Play is much more than “just fun” to babies. Play is discovering what they can do and practicing doing it, finding out about things and exploring what they find.
Play is
much more than “just fun” to babies. Play is discovering what they can do and
practicing doing it, finding out about things and exploring what they find. At
this age-stage play can be anything which stimulates babies to use their bodies,
their senses and their emotions, to develop their thinking, their understanding
and their intelligence. So while play must be fun (or the baby will not do it),
not all play has to be deliberate fun. Provided the adult who is taking care of
him has enough time, patience and good cheer, your baby can get some play value
out of every single ordinarily pleasant happening in his day, from having his
diaper changed to being fed lunch.
Being
deliberately played with is very important to babies, though. Older children
may long for you to play with them and love it when you do, but they can play
without an adult in a way that your baby cannot. In fact, for the next year or
so the distinction between “playing” and “learning” that will be so important
when he is older will scarcely exist, and neither will the matching distinction
between an adult playing with him and teaching him. When you or another adult
caregiver set out to play with your baby, you can’t help but be teaching him
because he can do so little for, or by, himself and has everything to learn.
He’d probably like an adult to play with him whenever he’s awake but the time
any of you can spend one-on-one with him, and without anything else you have to
(try to) get done simultaneously, is probably limited. So it is worth making
sure that the time you spend with him is used for the most appropriate, and
therefore interesting and enjoyable, kinds of play you can possibly think up.
Adjust
kinds of play to your baby’s moods. Like everybody else he enjoys different
things when he is in different moods, but unlike most older people his moods
can change in a moment.
When he is
feeling tough and good, he enjoys rough and tumble play. It makes him triumph
in his body and, gradually, in his own control and power cover it. But when he
is feeling tired or unwell, the same games frighten and upset him. He does not
feel in control and powerful now; he feels manhandled. When he is feeling quiet
and affectionate, he revels in being rocked and crooned to. But when he is
feeling restless and energetic, the same games make him feel imprisoned. When
he is tired or hungry or miserable, no game including free Barbie dress up games is any good. He does not want your
play – he wants bed or food of comfort.
Being a
playmate means adjusting your timing to the baby’s. His reactions are much
slower than yours, especially when the play that you are offering stretches new
abilities up to and beyond their limits. If he is to take his full share in the
“Barbie dress up and makeover games”, you must train yourself to play his pace. If you speak to him, for
example, wait five seconds for him to “answer” and then get impatient and say
something else, you have done him out of his turn. Wait. It may take him
fifteen seconds to find his answering sound.
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