Welcome to 'A Montessori Home'.
With so many of our friends and family living in far-off lands, I hope that this blog might help our loved-ones get to know our gorgeous Finlay as he grows up. I also hope that these posts may provide inspiration, provoke thought and conversation about creating beautiful Montessori environments for infants and toddlers at home. I'm always happy to hear your comments, thoughts and suggestions. Feel free to pop in now and then to see what we're up to!

Showing posts with label standing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label standing. Show all posts

Thursday, January 6, 2011

A Balancing Act

What a wonderful Christmas and New Year break we have had! It seems like forever since I last wrote a post, and so much has been happening. Big stuff. Like standing up!


While my sister and her partner were here visiting a few weeks ago, Fin was experimenting with letting go of the furniture and balancing for a few seconds at a time. It was as if he would hold his breath for those seconds and couldn't quite believe he was really doing it! Then suddenly last week, almost to the day he turned 10 months, he just decided to stand up all by himself. No furniture required, thank you very much. As with all new tricks, this is ALL he wants to do right now and he is so very happy about his new achievement.

Sometimes I forget that my parenting philosophy is a little different to the mainstream. I have been reminded of this fact a few times these past few weeks when well-meaning friends try to help Fin to stand or walk by holding his hands and coaxing him along. 'But isn't that what everyone does?!' 'Isn't that what good parents do?' 'How can you just sit by and watch a baby struggling like this...?'



Yet, if I stepped in at this stage, grasped his hands and helped him to walk, would I really be assisting him to develop? Does he really need me at this moment? Or is it me, the parent, who needs to be needed?

Maria Montessori believed that a child's work is sacred (and learning to walk is indeed work!) and is not to be interrupted. It is in these moments of concentration and struggle that the harmonious personality is formed.

And if I do step in to 'help'...? All I do is simply replace his own strength and will with my own. One of three things might then happen:
1) He accepts the help but learns that he is not capable of standing or walking by himself and will rely on help from an adult in future.
2) He senses that he is not developing fast enough. By holding his hands and urging him along we send the message that he should be walking, when at this moment all he might be ready for is standing (or sitting, or crawling...). Or
3) He fights against the help and sees it for what it is - an obstacle to his development.

All of these reactions have long-reaching consequences for the child's developing personality, because this isn't just about walking. This is about the way we see our child and the way our child sees himself. Each experience a child has, especially at this very young age, is absorbed into their whole being. If we can raise children who feel confident in their abilities and who know from experience what will come of sustained effort, imagine what amazing adults we will gift the world.

I do have a little giggle when I see Finlay wiggle away from a well-meaning 'helper' to find some clear space where he can practice this new skill all by himself. He gets this expression on his face as if to say, "What are you doing? Get out of my way so I can show you my new trick!".

So how can we help? There are many things we can do to assist a child in their development of movement. We can provide low furniture for pulling up, safe space for practicing, warm encouragement (without cheer leading - a warm smile is often enough), a safe lap and cuddle to retire to when they need it, and freedom from restraints like playpens, exer-saucers, walkers, bouncers etc. These do not teach children to walk, in fact they place them in unnatural physical positions, merely teaching them not to explore. Finally, we can find the patience and inner strength to sit and truly observe our child, marveling at these miraculous milestones while allowing him find joy in his own experience.

Sure enough, a few days after that first video I captured this one:


Joy and pride personified!


It is necessary for the teacher to guide the child without letting him feel her presence too much, so that she may always be ready to supply the desired help, but may never be the obstacle between the child and his experience.
(Dr. Maria Montessori)

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

On his own two feet



Wasn't it just the other day I was marveling at how Finlay had finally gotten himself up on hands and knees?... Well, in all his excitement at being able to move around he joyfully discovered a new trick - standing up! And now that's all he wants to do. Anywhere, any time. Everywhere, all the time. Wherever there is something to pull himself up on, he's up.

It all started in the kitchen. For months now I had been wondering whether to invest in one of these pull-up bars, but alas I never got around to it (and I'm not sure where we would have put it anyway!). Last week while I was cooking in the kitchen, Fin followed me in there by himself for the first time. Being on the floor, he noticed the handle to the drawer under the oven. He experimented with getting one hand off the floor to reach for the handle... and then the other hand pulled him up to kneeling! Very pleased with himself indeed. From now on I'll have to be very careful to keep him out of the kitchen while the oven is on.



The very next morning I woke to Fin's face grinning at me from the side of the bed - he had pulled himself up to stand!

Since then he has been unstoppable, even while he's had a bad cold and must have been feeling quite miserable. The poor thing has been all snuffly, snot running down his face, and yet he's still determined to pull himself up on anything within reach. Most recently he's experimenting with letting go of one hand or lifting one foot at a time. Cruising is on it's way!

Now, if only he could figure out how to get back down again....

What is truly thrilling to watch is the intense concentration and repetition that is going on. In my 3-6 classroom I regularly observed children absorbed in their work, repeating again and again until they had perfected a new skill, but this is different. It seems that the younger a child is, the more forcefully their inner guide drives them forward and the more intensely they experience the joy that comes with that work. I hope that by refraining to interrupt his efforts and by patiently helping him up each time he tumbles down (only to get up and try again), he might be able to carry some of this joy and energy into his adulthood to come.


"A child who has become master of his acts through long and repeated exercises, and who has been encouraged by the pleasant and interesting activities in which he has been engaged, is a child filled with health and joy and remarkable for his calmness and discipline."
(Dr. Maria Montessori, 'The Discovery of the Child', Clio Press Ltd, 92)