T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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200.1 | | TIPTOE::STOLICNY | | Mon Jul 30 1990 15:31 | 20 |
| Sarah,
Not an answer to your question (I seem to have a problem sticking
to the subject.....call me the Ratholer). I'd like to suggest
that now's the time to put David's walker away. Jason took a
very scary ride down the stairs at 7 months and landed in the
Emergency Room where he was said to have been "very, very lucky"
in that he sustained no long term damages. The ER doctor told
me to "please, please, please" take away to walker; they just see
so many walker injuries. I said no problem, we'll put a door
by the stairway and it will never happen again. The said that
stairs are not the only walker injury (though usually the most
serious type) that they see....walkers can actually flip out from
under the baby if he reaches too far or tries to climb out. For
what its worth, I believe that walkers have been banned in Canada.
As far as when they learn that they may fall, at 10-1/2 months,
Jason may know that he can fall but still takes the chances.
Carol
|
200.2 | We tried to teach "how to fall" rather than consequences. | HPSCAD::DJENSEN | | Mon Jul 30 1990 15:53 | 28 |
|
Sarah:
Not sure WHEN (if ever!) they figure out how dangerous their
"investigative acts" can be ... but when JA started standing, I
used to sit next to her and LET her fall (but break her fall
before she hit). I learned "in my youth" (during gymnastics)
that fall's themselves aren't bad ... but not knowing HOW
to fall IS bad.
I'm not saying JA doesn't have her share of scratches and bruises ...
OR hasn't tried that "life threatening aerobatic feat", but we've
been very lucky that she almost always lands on her kiester (with the
diaper's padding!). I've seen her twist herself in a pretzel formation
to land that way. She fell forward ONCE (loosened her front teeth)
... and since then she's always tried to fall backwards.
So, instead of trying to stop her from standing, climbing, hanging,
sliding, swinging, running ... we've tried to show her how to "break her
fall on her way down!".
I'm not aware of any method for "teaching them the consequences of
their innocense and investigative curiosity" ... just pray they don't
break their necks while they're learning all about gravity!!
Dottie
|
200.3 | another walker accident | WOODRO::CERIA | this space for rent | Tue Jul 31 1990 11:19 | 14 |
| re .1
Carol,
We just had a mishap at the baby sitters last friday. Our 7 month old
daughter, Taylor, went down a flight of stairs in her walker. She ended
up with a fractured skull. It;s amazing though, she is in great spirits
and is normal, no pressure on the brain, the hospital did a CT Scan and
showed nothing wrong, no cuts, just a little bruise onthe forehead that
has already gone away, they kept her overnight just in case and let her
out first thing the next morning. Our baby sitter was in worse shape
than Taylor, needless to say the walker is now retired.
jeff
|
200.4 | oh, goodness | TIPTOE::STOLICNY | | Tue Jul 31 1990 11:33 | 9 |
| re. .3
Jeff (and Taylor and babysitter) -
You poor things....I'm glad to hear that she is/will be fine.
As you're aware, it only takes 2 seconds.
Best wishes,
Carol
|
200.5 | Let the child set the limit | MAJORS::MANDALINCI | | Tue Jul 31 1990 11:49 | 25 |
| I personally believe that children need to fall to learn where the
limits are. I'm not talking about letting them fall down a flight of
stairs so they learn to go down backwards; I'm talking about the little
falls from trying to climb out of their walker or taking those first
steps. We never really discouraged our son from trying something
physical (assuming their was no absolute danger) and did make "light"
of falls so he wasn't afraid to try. Consequently, we had a very early
walker and a very physically advanced kid. We did secure his world and
made sure he was on carpeting most of the time or the soft lawn but
with ceramic tile floors he did take some nasty falls and usually came
up smiling more determined to continue doing what he was doing.
Kids fall. Just don't let they try swinging from the over-head fan
until you are sure they know how to land with bent knees ;>) Just
kidding. They need to find their physical limitations (not the
limitation of where a bone breaks) and learn to expand.
I have a friend who constantly said to her son "don't do that, you
might fall". The kid sat and didn't move until he was 18 months old and
I'm not kidding. I doubt he knew what "fall" even meant but she stopped
him from trying everything. There is a happy medium but I think the
child helps to set it depending upon how much physical freedom they are
willing to take on at any particular point in their life.
Andrea
|
200.6 | Look at me, daddy, I'm surfing! | CLOSUS::HOE | Daddy, let's go camping! | Tue Jul 31 1990 11:55 | 9 |
| When Sam was learning to crawl around, he would scoot all over
the place. One day, I was down in the family room and he wanted
daddy so I was trying to get him to turn around and back down the
stairs like he has done. To my amazement, he belly-surfed down
the stairs. He giggled when I ran over to pick him up.
I must have added 5 years to my hair colour that moment.
calvin
|
200.7 | It's quite simple | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Tue Jul 31 1990 12:57 | 8 |
| To answer the basenote's question, with few exceptions, kids suddenly
understand how dangerous childhood play can be at the point when they
become parents. The lucky ones then manage to unlearn this to a
certain degree, so that they don't age due to worry three times faster
than their kids.
