Pregnancy & Baby Index: Trying to Conceive - TTC: Preparing to TTC: Preparing to be parents: Are you ready?
Preparing to be parents: Are you ready?
Jennifer Newton Reents
You have been preparing to be parents for what seems like forever. Think
you'll be ready when the day comes? You may be surprised. Renowned
pediatrician T. Berry Brazelton offers some tips to help you get
prepared for one of the biggest changes of your life.
Welcome Baby! Now what?
You are expecting your first child and before you know it you will be
holding your little baby snugly in your arms. Then what?
After about nine months in anticipation, new parents are often faced
with a big surprise. Their baby is not just a baby but a human being
with his own personality. He is not someone they can mold entirely. He
has his own ways -- already -- of expressing his needs and desires --
and many new moms and dads just aren't prepared for that.
T. Berry Brazelton, internationally-known pediatrician and child
development expert, shares some thoughts to help parents prepare for one
of the biggest changes of their lives.
"It takes a while to learn what that baby's cues are," says Brazelton,
the author of more than 25 books on parenting and child development,
including the best-selling Infants and Mothers: Differences in Development, Touchpoints: Your Child's Emotional and Behavioral
Development and his latest The Irreducible Needs of Children: What Every Child Must
Have to Grow, Learn and Flourish. Brazelton says during the nine
months or so of pregnancy, parents-to-be are anticipating what their
child will look like, and emotionally preparing themselves for what is
to come - will he have 10 fingers and 10 toes? Will he be "normal?" and
what if he isn't?
"They wonder how they can ever nurture a baby," Brazelton says. "They
are preparing themselves for whatever baby they get ... and work up
energy to face what ever they have to (once the baby is born)."
And then there is reality. Their baby usually is "normal" on the
outside, but often different than they expected. He cries more than they
ever thought, needs to be held all the time or won't sleep in the
bassinet or on his back.
The learning begins
While it may take several weeks for parents to learn their baby's
different cries -- the only way a baby knows how to communicate --
Brazelton recommends parents ask whether their hospital or pediatrician
performs a screening called the Neonatal Behavioral Assessment
Scale,(NBAS) also called "the Brazelton," which he developed.
It is a test given to newborns that consists of assessing an infant's
reactions to a variety of stimuli such as a light in the eyes, a rattle,
a moving ball, etc, thus demonstrating the child's temperament. By the
end of the assessment, the examiner has a behavioral "portrait" of the
infant, describing the baby's strengths, individuality, adaptive
responses and possible vulnerabilities.
Brazelton said if parents can understand their baby's temperament, the
faster and better they will be able to relate to the child, creating
more harmony between parent and child early on.
"I think the main job of the parent in the beginning is to learn what
their baby is like in the beginning and (think) 'How do I interact with
that baby so that he feels good and I feel good,'" Brazelton recommends,
though he admits it often takes learning from mistakes to get to that
success.
Brazelton says two of his books, On Becoming a Family: The Growth of Attachment and Earliest Relationship: Parents, Infants, and the Drama of
Early Attachment, discuss these issues to help parents-to-be prepare
for whatever type of personality their baby may have.
Brazelton recommends parents-to-be read books on child development
before their baby arrives and suggests they take childbirth classes
where they may get a chance to learn about infant behaviors and learn
about the potential their baby will have from the day they are born.
"Parents need to recognize that you can do so much (for the child) but
some of it a child has to do for himself," he says. "...The behavior of
a child is his language, and the sooner parents can recognize that,
understand it and enjoy it, or accept it, the sooner they will feel like
they know what they are doing with their baby."
And the while the 82-year-old doctor has seen numerous new parents over
the years deal with the unexpected surprises and rewards of parenting,
nothing can prepare parents-to-be for one thing.
"The passion that they feel," he says. "I don't think anybody can get
ready for that."