My newborn baby makes walking movements if I hold her up and
let her feet touch a surface. Is she even cleverer than I
thought?
Just as you can’t help believing that
your newborn baby has smiled at you, the reflexes that a newborn
has can be misleading. Designed to help babies cope with tricky
situations, these amazing reflexes do not last more than a
few months. So this walking reflex which has you so fascinated
will not predict your baby’s ability to walk later on,
and will have disappeared after about 2 months. The rooting
reflex, which is obviously extremely useful, means that if
the baby’s cheek is stroked then baby will turn towards
the stimulus with the mouth, thus facilitating feeding. Feet
and hands also turn towards stimulus, and those little hands
can grasp an object strongly enough to support their own weight.
The Moro reflex, seen when baby is startled, is the throwing
back of the limbs with arched back and then clenching the
hands onto the chest. Watch your doctor at the next check
up and you will see that he uses the baby’s reflexes
as one of his assessment tools. Aren’t babies amazing?
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