attachment parenting advocates maintain that this
style of parenting is actually easier. Based on her experience
with hundreds of families, nationally known family and parenting
counselor Naomi Aldort, of Eastsound, Washington, says, "I
can't believe how difficult most mothers make it for themselves:
sleeping in a different room and having to get up and go to the
baby in the night, all the preparation and warming involved in
bottle feeding, all the gadgets and equipment to pack whenever
they go out. All attachment mothers need is a sling and their own
body."
Some fear that attachment parenting will create dependent,
clingy children. Attachment proponents claim the opposite is true:
"Attached children may be dependent longer, but because the
dependency phase is completely fulfilled, the child can grow into
an independent, secure adult," Aldort says. Further,
proponents argue that each developmental stage, such as toilet
learning, or weaning from the breast or bed, will be naturally
achieved when the child is ready, and not according to an
arbitrary, culturally determined timetable.
Mothers who choose the attachment parenting route may encounter
criticism from others. Perhaps the biggest concern is that this
style of parenting will lead to spoiled children. Aldort responds:
"Human beings are meant to be bonded, and a baby takes for
granted that he will be taken care of on his terms." Carrie
Eisenbeiz is one mom who knew instinctively before 20-month-old
Courtney was born that she wanted to sleep with her baby and
breastfeed her into toddlerhood. "When someone asks me,
'Aren't you worried about spoiling her?', I say 'It's my intention
to spoil her as much as possible.'"
The costs of not parenting in an attached way can be
great, according to Aldort and other attachment proponents.
"Several research studies show a clear connection between
children not getting their needs met at an early age and
malfunctions in adulthood, such as depression, drug use, violence
and divorce," Aldort says.
"It is our job to be responsive parents, meeting the needs
of our child; it is not the child's job to meet our needs
for a quiet and perfectly well-behaved child," adds child
psychologist Jan Hunt, M.Sc., director of The Natural Child
Project and web site. "In short, attachment parenting means
loving and trusting our children."
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