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Rearing
a child has always been a contentious issue where prevailing social norms
have dictated the outcome. However, Dr Benjamin Spock, through his book
on child rearing, opened up vistas that were yet new and original. His
death recently at the age of 94 has once again brought into focus the
dilemma for parents
From the moment of conception, parenting is demanding, exhilarating,
exhausting, ennobling. It brings out the best in us; it highlights the worst.
It is the love of the child that makes both the parents strong as well as vulnerable.
They become decisive in the middle of a muddle. They are also vaguely worried
about almost everything.
The knowledge about parenting was revolutionized
50 years ago in the West when Dr Benjamin Spock, who became a pediatrician inspired
by his mother's love for children, wrote Baby and Child Care, a perennial
bestseller. First published at the start of the World War II baby boom in the
USA, it soon became an authoritative and reliable guide for parents.
Two of his ideas that appealed to peopleboth regarded as radical at that
timewere demand-feeding the child, and treating children with respect and
dignity, instead of spanking.
Both these ideas were later blamed for
paving the way for a permissive society. Dr Spock, however refuted all such charges
in the sixth edition of his book, arguing: " I've always advised parents to respect
children, but to remember to ask for respect for themselves."
Dr Spock
also disagreed with the earlier notion of letting the child be on its own to inculcate
self-reliance in him. He opposed the use of infant seats and baby pens and advocated
more cuddling and physical contact between parents and child to give the baby
a sense of security and create a stronger parent-child bond.
Much of
this was lost on the Indian mothers, who stuck to the bonds handed down from generation
to generation. But, interestingly, these norms were not much different from what
Dr Spock advocated. Mothers in India have kept the child at the breast, demand-feeding
it. Physical contact is also maximum in India where mothers continue to carry
their children even when they can walk. However, many child psychologists point
out that in India, the awareness about is inadequate. The problem becomes acute
in nuclear families.
Observes
Bharat Kapur, publisher of Parenting magazine: "Parenting in India
is moving from the old-fashioned to the new, from strong family ties to
nuclear families. Modern, educated women are looking for more information,
rather than just depending upon the traditional feedback from parents
and families."
Yes, Dr Spock is
welcome.
Says Rahla Khan, a doctor who has taken up journalism: " I
was alone when my twin daughters were born. Even my pediatrician didn't tell me
how to breastfeed them. Dr Spock came to my rescue."
Komal Bedi Sohal,
creative consultant with an ad agency in Calcutta, found Dr Spock invaluable when
" unwanted and usually undesirable" advice was given to her. Her 16-month-old
son Varun has only six teeth. Relatives told her that he has calcium deficiency
or that he is slow. " But Dr Spock told me that this was normal," says Komal.
" And above all," she continues, " since I am a working parenting, his advice
on how to handle a career and a baby, on how not to spoil the child to appease
your guilt, on how to spend quality instead of quantity time with your child,
goes a long way."
Radhika Malhotra, a mother of two boys, however, feels
that her knowledge of parenting came mostly from home. " I used to ask my mother
for advice. I never consulted a book. Even now I don't know who Dr Spock is."
For Kumkum Bhandari, a journalist, bringing up her two children was
a matter of instinct, complemented by her extensive reading on the subject. "
I feel that each child is different and requires different kind of parenting.
I consider my children as small persons instead of thoughtless babies and try
to understand their personalities and needs." She also pooh-poohs the idea of
quality time. " I tried it when I was working, but it seemed as though we were
forcing ourselves to have fun at particular times. Children want to decide when
and what kind of fun they would have."
Instinct and discrimination are
both called for particularly when confronted with contradictions between the age-old
notions on parenting and medical advice which often gets revised.
Take
breastfeeding. In the recent past, the advertising industry helped create the
myth that infant food formulas were the best substitute for mother's milk. And
because breasts are usually considered sex symbols, it was believed that nursing
spoilt a woman's figure. But new research has shown that breastfeeding not only
provides the best nourishment for the baby, but also prevents infections and some
diseases, besides promoting intimacy between mother and child.
Bindu
P., a teacher and a mother of an eight-month-old child, didn't need telling. She
looks forward to coming back home from work and breastfeeding the child since
it creates a special bond: " The only problem I have faced is juggling my time
between my child and work," says she.
Immunization and vaccination is another contentious issue. In many western countries
there is a growing movement against compulsory immunization on the ground that
since the vaccines are usually animal sera, many animal viruses like SV-40, a
confirmed cancer-tumor promoter, might be passed to children.
In modern
India, compulsory vaccination of children is taken for granted. Predictably, Dr
Spock, who is from the mainstream of medicine, supports immunization, arguing:
" In the vast majority of cases the disease is much more dangerous to many more
children than the rare bad reaction."
Dr Dwarkadas Motiwala, director, National Pediatric Center, Delhi, believes
that many traditional notions on child rearing can often be harmful. "
Ghuttis or gripe water, often suggested by elders, contain steroids
and opoids that may make the child sleep well but can also cause respiratory
failure," he points out. However a spokesman of Dabur, a premier ayurvedic
pharmaceutical company of India, denies this: " Dabur Janam Ghutti is
purely a herbal product, hence any question of steroids and opoids can
be totally ruled out."
