Originally published on Everyday Feminism. (Content Warnings: incest, rape, and sexual violence). File image via iStock.
Two of my good friends had their first baby late this past year.
From the get-go, Baby was a cuddly little girl. (Or, as her two mums say, “We assume she’s a girl, but we won’t know for sure until she tells us herself.”) She was all about being held and being rocked – and crying her head off the moment anybody dared to put her down. She wanted contact with all the people ever.
But in the past couple of months, it seems she’s had a serious change of heart.
When some of us were over for a visit, Baby suddenly wanted none of it. Passed from one person to the next, she wailed like a banshee until finally given back to one of her mums, where she instantly quieted.
“Don’t take it personally,” Mama said to everyone, bouncing Baby. “She’s just entering that stage where she’s developing some healthy stranger danger.”
And so the new process emerged: One of us would attempt to hold Baby every once in a while. And if she cried for more than 20 seconds, we’d hand her back to one of her mums.
If Baby didn’t want to be held by certain people, Baby didn’t have to be held by certain people.
It was as simple as that – and something her mums are determined to keep in place as Baby gets older.
Seeing them regard their child like that was admittedly an eye-opening experience for me. I’d grown up in a world where you hugged relatives or family friends no matter what. To deny them was considered a huge sign of disrespect, and nothing was worse than disrespecting someone older than you.
Top Comments
Our daughter is very unsure of people she doesn't know well. If she doesn't want to hug someone we suggest a High 5 instead, she's normally ok with that, but if not, we don't push it.
Totally agree with this article. I have two nieces and I always ask if I can have a hug and a kiss when I leave. Three year old sometimes declines, though usually regrets this an instant later and comes running down the hall to crash tackle me.
There are lots of times as an adult that I've had to hug or kiss people who I've not wanted to hug or kiss, and I simply can't stand it. I"d never put a child through that.