Thanks for watching! Don't forget to get your free 0 - 12 months old developmental milestone chart here: brightestbeginning.com/12monthmilestones/?lead_source=youtube_199
Also letting them be bored!!! I remember my parents telling my siblings and I to “entertain ourselves “ but not because they were lazy or especially busy, but because they wanted us to be imaginative and proactive. I thank them for it.
Surprisingly I’ve already been doing this! I feels natural to me. If I’m doing work in the kitchen for example, and he’s in his walker and starts crying I usually say something like ‘I know baby boy, I’m sorry I’m busy, but you’re doing so good, I’ll get you soon I promise, you’re okay.’
My baby cried the first time she crawled. I was sitting just out of reach and every time she was about to reach me I’d inch away just a little more. It was her little war cry of determination.
@@wildswan221 I was encouraging her to crawl. She wasn’t hurt, just a little frustrated. Learning new skills can be challenging but it’s good for us to face challenges because that’s how we learn and grow. Did you even watch the video?
My baby was crying a lot when he was mastering high support position. But when I put him on the back, he got back to the position in 2 seconds and cried again :D the same with sitting and crawlling. That is such a huge effort for such small body! Very tiresome, so they cry a lot, but it is like crying in a gym ;)
My baby wanted to crawl at 7mo but couldn’t move his legs and as a result cried a lot out of frustration. Everyone around me told me to get a walker so he could move around but I never listened. At 8mo he started crawling and got so much more happier.
I have a similar situation with my baby right from her birth. Every day she attempts a lot of things she is not able to do yet. Like crawling etc. When she fails she cries very loudly and desperately, but never quits and doesn't let me stop her. I have nothing to do but ignore her crying. I can only give her a pacifier and turn on some music for relax. I wonder if it's a common case in babies or not.
@@verpal7920My 4.5 month old daughter has been trying to crawl and gets very frustrated and cries. She rolls from back to tummy beautifully but doesn't know how to roll onto her back from tummy. She wants to skip that and moves like she wants to crawl instead. She's a very determined little baby.
My son is the same, he just hit 4 months and is getting the hang of rolling onto his tummy, but can't get back onto his back. He just attempts to launch himself forwards because he wants to go so many places already haha.
The struggle is real. Don't shield them from it. It'll only make it harder on them when they grow up and face reality. Let them struggle. Let them fail. Let them make mistakes. Let them have their own triumphs. If they are accustomed to problem solving, trying again and again and brushing off failures from a young age, imagine how strong they will be when they are an adult. Loving and caring for a child is not sheltering them but showing them how to thrive under the pressures and challenges of life. If they grow up accepting these realities, they will have no issues adapting to whatever gets thrown at them. You can still be there for them, just be sure not to get in their way. It's easy to do too much.
@@climatecrisisdragon3628 Where did I say that I recommend ignoring their cries? Ignoring them and letting them make mistakes (to a point) are two entirely different things.
ive always let my babies cry for a minute or two during tummy time instead of immediently flipping them into their back at hte smallest sound of frustration. i get that its frustrating for them but ive also noticed that just after voicing their frustration is when they display a new skill like lifting their chest up off the gorund or swaying from side to side. they get lots of praise and encouragement when they master a new skill or i can see theyre trying really hard.
Hi Emma, Love your channel, I believe in letting me kids feel uncomfortable every now and then and letting them struggle through things rather than giving them answer. I just started my channel documenting my life as a dad, learning how to be a dad while raising my 4 year old son and 2 year old daughter. We have a third on the way so your channel is a great refresher. 😊
My baby cried, whined, screeched, yelled, grunted pretty much nonstop for the first year if I was not constantly giving her my full attention. And if I let her "build resistance" like in the video, sometimes it would take 45+ mins to calm her back down. She couldn't sit in bouncers, a play pen...literally nothing. I didn't have the option to let her build resilience because it never ever ended. Dr said it was just her personality. Now at 2, she is building resilience and doing so much better but is extremely attached to the point my pediatrician is concerned. Don't know how I could have followed this therapist's method at all....but I can see how it would beneficial. Just not practical for every person maybe.
