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Human babies are born helpless,
needing to be entirely cared for
and protected. Luckily, they are
born with all the necessary
tools and "instructions" to
attain such care for themselves,
and to become a loved and loving
part of their family and
society. The ingrained neural
and hormonal interactions
provided for parent and child to
assist them in this process are
among the most powerful in
nature. The hormonal cues are
clear and compelling and our
instincts can provide us with
all the appropriate responses.
Without taking great efforts to
avoid and ignore such urges,
parents will naturally follow
the advice of their neurons and
hormones, nurturing their babies
and maintaining physical
closeness with them.
Once born, baby's hormonal
control systems and brain
synapses begin to permanently
organize according to the human
interactions she experiences.
Unneeded brain receptors and
neural pathways are disposed of,
while those appropriate to the
given environment are enhanced.
Oxytocin-a Bonding Hormone
for Nursing and Parenting
Oxytocin is a chemical messenger
released in the brain chiefly in
response to social contact, but
its release is especially
pronounced with skin-to-skin
contact. In addition to
providing health benefits, this
hormone-like substance promotes
bonding patterns and creates
desire for further contact with
the individuals inciting its
release.
When the process is
uninterrupted, oxytocin is one
of nature's chief tools for
creating a mother. Roused by the
high levels of estrogen ("female
hormone") during pregnancy, the
number of oxytocin receptors in
the expecting mother's brain
multiplies dramatically near the
end of her pregnancy. This makes
the new mother highly responsive
to the presence of oxytocin.
These receptors increase in the
part of her brain that promotes
maternal behaviors .
Oxytocin's first important surge
is during labor. If a cesarean
birth is necessary, allowing
labor to occur first provides
some of this bonding hormone
surge (and helps ensure a final
burst of antibodies for the baby
through the placenta). Passage
through the birth canal further
heightens oxytocin levels in
both mother and baby.
High oxytocin causes a mother to
become familiar with the unique
odor of her newborn infant, and
once attracted to it, to prefer
her own baby's odor above all
others'. Baby is similarly
imprinted on mother, deriving
feelings of calmness and pain
reduction along with mom. When
the infant is born, he is
already imprinted on the odor of
his amniotic fluid. This odor
imprint helps him find mother's
nipple, which has a similar but
slightly different odor. In the
days following birth, the infant
can be comforted by the odor of
this fluid
Gradually over the next days,
baby starts to prefer the odor
of his mother's breast, but
continued imprinting upon his
mother is not food related. In
fact, formula-fed infants are
more attracted (in laboratory
tests) to their mother's breast
odor than to that of their
formula, even two weeks after
birth .
By
influencing maternal behavior
and stimulating milk "let down"
(allowing milk to flow) during
nursing, oxytocin helps make the
first attempts at breastfeeding
feel natural. Attempts at
nursing during the initial hour
after birth cause oxytocin to
surge to exceptional levels in
both mother and baby. Mothers
who postpone nursing lose part
of the ultimate hormone high
provided for immediately after
birth. Powerful initial
imprinting for mother and baby
is intended to occur chiefly so
that mother and baby will be
able to find and recognize each
other in the hours and days
after birth.
Yet a lifetime opportunity for
bonding and love is not lost if
this initial window is missed.
Beyond birth, mother continues
to produce elevated levels of
oxytocin as a consequence of
nursing and holding her infant,
and the levels are based on the
amount of such contact. This
hormonal condition provides a
sense of calm and well being.
Oxytocin levels are higher in
mothers who exclusively
breastfeed than in those who use
supplementary bottles. Under the
early influence of oxytocin,
nerve junctions in certain areas
of mother's brain actually
undergo reorganization, thereby
making her maternal behaviors
"hard-wired."
As
long as contact with the infant
remains, oxytocin causes mother
to be more caring, to be more
eager to please others, to
become more sensitive to other's
feelings, and to recognize
nonverbal cues more readily.
Continued nursing also enhances
this effect. With high oxytocin,
mother's priorities become
altered and her brain no longer
signals her to groom and adorn
herself in order to obtain a
mate, and thus a pregnancy. Now
that the child has already been
created, mom's grooming habits
are directed toward baby. High
oxytocin in the female has also
been shown to promote preference
for whatever male is present
during its surges (one good
reason for dad to hang around
during and after the birth).
Prolonged high oxytocin in
mother, father, or baby also
promotes lower blood pressure
and reduced heart rate as well
as certain kinds of artery
repair, actually reducing
lifelong risk of heart disease .
Although baby makes her own
oxytocin in response to nursing,
mother also transfers it to the
infant in her milk. This
provision serves to promote
continuous relaxation and
closeness for both mother and
baby. A more variable release of
oxytocin is seen in bottle-fed
infants, but is definitely
higher in an infant who is
"bottle-nursed" in the parents'
arms rather than with a propped
bottle.
