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  • Baby Containers Vs. Floor Time
    2025/12/09

    The baby industry wants you to believe you need walkers, jumpers, and fancy seats to help your baby develop. But what if all that gear is actually slowing your baby down? In this episode, pediatric OT Sarah Cook reveals the truth about Container Baby Syndrome, shares the research on developmental delays caused by baby gear, and gives you a simple, FREE solution that works better than any product you can buy.


    What You'll Learn

    Container Baby Syndrome Explained:

    • What counts as a "container" (car seats, swings, jumpers, walkers, bouncers, floor seats, high chairs)
    • How container time adds up throughout the day (3+ hours without realizing it!)
    • 600% increase in Container Baby Syndrome from 1992-2008

    Developmental Problems Caused by Baby Containers:

    • Restricted movement = restricted brain development
    • Babies' brains develop through movement and sensory exploration
    • Containers prevent: head turning, visual tracking, tactile development, vestibular input, proprioceptive development
    • Skipped milestones: rolling, sitting, crawling, walking
    • Physical consequences: plagiocephaly (flat head), torticollis (head tilt), muscle weakness

    Why "Working on Sitting" in a Baby Chair Backfires:

    • Posterior pelvic tilt causes hunched posture
    • Prevents core and trunk engagement
    • Babies get "used to" upright position
    • Creates resistance to tummy time
    • Leads to bottom scooting instead of hands-and-knees crawling

    Research on Baby Walkers & Developmental Delays:

    • Significantly lower motor development scores (Bezgin et al., 2021)
    • Reduced trunk balance and coordination
    • Speech delays from overuse (Cleveland Clinic)
    • Canada banned baby walkers entirely

    ⚠️ Safety Warning:

    • Asphyxiation risk when babies sleep in containers
    • Car seat angle changes when removed from car seat base (=suffocation risk)

    The Simple Solution: Floor Time

    • FREE and more effective than any baby gear
    • Babies need space to move, kick, roll, push, explore
    • 15-20 minute container limit (twice daily max)
    • Car seat time counts as container time!

    Baby Wearing as Alternative:

    • Keeps baby close while freeing your hands
    • Prevents plagiocephaly
    • Important: proper hip/knee positioning for joint protection
    • Breathing safety: face unobstructed, head below chin


    Key Takeaways

    ✅ Containers have documented negative impacts, ZERO positive impacts ✅ Your baby doesn't need fancy gear—they need space, freedom, and YOU ✅ The best things for babies aren't what we buy—they're what we DO


    Resources:

    📥 FREE Ultimate Baby Motor Milestone Checklist from birth to walking

    📌 Follow on Pinterest for daily baby development tips

    📧 WeeThrive Weekly Newsletter for my best pediatric OT tips & tricks


    Related Episodes:

    • Episode 2: Birth to Independent Sitting
    • Episode 3: Crawling to Walking
    • Episode 4: How to Help Your Baby Love Tummy Time
    • Episode 5: Why Crawling Matters

    Research References:

    Bezgin, S., Uzun Akkaya, K., Çelik, H. İ., Duyan Çamurdan, A., & Elbasan, B. (2021). Evaluation of the effects of using a baby walker on trunk control and motor development. Turkish archives of pediatrics, 56(2), 159–163

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    23 分
  • Retained Primitive Reflexes: The Hidden Reason Your Baby Might Be Struggling
    2025/11/23

    What You'll Learn in This Episode:

    Does your baby startle at every sound? Struggle with tummy time no matter what you try? There might be a neurological reason many healthcare providers never check for: retained primitive reflexes.

    In this episode, we're uncovering the hidden developmental issue that can impact everything from crawling to reading to emotional regulation—and most parents have never even heard of it.


    What Are Primitive Reflexes?

    Reflexes are automatic neurological responses present from birth (or even in utero) that serve specific survival and developmental purposes.

