19
November
2006
I had a miscarriage a few years before my daughter was born. It was a "late miscarriage" and I was completely devastated.
When I was pregnant with my daughter, I was terrified that I would lose her too, and requested an ultrasound. My midwife doesn't normally send her patients to get ultrasounds, but understood my need to "see" my baby alive and kicking.
I talked to my unborn baby beforehand…told her that she would hear a high pitched sound, and when she heard that daddy and I would be able to see her. During the ultrasound, the baby we saw raised her hand up to her head and opened and closed her fingers. Even the tech was startled at how she seemed to be waving at us. We waved back of course!
I haven't noticed any "problems" with Sidra's brain development in the last decade, but I am very aware that not all is understood with sonagrams. I have heard and read about language delays, neurons being "derailed" and have pretty much decided we don't know enough about this technology to use it without medical concerns being the reason.
There is so much we don't know about our current technology. There is a lot we don't know about the early brain development of babies. But there is a lot we do know, and much we are learning daily, about how they are sentient even before birth, how they can be included in what is happening to them and around them, and how talking to our babies helps them orient to the world they are in.
Talking to our babies, and listening to them can occur even before birth, and most definitly after. Maybe we unintentionally put them in harms way when we subject them to technology we believe is safe when it's not, but we can help them cope with the emotional distress of confusing and upsetting experiences by honoring their experiences, empathizing, and supporting them to heal.
I believe it is possible. The field of prenatal and perinatal psychology is showing this too, in many ways. Care to explore it with me?
Any thoughts on this?
Posted: Pre- and Perinatal Psychology
18
November
2006
Some friends of mine just had a new baby girl and I was compelled to write this issue about one way that newborns can sense their environment that you might not be fully aware of.
NOTE: Newborns can and do use many more senses than just the following, but I am limited by space in this article, so am focusing on one I believe is MOST interesting - hearing.
First we'll back up to before your baby is born, for the capabilities of newborns don't just start at the time of birth. My mom likes to tell about how I had the hiccups in utero every night at 1 a.m., and that after birth, I continued to have them at that same time! Indeed, babies behave similar to how they behaved both before and after their birth.
If you see your newborn sucking her fingers for instance, it's likely that she did that prior to birth as well. Sometimes sleep times/patterns are mirrored to that of when you experienced sleep or activity from your unborn baby. So activities and rhythms of the day can influence patterns and behaviour of a newborn…
But did you know that babies can hear very clearly while in the womb?
It used to be thought that what babies heard was a muffled version of the outside sounds, rather like what you hear if you're listening while submerged under water.
What has been discovered is that unborn babies can actually hear extremely clearly while in the womb. You see, when we are submerged, the reason sound is muffled is because our inner ear is filled with air and the sound bounces around that.
But an unborn baby's inner ear is filled with fluid, which acts as a conductor. An experieriment included placing a microphone inside a womans womb that was designed to simulate the capabilities of an unborn baby's hearing. Researchers were shocked to find a newborn can hear even very specific sounds like footsteps walking out the door, the door closing and opening and clearly could distinguish voices.
In addition to the very loud sounds of mom's biology (heartbeat, stomach and bowel rumbles are the loudest) newborns can hear things as loud or louder and more distinctly than they will be able to once born.
So after birth, when your baby seems to recognize specific voices, and other daily sounds, it's because he does recognize them. He has been listening in for a long time on all the sounds you've been making, learning and growing according to what the sounds are teaching him about life outside the womb.
There are many stories of women having to leave loud concerts or violent movies because their unborn baby was reacting so strongly to the sounds. And other stories of babies being soothed by specific music, songs and stories that were played, sung and read to them prior to birth.
But that's not all…
Not only are they hearing in the womb, but research indicates that they are actually learning language and speech in there too! Researchers have taken "cryprints" - as individual as fingerprints - of newborns, and found they are chock full of the rhythms, intonations and speech patterns similar to the mother's, and specific to the language spoken. They have since found that before birth, babies are exercising the muscles they will be using to make such patterns in speech.
When the newborns from mothers who were deaf or mute were studied they found that the babies had a very strange cry, or didn't cry at all, indicating that not hearing mom's voice may have been like missing a speech lesson.
What did your baby hear before he was born?
What does your baby hear now?
Now, combine the knowledge that your baby can hear very well with the fact that they also understand what we say (see article: "Can my baby really understand what I say?"), and reflect about what was said or spoken about your baby during the pregnancy.
Did you talk to, or about your unborn and newborn infant? Are warm, loving, accepting thoughts primarily what she hears about herself? Did you, and do you assure your baby that he is wanted and loved, and safe?
If so, you have a very lucky baby!!!