Persistent regular body contact
and other nurturing acts by
parents produce a constant,
elevated level of oxytocin in
the infant, which in turn
provides a valuable reduction in
the infant's stress-hormone
responses. Multiple psychology
studies have demonstrated that,
depending on the practices of
the parents, the resulting high
or low level of oxytocin will
control the permanent
organization of the
stress-handling portion of the
baby's brain -- promoting
lasting "securely attached" or
"insecure" characteristics in
the adolescent and adult. Such
insecure characteristics include
anti-social behavior,
aggression, difficulty forming
lasting bonds with a mate,
mental illness, and poor
handling of stress.
When an infant does not receive
regular oxytocin-producing
responsive care, the resultant
stress responses cause elevated
levels of the stress hormone
cortisol. Chronic cortisol
elevations in infants and the
hormonal and functional
adjustments that go along with
it are shown in biochemical
studies to be associated with
permanent brain changes that
lead to elevated responses to
stress throughout life, such as
higher blood pressure and heart
rate. Mothers can also benefit
from the stress-reducing effects
of oxytocin-women who breastfeed
produce significantly less
stress hormone than those who
bottle-feed .
Nor are fathers left out of the
oxytocin equation. It has been
shown that a live-in father's
oxytocin levels rise toward the
end of his mate's pregnancy.
When the father spends
significant amounts of time in
contact with his infant,
oxytocin encourages him to
become more involved in the
ongoing care in a
self-perpetuating cycle.
Oxytocin in the father also
in-creases his interest in
physical (not necessarily
sexual) contact with the mother.
Nature now provides a way for
father to become more interested
in being a devoted and satisfied
part of the family picture
through his involvement with the
baby.
With all of its powers, oxytocin
is but one of a list of many
chemicals that nature uses to
ensure that baby finds the love
and care he needs.
Vasopressin & Protection
Although present and active
during bonding in the mother and
infant, vasopressin plays a much
bigger role in the father. This
hormone promotes brain
reorganization toward paternal
behaviors when the male is
cohabitating with the pregnant
mother. The father becomes more
dedicated to his mate and
expresses behaviors of
protection.
Released in response to nearness
and touch, vasopressin promotes
bonding between the father and
the mother, helps the father
recognize and bond to his baby,
and makes him want to be part of
the family, rather than alone.
It has gained a reputation as
the "monogamy hormone." Dr.
Theresa Crenshaw, author of The
Alchemy of Love and Lust, says,
"Testosterone wants to prowl,
vasopressin wants to stay home."
She also describes vasopressin
as tempering the man's sexual
drive.
Vasopressin reinforces the
father's testosterone-promoted
protective inclination regarding
his mate and child, but tempers
his aggression, making him more
reasonable and less extreme. By
promoting more rational and less
capricious thinking, this
hormone induces a sensible
paternal role, providing
stability as well as vigilance.
Prolactin, Nursing & Behavior
Prolactin is released in all
healthy people during sleep,
helping to maintain reproductive
organs and immune function. In
the mother, prolactin is
released in response to
suckling, promoting milk
production as well as maternal
behaviors. Prolactin relaxes
mother, and in the early months,
creates a bit of fatigue during
a nursing session so she has no
strong desire to hop up and do
other things.
Prolactin promotes caregiving
behaviors and, over time,
directs brain reorganization to
favor these behaviors . Father's
prolactin levels begin to
elevate during mother's
pregnancy, but most of the rise
in the male occurs after many
days of cohabitation with the
infant.
As
a result of hormonally
orchestrated brain
reorganization during
parenthood, prolactin release
patterns are altered. It has
been shown that fathers release
prolactin in response to
intruder threats, whereas
childless males do not. On the
other hand, nursing mothers do
not release prolactin in
response to loud noise, whereas
childless females do. In
children and non-parents,
prolactin surges are related to
stress levels, so it is
generally considered a stress
hormone. In parents, it serves
as a parenting hormone.
Elevated prolactin levels in
both the nursing mother and the
involved father cause some
reduction in their testosterone
levels, which in turn reduces
their libidos (but not their
sexual functioning). Their
fertility can be reduced for a
time as well. This reduction in
sexual activity and fertility is
entirely by design for the
benefit of the infant, allowing
for ample parental attention and
energy. When the father is
intimately involved with the
infant along with the mother,
there should be some accord
between the desires of the two,
and oxytocin and other chemicals
provide for heightened bonding
and non-sexual interest in each
other, which serves to retain a
second devoted caretaker for the
infant.
Opioids & Rewards
Opioids (pleasure hormones) are
natural morphine-like chemicals
created in our bodies. They
reduce pain awareness and create
feelings of elation. Social
contacts, particularly
touch-especially between parent
and child- induce opioid
release, creating good feelings
that will enhance bonding. Odor,
taste, activity, and even place
preferences can develop as the
result of opioid release during
pleasant contacts, and
eventually the sight of a loved
one's face stimulates surges.
Opioid released in a child's
brain as a conditioned response
to a parent's warm hugs and
kisses can be effective for
helping reduce the pain from a
tumble or a disappointment.