I always listen to what the cry is. At now 11 months, my daughter can be a little bit of a drama queen. She is having some trouble with the idea that I'm my own person. So usually I'll let her crawl around the house exploring, but me watching her because of the cats. Just makinQg sure she doesn't get hurt or hurts the cats by accident. But dishes, cooking, hanging the laundry all need to be done as well. So I'll put her in her playpen. But of course she doesn't always like that. So I'll be nearby talking to her and letting her know when I'm hers again or when she can come out. For instance I'll say: when this laundry basket is empty I'll come get you. She might not perfectly understand me yet but i feel like this is a good way to let her get used to the fact she can't always get what she wants.
Just happened to me yesterday. My little girl doesn't like carrides at all and we needed to drive to the doctor and she was crying and screaming so much I kept talking to her and said things like we'll be there soon it is okay i know you don't like being in the carseat.. It is very hard work to keep yourself calm though, because she does not stop until we are at our destination.
I don't know, every time my son cries like crazy "for no reason" I later find out that there was a reason. Like he was hungry or tired or hurt in some way...
@@thirstbasketexactly! It happened to me with my firstborn. She was 9 mo, we were on a long trip and she wouldn’t stop crying when we were almost there. I completely lost it. I almost hurt her. I ask my husband to let me drive instead, and he showed her some videos in his cellphone. It turns out she was hungry. I was so anxious to arrive that I had missed her dinner time. I felt so ashamed.
I totally get what the therapist is saying but I don't know if the friend was totally wrong either. Depends on parenting style. I subscribe to the attachment parenting style which, in my belief (which may be wrong 😂), you answer ever cry and babies learn to trust you so explicitly that they actually still end up independent in a couple years bc they have the ingrained belief that UR ALWAYS there for them. Arguably, more independent as toddlers. Idk tho. Different training from different therapists, different belief systems. No one's wrong, just do your best and love them and it will all work out!
Agree. I think starting what she's saying around 1-2 years old could work. But as a baby baby they don't know if they're "truly distressed" or not they just know you aren't there and they're crying for you
For attachment purposes, responding to a cry doesn’t mean soothing a cry. And subscribing to a view like that leaves out a ton of people. Like me: My son was born with bilateral clubfoot. We began treatment at 2 weeks old. He HATED it and cried through every appointment the whole 8 weeks of treatment, no chance of comforting or calming him. (He did this for other more minor things too, like diaper changes) If attachment is about being there for him… we weren’t. We didn’t stop the distressing situation, we didn’t try to soothe him (after the first appointment), and we continued to subject him to the distressing situation. What we DID do was be in the situation with him, tell him it’s ok to feel uncomfortable and angry, and that we have to do the uncomfortable thing anyway. He’s 18 months old now, and displaying as securely attached behaviors as is possible. To bring it back to Emma’s example, responding can absolutely mean talking to them from the driver’s seat, being reliable and comforting with the getting in/out of the car process, and doesn’t have to include actively comforting and shushing.
My baby hates being in the car and car seat. I just wait for her to sleep then put her in the car. It is very stressful for me to drive while she is screaming. After this video, I need to be more brave and try driving even if she cries.
My baby always poops when we start driving and then he's very uncomfortable and starts crying! I pull over, change him and he's back ok. He never cries without a reason.
My son (4 mo) currently wants to roll on his tummy and then he immidiately tries to move forward, no matter how. Both of these things frustrate him a lot. I try to give him just a little help with rotating his hips, so he can try rolling and lifting his head by himself, and then I let him struggle with gravity and his body however he wants. He's already doing better with rolls, and he seems to have more strenght on his tummy - he can turn hips to sides, pull knees closer to his chest or lift his butt.
When I teach Human Growth and Development, I mention to my students (collegiate level) that even though people use the usual "baby talk" voice and there is an argument for using it, I'm not a fan. From day one, talking to your little ones in regular words and not "baby talk" allows them to hear what language sounds like. They learn to talk by imitating at first and as those language centers develop I'm on the side that says they should hear normal conversational speech. My mother did it with me. She would tell me all about her day at school (she was a K-12 music teacher). I think it was a good choice. As I said, others do make an argument for "baby talk." There is an analogous type of speech we use with our elderly folks called "elder speak" where we talk to our older parents, relatives, and others loudly, slowly, and condescendingly. Please don't do that. Even if the elder in question is dealing with dementia or hearing loss, they are a person. Please recognize that when you talk to them.
