Baby's Primary Developmental Tasks Austin TX

Your challenge? Learning everything about your baby when he was delivered without an owner's manual -- and as soon as you figure it out, he changes!

Local Companies

Setne Verlis PhD
(512)4800212
1823 Waterston Ave
Austin, TX
Austin Hypnotherapy
(512)4786256
2630 Exposition Blvd
Austin, TX
Johnson, Michael A
(512)9284357
101 W 6th St # 604
Austin, TX
Dr. Jennifer L. Imming, Ph.D.
(512)3744900
1600 W 38th St Ste 420
Austin, TX
Watterson, John PhD
(512)3060663
4101 Parkstone Hts # 260
Austin, TX
Ponder, JoAnn PHD
(512)4968244
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Austin-Bee Caves Counseling Center
512 828 7195
3534 Bee Caves Rd., Suite 114
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Candace Smith, LCSW
(512) 680-0425
5808 Balcones Drive
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Austin Counseling & Psychological
(512)3458195
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Ross J Mike PhD
(512)2501616
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Provided By:

by Dr. Laura Markham

Your New Baby's Primary Developmental Tasks

  1. Learning to nurse
  2. Learning to sleep at night
  3. Learning to handle lots of stimulation
  4. Development of trust
  5. Rapid physical and brain development
  6. Settling into his body

Your Challenge

  • Learning everything about your baby when he was delivered without an owner's manual -- and as soon as you figure it out, he changes!
  • Renegotiating your entire life.

Parents' Gameplan

  1. Wear your baby. Shell cry less and youll develop more sensitivity to what she needs, before she has to express herself loudly. You'll dramatically reduce the amount of time she spends crying and her chances of being colicky. Before you deliver, ask other moms about baby slings and snugglies, and be sure to have both around so you can see what works best for you.

  2. Nurse. Hell be healthier, have a higher IQ, and cry less. Youll be happier in the middle of all that unfolded laundry. (The hormones that get released when you nurse are similar to those released after orgasm.) Nurse on demand, not on schedule. Get whatever advice you need to get nursing established. As soon as your baby can handle it, nurse at night lying down, so you can doze while she nurses; you won't be so exhausted the next day from night feedings.

  3. Sleep whenever and wherever you can. For me, the family bed was the only way to get any sleep at all. It makes some people anxious. There are now great options, like a baby bunk, that connect right up against your bed so you can't roll on the baby accidentally. My advice is to read as much as you can, and then lose the guilt. Do what works for you and your baby.

  4. Plan for the baby to be with Mom or Dad as much as possible for at least the first year. An infant needs to be with an adult who is crazy about her. Thats too much to expect from a paid caretaker. Not to mention that if the paid caretaker IS crazy about the baby and leaves your employ -- and the chances of turnover are very high -- your baby will experience it as a tremendous loss. HE doesnt know this isnt a second mother. In fact, if he spends most of his waking hours with her, he doesn't know it isn't his primary mother.

  5. De-prioritize everything else, except eating, sleeping and loving, for yourself and the rest of your family. This isn't just for moms. It's amazing how many dads assume their lives can go on as usual when there's a new baby at home.

  6. If you stay home with a baby, dont let yourself get isolated. Get together with other moms or dads and talk babies. Or politics (For instance, why the U.S. is one of only five countries of 168 studied that doesn't mandate some form of paid maternal leave, putting us on par with Papua New Guinea, Lesotho, and Swaziland!)

    Click here to read more from Pregnancy.Org

Featured Local Company

Setne Verlis PhD

(512)4800212
1823 Waterston Ave
Austin, TX