A question often asked in the support groups is “Am I making my baby clingy by carrying them and breastfeeding them?”

Baby humans are carry mammals. Look at your baby. Does your baby look like a strong independent human being that is ready to nip off to the grocery store to buy some milk? She’s a week old, one month old, four months old.. Tiny. She’s a human infant. And she’s beautifully wonderfully normal and you’re doing absolutely nothing wrong.

What is happening is this: There are a LOT of myths floating around about how to raise human babies. These myths tell us that if we don’t train our babies to be independent from day one they will be clingy monsters. Because of this we push our babies away and the only way that they CAN get what they need (human contact) is by becoming clingy monsters. We then spend their childhood attempting to break them of their clinginess. When it doesn’t work we attribute their clinginess to the fact that they were held too much as babies. And then we repeat this bad advice to other parents so that they can save themselves. Or maybe we are successfully able to encourage a more mellow baby to stop wanting closeness, and have never experienced a more sensitive and needy baby.

It’s all myths. Babies are MEANT to be clingy little critters. They’re meant to be carried because they’re completely dependent on adults for survival and their instincts say that if they aren’t being carried that they’ll be eaten by tigers. ( https://nurshable.com/2012/08/21/what-do-you-mean-no-tigers-will-eat-me/ )

Here’s some other reading for you:
https://nurshable.com/2012/05/04/i-am-not-a-human-pacifier/
https://nurshable.com/2012/05/27/six-week-growth-spurt/

I have three kids. All of them have been raised similarly. One of them is a shy (compared to my other two) but blossoming three year old. The other two (Six and sixteen months) are incredibly social. They’re very trusting, very social, very outgoing. They all prefer to do everything themselves (including the sixteen month old). They’re secure, they’re attached, they all have excellent relationships with multiple adults.

It turns out *fine*.

I tend to focus on making my babies feel secure by respecting their cries as communication. This tends to mean that I wear them in a wrap as much as possible for the first six months, I breastfeed on demand, I nurse for comfort. I’m responsive and consistent and loving. As they get bigger and can sit up and crawl they come out of the wrap more and more and I have to chase them to keep up. They become more independent when their bodies become more skilled and when they are more able to take care of their needs. Children crave independence. They are intensely driven and curious little explorers of the world around them.

The level of independence you can expect from a child is roughly the same as their level of ability to meet their own needs and keep themselves safe, as well as their understanding of how to reunite with their caregivers if they are separated. Young human infants don’t even have a concept of object permanence. When they can’t see their caregiver their caregiver doesn’t exist anymore.

With a one month old? That ability to meet their own needs and keep themselves safe is zero. Can’t feed themselves. Can’t use the toilet. Can’t move themselves away from danger or towards mum. At that age babies are programmed to meet their needs by staying attached to someone who meets their needs.

We live in a culture that has chosen to label normal human infant behavior as a “problem” that has to be broken rather than as a phase to be embraced. As a result we try to break our children instead of nourishing them.

We do not need to do things that way.

So where did these ideas about infant dependence being a “bad” thing come from anyway?

The whole push to make young babies and children artificially independent comes from a troubled 20th century Behaviorist named John Watson who wrote extensively on child-rearing despite his later regrets for having done so because he “did not know enough” to do a good job. Much of his writing has been discredited but despite his methods not being scientifically backed they were wildly popular because they touted a view that artificially made infants much easier for adults to manage. John Watson was highly unethical as a researcher and experimented with inducing phobias in a developmentally disabled 11 month old child, advocated for extinguishing pregnancies for 20 years while enough data was gathered to ensure an efficient child rearing practice. He advocated for a business-like relationship between mother and infant and said that love was a “conditioned” response. Sadly his teachings about responding to infants have remained popular despite his questionable ethics, extreme ideas, and lack of credentials. The reason behind the popularity of his ideas might be found in his later career moves where he rapidly rose in the field of commercial advertising where he is credited for having popularized the idea of a “coffee break” in an advertisement for Maxwell House coffee.  Also of note is that his granddaughter suffered from psychological troubles that she attributed to having been raised using her grandfather’s theories. [Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_B._Watson ]

Rather than looking to the advice of a discredited behaviorist I prefer to follow other behaviorists whose beliefs are backed by more solid science and by observation of independent children in functional parent-child relationships.