    Examples you've seen:

    • Rooting reflex - Baby turns toward touch on cheek to find breast/bottle
    • Moro reflex - Baby startles at loud noises with arms flinging out

    THE KEY: These reflexes are meant to integrate (disappear) by specific ages. When they don't, they become "retained reflexes" and can cause significant developmental challenges.


    What Causes Retained Reflexes?

    Most common cause: Inadequate tummy time and missing typical developmental milestones.

    Why? Because movements INTEGRATE these reflexes into the nervous system.

    The baby gear problem: Walkers, jumpers, reclined seats, and excessive car seat use PREVENT the natural movements needed for reflex integration.


    3 Key Reflexes Every Parent Should Know:


    1. ATNR (Asymmetrical Tonic Neck Reflex) - "Fencer's Pose"

    When it appears: 13 weeks after conception
    Should integrate by: 6-7 months

    What it does:

    • Helps baby move down birth canal (acts like corkscrew)
    • Develops eye-hand coordination
    • Builds corpus callosum (brain hemisphere bridge)
    • Develops vestibular system (balance)

    This is the #1 reflex linked to reading challenges.


    2. STNR (Symmetrical Tonic Neck Reflex)

    When it appears: 6-9 months
    Should integrate by: 9-11 months

    What it does:

    • Develops near and far vision (head up = far vision, head down = near vision)
    • Develops binocular vision (using both eyes together)
    • Helps baby get into quadruped (hands and knees)
    • Allows upper and lower body to move independently


    3. Moro Reflex - "Startle Response"

    When it appears: 9-12 weeks in utero
    Should integrate by: 4-6 months after birth

    What it does:

    • Helps baby take first breath via adrenaline release
    • Responds to sudden stimuli (loud noises, bright lights, sudden touch)


    Why Movement Is the Answer:

    Movement is the ultimate driving force of brain health and growth.

    • Movement causes nerve cells to multiply and strengthen connections
    • Children with more physical activity consistently outscore less-active children on academic tests


    Listen to this episode if you want to learn what to do if you suspect your child has retained reflexes.

    Coming soon: Retained Reflexes Course with specific exercises and activities for older children


    Resources Mentioned:

    📥 FREE Ultimate Baby Motor Milestone Checklist

    🎧 Episode 2: Birth to Independent Sitting

    🎧 Episode 3: Crawling to Walking

    🎧 Episode 5: Why Crawling Matters

    📧 WeeThrive Weekly Newsletter (get updates on upcoming courses)

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    26 分
  • Why Crawling Matters (Even Though the CDC Says It Doesn't)
    2025/11/10

    Your pediatrician might have told you not to worry if your baby skips crawling—but what if crawling is actually wiring your baby's brain for reading, focus, and coordination? We dive into the 2022 CDC decision to remove crawling from milestone checklists and explore why 92% of pediatric physical therapists disagree.


    What You'll Learn:

    ✅ Why the CDC removed crawling and why therapists disagree
    ✅ How crawling strengthens the corpus callosum (brain bridge between hemispheres)
    ✅ Why the cerebellum contains 80% of your brain's neurons
    ✅ The connection between crawling and future reading, language, and memory
    ✅ What happens when babies skip crawling
    ✅ Crawling variations and what they mean
    ✅ The optimal crawling progression
    ✅ Sarah's story: How crawling transformed August's development


    Key Takeaways:

    🧠 Crawling builds brain infrastructure for coordination, reading, and writing
    🔬 Research shows crawling impacts motor skills, language, memory, and cognition
    👶 Crawling variations (bear crawling, bum scooting) signal retained reflexes
    📊 92% of pediatric PTs believe crawling is important (despite CDC removal)


    Episode Timestamps:

    [3:00] Why the CDC removed crawling
    [4:30] What crawling does for the brain
    [9:00] How crawling impacts future skills
    [12:00] What happens when babies skip crawling
    [14:00] Crawling variations explained
    [16:30] Sarah's personal story


    Resources Mentioned:

    📥 FREE Ultimate Baby Motor Milestone Checklist - Birth to walking tracker

    🎓 1-Hour Workshop - Coming soon! Help your baby achieve motor milestones


    Research References:

    • Kretch et al. (2024) - 92% of pediatric PTs believe crawling is important
    • Herbert, Gross, & Hayne (2007) - Crawling improves memory retrieval
    • McEwan et al. (1991) - Non-crawlers score lower on assessments
    • Yamamoto et al. (2025) - Less crawling variation = more delays
    • Wang et al. (2014) - Motor skills predict communication at age 3
    • Provenzale et al. (2012) - Corpus callosum myelination
    • Salman & Tsai (2016) - Cerebellum's role beyond balance

    [FULL CITATIONS WITH LINKS IN SHOW NOTES]


    Related Episodes:

    • Episode 2: Birth to Independent Sitting
    • Episode 3: Crawling to Walking
    • Episode 4: Tummy Time Tips
    • Episode 6: Retained Primitive Reflexes (Next!)


    Connect with WeeThrive:

    🌐 Website: weethrivepeds.com

    Support the Show:

    💙 Subscribe | ⭐ Leave a review | 📤 Share with a friend

    Host: Sarah Cook, MOTR/L - Pediatric OT & mom of 3
    Episode Length: ~20 minutes


    📚 References

    Herbert, J., Gross, J., & Hayne, H. (2007). Crawling is associated with more flexible memory retrieval by 9-month-old infants. Developmental Science, 10(2), 183-189.

    Kretch, K. S., Dusing, S. C., Harbourne, R. T., Hsu, L., Sargent, B. A., & Willett, S. L. (2024). Early mobility and crawling: Beliefs and practices of pediatric physical therapists in the United States. Pediatric Physical Therapy, 36(1), 9-17.

    McEwan, M. H., Dihoff, R. E., & Brosvic, G. M. (1991). Early infant crawling experience is reflected in later motor skill development. Perceptual and Motor Skills, 72(1), 75-79.

    (For a complete list of cited resources visit the blog post on Episode 5<

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    20 分
  • How to Help Your Baby Love Tummy Time (Not Just Tolerate It!)
    2025/10/26

    Picture this: You gently place your baby on their tummy... and within seconds, they're red-faced, crying, and arching their back. You pick them up feeling defeated and think, "Are we doing this wrong?"

    If that sounds familiar—you're not alone. And here's what you need to know: tummy time doesn't have to be a battle. In fact, with the right approach, it can become one of your favorite bonding moments with your little one.

    In this episode, we're diving into everything tummy time—why it matters, what's really happening in your baby's brain and body, and Sarah's best OT tips to help your baby not just tolerate it, but actually thrive during it.

    What You'll Learn:
    - Why tummy time is a full-body, full-sensory workout (not just about building neck strength!)
    - How tummy time develops ALL of your baby's sensory systems
    - How tummy time naturally integrates retained primitive reflexes (like the ATNR)
    - Why the "Back to Sleep, Tummy to Play" rule matters more than ever
    - How much tummy time your baby needs at each age (and how to build up gradually)
    - Sarah's personal story: Her anxiety with tummy time as a first-time mom and what she wishes she'd known

    The Science Behind Tummy Time:
    Tummy time strengthens your baby's neck, back, core, shoulders, and arms—all critical for future motor tasks like crawling, walking, running, and jumping. But it's doing so much more:

    - Building visual perceptual skills (the foundation for reading and writing)
    - Developing body awareness (proprioception)
    - Activating balance systems (vestibular receptors in the inner ear)
    - Integrating primitive reflexes back into the nervous system
    - Creating sensory tolerance (reducing hypersensitivity to textures)

    When babies don't get enough tummy time in their first year, they may exhibit tactile defensiveness, coordination challenges, and delayed motor milestones.

    The AAP's Safe Sleep Campaign:
    The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends placing babies on their backs for ALL sleep (naps and nighttime) until at least one year old to reduce SIDS risk. But as an unintended result, babies are spending less time on their tummies and are simply not used to the position—making tummy time during wake windows more important than ever.

