In our culture, the majority opinion is that parenthood starts after
birth. This view has been subtly fostered by medical scientists who
think of a baby as physical matter, especially brain matter, which they
have long believed is insufficient to register or process memory,
learning, trauma, emotion, or any truly human experiences until months
after birth. This effectively excludes the period of life in the womb
from active parenting. Hence, we tend to think that parenting cannot
really begin until a real baby is actually "delivered" to the parents.
Considering all we know today about the realities of life before birth,
we must appropriately reset the clock on parenthood. The womb is no
longer a dark, secret place. We know it is not an isolation tank! What
goes on in there for nine months is the ceaseless moulding and shaping
of the whole baby--a collaboration between baby and parents. All the new
facts of life plead for parental involvement, participation, and
cooperation in the powerful matrix of intimate interactions that take
place in the womb. Pregnancy is parenting de facto. Parental influence
on a child is at its peak during construction in utero.
Creating is what parenting is about--creating a physical body and brain,
creating emotional foundations for living, and establishing a rich
connection with the prenatal self.
1. Creating a Physical Body
Parents provide the immediate physical environment which will determine
whether the baby's equipment for living will be poor, average, or
optimal. As the foundations for physical life are laid, each new part is
built upon the previous one so that both limitations and advantages are
preserved. Although some degree of "plasticity" is possible during
later development, the original parts remain in place.
Parents who wait to think about this until after their child is born
will be starting too late--nine months after all the basic equipment has
been constructed. In the 20th century, parents began to face
compounding hazards of reproduction. These included old and new bacteria
and viruses, which seem to emerge when our immune system is weak and
vulnerable. In addition, environmental dangers became more challenging
with the huge new production of industrial and agricultural chemicals, a
swelling tide of stimulants and sedatives such as nicotine, caffein,
and alcohol, tempting "street" drugs like opiates and amphetamines, the
plethora of new drugs prescribed by physicians, new forms of
electromagnetic radiation including the bombardment of ultrasound waves
being overused to entertain parents during obstetrical office visits.
Because of so much environmental disruption, the safety and sanctity of
the womb is threatened as never before. (For specific research
addressing womb safety, see our column WombSafe).
A mother's diet can innocently invite birth defects. Science has only
slowly found the connection between deficiencies of folic acid (one of
the B vitamins) and the profound malformations of anencephaly and spina
bifida, defects which occur when the neural tube fails to close 18 to 26
days after conception. If construction deficits occur at the top end of
the tube, the baby's brain will likely be affected; if at the lower
end, the spinal column will likely be affected. Large scale disruptions
in the food supply, as in a famine, can create widespread problems of
reproduction. Long-term studies of children born to mothers who were
starved in early pregnancy show damage to the mechanisms of appetite
control and growth regulation, resulting in obesity in the offspring.
Famines produce increased rates of diabetes and schizophrenia, partly
through zinc deficiency which contributes to both of these diseases.
Sub-optimal nutrition, one of the factors behind the plague of
low-weight babies, means shortages of essential supplies during brain
construction resulting in a sub-optimal brain. In the modern urban
environment, estrogenic compounds flow freely and have an impact on
human sexual development. Hormonal deficiencies, excesses, and
imbalances effect both the genes and the environment that ultimately
determine sexual identity and orientation--all this before the baby is
born.
2. Creating Emotional Foundations
One of the biggest surprises about life in the womb is the extent of
emotional involvement and expression, generally not anticipated in
psychology or medicine. Spontaneous and graceful movement that can now
be observed from about 10 weeks after conception reveals self-expression
and early aspects of self-control, needs and interests. Some behaviors
reflect a protest against uncomfortable experiences. By 15 weeks,
ultrasound shows babies moving in reaction to something as simple as a
mother's laugh or cough. More disturbing are the aggressive actions seen
toward the needle during amniocentesis--attacking the needle barrel
with a closed fist, suggesting self-protection, self-assertion, fear and
anger that was previously thought unreal and impossible.
