True, I probably really could and really should let it go...but it comes up so often. And the next time it comes up, I really want to be able to have specific examples from the book that either A. are not backed up by science B. conflict existing widely held child development principles or research. And sadly, so far a good portion of the book seems to fit those two categories. It's not even about it's bad portrayal of attachment parenting--you can get that from lots of places. It is about advice that is just plain false or potentially dangerous.
Because it has come up A LOT. I'm not saying I'm going to go out and hunt people down and shove a doc in their face, but my husband has finally convinced me that people respond best to specific examples with evidence (he's so proud) and I want to be able to go back and reference it very specifically. I care more about the people who ask about it never having heard the background before, desperate, sleep deprived, and convinced that you will damage your child if you don't feed/cuddle/sleep them correctly.
I'm already forgetting what it was like the first two-three months, but I haven't forgotten enough to know that had I not heard about Babywise and the controversy surrounding it beforehand, someone could have handed me the book and in my postpartum craziness, I could have done some scary things that really could have damaged an already rough breastfeeding relationship, among other things. I guess that is what makes me so angry. It actively preys on the fears and emotions of new parents.
Because it has come up A LOT. I'm not saying I'm going to go out and hunt people down and shove a doc in their face, but my husband has finally convinced me that people respond best to specific examples with evidence (he's so proud) and I want to be able to go back and reference it very specifically. I care more about the people who ask about it never having heard the background before, desperate, sleep deprived, and convinced that you will damage your child if you don't feed/cuddle/sleep them correctly.
I'm already forgetting what it was like the first two-three months, but I haven't forgotten enough to know that had I not heard about Babywise and the controversy surrounding it beforehand, someone could have handed me the book and in my postpartum craziness, I could have done some scary things that really could have damaged an already rough breastfeeding relationship, among other things. I guess that is what makes me so angry. It actively preys on the fears and emotions of new parents.
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