- Bruce
|
200.8 | It's the falls, followed by silence and then a SCREAM that gets to you! | HPSCAD::DJENSEN | | Tue Jul 31 1990 13:38 | 24 |
| re: .6
Cal:
I laughed when I read your note, as JA did the same as "Sam". One day
Jim was folding clothes in the basement, turned around and couldn't
find JA. He called and called her ... to no avail. He started
panicing and then he heard this little voice ... but it sounded like it
came from "upstairs"? ... and here she was, on the top stair, sitting
nice and pretty with a big grin on her face which said "see, Dad, I
made it all the way to the top!"
We keep these stairs "gated" (as there's 14 of them with a large,
ceramic landing!) ... but there's only 3 in the front entrance and JA
tried those on a "belly surf", too -- unfortunately, there was a large
hurricane "tree" at the bottom, which stopped her "quite abruptly".
She hasn't tried that AGAIN! -- Usually one split lip will cure her for
awhile!
Can't stop them from "trying" ... they'll always "seek out" something!
And they're usually too "quick" to grab before they've already started
their stunt.
Dottie (who always gets to "put JA back together again!"
|
200.9 | acrobats in disguise | DELNI::SCORMIER | | Wed Aug 01 1990 10:43 | 16 |
| So I can assume from all of this that at some magical age he will
understand the concept of falling, but choose to "go for it" at times,
if the reward seems worth the price of a fall? I still don't see him
attempt to catch himself if he leans back too far, or attempt to right
himself when he starts to fall over, so I guess he needs a few more
months of development, or a few more experiences of falling before he
figures this out? I just wish he would learn that he can't walk yet,
so that when he cruises to the end of the couch he doesn't try to
continue into thin air! Although, I must admit, I'm get pretty
good at those acrobatic feats of charging over and sliding a hand under
his little head before it hits the hardwood floor! I wonder if it
occurs to him "Gee, Mom was over there a second ago, and now she's on
the floor with me"!
Sarah
|
200.10 | | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Wed Aug 01 1990 15:16 | 12 |
| He'll learn about falling by falling, and he'll fall a few thousand
times before he is a good walker. Then he'll start falling out of
jungle gyms. Get used to it, and let him fall. His head is designed
to take the punishment, even of whacking a hard floor. Just try to
move furniture with hard, sharp corners or edges to where he is not
likely to strike it on the way down.
If you succeed in protecting him from unpleasant falls now (as opposed
to dangerous ones), he will just learn more slowly, and probably be
more subject to injury when he is larger and heavier.
- Bruce
|
200.11 | Falling off the horse - but only on the rug! | EISMER::REIDY | | Thu Aug 16 1990 13:50 | 33 |
| As I read all these replies, I realize we've been doing the 'let them grow'
philosophy almost subconsciously. With two little boys, I was forwarned that
they would constantly get into scraps, and if I start to panic early, I and the
boys will defnitiely go gray early. G-d bless my most wonderful daycare
provider who has the most practical manner I have ever seen.
In our household, it's the inverse of the 'typical' - Mom tends to be much more
relaxed and into 'rough-housing' - while my husband is always going 'don't do
that - he could fall, he might hurt himself...... Fortunately, we let the boys
understand the limits, and so far (knock on wood) it has worked. For example -
one of our favorite games is riding horsey on Mom's tummy while she does
sit-ups. The kids like it 'cuase they always play at FALLING OFF!. And
sure enough, after a yaer of doing this (Matt started as soonas he could sit
up, Mike's a pro now), they really know how and where to fall. If we are
near the couch - without coaching, they head for the other side. If there are
hard toys on the floor - they miss them. And they know that they don't do it
on the wood floor or linoleum. As a matter of fact, when I had Mike riding
real horsey on my back (me crawling - so much fun) he wanted me to chase Matt
into the kitchen (ouch said my knees) - and do you know, it's the FIRST time
he's really held on! He knew that he didn't want to fall or play fall away
from the grass or rug. It is amazing what they learn!
I really do advocate the let them have room conceptually. Also when they do
fall, it is amazing how much less crying there is when Mom and Dad don't
'react.' Matty took a spill last night, and cut his knee pretty bad. We just
picked him up, and Mike immediately started talking about how lucky he was -
cause he could have a bandaid. All it took was a minute of cuddling, and he
was back on the road!
I 'm rambling. Better stop before I fall!
Minda
|
200.12 | Results from the MIT Infant Studies | CECV01::POND | | Tue Oct 09 1990 09:43 | 18 |
| Just for general info...most infants start perceiving depth at 12
weeks; by 20 weeks depth perception is intact. (I've taken both my
girls to MIT for infant studies in their vision labs; these are the
numbers the MIT folks have concluded. Surprisingly early, isn't it?)
What is known as "visual cliff withdrawal" usually starts around 7
months. That is, a baby will perceive the depth and withdraw or become
anxious around the apparent precipice. (This is in an experimental
setting.)
The problem with real life is that babies rarely pay attention to
"visual cliffs" if they are otherwise occupied. So...while an 11 month
old is able to peceive and "understand" a cliff, they're rarely
concentrating on the cliff if they're reaching for something. Hence,
they inadvertently fall...not because they can't perceive, but because
they were paying attention to some goal.
|