A
few days ago, I read a blog post criticizing those of us who call ourselves
“babywearers.” The author claimed she’d
rather go naked (literally as the post was headed by a tasteful photo of a mama
holding a baby, both naked) than “wear” her baby. Apparently, I’ve been ignoring and
dehumanizing my children for fashion and convenience’s sake and encouraging you
to do the same.
Ouch,
that smarts.
On
second thought, it smacks of extremism.
I do agree that it would be great to do nothing by hold my baby day and
night. At my house, this means that I
would be completely non-functional.
Caring for the home and children is in large part my responsibility as
my loving, helpful husband works full-time.
Unfortunately, I do not have the luxury of a housekeeper, nanny, chef,
personal shopper, or stylist to coif me and ready my house for daily life. Heck, we don’t even have a babysitter after a
year of living here.
If
I were never guilty of “wearing” my babies, we might not all still be here. That is a slight exaggeration. My house certainly wouldn’t be clean or neat,
there would never be any food, and my older child might be running across the
country like Forrest Gump. Wearing my
second child from the first days saved my sanity and confidence. I had a way to keep him happy and safe while
simultaneously entertaining (or chasing) my older child. She was not quite two when he was born, so
she still needed a lot of my hands-on care and attention. I do not know how I would have been happy,
healthy, or functional without our “mama pouch” during that 4th
trimester.
It’s
true that a well-worn kiddo is super cute, even chic at the moment. Does that lessen the well-documented fact
that your baby has a biological need to be close to you? Wearing your child fills physical and
emotional needs for you both, and it helps you to meet the needs of other when
necessary.
Watching
National Geographic confirms that wearing your baby is as instinctive as it
gets. I have never watched or read about
a tribal culture (never will you catch me labeling them “primitive” as they are
incredibly sophisticated societies, many more “civilized than our own) in
Africa, the Philippines, South America, etc… that DIDN’T show mothers carrying
their newborn to toddler-age children in some sort of sling or wrap. These women indubitably meet more challenges
and hardships in daily life than I do, but we all end up babywearing. It is a way to keep that child secure and get
by.
Modernity
is a blessing and a curse. We ask so
much of new mothers and so often push them to “get back to normal.” There is no more old normal. Everything changes with a baby. I envy the cultures who do not allow a new
mother to lift a finger for the first 30 days of her baby’s life. Instead, the mother’s female relatives take
care of the household, provide meals, and make it so that the mother’s only job
is to nurture her baby and rest. It’s a
stretch in my birth
classes to convince an expecting mother to spend 5 days in, 5 days on, and
5 days near her bed. That’s about as
basic as it gets for postpartum recovery.
It’s mostly to let the ligaments that hold up your uterus draw back up, allow
all of the organs supported by your pelvic floor to settle back into the proper
place, and work out the kinks of early breastfeeding.
That’s
another post for another day. Back to
babywearing.
I
do not make time to sew rings slings for others as penance to the gods of
fashion. I did not make your sling to marginalize
your child to the level of the season’s hottest new purse or a pair of hot,
red-soled heels. If you choose a baby
carrier, my slings or otherwise, that screams “you,” you will use it more.
This,
in turn, means that your baby will spend less time in baby “appliances” and
more time in physical contact with you.
Even the priciest carrier purchased only for its looks and popularity is
better than expecting to put your baby down all the time. I would rather see a baby in said carrier
snuggled against a caregiver than sitting all but forgotten in a carseat while
mama chats with her friends over lunch.
We
are carry mammals, not cache mammals.
The baby constantly expected or pushed into “appliances” is the ignored
baby not the “worn” baby. Not to
mention, tying to “teach” your baby to like things like bouncers and swings is
stressful. It sure was at my house. I didn’t want to carry or wear my babies all
of the time. Nobody loves holding a baby
24 hours a day. We all need a break and
a safe, secure place to put that baby.
It’s all about balancing your needs with those of the new addition.
My
ability to sew slings allows me to ease this transition for new parents. Whether it’s your first or your 8th
baby, there will be some changes. I have
a skill that can boost the confidence and lower stress of mothers around
me. The benefits of attachment parenting
are many and backed by much research.
For some, wearing a baby is the only tenet of AP they will ever embrace.
I,
for one, would feel naked NOT wearing my baby.
“Babywearing” will never be a pejorative in my personal vocabulary. I hope to be that wizened, smiling, elderly
lady in the grocery store driving all of the young mamas up the wall talking
about how smart they are to follow their intuition and wear their babies.
2 comments:
Well said, and well written, Kate.
Brilliant and beautiful, Kate. So true.
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