As someone studying speech pathology, you should absolutely use proper words and grammar when talking to babies (no "bah bah buh bah?" or "baby want bottle?" or anything like that). However, speaking with a exaggerated tone while clearly enunciating your words has been shown to help babies pick up language more easily because 1. it's more interesting and engaging for them and 2. they can hear the complex speech sounds better. So nothing wrong with baby talk - it's even been proven by studies to be beneficial! Just make sure it's not nonsensical or ungrammatical.
Side question: do you know if there’s a critical narrow window for certain brain development in babies can’t be catch up? My baby is 6 mo and experiencing poor growth due to low feeding intake, supplemental refusal, reflux . It may be a few more months before she can start to catch up. I’m worry if a few months of poor growth will hinder her brain development permanently. 😞 thank you
My 15 month old is hurting herself as soon as she is frustrated - hits her head against a wall, floor, bites herself... I am not able to let her cry and build that resilience and don't know what to do
Hi Emma, my baby is approaching 9 months and he’s wobbly when sets down is that normal? He was born 2-3weeks before his due dates Thank you for sharing your knowledge and experience with us
Oh darn. Seems like i f* up already. He is 2.5 now and i was never able to ignore his cry or stay calm. Obviously i do want him to have good resiliance. Probably dont have it myself though... What now?
I am using your advice at our nursery looking after 1-3 year olds. Some kids have never been left to cry and it is so hard for them. My mum gave similar advice to me when I had my son 18 years ago.
My 4th complwtlybfeel apart every time we drive anywhere-day or night cose or far. Turned out ahe had severe, severe motion sickness. She didn't grow out of it until late high school. Poor thing.
One of my 16-month-old twins gets incredibly frustrated when he can't accomplish something, and it quickly escalates into a full meltdown every time. There’s nothing I can “help” with because he doesn’t want me to-he just insists on doing it himself. So I stay nearby, but I’m at a loss for how to support him when the meltdown happens. He doesn’t calm down with hugs or being held; instead, he just screams for what feels like ages. His twin sister isn’t like this, so I’m not sure what I might be doing wrong. Also, regarding the car seat, my daughter cries and screams and despite talking singing and giving her toys it only grows louder over time. She does calm down when I take her out, but when I put her back in to continue the trip, she starts screaming all over again.
At this age, children are naturally impulsive and very focused on the present, plus they aren’t yet aware of how their actions impact others. Teaching them about taking turns can be a great way to build this awareness, along with plenty of practice!
@@EmmaHubbardat what age do kids start developing empathy or even just the understanding that others have wants/needs and we need to take turns? My 20mo is starting to show jealousy toward the cats and I want to wait to have a second child for him to grow out of that a little. We try to explain taking turns and things like, "Ouch! It hurts Mango when you pull her tail. She doesn't like it."
You can start doing this from birth. For instance, if you're driving your baby to their 6-week checkup and they get upset, you can reassure them by talking gently to let them know you're there. Or, if you're in the shower and they wake up unexpectedly, you can speak to them calmly following the 3 steps, as you finish up, showing them that you're close by and supporting them.
At what point should I rescue him (11mo) for car ride cries? He'll wail and shriek for an hour. Speaking to him doesn't comfort him. I can get him and give him a cuddle break but he cries right when I put him back in.
I just noticed that I've gotten used to being the only adult in the front seat when me, my wife and my baby daughter are all in the car. (I'm the only one who knows how to drive). My wife will always be in the back seat trying to calm our baby down when she cries. And since she seems to hate the car seat, she'll cry almost every time she's there. I now see there's a different way of doing things.
What would you recommend for me to bear the frustrations and cries? It is very hard for me to let her cry. Plus everyone else is forcing me to not too. So it got very hard now, and kind of late.. She's 20 months old
Is it too late to start doing this? I have an 11 month old (almost 1 year) and I don’t know how to start doing this when I’ve been doing the exact opposite
How do you know a baby on the ground is actually distressed or that they just want to be picked up? I've got a 4 mo boy and think I've definitely picked him up at the first sign of crying so he cries quite quickly when put down. But I struggle to know when he's distressed because his cries are so intense even if he's not hungry or tired.
Any recommendations for a 9 month old who still absolutely hates the car seat? Literally nothing I have tried works and I am losing my mind being stuck completely at home.
@@monika-1315I have three, including a hip carrier, but now that he's crawling around he doesn't want to be on me at all but also only wants to be on me. And we live way out in the boonies, so no buses or public transport ☹️
Sometimes thr baby just doesn't like the type of carseat they are sitting in. A friend of ours switched carseats and it git a little better for her baby.
@@johannabecker8408 I wish I could try before buying, they're so expensive. He hated the infant car seat and hates the convertible one too. He'll arch his back and scream until his spit becomes so sticky he vomits.
@@alessandriagiannantonio2698 Was he okay about strollers (when he was lying and when he is sitting)? Is it specifically about a car seat? Did he have problem with spitting or it's just because he cries so hard?
What if it’s a problem that’s not rly solvable? My little one gets frustrated pulling on toys attached to his baby gym, so when I notice that, I would take them off so he can grab them freely.
I already know this by instinct but whenever I do this my husband thinks I am doing a terrible parenting job and sometimes interferes. It’s so frustrating that I can’t convince him it’s the right thing to do
My daughter used to scream in the car seat and as soon as we switched to a different type she stopped and stared enjoying the car. We had a bucket seat at first
Emma, I desperately need your help. Could I communicate with you directly? You are my last resort. Do you have an email? My question is about my 9 month old Grandaughter
Hi! While I don’t currently offer one-on-one consultations, you’re very welcome to reach out to me through my website at brightestbeginning.com/contact. I’d be happy to see if I can provide some guidance for your questions about your granddaughter.
I only do tummy time maybe once or twice a day, and my 3 month old is already commando crawling. He looks up at me and smiles, then drops his head to continue crawling.
This is where i get nervous about my own children. I work in daycare, so it doesn't really look good on us teachers if we just let the kids cry without soothing them. But i know i want to do this with my own children. I just think it's so engraved in me to immediately go to them.
Pushover parents bow down to their children, causing them massive anxiety later on in life because they aren't constantly occupied. Please don't do this.
Thanks for watching! Don't forget to get your free 0 - 12 months old developmental milestone chart here:
brightestbeginning.com/12monthmilestones/?lead_source=youtube_199
Hi, the link leads to 404 page. Best
Hey the link won’t open.
Sorry! Fixed!
@@EmmaHubbard thank you! 😄
Also letting them be bored!!! I remember my parents telling my siblings and I to “entertain ourselves “ but not because they were lazy or especially busy, but because they wanted us to be imaginative and proactive. I thank them for it.
Thanks so much for sharing!
@@EmmaHubbard thank you for your videos!! I have a 6 week old and your videos have helped me so much!
Your videos have helped me in these 6 weeks with my darling baby
Thank yoouuu
Tolerating boredom is so healthy. I wish more adults could learn to cope with boredom without their smartphone
Do one for building resilience in a 25 year old baby
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
I let out an audible laugh at the gym
😂😂😂 zamn
😂😂
Spat my tea 😂
Absolutely! And so much pressure from Asian society criticizing us parents for not watching our kids!
Surprisingly I’ve already been doing this! I feels natural to me. If I’m doing work in the kitchen for example, and he’s in his walker and starts crying I usually say something like ‘I know baby boy, I’m sorry I’m busy, but you’re doing so good, I’ll get you soon I promise, you’re okay.’
My baby cried the first time she crawled. I was sitting just out of reach and every time she was about to reach me I’d inch away just a little more. It was her little war cry of determination.
Love the war cry of determination!
@@wildswan221 I was encouraging her to crawl. She wasn’t hurt, just a little frustrated. Learning new skills can be challenging but it’s good for us to face challenges because that’s how we learn and grow. Did you even watch the video?
My baby was crying a lot when he was mastering high support position. But when I put him on the back, he got back to the position in 2 seconds and cried again :D the same with sitting and crawlling. That is such a huge effort for such small body! Very tiresome, so they cry a lot, but it is like crying in a gym ;)
My baby wanted to crawl at 7mo but couldn’t move his legs and as a result cried a lot out of frustration. Everyone around me told me to get a walker so he could move around but I never listened. At 8mo he started crawling and got so much more happier.
