Hugging Babies is Not Enough
Last week, after posting Self Esteem Mini-Course (part 6), I got this comment from Chuck Bluestein referring to his post called What Causes a Lack of Self-Esteem in Americans. According to Chuck, the lack of physical touch in infants is the source of the problem.
Well, Chuck, I agree with you that physical touch is essential for kids' physical and emotional growth. I even think that parents who think they are "spoiling" their babies by holding them in their hands are being unreasonable. Yes, babies needs to be hugged and touched, but the real problem in our society starts when they grow a bit and Mom and Dad think it is inappropriate to touch them anymore. It reached a stage where grown-ups who lived together in the same house for years shake hands when they see each other. I try from time to time to imagine my kids as grown-ups. I have changed their diapers! I cannot imagine myself shaking their hands when they become parents. Since they were babies, I have hugged them and said, "I can hug you and love you as much as I want".

However, Chuck, I do not believe that "hearing" about something can convince people to behave in any way. People have heard everything there is to hear, they have all the knowledge in the world but it just does not sink in, because of the many filters they have added to their identity over the years. This is neither right nor wrong, it is just a fact. We go through life and come up with filters that help us survive.
And I still think there is no such a thing as "the right way" (I think Special Education professionals are "programmed" to react like this to the terms "right" and "wrong"). People always choose what seems to be the right way at the time. Not one ever says, "Well, here are 7 options for raising kids, let me pick the wrong one"…
I love Mr. Miyagi from "Karate Kid" and I think I would have said, "When the student cannot understand something, it is only because the teacher did not present it properly", but bad teachers? I do not think there are any. No teacher on Earth ever becomes a teacher in order to damage kids. No teacher ever says, "Well, I have 7 ways (I love the number 7) to teach, let me choose the lousiest one". Teachers (and parents are teachers too) teach the best way they can. We need to give them more strength, more confidence, more support and no judgment.
Chuck says, "This lack of self-esteem is not because American parents do not love their kids. It is because they never learned how to raise infants. The way that kids are raised now is described in the book, Revolution from Within: A Book of Self-Esteem by Gloria Steinem (1992). This tells how children are alive to serve the parents and the parents are perfect and always right and it goes on and on".
I agree with Gloria Steinem that most parents have never learned how to raise infants, but they have never learned how to raise toddlers or teens either, they have never learned how to establish a relationship with a partner or take care of their finances or do home maintenance, although they have to do it all their life. What is new about that?
I would like to suggest that you take all the Amer-Indians, put them in the middle of a busy city and see how much self-esteem they will have there. Kids who grow in a small community with a different dynamic can continue to raise their kids the same way for over 100,000 years.
The kids we have today, the kids whose parents have Internet connections and go on the computer to read the great posts you and I write, live in a super fast world with changes every day, all day. Even if they wanted to keep their life the same way for a week, they could not do it.
When you say 100,000 years, it is funny. My 6-year-old just came back from school, excited that she had learned how to change the colour of text in Microsoft Word. My husband than told her he had met his first computer at university and we had our first computer at home when he was 26. In just a short time, life has changed for all of us. Do you think that, if we wanted, we could say, "Nah, I do not like this life. Too many changes. I want to go back to living like 100,000 years ago"?
As much as I believe that touch is important, I want you to know there are kids who cannot stand the feeling of being touched all the time (and Chuck, there is nothing wrong with these kids). You are describing a community of people who are kinesthetic and benefit from physical touch, but this does not mean that everyone does.
Some kids who will cry if you put them in a sling, because they will feel limited, whereas others will feel warm and safe. I have three kids and each is different in their need for touch. I find that natural. Yes, physical touch contributes to people's self-esteem, but I wish they could have remembered the hugs they got in their infancy. I wish there was a tank of hugs and touch that they could carry with them to adulthood. It is wishful thinking but far from being real. People need hugs and physical touch all the time - infants, toddlers, teens, parents, growth-ups, old folks - everybody. There is magic in the infant years, but hugs are not that magic.
If you believe that whenever the baby cries it is because he is in pain, you might find it hard and painful to raise kids. Kids cry as a form of expression. This is what they know and it is very good that they cry. Life is beautiful, but not if we immediately give them their desires all the time. They are just babies learning about life. Kids are not servants, nor are their parents. Everyone in this life wants to satisfy their needs and sometimes, there are conflicts of interest. For example, kids want to sleep in your bed and you want to make love to your partner tonight. Oops, what is more important now, your feeling of love, your partner's feeling of love or your kids' feeling of love? In every conflict of interest, parents are just a little bit more experienced than their babies are. Just as on planes, they tell you to put your mask on first when there is an emergency, it only makes sense to me that with self-esteem, you would do the same. Your kids will certainly learn to live by doing what you do, so teach them to take care of themselves by taking care of yourself.