    Remember: "Back to sleep, tummy to play."

    Key Takeaway:
    Tummy time is exhausting for your baby—it's like a difficult Pilates class! Start slow (2-4 minutes, 4-5 times a day), stay consistent, and build gradually. Short, frequent bursts throughout the day are more effective than one long session.

    If you can master tummy time, your baby is going to learn subsequent milestones—like rolling and crawling—so much faster and easier.

    Sarah's Upcoming Workshop:
    Sarah's 1-hour workshop will cover ALL her best tips and tricks for getting your baby to be successful during tummy time. Tummy time should be fun for you and your baby—not something you dread.

    Free Resource:
    📥 Download your FREE Ultimate Baby Motor Milestone Checklist (Birth to Walking)

    This visual guide includes tummy time milestones for each phase of development.

    Perfect For:
    - Parents whose babies hate tummy time
    - First-time parents anxious about "doing it right"
    - Babies with reflux or medical issues that made early tummy time difficult
    - Parents told "your baby will find another way" but want to support proper development

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    18 分
  • Infant Developmental Milestones: Crawling to Walking
    2025/10/26

    Your baby's first steps might seem like a small moment—but behind those wobbly knees is a massive transformation happening in your baby's brain. Crawling, standing, and walking aren't just cute milestones to capture on video. They're literally building your baby's brain for balance, focus, coordination, and even future learning.

    In this episode, we're diving into Phases 4 through 6 of motor development—from that first belly scoot all the way to independent walking—and uncovering what's really happening beneath those tiny feet.

    What You'll Learn:

    • Phase 4: Pre-Crawling & Crawling (7–11 months)—how crawling strengthens the corpus callosum (the bridge between brain hemispheres) and why it's essential for reading, attention, and coordination
    • What's happening in the brain: How crawling activates the vestibular system, proprioceptive system, and cerebellum
    • Phase 5: Pre-Standing & Standing (8–12 months)—why babies must master quadruped (hands and knees) before they can stand
    • Phase 6: Pre-Walking & Walking (12–18 months)—why walking is the culmination of everything your baby has been working toward
    • Fine motor skills that emerge at each phase (pincer grasp, bilateral coordination, intentional release)
    • Sarah's personal story: How going back to crawling transformed her son August's development after he was told to "skip it and go straight to walking"

    Why This Episode Matters: In 2022, the CDC and American Academy of Pediatrics removed crawling from their milestone checklist. Many pediatric therapists—including Sarah—strongly disagree with this decision. This episode explains why crawling still matters and what happens when babies skip this critical phase.

    What to Do If Your Baby Is Delayed:

    • Why "wait and see" advice can be harmful
    • How the early intervention process works (and why it takes too long)
    • Why WeeThrive exists: to give parents tools NOW—not months from now

    Key Takeaway: Each phase builds on the previous one. Crawling isn't just about getting from point A to point B—it's wiring the brain for coordination, reading, attention, and emotional regulation. When we skip steps, we miss critical developmental windows.

    Free Resource: 📥 Download your FREE Ultimate Baby Motor Milestone Checklist (Birth to Walking)

    This visual guide covers all 6 phases and helps you track your baby's progress through crawling, standing, and walking.

    Perfect For:

    • Parents told "don't worry if your baby skips crawling"
    • Babies who are scooting, bear crawling, or skipping hands-and-knees crawling
    • Parents whose babies seem "behind" on motor milestones
    • Anyone navigating developmental delays or early intervention
    • Parents who want to advocate for their child when doctors say "wait and see"

    Coming Next: Episode 4 dives deep into tummy time—why it matters, how to make your baby love it (not just tolerate it), and Sarah's best OT tips for success.

    About Your Host: Sarah Cook, MOTR/L, is a licensed pediatric occupational therapist and mom of three boys—including one with Down syndrome who is now her strongest, most coordinated crawler. Sarah combines clinical expertise with lived experience and created WeeThrive to empower parents with evidence-based tools to help their children thrive.