I have a similar situation with my baby right from her birth. Every day she attempts a lot of things she is not able to do yet. Like crawling etc. When she fails she cries very loudly and desperately, but never quits and doesn't let me stop her. I have nothing to do but ignore her crying. I can only give her a pacifier and turn on some music for relax. I wonder if it's a common case in babies or not.
@@verpal7920My 4.5 month old daughter has been trying to crawl and gets very frustrated and cries. She rolls from back to tummy beautifully but doesn't know how to roll onto her back from tummy. She wants to skip that and moves like she wants to crawl instead. She's a very determined little baby.
My son is the same, he just hit 4 months and is getting the hang of rolling onto his tummy, but can't get back onto his back. He just attempts to launch himself forwards because he wants to go so many places already haha.
The struggle is real. Don't shield them from it. It'll only make it harder on them when they grow up and face reality. Let them struggle. Let them fail. Let them make mistakes. Let them have their own triumphs. If they are accustomed to problem solving, trying again and again and brushing off failures from a young age, imagine how strong they will be when they are an adult. Loving and caring for a child is not sheltering them but showing them how to thrive under the pressures and challenges of life. If they grow up accepting these realities, they will have no issues adapting to whatever gets thrown at them. You can still be there for them, just be sure not to get in their way. It's easy to do too much.
well said
@@climatecrisisdragon3628 Where did I say that I recommend ignoring their cries? Ignoring them and letting them make mistakes (to a point) are two entirely different things.
I wish I saw this Video 8 month ago 😢. You don’t know how much you are helping new moms or moms in general ❤❤❤❤ thank you so much !
ive always let my babies cry for a minute or two during tummy time instead of immediently flipping them into their back at hte smallest sound of frustration. i get that its frustrating for them but ive also noticed that just after voicing their frustration is when they display a new skill like lifting their chest up off the gorund or swaying from side to side. they get lots of praise and encouragement when they master a new skill or i can see theyre trying really hard.
Nice 👏👏👏
Hi Emma,
Love your channel, I believe in letting me kids feel uncomfortable every now and then and letting them struggle through things rather than giving them answer. I just started my channel documenting my life as a dad, learning how to be a dad while raising my 4 year old son and 2 year old daughter. We have a third on the way so your channel is a great refresher. 😊
My baby cried, whined, screeched, yelled, grunted pretty much nonstop for the first year if I was not constantly giving her my full attention. And if I let her "build resistance" like in the video, sometimes it would take 45+ mins to calm her back down. She couldn't sit in bouncers, a play pen...literally nothing. I didn't have the option to let her build resilience because it never ever ended. Dr said it was just her personality. Now at 2, she is building resilience and doing so much better but is extremely attached to the point my pediatrician is concerned. Don't know how I could have followed this therapist's method at all....but I can see how it would beneficial. Just not practical for every person maybe.
I always listen to what the cry is. At now 11 months, my daughter can be a little bit of a drama queen. She is having some trouble with the idea that I'm my own person.
So usually I'll let her crawl around the house exploring, but me watching her because of the cats. Just makinQg sure she doesn't get hurt or hurts the cats by accident.
But dishes, cooking, hanging the laundry all need to be done as well. So I'll put her in her playpen. But of course she doesn't always like that. So I'll be nearby talking to her and letting her know when I'm hers again or when she can come out. For instance I'll say: when this laundry basket is empty I'll come get you.
She might not perfectly understand me yet but i feel like this is a good way to let her get used to the fact she can't always get what she wants.
Perfect approach❤
Helpful
Just happened to me yesterday. My little girl doesn't like carrides at all and we needed to drive to the doctor and she was crying and screaming so much I kept talking to her and said things like we'll be there soon it is okay i know you don't like being in the carseat..
It is very hard work to keep yourself calm though, because she does not stop until we are at our destination.
It could be medical-like our daughter.
It can be so hard to stay calm when they are upset in the car while you're driving.
I don't know, every time my son cries like crazy "for no reason" I later find out that there was a reason. Like he was hungry or tired or hurt in some way...
