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- From: hyler@ast.saic.com (Buffy Hyler)
- Newsgroups: misc.kids
- Subject: Re: How to Deal with Overly Shy 6 Month Old
- Message-ID: <1992Nov23.163550.27259@ast.saic.com>
- Date: 23 Nov 92 16:35:50 GMT
- Article-I.D.: ast.1992Nov23.163550.27259
- References: <1992Nov22.070438.17999@netcom.com>
- Sender: news@ast.saic.com
- Reply-To: hyler@ast.saic.com
- Organization: SAIC
- Lines: 53
-
- In article 17999@netcom.com, pam@netcom.com (Pamela Araki) writes:
- >Hi! I need some help ...
- >
- >My six month old, Brandon, is *extremely* shy. He refuses to be
- >held by anyone but mom, dad, and one of his grandmothers. If
- >anyone so much as looks at him the little lower lip goes out and
- >he starts bawling.
- >...
- >Anyway, how do I break him of this? If I as much as leave
- >the room he gets anxious. And, I'm with him almost constantly.
- >It can't be lack of attention, just maybe too much attention.
- >Any ideas? Any comments would be very appreciated.
-
-
- Actually, Brandon may just be being Brandon. When my now 5.5 year old
- son was Brandon's age he was just starting into what you described
- above. Up until that time David was happy as a clam to be held for
- 5-10 minutes by just about anyone. Then, around 7-8 months he became
- very particular about who held him which was primarily only people he
- knew rather well. As he got older this attitude towards strangers
- stayed the same. He would hardly look at people he didn't know until
- after about 30-60 minutes of being around them and heaven help them if
- they touched him. But if he met the person on a fairly regular basis
- (ie. once a week) then he was pretty outgoing and friendly. He does
- make one strange exception. We call them "Gammy" types. He seems to
- be quite at ease with my mother's friends even when meeting them for
- the first time.
-
- Anyway, I know how it is to be a little frustrated by having to always
- be in eyesight of your child at all times or hear immediate wails of
- anguish, but you eventually learn to adapt. I think the best thing we
- did was to get David into a socially (non-academic) pre-school. He is
- still very shy, but he has learned how to express his dislike of being
- touched or talked to by strangers in a relatively polite manner...well,
- most of the time :-) And most adults are *very* understanding and
- quite a number of the kids as well. I used to encourage the adults who
- wanted to be near him to just play with him and talk gently. In a few
- cases David would within a few minutes start interacting and smiling.
- I noticed that these adults were the ones who let David give the
- signals and waited for them.
-
- Now, on the plus side of all this, I had a kid who never, never ran
- away from me at any time when we were out and about. He always kept me
- in eyesight. So there is some balance to all of this....:-)
-
-
-
- ---
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- Buffy Hyler (hyler@ast.saic.com)
- SAIC, Campus Point
- San Diego, California
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-