    Subscribe to WeeThrive Weekly Newsletter for exclusive resources and early access to workshops: weethrivepeds.com

    Link to favorite baby bowl with suction bottom and low profile.

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    19 分
  • Infant Developmental Milestones: Birth to Independent Sitting
    2025/10/26

    Did you know your baby's brain builds over one million new neural connections every second during their first year? And every roll, reach, and wiggle is literally designing your baby's brain.

    In this episode, we're diving into the first three phases of infant motor development—from birth to independent sitting—and exploring what's happening inside your baby's brain at each stage.

    What You'll Learn:

    • What developmental milestones actually are (and the 4 categories every parent should know)
    • How the brain builds from the bottom up—from brainstem to cortex
    • The "house foundation" analogy: why tummy time, rolling, and crawling are the foundation for all future learning
    • Phase 1: Intro to Gravity (Birth–3 months)—how your baby adjusts to life outside the womb and why that tiny head lift is HUGE for brain development
    • Phase 2: Rolling (4–7 months)—how rolling activates the brainstem, vestibular system, and cerebellum
    • Phase 3: Sitting (5–9 months)—why you should NEVER place your baby in a position they can't get into themselves
    • Why floor time beats fancy baby gear every single time
    • Sarah's personal story: How her son August's developmental delays taught her that milestones aren't random—they're beautifully designed

    Key Takeaway: "Everyday movements build bigger brains." Each milestone builds on the one before, creating the foundation for the next through specific neural pathways. Skipping one phase—like tummy time—makes the next phase that much harder.

    Free Resource: 📥 Download your FREE Ultimate Baby Motor Milestone Checklist (Birth to Walking)

    This visual guide will help you track your baby's progress through all six phases of motor development.

    Perfect For:

    • Parents worried their baby is "falling behind"
    • First-time parents navigating infant milestones
    • Parents whose babies hate tummy time
    • Anyone told "don't worry, your baby will catch up" but their gut says something isn't right
    • Caregivers supporting infants with developmental delays

    Coming Next: Episode 3 covers Phases 4–6: Crawling, Standing, and Walking—and how these milestones build the brain for balance, focus, and coordination.

    About Your Host: Sarah Cook, MOTR/L, is a licensed pediatric occupational therapist and mom of three boys. She combines clinical expertise with lived experience navigating developmental delays and Down syndrome. Sarah created WeeThrive to give parents evidence-based tools to help their children thrive—not just reassurance.

    References: Goddard Blythe, S. (2009). Attention, balance and coordination: The A.B.C. of learning success. Wiley-Blackwell.

    Subscribe to the WeeThrive Weekly Newsletter for exclusive resources and early access to workshops at weethrivepeds.com

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    18 分
  • My Story & Why WeeThrive Exists
    2025/10/26

    Welcome to The WeeThrive Peds Podcast! In this first episode, I'm sharing my personal story—why I became so passionate about infant and child development, and why I created WeeThrive to help parents like you.

    You'll hear about:

    • My journey as a pediatric occupational therapist and mom of three boys
    • Our second son August's developmental delays after a severe GI condition and how going back to foundational milestones (especially crawling) transformed his development
    • Our third son Beckham's surprise Down syndrome diagnosis and why I refused to accept that "kids with Down syndrome don't crawl"
    • How supporting the full developmental sequence—without skipping steps—led to incredible results
    • Why parents need more than reassurance: they need real, evidence-based tools to help their children succeed If you've ever been told "don't worry, your baby will catch up" but your gut tells you something isn't right, this episode is for you.

    What's Coming on This Podcast: In future episodes, we'll dive deep into infant milestones, brain development, crawling, tummy time, retained primitive reflexes, sensory processing, and practical ways to support your child's motor and cognitive development at home—even if your pediatrician says everything is "fine."

    This podcast exists to empower you with the knowledge and confidence to advocate for your child and help them thrive—no matter where they are in their developmental journey.

    Free Resource: Download your free Ultimate Baby Motor Milestone Checklist: Birth to Walking HERE.

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    9 分