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The Natural Child Project
Box 3183
Sunriver, OR 97707
February 27, 2008
NBC Viewer Relations
30 Rockefeller Plaza
New York, NY 10112
Viewer Relations Dept:
As a parent, child psychologist and family
counselor, I am deeply concerned about the premise of your new show
"The
Baby Borrowers," and for the present and future emotional
health of the babies and young children whose lives will be so
strongly affected.
Sudden removal from their parents and placement
with strangers for long periods of time is from a baby's point of view
no different than a kidnapping. It has been well-established that
babies who suddenly lose their primary caregiver can quickly go into
mourning and emotional depression. They have no sense of time and no
way to know that they will ever be returned to the only family they
have known. They will inevitably express their fear and confusion in
the only way they can, with tears, screams, and regressive behavior.
Will their cries and behavior be understood and respected by teenagers
with little or no experience with babies and their critical need for
compassion and reassurance? I fear not, because anyone who understands
the potential for the lifelong repercussions of such a situation would
never participate in this type of show.
Babies do not have the mental capacity to
anticipate the return of a mother who has gone; they cannot use
imagination or project into the future. Research consistently shows
that babies separated from their mothers have skyrocketing cortisol
levels. This is neurotoxic, damaging brain tissue in the prefrontal
lobe areas that regulate emotion, leading to a lifetime vulnerability.
When cortisol is produced due to emotional stress, the next stressful
experience creates an even larger surge of cortisol. By the time a
stressed child reaches adulthood, he is likely to overreact to all
stressful situations, making it harder to cope with life's challenges.
For all these reasons, babies and young children should be kept as
stress-free as possible, to protect their future psychological and
physical health.
As traumatic as this experience will surely be
for these babies and children, the effects will not end when they
return home. Will their parents then understand and empathize with
their inevitable sadness and regressed behavior? Probably not, because
few parents are aware of the critical importance of early childhood
experiences. There is every reason to believe that this kind of trauma
will have long-term effects, making it harder for these children to
trust their parents or indeed, anyone else. This kind of emotional
trauma can have lifelong effects, limiting their ability to have
mutually fulfilling relationships with others in adulthood. Nothing is
more precious than one's ability to love and trust others fully.
The first months and years of life are
absolutely critical for establishing the capacity for love and trust.
Babies are human beings who deserve to be treated like human beings,
not objects to be callously exploited for "entertainment". I
urge you to read the enclosed
article on the critical importance of parenting in the early
years, and to find a way to entertain your audience that does not
jeopardize anyone's mental health and happiness - especially the most
emotionally vulnerable members of our society. Babies and young
children deserve our utmost love and compassion!
For more information, please see:
"The Science of Attachment: The Biological
Roots of Love"
www.naturalchild.org/guest/lauren_lindsey_porter.html
Sincerely,
Jan Hunt, M.Sc., Director
The Natural Child project
www.naturalchild.org
Related link: Fury
as TV teenagers play house with real babies
Please
send a letter to NBC - even a short one will be valuable.
It may even be the one letter that convinces them to drop the
show!
NBC Viewer Relations
30 Rockefeller Plaza
New York, NY 10112
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