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Paperback Your Self-Confident Baby: How to Encourage Your Child's Natural Abilities -- From the Very Start Book

ISBN: 0471178837

ISBN13: 9780471178835

Your Self-Confident Baby: How to Encourage Your Child's Natural Abilities -- From the Very Start

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Book Overview

At long last -- Magda Gerber's wisdom and spice captured in a book --what a treasure Now parents and caregivers everywhere can benefit from learning what it means to truly respect babies. -- Janet... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

A Must Have!

This book is the best introduction to the RIE method of respect in caring for children and yourself, and an absolute essential for new parents and grandparents. This philosophy is summed up in "do less, observe more," and it's the observing that's the key. We tried the RIE philosophy when our son was four months old, and wished we had done it sooner! It's made a huge difference in our household. I had been driving myself crazy reading What to Expect and Baby and Child, trying to do it all. Talk to him this way, give him that kind of toy or mobile, sit him up in the right kind of seat, carry him around whenever possible, take him out to see the world, never just let him be so he can assimilate that world and choose what he needs to work on next. And then I felt guilty any time I did just let him be so that I could have some downtime, even when it was obvious that he was perfectly busy doing his own thing. After beginning to use the RIE way, I feel like I'm a much better mother and that my husband and I are both enjoying our baby and our lives so much more. The best thing has been the level of peace that descended, in all of us, and we still have a very active boy. He's standing and "cruising" at eight months!The difference using RIE has made became very clear when we visited the grandparents this month, and I watched my mother change him. She rushed through it, trying to get him clean and changed without him squirming off the table or kicking his messy diaper and bottom. He almost went off the table, ended up arching his back so that she was holding him completely off the table except for the top of his head, and cried the whole time. When I change him, I tell him each thing I'm going to do, and I do it slowly, enjoying the quiet time we have together. He looks me in the eyes, smiles, lifts up his legs so I can clean him when I ask him to, then puts them down again. I never would have believed it before reading this book.We have also read Dear Parent and Trees Make the Best Mobiles. Dear Parent is a collection of essays and speeches that cover the same ground but not as coherently nor as thoroughly, and with an occasionally annoying tone. Trees is cute, soundbites of the same material, useful for new parents with little time and less sleep. I recommend it as a companion to Self-Confident Baby.

The best book on parenting that I've read

This is the best book I have read so far on parenting (and I've read quite a lot). This is a book that defends a very simplistic and baby-focused style of parenting. Sometimes the theory is a little over the top, but the basic tenets are right on target...or at least I think so. First of all, the author suggests that you think of those times when you feed, change and bathe your baby as opportunities to bond with her. Also, she suggests that you constantly talk to your baby, narrating everything that you do, asking permission, and expressing your expectations for baby. (Even if you think your baby won't understand, my 5 1/2 month old has a sense of what I'm saying and it helps.) She also suggests that you observe, but not interrupt your child's learning process, unless of course the baby is going to hurt herself. To demonstrate her point, I'll give you my own example with my baby that I found just fascinating. I put him down on the gymini mat (without any toys dangling). Since my baby is the master drooler, as most babies at this stage, I put receiving blankets on top of the mat and just gave him a cup to play with. He played with the cup for a while, but then dropped it. As he reached for it, he inadvertently pushed it away. (My inclination was to give the cup back to him, but after reading this book, I decided not to.) When he realized he couldn't reach it, he turned over toward the cup, getting a little closer. He reached for it, but just pushed the cup away further. This time, he grabbed the receiving blanket and pulled, finally bringing the cup closer...cool, huh???

Your Self-Confident Baby

I read this book when my son was 14 months old and began implementing Magda Gerber's philosphy of respect for infants and toddler's. It is amazing to my husband and myself how easy it was to gain the cooperation of our little boy just by explaining what we would be doing and giving him time to participate in his own care. Primary times for interacting with your child are diapering, feeding and bathing. These times are no longer tasks to be hurried through, but moments of communication and interaction that set the stage for a lifetime of relating. The book also addresses the needs of parents. It is the first book I have read that truly deals with the family as a unit. Realizing that parents also have needs and are better at parenting when these needs for rest and time apart from the infant are met was very helpful.Also helpful were the ideas around creating safe areas for Noah to play in ... both indoors and out as a way for him to have space and time alone. Allowing Noah to have his feelings when something comes up that doesn't suit him was another area that the book deals with. It is ok to be mad or upset or uncomfortable...and as a parent not to distract my son from being upset, which seems to be a knee-jerk response at times. It never occurred to me that just acknowleging Noah's feelings was enough. I didn't have to give in to all the demands to keep peace in the house. In fact, our home is very peaceful since implementing Gerber's ideas. This is more than just a parenting book. It has helped me be more present with my son.I only wish I would have discovered this book before we had our son so that I could have done some of the things she suggests earlier in Noah's life. It is a book that I enthusiastically recommend.

The perfect "new parent" gift!

Nearly everyday my husband thanks me for having discovered this book (and the RIE approach). It has taught us to be more patient, trusting, and "present" parents. In my desire to be the perfect mother, I could easily see myself doing everything for my son, but this book helped me see how that was exactly NOT what my son wants from me. Learning to offer choices and explaining consequences has given us a positive model for teaching and discipling. And unlike anything else I've read, this approach has taught me that it's perfectly ok if my son and I don't agree on everything -- I can still do what I need/want to do and he can have his own feelings about it without me needing to distract him out what he is expressing (geez, what a complicated way of saying that if he wants to cry while I take a shower, that's ok for both of us!) By modeling respect (most of the time), we are teaching our child how important and capable he is. And so far the "terrible twos" are anything but!! Thank you Magda for devoting your life to infants -- and thank you Allison for sharing her theories with us! I have given or lent this book to every new parent I know with the full confidence that they will pick up at least one thing that will forever affect the way they raise their precious new baby!!

The most common sense approach of any time

It is often said, "When you don't know what to do, you do what you know." Without the RIE approach, I would have repeated many of the very serious mistakes my mother made. This book so articulately describes the "how to's" and "why's" of child-rearing. There are very few unanswered questions. It is a wonderful guide book not only for raising children, but for relating to people of all ages. Magda Gerber reminds us that frustration, anxiety, fear and other stresses are normal experiences for parents and children. Even with the struggles life dishes out, one can realistically build a life-long relationship with your infant by modeling respect. One of the many of the messages I came away with from reading this book is that aside from the obvious fact that parenting is hard work, it also can be fun and we have the right to relax and enjoy it. Magda Gerber presents guidelines that really work because they are so logical. The experiental aspects of the RIE approach in raising an infant are described in a clear, understandable and applicable way. I wish it were required reading for all parents. This book is now the gift I give to all my friends who are parents or soon-to-be parents. My only criticizm is that the book ended. Wendy Kronick - Los Angeles, CA.
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