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The Fussy Baby Book: Parenting your high-need child from birth to five
the fussy baby book
Parenting your high-need child from birth to age five
Dr William Sears and Martha Sears, R.N.
Edited by Caroline Deacon
contents
Cover
Title Page
A word from Dr Bill and Martha
I: the journey begins
chapter 1: hayden – our high-need child
How She Acted
How We Felt
What to Call Her
Our High-Need Child Grew and Changed
Her Discipline Needs Were Higher
Our Needs Versus Her Needs
How We Grew – the Payoff
chapter 2: profile of a high-need baby
Intense
Hyperactive
Draining
Feeds Frequently
Demanding
Awakens Frequently
Unsatisfied
Unpredictable
Supersensitive
Unable to Be Put Down
Uncuddly
Not a Self-Soother
Separation-Sensitive
chapter 3: your baby’s cry – what it means, how to listen
An Infant’s Cry – The Perfect Signal
Should Baby Cry It Out?
Should You Ever Let Baby Cry?
Mellowing Baby’s Cries
chapter 4: creative ways to soothe a fussy baby
Motions that Mellow
Sounds that Soothe
Sights that Delight
Touches that Relax
chapter 5: feelings shared by parents of high-need children
Doubtful
Alone
Defensive
Resentful
Thrilled and Scared
Controlled
Critical
Tied Down
Inadequate
Lost
Worried
Disillusioned
Manipulated
Confident and Comfortable
Proud
Vindicated
Connected
chapter 6: seventeen survival tips for parents of high-need children
Consider Yourself
Allow Baby Some Frustration
Make Sleep a Priority
Be Positive
Be Patient
Focus on the “Biggies”
Realize Your Child Is Unique
Don’t Compare
Get Out
If You Resent It, Change It
Get Help
Job-Share
Plan Ahead
Take the Long View
Get Behind the Eyes of Your Child
It’s No One’s Fault
Study Your Child
chapter 7: mother burnout
Martha’s Experience
What Fuels Mother Burnout?
What to Do About It
Avoiding Mother Burnout Altogether
chapter 8: helping the high-need child go to sleep and stay asleep
Why High-Need Children Sleep Differently
Parenting Baby to Sleep
Keeping Baby Asleep
Alternatives for the All-Night Nurser
chapter 9: feeding high-need children
The Benefits of Breast-Feeding
Problems Mothers Who Breast-feed May Encounter
Formula-Feeding Fussy Babies
High Needs – High Nutrition
Grazing
chapter 10: hidden causes of fussiness in infants
Food Sensitivities
Gastroesophageal Reflux
Ear Infections
Anaemia
Urinary Tract Infections
II: the high-need child grows up
chapter 11: the high-need thrill ride
The Ride Begins
1. Little Need for Sleep
2. High Need for Mum
3. High Sucking Need
4. Hyper-Responsive to Stimuli
5. Hyper When Hungry
6. Highly Creative
7. Resisting Authority
8. Stubborn
9. Negative
10. Opinionated
11. High Need for Affirmation
12. “It’s Not My Fault!”
Where Do I Go to Resign?
chapter 12: disciplining the high-need child
Get Connected to Your Child – Early
Study Your Child
Think Kid First
Provide Structure, Set Limits
Know When to Say Yes and When to Say No
Command Respect
Help Your Child Learn Empathy
Give Choices
Let Your Child Know What You Expect
Shaping Is More Important than Controlling
chapter 13: how to talk to and listen to the high-need child
Understand Your Child’s Viewpoint
Getting Your Child’s Attention
Holding Your Child’s Attention
Encourage Compliance Before Defiance
Guide Your Child Toward the Conclusion You Want
Model Control
Use Proper Body Language
Acknowledge Your Child
chapter 14: the payoff – for children and for parents
Empathy
Sensitivity
Sense of Justice
Awareness
Intimacy
Confidence
Expressiveness
Persistence
Interdependence
Ability to Make Wise Choices
Future Parenting Skills
Closeness
Ease in Disciplining
Trust
III: stories from the experts
chapter 15: survivors’ stories
Too Tired to Get Dressed
I Knew Something Was Wrong With Him
Balancing a Medical Career and Mothering
Robbed of a Month of My Motherhood
A Late Bloomer
Why Doesn’t This Baby Sleep?
Day-Care Nightmare
I Snuggled With My Premmie in Bed
A Screaming Bundle of Unhappiness
Sleepless in Canada
Career Derailed
He’s a Hard-to-Love Baby
The Proof Is in the Pudding
I Would Not Want Her Any Other Way
Time to Move On
Index
Acknowledgements
Keep Reading
Also by the Authors
Copyright
About the Publisher
a word from dr bill and martha
We want to both congratulate and encourage you on being blessed with a high-need child. Having a challenging child will bring out the best and worst in you; we wish to help this life-changing experience bring out the best.
Parenting a high-need child is like attending a continuous life-enrichment seminar. From the moment these infants exit the womb, in one way or another, they announce, “Hi, Mum and Dad. You’ve been blessed with an above-average child, and I need above-average parenting. If you give it to me, we’re going to get along fine; but if you don’t, we’re going to have a bit of trouble down the road.” And these babies have the persistence required to hold up their end of this bargain. Right from the start these children make it clear they need more! The good news is they also give more to everyone who cares for them.
This book is about children who are challenging and the parents who guide them. Besides insights that we have gained from parenting our own high-need children and from counselling hundreds of parents in our paediatric practice, sprinkled throughout this book you will find testimonies from parents who have survived and thrived with their high-need children – kids you would like. We let the experts speak for themselves.
Parenting a high-need child will be one of the most difficult journeys of your life. It will also be one of the most rewarding.
William and Martha Sears San Clemente, California May 1996
I the journey begins
Parenting is a journey. Parenting a high-need child is a journey where you unwittingly end up in uncharted territory. Before your baby’s birth you imagine what the journey will be like. You buy guidebooks. You listen to friends who have taken similar trips. It’s exciting. Your baby is born and the journey begins. Suddenly your trip isn’t going as planned. Your child is not following the guidebooks. He takes you on a different journey, one that you might not have chosen and certainly not the one you had anticipated. Initially, you resent this change in travel plans. The road is bumpy. It is lonely. And it’s costing you much more energy than you had budgeted. But you’ve purchased a non-refundable ticket, so you must go on. While your friends are seeing all the popular sights, your child pulls you off the usual paths, down side roads, and into places where you’re forced to carve some new trails on your own. The trip is tiring and challenging. You have difficulty sharing your discoveries with your friends; they haven’t been where you’ve been or seen the world through your child’s eyes. Before long, though, you will gradually begin to realize how much richer your life is and how much wiser you are for having experienced this special journey.
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