A Mother's Simple Advice
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Make Them Feel Safe and Secure
My mother often talked about making babies and children feel secure - physically and emotionally.
She often talked about how to hold babies in a way that made them feel safe and secure. For example, she'd talk about "not slinging them over your arm" and, instead, holding them in a way that wouldn't make them sense they could be dropped.
She would often talk about about always remembering that babies and children are "separate little human beings with thoughts and feelings". It bothered her when she'd see parents seemed to forget that, in even in a small way. For example, if she saw a parent insisting a baby drink all the milk in his bottle, clean a plate, or eat some food he didn't like (when the baby/child clearly didn't want the milk or food), my mother would say, "The way I think of it, 'How would they (the parents) like it if someone made them eat when they didn't want to eat?'".
She would talk about how parents often want children to do things they, themselves, wouldn't want to do. She found it objectionable when she'd see parents do something like force a child to swim when the child was terrified of water. Again, she'd ask, "How would they like it if they were terrified, and someone came along and made them do something anyway?"
The ideas she emphasized were always about the fact that a child trusts his parents to make him feel safe, secure, and respected. She would often say, children have only their parents to count on. If parents don't make them feel secure they have nobody." She would talk about parents worry too much about "spoiling children" and would say, "If you make them feel safe and secure they aren't needy, demanding, and spoiled."
My siblings and I grew up with the luxury of being very secure individuals. As children, we were pretty well behaved. That's not saying we didn't do things we shouldn't do, but, on the whole. we were well mannered, respectful, and well behaved.
Because I had seen how my mother's emphasis on making babies and children feel very secure had apparently been very effective, I adopted a similar philosophy with my own children (now grown) - and, sure enough, it does seem to be pretty effective.
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Comments
very touching, well written. thumbs up!
This post was very warming. I didn't have my mother growing up and I very much love to feel safe and secure; something that was a whole other language to her.
-h
Hannah, thank you. A lot of people didn't have a mother to make them feel safe and secure. I guess that's why, once I had kids of my own, I began to write quite a bit about the closeness between mothers and children. (This Hub isn't really that kind of writing, but I do write a lot about it.) It's a very nice thing for mothers and children to share, if they're fortunate enough to share it. I don't know if you have children or not, but chances are you will know how important such feelings are and will get to enjoy sharing them if/when you have children (if you don't already have them).











nashomega says:
2 years ago
The best thing my mother gave us was our education, when the world was against her she taught us, help us become independent and have a status in the society. For me my mom is the best! She made us what we are today!
Good Hub i hope you have more comments soon!