Attributes of the unborn baby – Interconnection between the psychology of the baby and the psychology of parenting

Our understanding of the psychology of the baby and the psychology of the parents is superficial. Much of the accepted knowledge is based on misconceptions and theories. The psychology of the baby and the psychology of the parents are interconnected and affect each other. To properly understand a baby, it is important to understand the common negative family dynamics, serious disorders, and dysfunctional behavior patterns that are present in most people’s lives. These factors influence the exchanges, agreements and reactions that occur unconsciously between the baby and the parents.

Before birth and throughout infancy (until the child acquires social language skills), communications between infant and parent take place naturally and primarily as subconscious communications. When parents are extremely selfish and negative, it creates a harrowing and painful mental and emotional experience for a vulnerable and sensitive baby or unborn child.

Unborn babies are alive and growing by the time the sperm penetrates the egg. About three weeks pass before the physical heart begins to beat. At six weeks, babies turn their arms, legs, and heads. Their physical movements reveal whether they are comfortable or uncomfortable, and also give babies the feeling that they are detached from their environment.

12 weeks

At twelve weeks, their major physical organs are sufficiently developed to be visible, and they have begun observable regular cycles of activity and rest. At fifteen weeks, ultrasound recordings show fetuses moving in response to their mothers laughing or coughing. They demonstrate the ability to taste and discern the differences in taste between sweet, bitter and sour.

Four-month-old fetuses make “determined movements” such as thumb-sucking in an effort to calm down when stressed or threatened. Ultrasound images have captured unborn twins expressing a variety of feelings by repeatedly punching, kicking, kissing or playing inside the womb. They develop the ability to hear sounds at around four months, which allows them. for you to take a giant leap in consciousness. Although a baby’s physical ears won’t be fully formed until the sixth month, experiments confirm that unborn babies can hear months before that time due to a primary hearing system. Babies in the womb seem capable of memorizing the voices of their mothers (and fathers). Immediately after birth, tests show that many prefer their mother’s voice when exposed to the voices of a variety of other women.

Their eyelids remain fused until the sixth month. Surprisingly though, experiments show that unborn babies are actually able to “see” months before their eyelids open. They can “see” without the use of their physical eyes. They visibly respond when a bright light is shone on the outside of their mothers’ stomachs. Some fetuses move toward the light and fixate on it, others move away from the light apparently disturbed by it. By reacting to lights, preborns are demonstrating their ability to see objects in space and respond to them in purposeful and coordinated ways.

6 months

During the sixth month, brain wave tests detect periods of REM sleep that indicate a “dream state,” and dreaming means thinking about and processing images that have meaning to the baby. Facial expressions and body movements that occur while the fetus is sleeping show that the baby is having a pleasant or unpleasant sleep experience.

Fetuses apparently listen all the time and are observed moving their bodies and dancing to the rhythm of their mothers’ speech and moving to certain types of music. Most fetuses are “startled” by a loud noise, but they learn to discriminate and ignore certain routine noises that recur in their external environments.

Scientists have conducted studies that show that by the sixth month, a baby has the ability to remember and retain memories. At this time, they are able to discern subtle differences in their mothers’ attitudes and feelings and have been observed responding to them. Psychological, neurological, biochemical, and psychological tests performed on unborn babies in the womb point to the fact that fetuses make decisions, think, feel, remember, listen, learn, and react in positive or negative ways. Science now confirms that the unborn baby ready to be born already has a distinctive and observable personality.

Reaction – Reactive Patterns of Behavior

Unborn babies shape their attitudes by how they choose to react to what they feel and perceive. They begin to form their basic approaches to life through their choices in relation to the intentions, attitudes, choices, and demands of their mothers and fathers, and the various subconscious messages they receive from their parents during life in the womb.

bread packets

When our babies arrive in the air world, they are already loaded down with substantial, subconscious and negative psychological “baggage”. At birth, many are “bundles of pain,” not bundles of joy.

Add a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *