Imperial Valley Press

A view into tomorrow’s antiques

- ELAINE HEFFNER

Agroup of child psychiatri­sts in training were learning about various theories of child developmen­t that have emerged over time. A film portrayed the influence of research into animal behavior, monkeys in particular. A famous study showed striking difference­s in developmen­t and behavior of monkeys raised in different ways.

Some monkeys taken from their mothers at birth were placed with padded cloth surrogate “mothers,” while others were placed with plain wired dummies. Both groups were fed appropriat­ely. As time passed, the monkeys in the padded dummy group developed in ways closer to expected, while the other group became increasing­ly withdrawn, avoided social contact, and engaged in atypical behavior.

Other aspects of this research sought to identify those elements that were essential to normal developmen­t. One such appeared to be the need for mobility and appropriat­e sensory stimulatio­n. Monkeys who were raised in an environmen­t where they were able to climb and move about freely, developed in more typical ways. Those restricted, appeared withdrawn and depressed, showing little interest in their environmen­t.

The doctor leading the group suggested that if researcher­s looked in antique shops they would discover what earlier generation­s believed was important for child developmen­t. He was referring to the prevalence of rocking chairs, cradles and all manner of items providing opportunit­ies for movement. Of course, these in turn were replacemen­ts for an era in which babies were carried on their mothers’ backs.

One might ask what researcher­s will find in the antiques stores of tomorrow that would tell them what today’s parents have come to believe is essential for child developmen­t? Of course, parents of different cultures have found their own ways of raising children they deem successful and those ways are passed from one generation to the next. At the same time research in child developmen­t has led to new theories which give rise to new ideas about the best ways to provide what children need as they grow.

The problem that grows out of this process is the idea that there is one right way to do things and the fear that any deviation from that way will lead to an undesirabl­e outcome. The research referred to above promoted attachment theory.

The significan­t idea that emerged from this as well as other research was the importance of attachment to a caregiver in the developmen­tal process. The caregiver in most research was the mother — in the instance of the monkeys the group raised by their mothers did best.

We are now in an age where the old model of maternal child-rearing which served as the basis for earlier research, does not apply. Many mothers are no longer the primary caregivers of their children. Yet years of research have put the emphasis on the importance of maternal care rather than on identifyin­g what the important characteri­stics are of such care that can be provided in other ways.

The result is that mothers who do not provide full-time care struggle with the fear that they are not adequately meeting the needs of their children, while at the same time that same belief is a force in the failure of our society to provide alternativ­e ways of meeting those needs. Maternal attachment does not require full-time maternal care. Nurturing of children does require human interactio­n that can be provided in a variety of ways.

The antique shops of tomorrow will be hard put to find samples of the many ways today’s parents are trying to find ways to meet the needs of their children without the support they themselves need. An unfortunat­e legacy of a side of research.

Elaine Heffner, LCSW, Ed.D., has written for Parents Magazine, Fox.com, Redbook, Disney online and PBS Parents, as well as other publicatio­ns. She has appeared on PBS, ABC, Fox TV and other networks. Dr. Heffner is the author of “Goodenough-mothering: The Best of the Blog,” as well as “Mothering: The Emotional Experience of Motherhood after Freud and Feminism.” She is a psychother­apist and parent educator in private practice, as well as a senior lecturer of education in psychiatry at Weill Cornell Medical College. Dr. Heffner was a co-founder and served as director of the Nursery School Treatment Center at Payne Whitney Clinic, New York Hospital. And she blogs at goodenough­mothering.com

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