Parents "learn" to enjoy
beneficial activities such as
breastfeeding and holding, and
infants "learn" to enjoy contact
such as being held, carried, and
rocked, all as a response to
opioid release. Babies need
milk, and opioids are nature's
reward to them for obtaining it,
especially during the initial
attempts. The first few episodes
of sucking organize nerve
pathways in the newborn's brain,
conditioning her to continue
this activity. This is the
reason that breastfed babies
sometimes have trouble if they
are given bottles in the newborn
nursery-early exposure to
bottles creates a confusing
association of pleasure with
both bottle nipples and the
mother's breast. In fact, any
incidental sensations
experienced during rocking,
touching, and eating that aren't
noxious can become part of a
child's attachment and will
provide comfort. It could be the
warmth of mother's body,
father's furry chest, grandma's
gentle lullaby, a blanket, or
the wood-slatted side of a crib.
Prolonged elevation of prolactin
in the attached parent
stimulates the opioid system,
heightening the rewards for
intimate, loving family
relationships, possibly above
all else. Just as with codeine
and morphine, tolerance to
natural opioids can occur, which
will reduce the reward level for
various activities over time.
But this is not a problem for
attached infants and parents,
because higher levels of
oxytocin, especially when
created through frequent or
prolonged body contact, actually
inhibit opioid tolerance ,
protecting the rewards for
maintaining close family
relationships. On the other
hand, consuming artificial
opioid drugs replaces the
brain's need for maintaining
family contacts.
Once a strong opioid bonding has
occurred, separation can become
emotionally upsetting, and in
the infant possibly even
physically uncomfortable when
opioid levels decrease in the
brain, much like the withdrawal
symptoms from cocaine or heroin.
When opioid levels become low,
one might feel like going home
to hold the baby or like crying
for a parent's warm embrace,
depending on your point of view.
Sometimes alternate behaviors
are helpful. For instance,
thumb-sucking can provide some
relief from partial or total
withdrawal from a human or
rubber nipple and can even
provide opioid-produced
reminiscences for a time.
Norepinephrine & Learning
Breastfeeding also causes
dopamine and its product,
norepinephrine (adrenaline), to
be produced, which help maintain
some of the effects of the early
bonding. They enhance energy and
alertness along with some of the
pleasure of attachment.
Norepinephrine helps organize
the infant's stress control
system, as well as other
important hormonal controls in
accordance with the nature of
the early rearing experiences.
It promotes learning about the
environment-especially learning
by memorization that is carried
out by oxytocin, opioids, and
other chemical influences.
Pheromones & Basic Instincts
How does the man's body know to
initiate hormonal changes when
he is living with a pregnant
female? How can an infant
accurately interpret mother's
"odors" that adults often can
barely detect? The answer is
pheromones. Among other things,
pheromones are steroid hormones
that are made in our skin. Our
bodies are instinctually
programmed to react accordingly
when we detect these pheromones
around us.
Newborns are much more sensitive
to pheromones than adults.
Unable to respond to verbal or
many other cues, they apparently
depend on this primitive sense
that controls much of the
behavior of lower animals. Most
likely the initial imprinting of
baby to odors and pheromones is
not just a matter of preferring
the parents' odors, but is a way
nature controls brain
organization and hormonal
releases to best adapt baby to
its environment. Baby's
earliest, most primitive
experiences are then linked to
higher abilities such as facial
and emotional recognition.
Through these, baby most likely
learns how to perceive the level
of stress in the caretakers
around her, such as when mother
is experiencing fear or joy.
Part of an infant's distress
over separation may be caused by
the lost parental cues about the
safety of her environment. Of
course the other basic sensation
an infant responds to well is
touch, and coincidentally, body
odors and pheromones can only be
sensed when people are
physically very near each other.
What the World Needs Now . .
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Infants universally cry when
laid down alone. If we allow
ourselves to listen, our neurons
and hormones encourage us in the
proper response. Babies are
designed to be frequently fed in
a fashion that requires
skin-to-skin contact, holding,
and available facial cues.
Beneficial, permanent brain
changes result in both parent
and infant from just such
actions. Contented maternal
behaviors grow when cues are
followed. The enhancement of
fatherhood is strongly provided
for as well. A father's
participation encourages his
further involvement and creates
accord between father and
mother. Frequent proximity and
touch between baby and parents
can create powerful family
bonding-with many long-term
benefits.
Sadly, over the last century
parents have been encouraged by
industry-educated "experts" to
ignore their every instinct to
respond to baby's powerful
parenting lessons.
Psychologists, neurologists, and
biochemists have now confirmed
what many of us have
instinctually suspected: that
many of the rewards of
parenthood have been missed
along the way, and that
generations of children may have
missed out on important lifelong
advantages.
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Eva Lillian
Contributing Author
Dr. Palmer provides
telephone
consultations for
colic, lactation
difficulties, child
nutrition, food
allergy issues, and
infant sleep
challenges, from an
attachment parenting
perspective. Visit her
website at
www.babyreference.com. |
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