by Armin Brott
www. mrdad.com

Dear Mr. Dad: I'm pregnant and my husband and I find
ourselves talking to our baby a lot. Sometimes we're sure he or she is
responding to what we say. Are we imagining things?
Not at all.
Although the very idea may sound a bit far fetched, fetuses are
extremely responsive to sounds from the outside world. In one study,
newborns whose mothers regularly watched a popular soap opera while
they were pregnant stopped crying when the show's theme song was
played. Infants whose mothers hadn't watched the show had no reaction
when they heard the music.
But why would mature grown-ups want to spend time trying to
communicate with a fetus when they could be doing something else (in
your husband's case, that could be out playing pool with his friends)?
Simple. It's fun. Plus, it may be able to help you establish a bond
with your baby even before he's born.
It might work the other way too, helping the baby establish a bond
with you. This could
be particularly important to your husband. Lots of fathers get jealous
of the immediate connections their infants have with their mothers.
But a good part of that connection might have more to do with the
mother's voice (which the baby has heard every day for nine months)
than anything else. If he spends some time "conversing" with
your baby before she's born, she'll recognize and be more responsive
to his voice.
Some researchers believe that prenatal communication (which, by the
way, doesn't have to be limited to words), stimulates babies' brains,
triggering nerve cell development, helping them process information
more efficiently. In other words, they believe it may make babies
smarter. They also contend (though not everyone agrees) that
prenatally stimulated babies tend
to cry less at birth, have longer attention spans, sleep better, are
less likely to develop learning disabilities and turn out to be more
creative and musical.
There's a lot of disagreement about the effects of prenatal
stimulation or whether it even works at all (although no one says it
can do any harm). So if you're thinking about giving it a try, here
are few things to consider:
- Take
it easy. Remind your husband that while it's great that he wants
to communicate with the baby, you have a right to a little peace
and quiet once in a while. On the other hand, keep in mind that
some researchers have found that women whose babies are stimulated
before birth have shorter labors and a lower rate of
c-sections.
- Speak up. Don't speak loud enough so that someone across the room
can hear you.
- Keep it regular. Put yourself on a schedule so that the baby will
get to know that something's going to happen.
Ease into it by patting your belly before you start. And
don't go overboard. Half an hour twice a day is plenty. Fetuses
need down time, just like regular people.
- Mix it up. Playing the same piece of music or reading the same
haiku every day is great but throw in some variety too. Fetuses
block out stuff that bores them.
- Don't get your expectations too high. There's no guarantee that
anything you do will affect your baby in any way. But at the very
least, have fun.
Armin
Brott, hailed by Time
as "the superdad's superdad," has written or co-written six
critically acclaimed books on fatherhood, including the newly released
second edition of
Fathering Your Toddler: A Dad’s Guide to the Second and Third
Years. Armin Brott has just released a brand new DVD,
"Toolbox for New Dads... because babies don't come with
instructions!" Purchase it at www.mrdad.com/dvd/.
His articles have appeared in The
New
York Times Magazine, Newsweek, American Baby,
Parenting, Child, Men's Health, The Washington Post among others.
Armin is an experienced radio and TV guest, and has
appeared on Today, CBS Overnight, Fox News, and Politically Incorrect.
He's the host of "Positive Parenting," a weekly radio
program in the San Francisco Bay Area. Visit Armin at www.mrdad.com
and listen to his podcast at http://mrdad.com/daddycast/.
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