Sensitive to trends in parenting, Brazelton (Infants and Mothers,
On Becoming a Family) now addresses himself to the normal
developmental problems - from infant fears to toddler tantrums to
school-age maladies - that overanxious parents may unconsciously
reinforce. "For the child, this deviant behavior and these periods
of testing are necessary and important"; for the parents, Brazelton
points out and illustrates (from his practice, and his work at
Boston Children's Hospital), such "problem" behavior may not only
seem a symptom of failure, but call up threatening memories.
Brazelton does not counsel complacency: periodic fears and periods
of sadness are, each in their own way, calls for help. (Aggression,
masking fear, requires acceptable outlets; prolonged sadness may be
assuaged by retrospective sharing.) Mindful of societal pressures
on infants and small children, Brazelton is for, not against,
thumbsucking and cuddling a "lovey" (blanket, stuffed animal), as a
form of comforting, self-controlling behavior. He is firm on the
matter of discipline, of limits-setting (especially in the
turbulent second year), and on the related issues of feeding and
sleeping - with specific points on establishing meal-times as
"sacred" without discouraging independence (tiny portions for
messers and throwers, egg-in-milk instead of between-meal snacks),
specific arguments against "the family bed" solution (as fostering
daytime dependence, making later separation more difficult). In the
final section, "Psychosomatic Problems," Brazelton notes that each
child has an "Achilles heel" - "an organ which responds to stress
and creates symptoms which become the outlet for any unusual or
usual pressures." He explains the mechanisms of little girls'
stomach aches and little boys' headaches (the sex-linkage is still
a mystery), how to handle croup emergencies or asthma attacks, so
as to avoid a chronic problem. He also takes up bedwetting -
offering a preventive toilet-training program, emphasizing the
father's supportive role - and "positive" hospitalization. Once
again: fluent, variegated (a bow to Selma Fraiberg, an observation
of Margaret Mead's, reports of collegial research and reaction to
his Redbook articles), and consistently sustaining. (Kirkus
Reviews)
Fears, feeding, and sleep problems, croup and tantrums,
stomachaches, asthma: these are some of the problems that every
parent worries about at one time or another. According to Dr.
Brazelton, most of these are a normal part of growing up. Only if
parents add their own anxieties to the child's natural drive toward
master will these "normal problems" become laden with guilt and
tension and deepen into chronic issues. If parents can learn to
listen, to hear the stress that may lie behind psychosomatic
complaints, they can not only remove some of the excess pressures,
but also help their children toward self-understanding.
General
Imprint: |
Da Capo Press Inc
|
Country of origin: |
United States |
Release date: |
November 1992 |
First published: |
October 1992 |
Authors: |
T.Berry Brazelton
|
Dimensions: |
229 x 152 x 12mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Paperback - Trade
|
Pages: |
192 |
Edition: |
Revised |
ISBN-13: |
978-0-201-63270-5 |
Categories: |
Books >
Social sciences >
Psychology >
General
Promotions
|
LSN: |
0-201-63270-5 |
Barcode: |
9780201632705 |
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