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  • 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 crying.

  • "Stop that!

  • I don't want you to do that. Stop it again!"

  • Here's another example:

  • "You scared me!

  • I thought that something terrible had happened.

  • Come here now, Mummy was just so scared,

  • make Mummy feel better,

  • give Mummy a hug, make Mummy 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 mum gave the baby

  • was that her own needs were more important than her baby's.

  • These babies stop 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 or whining,

  • to get their mother's attention.

  • They don't know what to expect from their 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.

  • "Shhhhh. It's okay."

  • See how this time the mum focuses on her 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 in 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.

Parents often react inconsistently

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