Sorry, I've got to ask it, but how is being put on their back any more of a naturally applied position than being put on their tummy? Babies lie on their back because we put them there as much as they would lie on the tummy by us putting them there... To be honest, a babies favourite position is usually hanging them upside down like they are in the womb. I know my son LOVED being upside down when he went to see the osteo post birth. Not exactly practical or healthy though to be doing all the time, and of course they can't put themselves into that position.
My DS does all this too (the rolling, commando crawling, baby bending) despite us putting him into positions like on his tummy and helping he stand (because he loves that position too even if he can't get into it himself), and I'm not trying to be competitive, but he's been doing it since 5 months (he's only just hit 6 months this week and rocking on his knees). He first rolled both ways at 2 months (from tummy to back and back to tummy again). People have always commented on how strong DS is, because he's built like a brick S'House and could hold his head as steady as a 3 month old on his first day of life, and everything else has gone from there. My DD however didn't even crawl until 17 months and we never consciously put her into any position but her back, but she had low-tone issues. Couldn't it just be the personality and physical strength of the individual child?
And while I understand some of the logic behind some Osteo's telling people to not sit a baby before they are ready, I'm a little bit confused about how that relates to putting the baby on their back only. In fact my Osteo explicitly said to make sure I didn't always stick baby on his back, and to rotate between tummy, right side, back, left side.
That being said, our home is Steiner-based (to a degree), and therefore a texture banquet where it wasn't before, maybe that has something more to do with advanced development. The motivation of exploration... Although, I don't see what the big deal about our kids doing things faster than other kids is anyway. They'll all do it in their own time, and that time will be what is right for them.
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