Dr Motiwala also advises against keeping a child on breast milk alone after three
months: " The milk has no vitamin D or iron. Hence, it is necessary to give some
solids. But bottle feeding should be totally avoided."
Dr Poonam Jain,
a homeopath, agrees: " Bottles are often not boiled or dried properly and invite
fungal growth."She prescribes Cal Phos 6x to help with teething problems.
OLD
V/S NEW
Current
medical wisdom upholds some traditional Indian practices while rejecting
others
Avoid prelacteal feeds like honey water, glucose or formula milk
Talcum powders serve no purpose and can be avoided. Soaps,
if used at all should be mild
If Muslim, postpone circumcision till a later stage and make
sure that it is done by a qualified surgeon
Dr Promilla Butani in Parenting
Don't give the child any water or juices until he starts
on solid food
Avoid applying kajal or surma in the baby's eyes
Take any ailments, even a minor fever, seriously in a newborn
Avoid putting ear- or nose-rings
Use cotton clothes and diapers. Disposable or self-retaining
diapers might not be good for India's climate
After feeding, burp the child. Don't let the child lie down
face-up immediately after feeding
Don't try tricks such as coating your child's thumb with
chilies to rid him of his thumb-sucking habit. These are psychological
problems that should be handled by a pediatrician
Dr Dwarkadas Motiwala
Medication
for children is another problem area at a time when the side effects of
allopathic medicine are too well known. Dr Jain advises against the excessive
use of antibiotics since they reduce the immunity level. Says Uma Khosla,
a teacher: " Every time my first son was ill, I gave him modern medicines.
But he grew to be a weak child. Now for my second son, I go to a homeopath
or vaidya, a traditional ayurvedic healer."
Toilet training has always been a tricky subject. Dr Spock
argues that it can set the stage for a lifelong habit of cleanliness and order.
He suggests that a child should not be forced to sit on the potty. Instead he
should be allowed to sit on it with his clothes on for a few days before actually
using it. But he cautions that toilet training should begin only when the child
is at least 18 to 24 months old, otherwise he may later rebel through prolonged
soiling or bed-wetting. But Dr Jain disagrees: " A child can be toilet trained
when he is as young as a year old."
The child's emotional and behavioral
responses are determined by the environment he is brought up in. It depends entirely
on the kind of attention he gets from his parents, and the relationships that
the husband and wife have when the child is growing up.
Dr Spock wrote
that the intense materialism of the modern society has " convinced many people
that getting ahead of their work is the most important thing in life and that
personal happiness should be sacrificed if necessary. Parents transmit their extreme
competitiveness to their children".
This, Dr Spock wrote, should be
changed. " Children should be expected to be kind and helpful at the age of two
and should be volunteering for hospitals, institutions, and tutoring work in adolescence.
Schools should stop grading. Parents should avoid punishment. They should forbid
the viewing of violence and explicit sex on movies and on TV."
Dr
Jain advises parents to be careful of how they behave before the child since that
psychological basis of a person gets formed in infancy itself. " If you want to
teach your child anything, start from the very beginning. Don't smile at or indulge
in his naughty tricks for which you would admonish him when he's a little older.
Frank S. Pittman, MD, a columnist for Psychology Today, suggests that
you spend a lot of time on the floor with the baby, seeing the world from his
perspective, and tell him all about yourself long before he is old enough to understand
a word of it. His other suggestion includes sharing your baby with aunts, uncles,
and grandparents and taking your baby with you wherever you can, but make sure
you leave the baby some of the time to understand that you can get along without
each other.
Ultimately, parenting is not all that difficult if you use
your sixth sense and discrimination power. To prevent confusion, ignore what neighbors
and other busybodies say. And don't be overawed by expert opinions, including
that of Dr Spock who himself admitted: " Every child is different, every parent
is different, every illness or behavior problem is somewhat different from every
other. All I can do is prescribe the most common developments and problems in
the most general terms."
To sum up, be your own parent.
PAPA
OF TINY FEET
In
a time of nuclear families in which wives also contribute to the
family kitty, it is imperative that fathers too share the responsibility
of bringing up a baby. Don't view the time spent with your child
as a chore. It is an integral part of your life that will help
strengthen the parent-child bond.
The keynote
in approaching fatherhood is to relax. A baby is responsive to parent's feelings.
If you are anxious, so will the baby be.
A baby often makes demands
on his mother at the most outrageous times, leaving her exhausted. At this time
you can encourage her by taking on some of the taskssuch as changing nappies
or waking up in the night to look after necessary chores.
It might seem difficult to change your lifestyle that the baby's
presence would inevitably demand. You may have to say good-bye
to indulgent hobbies that you have developed over the years, the
partying that used to be fun. But if you allow yourself to get
involved in the process of your child's growing upbuilding
blocks with him, doing jigsaws, and reading from picture booksyou
will discover a new joy, as you unfold the wonder of life through
his eyes.