The Vital Touch: How Intimate Contact With Your Baby Leads To Happier, Healthier DevelopmentHenry Holt and Company, 2014/09/23 - 288 ページ Using a lively array of anthropological and sociological sources, The Vital Touch: How Intimate Contact with Your Baby Leads to Happier, Healthier Development by Sharon Heller, PhD, presents a provocative examination of the reasons why, now more than ever, we need to make consistent physical connections with our infants and children. |
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... less able to remember, less able to cope, and less able to mother. We've reason to believe humans are no different. In fact, touch is literally a baby's lifeline. Able to thrive without hearing, without vision, and without smell ...
... less able to remember, less able to cope, and less able to mother. We've reason to believe humans are no different. In fact, touch is literally a baby's lifeline. Able to thrive without hearing, without vision, and without smell ...
7 ページ
... less easily identified, our isolationism, our difficulties with intimacy, our adver' sarial relationship with our own bodies, all likely relate to a culture that promotes mother'baby disconnection from the beginning and pronounced ...
... less easily identified, our isolationism, our difficulties with intimacy, our adver' sarial relationship with our own bodies, all likely relate to a culture that promotes mother'baby disconnection from the beginning and pronounced ...
13 ページ
... less than a minute—until the umbilical cord is cut!” Given this climate, American parents were ripe for behaviorism. Led by John Watson, the behaviorists believed we are born a blank slate, our habits and personality formed by rewarding ...
... less than a minute—until the umbilical cord is cut!” Given this climate, American parents were ripe for behaviorism. Led by John Watson, the behaviorists believed we are born a blank slate, our habits and personality formed by rewarding ...
16 ページ
... less than 10 percent. With a trend throughout the century moving increasingly in the direc~ tion of less harsh parenting, modern parents tend, in general, to be more nurturant than their parents were, who were more nurturant than their ...
... less than 10 percent. With a trend throughout the century moving increasingly in the direc~ tion of less harsh parenting, modern parents tend, in general, to be more nurturant than their parents were, who were more nurturant than their ...
18 ページ
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目次
3 | |
9?WPET | 104 |
8 SENSORY OVERKILL | 125 |
THE BODY FORBIDDEN | 143 |
BREAST OR BOTTLE? | 163 |
fiemky 12 | 213 |
FINISHING TOUCHES | 231 |
257 | |
267 | |
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