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The
Importance of the In-Arms Phase, by Jean Liedloff
First appeared in
Mothering magazine, Winter 1989
In the two and a half
years during which I lived among Stone Age Indians in the South
American jungle (not all at once, but on five separate
expeditions with a lot of time between them for reflection), I
came to see that our human nature is not what we have been
brought up to believe it is. Babies of the Yequana tribe, far
from needing peace and quiet to go to sleep, snoozed blissfully
whenever they were tired, while the men, women, or children
carrying them danced, ran, walked, shouted, or paddled canoes.
Toddlers played together without fighting or arguing, and they
obeyed their elders instantly and willingly.
The notion of punishing a child had apparently never occurred to
these people, nor did their behavior show anything that could
truly be called permissiveness. No child would have dreamed of
inconveniencing, interrupting, or being waited on by an adult.
And by the age of four, children were contributing more to the
work force in their family than they were costing others.
Babes in arms almost never cried and, fascinatingly, did not
wave their arms, kick, arch their backs, or flex their hands and
feet. They sat quietly in their slings or slept on someone's hip
— exploding the myth that babies need to flex to
"exercise." They also did not throw up unless
extremely ill and did not suffer from colic. When startled
during the first months of crawling and walking, they did not
expect anyone to go to them but rather went on their own to
their mother or other caretakers for the measure of reassurance
needed before resuming their explorations. Without supervision,
even the smallest tots rarely hurt themselves.
Is their "human nature" different from ours? Some
people actually imagine that it is, but there is, of course,
only one human species. What can we learn from the Yequana
tribe?
Our Innate Expectations
Primarily, we can try to grasp fully the formative power of what
I call the in-arms phase. It begins at birth and ends with the
commencement of creeping, when the infant can depart and return
at will to the caretaker's knee. It consists, simply, of the
infant having 24-hour contact with an adult or older child.
At first, I merely observed that this in-arms experience had an
impressively salutary effect on the babies and that they were no
"trouble" to manage. Their bodies were soft and
conformed to any position convenient to their bearers — some
of whom even dangled their babies down their backs while holding
them by the wrist. I do not mean to recommend this position, but
the fact that it is possible demonstrates the scope of what
constitutes comfort for a baby. In contrast to this is the
desperate discomfort of infants laid carefully in a crib or
carriage, tenderly tucked in, and left to go rigid with the
desire for the living body that is by nature their rightful
place — a body belonging to someone who will
"believe" their cries and relieve their craving with
welcoming arms.
Why the incompetence in our society? From childhood on, we are
taught not to believe in our instinctive knowledge. We are told
that parents and teachers know best and that when our feelings
do not concur with their ideas, we must be wrong. Conditioned to
mistrust or utterly disbelieve our feelings, we are easily
convinced not to believe the baby whose cries say "You
should hold me!" "I should be next to your body!"
"Don't leave me!" Instead, we overrule our natural
response and follow the going fashion dictated by babycare
"experts." The loss of faith in our innate expertise
leaves us turning from one book to another as each successive
fad fails.
It is important to understand who the real experts are. The
second greatest babycare expert is within us, just as surely as
it resides in every surviving species that, by definition, must
know how to care for its young. The greatest expert of all is,
of course, the baby — programmed by millions of years of
evolution to signal his or her own kind by sound and action when
care is incorrect. Evolution is a refining process that has
honed our innate behavior with magnificent precision. The signal
from the baby, the understanding of the signal by his or her
people, the impulse to obey it — all are part of our species'
character.
The presumptuous
intellect has shown itself to be ill-equipped to guess at the
authentic requirements of human babies. The question is often:
Should I pick up the baby when he or she cries? Or should I
first let the baby cry for a while? Or should I let the baby cry
so that this child know who is boss and will not become a
"tyrant"?
No baby would agree to any of these impositions. Unanimously,
they let us know by the clearest signals that they should not be
put down at all. As this option has not been widely advocated in
contemporary Western civilization, the relationship between
parent and child has remained steadfastly adversarial. The game
has been about how to get the baby to sleep in the crib, whether
or not to oppose the baby's cries has not been considered.
Although Tine Thevenin's book, The Family Bed, and others have
gone some way to open the subject up of having children sleep
with parents, the important principle has not been clearly
addressed: to act against our nature as a species is inevitably
to lose well-being.
Once we have grasped and accepted the principle of respecting
our innate expectations, we will be able to discover precisely
what those expectations are — in other words, what evolution
has accustomed us to experience.
The Formative Role of the In-Arms Phase
How did I come to see the in-arms phase as crucial to a person's
development? First, I saw the relaxed and happy people in the
forests of South America lugging around their babies and never
putting them down. Little by little, I was able to see a
connection between that simple fact and the quality of their
lives. Later still, I have come to certain conclusions about how
and why being in constant contact with the active caretaker is
essential to the initial postnatal stage of development.
For one thing, it appears that the person carrying the baby
(usually the mother in the first months, then often a four- to
12-year-old child who brings the baby back to the mother for
feeding) is laying the foundation for later experience. The baby
passively participates in the bearers running, walking,
laughing, talking, working, and playing. The particular
activities, the pace, the inflections of the language, the
variety of sights, night and day, the range of temperatures,
wetness and dryness, and the sounds of community life form a
basis for the active participation that will begin at six or
eight months of age with creeping, crawling, and then walking. A
baby who has spent this time lying in a quiet crib or looking at
the inside of a carriage, or at the sky, will have missed most
of this essential experience.
Because of the child's need to participate, it is also important
that caretakers not just sit and gaze at the baby or continually
ask what the baby wants, but lead active lives themselves.
Occasionally one cannot resist giving a baby a flurry of kisses;
however, a baby who is programmed to watch you living your busy
life is confused and frustrated when you spend your time
watching him living his. A baby who is in the business of
absorbing what life is like as lived by you is thrown into
confusion if you ask him to direct it.
The second essential function of the in-arms experience appears
to have escaped the notice of everyone (including me, until the
mid-1960s). It is to provide babies with a means of discharging
their excess energy until they are able to do so themselves. In
the months before being able to get around under their own
power, babies accumulate energy from the absorption of food and
sunshine. A baby therefore needs constant contact with the
energy field of an active person, who can discharge the unused
excess for each of them. This explains why the Yequana babies
were so strangely relaxed — why they did not stiffen, kick,
arch, or flex to relieve themselves of an uncomfortable
accumulation of energy.
To provide the optimum in-arms experience, we have to discharge
our own energy efficiently. One can very quickly calm a fussing
baby by running or jumping with the child, or by dancing or
doing whatever eliminates one's own energy excess. A mother or
father who must suddenly go out to get something need not say,
"Here, you hold the baby. I'm going to run down to the
shop." The one doing the running can take the baby along
for the ride. The more action, the better!
Babies — and adults — experience tension when the
circulation of energy in their muscles is impeded. A baby
seething with undischarged energy is asking for action: a
leaping gallop around the living room or a swing from the
child's hands or feet. The baby's energy field will immediately
take advantage of an adult's discharging one. Babies are not the
fragile things we have been handling with kid gloves. In fact, a
baby treated as fragile at this formative stage can be persuaded
that he or she is fragile.
As parents, you can readily attain the mastery that comes with
comprehension of energy flow. In the process you will discover
many ways to help your baby retain the soft muscle tone of
ancestral well-being and give your baby some of the calm and
comfort an infant needs to feel at home in the world.
Copyright ©1991 by Jean Liedloff
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Copyright ©1998 by The Liedloff Society for the Continuum
Concept, All Rights Reserved. www.continuum-concept.org
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