Some authors such as Stein & Newcomb say that caregivers who habitually respond to the needs of the baby before the baby gets distressed, preventing crying, are more likely to have children who are independent and that soothing care is best from the onset because once behaviors become established it’s harder to change them.

Giving babies what they need leads to greater independence later in childhood. In reports of small-band hunter-gatherers, parents met all of the needs of their young babies and children. Toddlers were confident and independent enough to walk into the bush on their own. [Hunter-Gatherer Childhoods, edited by Hewlett, B., & Lamb, M. New York: Aldine. 2005]

Can you create a clingy child through parenting? Absolutely. But not by being responsive. Read more here: https://nurshable.com/2013/07/31/creating-a-clingy-child-through-parenting/

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7 responses to “Am I Making My Baby Clingy by Breastfeeding and Carrying Them?”

  1. Lindsay Avatar
    Lindsay

    This is a great article! What I worry about with my little one is that he is 18 1/2 months old and at this point, he should understand object permanence. Nut is clingier than ever. Normal?

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    1. sarah Avatar
      sarah

      Lindsay,

      Different children are different. My sixteen month old is more independent than my 3 year old. He needs more reassurance and he needs to understand things and come to peace with ideas before he’s okay with them. He’s introverted, sensitive and a watcher before he’s a doer. There are plusses and minuses to that. My oldest is a doer. Intensely social. LOVES roller coasters and excitement and new things. He’ll run into a group of kids and jump right in. My youngest is a combination of all of it.

      Is he clingy or is he fearful? If he’s fearful then it can be a good idea to talk about his fears and create a “scaffolding” that will help him understand and address the fears. If he’s just clingy it’s fine to let him cling. I pull mine closer when they’re clingy and let them know that it’s okay if they need to cling to me for a bit longer and we’ll try the new thing when they’re okay with it.

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  2. Lindsay Avatar
    Lindsay

    That should say “but,” not “nut.”

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  3. Lindsay Avatar
    Lindsay

    He is clingy. He is not an independent sleeper and even with co-sleeping, he is often not rested enough. He is also very challenging when it comes to food and has been wanting to nurse more than I ever imagined he would at this age. I know that getting canines is hard. I know learning to speak is hard. I just feel like he is not only not progressing as fast as I would like (without trying to compare him to the angel children and magicaleepers out there!), but almost regressing. Once again my expectations of what parenting would be like have been vastly different than reality. I, quite simply, thought 18 months would be easier. With my spirited / high needs child, I am now scared things will never get easier.

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    1. Svea Boyda-Vikander Avatar
      Svea Boyda-Vikander

      Heh. When I read ‘nut’ I assumed that was a cute name you call your child!

      Sounds like a tough time you guys are having… I think it’s important to remember that eighteen months for a human baby is still really, really young. And as the mom of a fantastically challenging (and by that I mean: his challenges are fantastic-wonderful, and the amount of challenge is fantastic-whoa) toddler, I can promise you that it DOES get easier. It does! Sometimes I don’t even know how I survived months 12-18… Days at home with just the LO and I, as we had just moved to a new city and were still getting our feet on the ground. In our situation, things got much easier once I found some likeminded parent friends (not always easy to do! I had to post ads online!) and got a bit of regular childcare for our son (I had tried at 10-12 months but he made it very clear that he was not ready, even just for an hour or two at a time…). Which brings me to my only piece of advice for you: gather all the support you can get. You might feel more at ease with nut’s clinginess if you have a bit of space for yourself.
      P.S. Mother’s helpers are great for clingy babies – someone who can come in and play with the LO while you sit (in the same room!) and drink a cup of tea.

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  4. Anna Avatar
    Anna

    My son was very clingy and super focused on nursing at 18 months too. I couldn’t believe how much more he ate when I wasn’t home–I think he was still getting at least half his calories from nursing. Also, if anyone but my husband or me even looked at him (much less dared to speak to him or try to pick him up!), he would burst into tears and need to be held. He is 2 1/2 now and loves to chat with any adult or child he can make eye contact with. It literally just happened one day. He also started sleeping through the night in his own bed a few weeks ago after a lifetime of co-sleeping starting with the first wake-up. If you had asked me when he was 18 months old when I thought he would sleep all night in his own bed, I would have said “hopefully by the time he’s 4?” Development is magical. Hang in there!

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  5. Lindsay Avatar
    Lindsay

    Bless you. Thank you for the encouragement!

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