Now reflect on your own experience. What might people have said in your presence when you were very young, or not even born yet? Are there any patterns you see in your life that match what you know about your very early messages?
If you'd like to explore this more, click on the title of this article. You'll be taken to a page where you can ask more questions, reflect and get feedback.
Let's talk!
Posted: Newsletter, Pre- and Perinatal Psychology, amazing newborns, infant communication
15
November
2006
By no means an exhaustive list, here's some "starter" books for anyone intersted in the foundational theories of what I do.
They are in my opinion, wonderful overviews of the consciousness and awareness of infants.
- The Mind of Your Newborn Baby. Dr. David Chamberlain (1988/1998); Berkeley, CA: North Atlantic Books.
- The Biology of Belief: Unleashing the Power of Consciousness, Matter, and Miracles. Dr. Bruce Lipton (2005). Santa Rosa, CA: Mountain of Love/Elite Books.
- The Secret Life of the Unborn Child. Thomas Verny and John Kelly (1981/1986); New York: Dell.
- Tomorrow's Baby: The Art and Science of Parenting from Conception Through Infancy. Dr. Thomas Verny and Pamela Weintraub (2002); New York: Simon and Schuster. NOTE: The new paperback edition of this book has a new title - Pre-Parenting, nurturing your child from conception.
More to come, or add your own!
Posted: Favourite books, Pre- and Perinatal Psychology, amazing newborns, infant communication
29
September
2006
David Chamberlain is the author of The Mind of your Newborn Baby (1989/1998) and co-founder of the Association for Prenatal and Perinatal Psychology and Health (APPPAH). He is editor of the APPPAH website and a core faculty member of The Santa Barbara Graduate Institute. He offered me the use of his address to the graduates of 2006, and I am grateful and honoured to share it with you here.
About Real Babies
by David B. Chamberlain, Ph.D
Introduction
I am honored to address you on this special day.
It is a day of many miracles, is it not?
The first miracle is that we are all here, sitting in our respective places, all according to our dream, our plan. You chose to be here.
Santa Barbara Graduate Institute is a unique school and it is a miracle that it came into existence. But it was not an accident. There were parents–not the kind of parents who wake up one morning and say, "Oh my god, we’re pregnant!" No. This baby was planned.
This school is not a place of easy miracles. This is not a Country Club or Party School! Being here is serious business requiring steady intellectual effort, and discipline driven by purpose. You have met the goal you set for yourself.
Finally, it is our miracle to sit together in a true community of scholars: friends, fellow teachers, learners all. This too was no accident; it was part of the original vision of the founders, Marty Glenn and Ken Bruer. We are grateful to you, Marty and Ken, for this community!
In this graduate school, I dare say, the central miracle is the baby–not just any baby, but what I like to call the real baby.
Babies are powerful beings with a huge mission. On arrival, they turn women into mothers, men into fathers, and couples into families. They humanize us, teach us tenderness, and inspire attachment. If we let them, they lead us toward a true civilization. And for all this, they get no particular credit for a magnificent effort!
I did not always know this about babies. In 1958, when I received my Ph.D. in psychology, I knew very little about the mind of a baby–not because I was not listening in classes but because my teachers didn’t know either.
My sudden plunge into the baby psyche came in 1974 when I took a course in the clinical applications of hypnosis and suddenly discovered memories I never knew existed, memories of birth and life in the womb! I quickly learned that babies were radically different from the babies being presented in psychology and in medicine.
Example. Freud’s idea of "infantile amnesia" that no one has any real memories before three years of age, had saturated psychological and medical thinking since its introduction in 1916. Although I knew in 1974 the theory could not be true, it was not until 1996 that a culmination of brilliant experimental research proved the whole theory false. I now refer to this as "80 years of scientific amnesia" about baby mind and memory–denying parents and professionals a true idea of what babies were like!
Another example was the large discrepancy between the actual senses of babies and the few senses acknowledged by the scientific community. In 1975¸ touch seemed merely reflexive; hearing was dampened (if not drowned) in the liquid environment of the womb; vision was primitive, blocked by closed eyelids and distorted by water; and the sense of smell was judged "impossible" without air. None of these scientific beliefs turned out to be true. Today, I can count at least twelve senses working in utero.
As I look back on the 20th Century, I see this gap as part of a larger problem of "shrinking" the real baby in psychology and medicine. Along with the shrinking of memory and the senses, there was a parallel shrinking of emotions, intelligence, learning, and the baby’s sense of "self." All this shrinking was ultimately justified because a prenate or newborn did not yet have sufficient brain matter to support any of the human activities above .