@@thirstbasketexactly! It happened to me with my firstborn. She was
9 mo, we were on a long trip and she wouldn’t stop crying when we were almost there. I completely lost it. I almost hurt her. I ask my husband to let me drive instead, and he showed her some videos in his cellphone. It turns out she was hungry. I was so anxious to arrive that I had missed her dinner time. I felt so ashamed.
Soo hard @@EmmaHubbard
This was super helpful, not unlike most of your videos, what I'm experiencing right now! Your channel is such a godsend! Thank you. 🤗
Thanks so much! ❤️
Your channel is absolutely my go to for sound advice. I have a 3 month old and you've been so helpful. Thank you!!
So kind of you to say! Thank you!
I totally get what the therapist is saying but I don't know if the friend was totally wrong either. Depends on parenting style. I subscribe to the attachment parenting style which, in my belief (which may be wrong 😂), you answer ever cry and babies learn to trust you so explicitly that they actually still end up independent in a couple years bc they have the ingrained belief that UR ALWAYS there for them. Arguably, more independent as toddlers. Idk tho. Different training from different therapists, different belief systems. No one's wrong, just do your best and love them and it will all work out!
Agree. I think starting what she's saying around 1-2 years old could work. But as a baby baby they don't know if they're "truly distressed" or not they just know you aren't there and they're crying for you
For attachment purposes, responding to a cry doesn’t mean soothing a cry. And subscribing to a view like that leaves out a ton of people. Like me:
My son was born with bilateral clubfoot. We began treatment at 2 weeks old. He HATED it and cried through every appointment the whole 8 weeks of treatment, no chance of comforting or calming him. (He did this for other more minor things too, like diaper changes)
If attachment is about being there for him… we weren’t. We didn’t stop the distressing situation, we didn’t try to soothe him (after the first appointment), and we continued to subject him to the distressing situation.
What we DID do was be in the situation with him, tell him it’s ok to feel uncomfortable and angry, and that we have to do the uncomfortable thing anyway.
He’s 18 months old now, and displaying as securely attached behaviors as is possible.
To bring it back to Emma’s example, responding can absolutely mean talking to them from the driver’s seat, being reliable and comforting with the getting in/out of the car process, and doesn’t have to include actively comforting and shushing.
Perfect! I was looking for this vídeo 😊❤
My baby hates being in the car and car seat. I just wait for her to sleep then put her in the car. It is very stressful for me to drive while she is screaming. After this video, I need to be more brave and try driving even if she cries.
My baby always poops when we start driving and then he's very uncomfortable and starts crying! I pull over, change him and he's back ok. He never cries without a reason.
I started putting my little one in a car seat 10 minutes before we leave the house for this same reason.
My son (4 mo) currently wants to roll on his tummy and then he immidiately tries to move forward, no matter how. Both of these things frustrate him a lot. I try to give him just a little help with rotating his hips, so he can try rolling and lifting his head by himself, and then I let him struggle with gravity and his body however he wants. He's already doing better with rolls, and he seems to have more strenght on his tummy - he can turn hips to sides, pull knees closer to his chest or lift his butt.
When I teach Human Growth and Development, I mention to my students (collegiate level) that even though people use the usual "baby talk" voice and there is an argument for using it, I'm not a fan. From day one, talking to your little ones in regular words and not "baby talk" allows them to hear what language sounds like. They learn to talk by imitating at first and as those language centers develop I'm on the side that says they should hear normal conversational speech. My mother did it with me. She would tell me all about her day at school (she was a K-12 music teacher). I think it was a good choice. As I said, others do make an argument for "baby talk." There is an analogous type of speech we use with our elderly folks called "elder speak" where we talk to our older parents, relatives, and others loudly, slowly, and condescendingly. Please don't do that. Even if the elder in question is dealing with dementia or hearing loss, they are a person. Please recognize that when you talk to them.
As someone studying speech pathology, you should absolutely use proper words and grammar when talking to babies (no "bah bah buh bah?" or "baby want bottle?" or anything like that). However, speaking with a exaggerated tone while clearly enunciating your words has been shown to help babies pick up language more easily because 1. it's more interesting and engaging for them and 2. they can hear the complex speech sounds better. So nothing wrong with baby talk - it's even been proven by studies to be beneficial! Just make sure it's not nonsensical or ungrammatical.