If you teach kids that when they are not being held, they are not loved, you are teaching them the most horrible thing. The best thing is to tell them that they are loved no matter what and that there are many ways to express love and physical touch is only one of them. I hope no kid in the world will adopt this way of thinking, because we are not held most of our life, and life would be miserable if touch was the only way to express love.
Teen depression is not caused by not being hugged and touched in infant years but because parents think it is valuable to touch their kids when they are cute babies, but when the cuteness disappears, the hugs and the physical affection disappear with it. Many teens do not get touch from anyone close to them.
So Chuck, as much as I think that touch is essential for people's growth and wellbeing and as much as I think the early years are crucial, I do not agree that this alone is the source of self-esteem in people, although I wish you were right!
Happy ongoing parenting is the answer,
Ronit
Related posts
- Hugs: The Ultimate Antidepressant
- Hugging Season
- How to Fill Your Love Tank
- Teen(r)age: In Search of Love and Uniqueness
- So Your Kid is Overweight. Now What?
Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.
7 Responses to “Hugging Babies is Not Enough”
Please share your throughts
Your comment will be moderated by its RELEVANCE and its VALUE to our readers.
|
Find out today how to be happy in life with the help of a life coach |






Its all true what you say
Yet to quote an authority ( or a non authority on the subject - Gloria Steiman). Where did this come from
In the end most of what is being discovered here - your grandmother could of told you- without all this new discovery and research
Hi Ronit - great article as usual. For me I agree - I think 2 things that are definitely part of what I would define as good parenting is touch AND validation. Children do need physical contact to know that they are loved and they need positive comments and feedback so they know they are ok - unfortunately for me I received neither, so there is really no mystery as to why it has taken me years to work on my self-esteem - but at least I've learnt 2 things that I will definitely include in my parenting some day and I'm really looking forward to it!
Art Fellon,
Thank you for your comment.
It is valid that there are things the world research now that was known for many years. However, I still think that what was right 80 years ago is not right today.
Chuck referred to someone who wrote a book and researched a topic. I can understand that. We all do that. Look for supporting legs to our beliefs and actions.
By the way, I don't know about your grandmother but my grandmother wasn't the person to tell me that.
Happy day
Ronit
http://www.ronitbaras.com
Hi Tina,
I am working on the self-esteem chapter about parents self esteem and how this is a cycle that we need to stop.
Parents with law self esteem – Never hugged, never heard a nice word, raise kids with low self esteem - never hugged, never heard a nice word, that raise kids…
You should be proud of yourself for stopping the cycle.
There you have it, nice words and a hug
Hugs
Ronit
http://www.ronitbaras.com
[...] all the time and let them sleep in their bed at night, would that set them up for a good life?http://www.ronitbaras.com/index.php/2008/04/focus-on-the-family/parenting-family/hugging-babies-is-n...How Not to Get Baby to Sleep - TIMEHow not to Get baby to Sleep. Tuesday, Apr. 08, 2008 By TIFFANY [...]
When you say teachers, you mean professional teachers. They get paid to teach while someone that teaches without pay is just a teacher. So everyone is a teacher. For example I was in New York and asked a guy how to get to Carnegie Hall. I wanted him to teach me how to get there. So he did. He said "Practice, practice." That is an old joke.
The Ku Klux Klan teaches their family and others that blacks and Jews are bad. Adolf Hitler taught about the Nazi movement. He even had Nazi Youths. Children learn from parents, teachers and others.
I learned a lot from books. I have read more books than most people have heard of. Recently I read the 3 books by Daniel Quinn (Ishmael, My Ishmael and The Story of B). His book, Ishmael, won the $500,000 Turner Tomorrow Fellowship award for the book to save the planet earth. Some schools and colleges now require students to read it.
Since I had that information from the book The Continuum Concept that taught the way that babies have been brought up for 100,000 years,, there has been further development in the medical community. There is now a massive scientific book called The Baby Book by 4 MDs and and a registered nurse. Has it worked for them? Yes, the one MD is Dr Sears and the RN is his wife and the 3 other doctors are their sons!
They call it attachment parenting and baby wearing. They even have scientific studies about baby wearing. Also the the people who had brought babies up the same way for 100,000 thousand years had been called "Godless savages" by Chistians just like the black slaves, native Americans, Incans and the Aztecs. But the above MDs are prominent Christians so they are not "Godless savages."
Note if you do not beleive me do a Google search for "Godless savages" and other things mentioned above.
Cancer cure,
you are right, everyone is a teacher but not because they give us something but because we take.
If we took something from someone, he taught us something.
I know what you mean when you say that reading is a form of learning but I think that implementing is the real learning. even things we learn from our parents, friends, professional teachers of from enemies, we need to implemented.
I am not sure that concept that were fine for 100,000 years are 100% relevant today because we live in a different world.
I am sure some people find the concepts still relevant today.
Some people need scientific proof that something is good, though I like science and research I am reminding you that I am an educator and am familiar with research that was done on 3 kids and still valid today and research done on 1000 kids that means nothing at all.
I am sure that it worked for them.
I recommend parents to examine every concept and find out if it works for them. It does not need to be right for everyone It just needs to work for you.
I had two nephews born a day apart. The younger sister ( she is a social worker with 3 degrees and one of them in psychology. She is very familiar with all parenting concepts) chose to go with "attachment parenting". The older sister ( premature baby and special education degree)did not like that idea and is very much into routine and scheduling.
Maybe I should ask you ( or anyone else reading this comment) Which one of them is having fun and which one is not?
( by the way, both of them love the parenting and enjoy it very much but one of them is struggling and the other one is not)
tell me what you think.
I will tell you what is happening in their reality and why I think it is happening.
Happy day
Ronit