SHAAREY ZEDEK
BETH HAYELED
NURSERY SCHOOL
Semi-Annual
primary means of express-
ing and communicating ba-
sic needs."
Of these needs, most are
simple to solve. Whether
hungry or exhausted, in-
fants will cry to make their
wishes known — and with-
out quick action by a parent,
the crying will soon escalate
to a fierce howl, according to
the doctor.
"If you concentrate your
efforts on responding to the
messages conveyed in your
baby's cries, you will be both
keeping your baby physi-
cally healthy and laying the
groundwork for his or her
psychological and cognitive
growth," Dr. Taubman
writes.
And if that sounds too
much like common sense,
Dr. Taubman warns that
new parents, many of whom
suffer under the weight of
familial advice and consent,
usually do not know how to
cope with crabby babies. In
addition, Dr. Taubman said
some pediatricians are not
sympathetic to crying in-
fants.
This indifference to colic,
Dr. Taubman claims, spr-
ings from an assumption on
the doctor's part that the
parent has tried everything
possible to soothe the baby.
In addition, many pediatri-
cians see infant crabbiness
as merely another hurdle in
development, and since
"things get better, they
don't see the negative con-
sequences of the problem."
First, there are the many
myths wrung from genera-
tions of baby rearing — such
as an infant becoming spoil-
ed from too much food or too
much comfort. Add some
pediatricians' misconcep-
tions about colic, and the re-
sult can damage the baby's
psychological and physical
well-being, according to Dr.
Taubman.
"Babies can't be spoiled,
they don't know how to ma-
nipulate you," he said.
"They need that security
that a parent can give."
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1
851-5111
A vegetarian dinner at the
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being organized for 7 p.m.
June 7 by the Washtenaw
County Jewish Community
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