Side question: do you know if there’s a critical narrow window for certain brain development in babies can’t be catch up? My baby is 6 mo and experiencing poor growth due to low feeding intake, supplemental refusal, reflux . It may be a few more months before she can start to catch up. I’m worry if a few months of poor growth will hinder her brain development permanently. 😞 thank you
My 15 month old is hurting herself as soon as she is frustrated - hits her head against a wall, floor, bites herself... I am not able to let her cry and build that resilience and don't know what to do
Resourceful tips. Thank you very much.
No worries!
Thank you dear Emma.. its a timely video as I am worried of leaving her at times to engage in my work & later she screams a lot.
Hi Emma,
my baby is approaching 9 months and he’s wobbly when sets down is that normal? He was born 2-3weeks before his due dates
Thank you for sharing your knowledge and experience with us
Lord help me my baby boy is too cute to cry 😢😢😢
Thank you!!
Oh darn. Seems like i f* up already. He is 2.5 now and i was never able to ignore his cry or stay calm. Obviously i do want him to have good resiliance. Probably dont have it myself though... What now?
Thank you so much for confirming my way of handling car trips! This video and your explanations are a really helpful support for me.
I am using your advice at our nursery looking after 1-3 year olds. Some kids have never been left to cry and it is so hard for them. My mum gave similar advice to me when I had my son 18 years ago.
My 4th complwtlybfeel apart every time we drive anywhere-day or night cose or far. Turned out ahe had severe, severe motion sickness. She didn't grow out of it until late high school. Poor thing.
I saw this with a little one I worked with too
Oh, the poor thing! Luckily my daughter didn't have it, she just hated the car for the first 6 months!
Thanks Emma ma'am
One of my 16-month-old twins gets incredibly frustrated when he can't accomplish something, and it quickly escalates into a full meltdown every time. There’s nothing I can “help” with because he doesn’t want me to-he just insists on doing it himself. So I stay nearby, but I’m at a loss for how to support him when the meltdown happens. He doesn’t calm down with hugs or being held; instead, he just screams for what feels like ages. His twin sister isn’t like this, so I’m not sure what I might be doing wrong.
Also, regarding the car seat, my daughter cries and screams and despite talking singing and giving her toys it only grows louder over time. She does calm down when I take her out, but when I put her back in to continue the trip, she starts screaming all over again.
Great content.
Thank you!
Wow , educative. Now my boy is 2,years but he is always pulling things from the little sister of one years. His plays are rough
At this age, children are naturally impulsive and very focused on the present, plus they aren’t yet aware of how their actions impact others. Teaching them about taking turns can be a great way to build this awareness, along with plenty of practice!
@EmmaHubbard
Thanks Emma. This is helping.
@@EmmaHubbardat what age do kids start developing empathy or even just the understanding that others have wants/needs and we need to take turns? My 20mo is starting to show jealousy toward the cats and I want to wait to have a second child for him to grow out of that a little. We try to explain taking turns and things like, "Ouch! It hurts Mango when you pull her tail. She doesn't like it."
At what age of the baby can you start practicing this?
I would like to know too, appreciate your reply Emma!
Me too..
You can start doing this from birth. For instance, if you're driving your baby to their 6-week checkup and they get upset, you can reassure them by talking gently to let them know you're there. Or, if you're in the shower and they wake up unexpectedly, you can speak to them calmly following the 3 steps, as you finish up, showing them that you're close by and supporting them.
@@EmmaHubbard thank you!!
@@EmmaHubbard Thanks Emma 🙏
At what point should I rescue him (11mo) for car ride cries? He'll wail and shriek for an hour. Speaking to him doesn't comfort him. I can get him and give him a cuddle break but he cries right when I put him back in.
I just noticed that I've gotten used to being the only adult in the front seat when me, my wife and my baby daughter are all in the car. (I'm the only one who knows how to drive).
My wife will always be in the back seat trying to calm our baby down when she cries. And since she seems to hate the car seat, she'll cry almost every time she's there. I now see there's a different way of doing things.
Any tips for a 2 year old ? ☺️
We froze ours for two years. Can confirm, was pretty chill.