In my personal experience with babies, however, they were not shrinking; they were expanding in all dimensions. They were learning all kinds of things (whether we wanted them to or not), they were forming beliefs about parents and themselves, and were arriving at decisions that were definitely not good for them. Indeed, they kept me busy inventing a therapy to help them identify and resolve these problems.
I was discovering that babies had what I would now call an innate sense of self, memory, intelligence, virtue, awareness, and knowing. They were capable of storing out-of-body experiences and even near-death experiences in response to abortion attempts and the loss of a twin in utero, meaning that they were capable of profound experiences whether they had full bodies or brains or not. For most of the 20th century, scientific studies missed this baby.
Eventually, I came to the awkward conclusion that scientists in medicine and psychology were "hallucinating" babies to suit themselves! They were "making up" babies who fit into their own prejudiced and materialistic beliefs about what babies ought to be like, but their babies were not true to the facts.
Surprisingly, many of these hallucinations continue today in traditional obstetrics. Since it is well established that babies have a keen thermal sense and hate being cold, every cold birth is evidence for hallucination. The ritual is endlessly repeated: babies screaming in protest and doctors smiling as if everything is perfect! In our time, what is more characteristic of babies born in hospitals than the noise of their crying? How did this become standard in obstetrics? Babies are still doing their part by communicating their distress as loudly as possible, but doctors appear deaf and unaffected by what is happening. They seem content with the hallucination that everything is fine the way it is.
As a group, obstetricians seem content with the hallucination that babies are not equipped to experience pain, remember pain, or find any meaning in pain–a belief that has continued in medicine for centuries. Is it not still everyday practice to jab newborn heels for blood, to needle babies with drugs and vitamins, and to cut off male foreskins–while smiling and reassuring bystanders that pain will have no effect? How about holding babies upside-down and putting them down on flat surfaces? Or routinely separating babies and mothers? Is it unfair to ask when the doctors who deliver 98% of babies in our country today will wake from their hallucinations and stop violating sentient babies?
But why am I bringing this up at your graduation?
Because I am talking about our roots, our mission, and our contribution to society. You have your work cut out for you in representing the real baby, not some scientific fiction or fraction of a baby. If we don’t pursue this, who will?
Wendy McCarty has made a perceptive observation comparing developmental psychology and prenatal and perinatal psychology. She said, in developmental psychology they talk about babies, but in pre- and perinatal psychology, we talk to babies. I believe that this is the real secret of our success and the source of our authority. In our field, we may come by different paths but I believe we passionately converge on the whole baby. Ray Castellino and colleagues, and William Emerson and colleagues are all talking to babies, just as Myriam Szejer and colleagues in Paris are talking to babies, except that over there, they are speaking to newborns in plain French. This audience tonight is packed with people who are talking to babies, and in other ways extending the boundaries of what we used to think was true about them. I applaud you as explorers on this new frontier.
I am interested these days in the growing literature of parent reports describing how they were contacted, in one way or another, by future babies before they were conceived, sometimes long before. In the past, I want to remind you, parent reports were not considered valuable by academic researchers trying to understand babies. Parent testimony was obviously biased, and was automatically dismissed. In my opinion, we pay a high price for not listening to what people have to report!
One of my favorites is the story of a "baby" who succeeded in getting the attention of his future mother and startled her by saying, "Mom, when are you going to be ready for me?" "Who are you?" she asked, and he said clearly, "I am Timothy, your son!" This encounter proved unforgettable. Much later, when she did conceive and deliver a baby, she was sure she was experiencing the same personality she had encountered earlier. Today, hundreds of these spontaneous reports are circulating. In fact, I can add that whenever I mention this literature, hands go up in the audience and mothers volunteer the fact that they had that experience with their own children.
What I love about the implications of this startling research is the same thing I came to love about near-death experiences when I first read about them in 1975. At that time, when I was first trying to explain birth memories, critics would say babies couldn’t have these memories because they did not have the brains to do it. What I learned from the near-death reports was that nobody ever took their brains with them on these journeys! Something else was needed to account for the profound encounters, thoughts, life-reviews, and big decisions that they made and stored. I realized then that babies were demonstrating to me the same mysterious (human) faculties–apart from brain matter–that could explain their astute awareness before conception and the times following. Therefore, I welcome this new evidence from real parents adding to our understanding of the consciousness which we all have, parents and babies alike.
I think it is our mission to illuminate the whole baby, and to draw more and more people–both parents and professionals–into a full and constructive dialog with them.
In closing, I’m sure I speak for other members of the faculty in expressing our congratulations on your graduation. You have surely earned the confidence we have in you. We are proud to have played a part in your education. As future leaders in our field, we trust that you will take our places when we are gone!
***
Posted: Pre- and Perinatal Psychology, amazing newborns