Helen Butler wrote:
> A baby of four months sees its mother stick something in her mouth, she is
> relaxed and enjoys it. Wow, lookslike fun, no iea what it is, must try!!!
>
>
You sound like there is no difference between the interest in solids and
general curiousity. There is a big difference. One of the ways that
I've heard it recommended to see which you are dealing with is to hand a
baby who has been reaching for solids a clean, empty spoon. If this
makes baby happy, baby was just curious or wanted a toy like mom's. If
baby still is staring at and demanding food from mom, then it is
actually a baby who is wanting solid food. Also, anyone who has really
seen a baby demanding solids will know how different this is than a baby
demanding a toy or anything else.
>
>
> Trusting to curiousity: the baby has no idea is connected to food going into
> his GI tract, but *we do* -- !!!??? We know that it takes about 6 months of
> extra-gestate life for the gut, the immune system etc to mature and for the
> baby to be protected enough for food.
>
But the point you are missing is that a baby doesn't _need_ to
understand this. Whether you look at it from a religious or
evolutionary perspective, it makes sense for the survival of humans for
babies to signal when they are ready for solids.
The other thing that has happened with this conversation is that it has
focused entirely on one of the signs of readiness. There are others
also. Teeth, for instance. And the loss of the tongue-thrust reflex.
Babies are different. They will be ready for solids at different ages.
All that research can do is tell us what is the _average_ age of
readiness. Should we deny a baby solids when he is ready because he's
ready early? Should we force-feed a baby solids before he is ready if
he becomes ready late?
That's one thing I don't understand about those who think the calendar
tells when a baby is ready for solids; what about the baby who doesn't
want solids at six months? If that baby's lack of interest can be a
sign as to whether he is ready, why can't a baby's interest also be a sign?
In my mind, introducing solids to a baby who is demanding them, showing
other signs of readiness, and is somewhere around half a year old is
just part of the same approach as cue-feeding and child-led weaning. It
is letting the child take control of his own food consumption. I'm not
suggesting that the child's control is absolute, but a child at any age
knows whether he should eat more or not. He should be able to choose
among a few reasonable options picked by a grown-up.
To insist on feeding solids at exactly six months because that is the
average time of gut closure sounds to me like insisting that a
breast-fed baby eat every two hours because that is what research shows
to be the average stomach emptying time for breastmilk.
I guess I just trust babies and trust mothers' instincts about their
babies more than I trust technology, research, or calendars. Perhaps
that's part of the difference between the approach of LLL leaders and
LCs? I know that if LLL ever changed its recommendations to be based on
the calendar rather than baby's readiness, I would be unable in good
conscience to continue to be a leader.
I must say that I appreciate how polite everyone is being in talking
about an issue that many of us feel very strongly about. Thank you to
everyone who has been making me think more clearly about this issue and
why I have the beliefs about it that I do.
Christine
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