With surprising development of hearing and tasting before 16 weeks
gestational age, the way is open for babies to have even more extensive
interactions with their mothers and fathers. Ultrasound imaging of twins
similarly shows the unexpected scope of their social relationships seen
in repeated hitting, kicking, kissing, or playing together. Life in the
womb--now that we can observe it--bears little resemblance to the lazy
world previously hypothesized in which a baby was a passive passenger
virtually deaf, dumb, and blind. In those days, parents themselves
thought it was appropriate to be deaf, dumb, and blind.
As it is with the establishment of physical settings in utero, the
emotional system is also organizing itself in relation to the range and
varieties of experiences encountered. A baby surrounded with anger,
fear, and anxiety will be adjusting itself to that world and may carry
those settings forward unless something changes. Patterns of fearful
reaction already visible via ultrasound before birth can be seen after
birth. This emotional sensitivity of the fetus is one big reason why
adoption cannot be viewed as just a simple experience for the parents.
Chances are, an adopted baby has emerged from confusion and conflict,
both troubled and conditioned by the turmoil of the birth parents. They
have been learning from experience and are likely to arrive feeling at
least uncertain, possibly rejected, carrying unconscious baggage of
anxiety about its identity and connections. Parents are potent factors
in shaping the dynamic world of the unborn.
3. Establishing a Rich Connection with the Prenate
Not long ago we thought it was impossible for prenates to have any truly
personal or significant experiences. We didn't see that they could have
a working mind. In retrospect, our false beliefs about their brain
power obscured the fact that babies in the uterine world were indeed
having a range of experiences, establishing patterns of interaction,
listening to music and conversation, and as tests ultimately proved,
were committing them to memory. Numerous experiments have made it clear
that prenates who have the opportunity to hear stories and music
repeated to them in utero can demonstrate recognition for this material
later in life. Prenates have become familiar with and show a preference
for specific lullabies, musical themes like "Peter and the Wolf," "Mary
had a little Lamb," and even theme music from television soap operas.
Prenates memorize the voices of their mothers and fathers in utero while
learning the basic features of their native language, the "mother
tongue" as we say. Spectrographic analysis of voice and cry sounds as
early as 26 weeks of gestation show how far babies of this age have
already progressed in adopting the voice characteristics of the mother.
In a recent experiment, mothers repeated a children's rhyme daily for
four weeks from week 33 to 37 in utero. Tested at 37 weeks while still
inside, the babies reacted with a change of heartbeat to the familiar
rhyme, but not to the unfamiliar rhyme. In other research, babies have
demonstrated immediately after birth a preference for their mother's
voice and their native language. The womb turns out to be a stimulating
place and functions as a school. And all babies attend.
In the last fifteen years as these facts were gradually becoming known,
many books, tapes, and exercises were created to help parents understand
and communicate with babies in the womb. All are potentially valuable
in helping parents to make a creative and loving attachment (rather than
an insensitive or aggressive one), a connection which respects the
needs and limitations of the baby and doesn't overwhelm them. Babies are
naturally curious and interactive. Taking advantage of this since about
the 1980s, organized programs for parents have been developed and
tested, revealing the benefits of carefully planned stimulation. (For
the scientific details, please see another section in this column
featuring best examples of prenatal stimulation.) These studies have
proven what few believed decades ago: (1) that babies in the womb are
alert, aware, and attentive to activities involving voice, touch, and
music; (2) that babies benefit from these activities by forming stronger
relationships with their parents and their parents with them, resulting
in better attachments and better birthing experiences, and (3) that
these babies tend to show precocious development of speech, fine and
gross motor performance, better emotional self-regulation, and better
cognitive processing. These are the gifts and rewards of active
parenting.
Author(s): David Chamberlin
Disclaimer
The sole purpose of these blogs is to provide information about
the tradition of ayurveda. This information is not intended for use in the
diagnosis, prevention or cure of any disease. If you have any serious, acute or
chronic health concern, please consult a trained doctor/health professional who
can fully assess your needs and address them effectively. If you are seeking the
medical advice of a trained Ayurvedic expert, call us or e mail.
Dr Unnati Chavda
(Promoting pregnancy wellness)
www.ayurvedapanchkarma.in
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