How do you deal with a clingy toddler while taking care of a breastfeeding baby too?
gv him a doll bottle etc
What would you recommend for me to bear the frustrations and cries? It is very hard for me to let her cry. Plus everyone else is forcing me to not too. So it got very hard now, and kind of late..
She's 20 months old
This use of language also works well with people with dementia who have lost their cognitive and linguistic abilities.
Thank you
I needed this video. My daughter is learning to sit on her own and she hates it. Same with car rides.
Hopefully the 3 step approach makes it a little easier for you both❤
Is it too late to start doing this? I have an 11 month old (almost 1 year) and I don’t know how to start doing this when I’ve been doing the exact opposite
How do you know a baby on the ground is actually distressed or that they just want to be picked up? I've got a 4 mo boy and think I've definitely picked him up at the first sign of crying so he cries quite quickly when put down. But I struggle to know when he's distressed because his cries are so intense even if he's not hungry or tired.
Any recommendations for a 9 month old who still absolutely hates the car seat? Literally nothing I have tried works and I am losing my mind being stuck completely at home.
Can you walk anywhere? I would get a baby carrier for walks or try to get somewhere by bus etc
@@monika-1315I have three, including a hip carrier, but now that he's crawling around he doesn't want to be on me at all but also only wants to be on me. And we live way out in the boonies, so no buses or public transport ☹️
Sometimes thr baby just doesn't like the type of carseat they are sitting in. A friend of ours switched carseats and it git a little better for her baby.
@@johannabecker8408 I wish I could try before buying, they're so expensive. He hated the infant car seat and hates the convertible one too. He'll arch his back and scream until his spit becomes so sticky he vomits.
@@alessandriagiannantonio2698 Was he okay about strollers (when he was lying and when he is sitting)? Is it specifically about a car seat? Did he have problem with spitting or it's just because he cries so hard?
What if it's a 2yo who gets frustrated with his toys because he cant build it and even throwing the toy? What should we do?
Letting my baby struggle a bit is why hes crawling at 5.5months
What if it’s a problem that’s not rly solvable? My little one gets frustrated pulling on toys attached to his baby gym, so when I notice that, I would take them off so he can grab them freely.
i've never "dropped everything" when my babies cried. i always got more worried when they were quiet.
Unfortunately, my baby cries (regularly) in the car so hard that she stops breathing and turns red. That's how much she hates the car
Oh, the poor thing. Hopefully, it gets a bit more tolerable for her when she can play and interact with toys.
I already know this by instinct but whenever I do this my husband thinks I am doing a terrible parenting job and sometimes interferes. It’s so frustrating that I can’t convince him it’s the right thing to do
My daughter used to scream in the car seat and as soon as we switched to a different type she stopped and stared enjoying the car. We had a bucket seat at first
Emma, I desperately need your help. Could I communicate with you directly? You are my last resort. Do you have an email? My question is about my 9 month old Grandaughter
Hi! While I don’t currently offer one-on-one consultations, you’re very welcome to reach out to me through my website at brightestbeginning.com/contact. I’d be happy to see if I can provide some guidance for your questions about your granddaughter.
What if 6 MO baby cries if left with daddy or nanny, wanting to be with mom only?
I only do tummy time maybe once or twice a day, and my 3 month old is already commando crawling. He looks up at me and smiles, then drops his head to continue crawling.
This is where i get nervous about my own children. I work in daycare, so it doesn't really look good on us teachers if we just let the kids cry without soothing them. But i know i want to do this with my own children. I just think it's so engraved in me to immediately go to them.
Being in the car may not be thr same situation as when they learn crawling or waiting for mama from the shower. What if your baby is scared of cars?
Nowadays it's weird. It's almost Dogma, if you don't jump IMMEDIATELY when baby cries. It's like we went from one extreme to the other...sigh
How can you bear hearing the baby crying for hours on long road trips? My nerves snap one by one as my son is constantly crying
Pushover parents bow down to their children, causing them massive anxiety later on in life because they aren't constantly occupied. Please don't do this.
This never happened in my day
Lol the infamous "back in my day"
Trying to do this but mil always jumps in to save the baby 🥲
Every family member does that All the time 😂😂😂