Is Your Child Emotionally Independent?

How to Help Foster Emotional Independence Through Attachment Parenting

April Duke
We are told from the day we bring our babies home from the hospital to encourage independence. Great Aunt Sally asks when you're going to wean him, and your mother wants to know when she can keep him for a week. Well meaning friends and relatives are full of advice on fostering independence: "Don't pick him up too much, he'll want to be held all the time", "Don't go get him when he cries, he'll think he can get anything he wants just by crying", or, "You're not sending him to preschool? How will he ever learn to be independent?"

How does anyone learn to be secure at all in a world like that? Babies learn to be independent by being constantly reassured that we are there for them. By responding to a child's needs, you actually foster the independence that we as a society value so highly. It may seem counter-intuitive, but babies who cry less and who are attended to quickly are happier and more secure than babies left to cry so they'll (ironically enough) "learn" to be independent.

A controversial and not-too-popular opinion, introduced by books like The Continuum Concept by Jean Liedloff, is that babies should be "in arms" for the first 6 months of life. An easy way to accomplish this is by wearing your baby in a baby sling. After 6 months of age, you can continue to give your baby the reassurance he needs by holding him as much as possible and always making sure that you are there when he needs to "touch base". The philosophy behind this is that secure children will be better equipped to deal with the pressures of life.

Attachment Parenting has grown in popularity in recent years, and I believe this will be for the betterment of society. Studies have suggested that violence can come from basic attachment issues. Are we are seeing increased violence in the younger generations because of the rise in detached parenting? It is possible that these children are not emotionally secure enough to process life and all of the pressures that go along with it.

With this in mind I urge you, when your baby cries, pick him up. You won't be spoiling him, you'll be creating in him the knowledge that when he needs something, you will be there for him. If we can begin to return to attached parenting, it is possible that this next generation will be one of peace.

5 Comments

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  • Misha5/13/2010

    very good stuff. thanks for the incite.

    Misha
    http://www.modmum.com

  • Sophie1/1/2009

    This sounds like a very reasonable approach. I really like the way you developed the article.
    Sophie

  • Matt A. Maxx9/9/2008

    Humm... Interesting. I've often wondered if the rise in violence and crimes within our society has something to do with our children being raised by babysitters.

  • Angela Atkinson9/8/2008

    Bravo!! So wonderful to see this article...I have used AP with all three of my kids and it's worked out very well for me so far! Great article. I completely agree with your point of view here!! Five stars.

  • danny9/4/2008

    very intuitive. i do agree that more physical reassurance creates independance

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