T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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888.1 | Sounds normal to me! | MKOTS3::NICKERSON | | Thu Jan 26 1995 11:38 | 20 |
| As I recall, 8-12 months is about the age that kids start the "Stranger
Anxiety" stage. Sounds like this is all your son is doing and is
perfectly normal. He's obviously attached to the one caregiver and
associates her with safety. All three of my kids went through this
stage and, like all stages, it just has to be ridden out.
I don't think your sleeping arrangements have ANYTHING to do with
this and I also don't think it's any of the daycares business (sorry
if that offends anyone). All three of my boys ended up sleeping with
my husband and I at some point in the night during their infancy. They
stopped on their own. All three had different levels of stranger
anxiety (as a matter of fact, my 5.5 year old was the BEST at accepting
new people in his life and STILL sleeps with my husband and I from
time to time.)
I would talk to your child's pedi - he/she could assess if they feel
your son has any behavioral problems (doubt it). Maybe the daycare
will listen if you exaplin things from a doctors perspective.
Linda
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888.2 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | proud counter-culture McGovernik | Thu Jan 26 1995 11:48 | 16 |
| I definitely don't think that your sleeping arrangements have anything
to do with this. He sounds like a fairly normal baby who wants to be
around the people who are supposed to be caring for him to me. If
anything you are probably increasing his security, rather than making
him feel alone and frightened in the night. No offense intended to
anyone who doesn't family bed, but Frank and I have some fairly strong
opinions on this.
If this is a very large center with a lot of kids that require split
attention from the caregiver(s) he might be better off in a smaller
setting instead. Some kids are more "adult" oriented than others, and
from what you wrote he seems like one. If he is left to develop
independent playing at his own rate, I believe you and your day-care
provider will find over the next few months that this will change.
meg
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888.3 | Just another stage of development... | MR4DEC::CMARCONE | | Thu Jan 26 1995 12:27 | 9 |
| My daughter when through similar behavior between 11-14 months. She
cried whenever anybody left here, the daycare provider, my husband, me,
her grammy, etc. I agree with .1 that it is most likely separation
anxiety and stranger anxiety. That's what my pedi told me and it did
leave after 3-4 months. My pedi told me to ride it out, it's just a
phase. Sure enough it was, now at 22 months we're on to new stages...
BTW - my daughter didn't sleep with us, so I doubt it has anything to
do with your sleeping arrangements.
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888.4 | | CNTROL::JENNISON | No turning back | Thu Jan 26 1995 13:16 | 11 |
|
I'm surprised they use the term "insecure". How many
fully secure, independent 11 month olds are there on this planet ?
My son is very happy to play by himself, but that doesn't mean
I can leave him alone in a room without his fussing. Insecure
is the last word I'd use to describe him.
Your son sounds very normal to me!
Karen
|
888.5 | | LJSRV1::BOURQUARD | Deb | Thu Jan 26 1995 13:24 | 24 |
| I'm just going to echo what others have said:
Kids have different temperaments -- some play
independently quite readily at an early age;
others don't. Your son sounds very much like my
daughter Noelle was around that age. The positive
side is that he's capable of forming very strong
attachments to people who take care of him.
This can be a tough stage -- especially if your temperament
is nearer the other end of the spectrum. Noelle is
2 1/2 now and still prefers an adult's attention to
playing independently. However, it's now okay for
me to go the bathroom or shower :-)
Noelle *never* slept with us (except for nursings
in bed). She was in a crib in her own bedroom at
3 weeks. I don't believe for a second that your
sleeping arrangements have anything to do with this.
And, even though I don't practice the family bed,
I'm really angered that a daycare would try to blame
perfectly normal behavior on perfectly normal sleeping
arrangements. (I'd be just as angered if they tried
to blame unusual behavior on perfectly normal sleeping
arrangements.) But maybe I'm cranky today...
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888.6 | | TLE::C_STOCKS | Cheryl Stocks | Thu Jan 26 1995 20:29 | 19 |
| re .5:
>>>Noelle is
>>>2 1/2 now and still prefers an adult's attention to
>>>playing independently. However, it's now okay for
>>>me to go the bathroom or shower :-)
Wow, Deb, do you mean all by yourself with nobody else in the room and the
door closed? I'm envious - I have just recently reached the point of being
able to do that most of the time (at home, I hasten to say - I don't have the
same problem at work!), and my youngest is 4.5 years.
basenoter, I agree with the other replies here - your daycare providers seem
to have a surprisingly limited understanding of normal 11-month-old behavior.
My kids both had similar clingy stages at around that age (one was at 9 months,
the other was probably around 11 months - those milestones don't quite stick
in my mind as well for the second one...).
cheryl
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888.7 | thanks! | ASIC::JPOIRIER | | Fri Jan 27 1995 10:20 | 19 |
| Thank you all very much for the responses. I'm feeling much better
about this now.
Meg, he is in a very small center. He just adores his main caregiver.
She's been just great with him and he has plenty of attention from her.
I don't have enough wall space at home to hang all of the finger
painting pictures and other crafts that they do together!
Kyle's been walking now for about 6 weeks, though he's not 100% great
at it, he's getting better and better all the time. I've read
everywhere that once the little ones start to walk, it's a whole new
phase that they go through which to me is very possibly what's going on
with him.
I love the center that he is at, I hope I didn't give anyone the
impression that we weren't happy with him there. I'm sure we can talk
about this issue and come to an agreeable resolution.
Thanks again everyone! Jean
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888.8 | re: .6 | LJSRV1::BOURQUARD | Deb | Fri Jan 27 1995 13:38 | 13 |
| > Wow, Deb, do you mean all by yourself with nobody else in the
> room and the door closed?
Cheryl,
Well, for the showers at least, since hubby keeps her occupied.
(Though I'll admit that there are times when she happily sits
on the floor in the bathroom coloring or playing with her
"creatures" while I shower.) And I must admit that she generally
wants to "help Mommy" go to the bathroom (complete with applause
and "Good job, Mommy!" when I'm done :-)
- Deb
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