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The Natures nest was designed by Ambrose Hooi, as a solution to his Daughters colic and sleeping problems, read his story: |
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My Daughter Joanna was born in November 1988. The proverbial 'perfect' baby, feeding and sleeping well, she was a joy to behold. At about 4 weeks, however, things began to change, with the onset of colic, an often difficult to understand syndrome. She soon became unsettled and restless. As with most colicky babies, sleeping and feeding became a 'chore' rather than a 'joy'.
Her absence from home created an environment of tranquility that allowed me to ponder leisurely over the question of 'a cure' for all this colic! What does a newborn do most of the time? Sleep? Yes, apart from feeding and the other natural things that all good babies do, the newborn sleeps or tries to, most of the time. So he spends most of his early life lying down, somewhere. Could the logical answer to the problem then, be as simple as a bed? |
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A suitable bed for all these young 'lay abouts'? Perhaps some kind of a 'nest' that replicates the comfort and security of the maternal womb may not be too far fetched an idea for a solution! After all, why does the stork deliver the baby in a hammock and not in a basket? Why do baby kangaroos hop back into the pouch at the slightest sign of danger? Why do babies curl up in a corner of a cot to sleep? With more research into the subject, it became increasingly evident that apart from Western cultures, there are many other cultures that use an alternative bed for their babies. In many countries a little hammock of one kind or another is used exclusively for their newborns. In these societies where nothing 'natural' is misconstrued as obsolete, the hammock as a baby bed can be found everywhere, suspended from beams in corridors and doorways, from the branches of shady old trees and on the front or back of mothers working in the fields. Every time you look in on these 'hammock' babies, they are asleep, blissfully! The human baby, amongst the most helpless at birth, is no different. To cope with the outside world in their first few months of 'external' existence, they must surely be given an environment that has some resemblance to the maternal womb. As he spends most of his time in bed, then he should have a bed that simulates the conditions of the maternal womb. A bed that can provide spatial restrictions or enclosure, tactile touch and rhythmic movements. The conventional baby bed that is available is therefore nowhere near suitable. They are, very simply, adult beds made in miniature and 'babied' up with frills. The only problem here is that babies are not miniature adults! They are initially frail and helpless and they need a lot of nurturing and sleep. Their bed must therefore be a place of utmost comfort and security, a bed that is at once soothing and stimulating.
By the time of Joanna's return from Torrens House, I was ready! I had constructed a crude hammock with an old 'sarong' suspended from the dining room ceiling by a few strands of bicycle tyre tubes. It was a sizzler of a day, a typical South Australian hot, dry, mid-summer's day. The trip home from Torrens House was long and arduous and she was in a 'piggish' mood- perfect for the much anticipated trial. We took her out of the capsule and put her in the hammock. She screamed. I started to rock her up and down. The screaming stopped . Curiosity took over. She began to look around this strange contraption. She was tired. We kept up the rocking, up down, up down. Soon the inevitable happened. The rhythm of the rocking got the better of her and she fell into a long, deep sleep. From then on, this was her bed. She slept in it till she was almost two.
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