What matters most with a baby is to talk, of course. The content isn't anywhere near as important as the tone, the eye contact, the attention. None the less, I'm very glad to say that Helena Iara was very attentive as I tried to explain to her the development of pre-socratic philosophy and autarchic, decentralized government as a root of the thinking of Thales and Anaximander. Whether these hypotheses are true or whether she will even be interested in philosophy matters very little. What was great was her constant, curious eye contact.
Today I'm interrupting the Shine a Light blog to celebrate an entirely personal event, one that has little to do with street kids or child soldiers or indigenous kids making telenovelas (though the name Iara is Guaraní...). Rita and my daughter was born last night, weighing in at a little over seven pounds, and since then has shown herself to be strong, healthy, and curious. Her eyes are in constant movement until they find an interesting object or person, at which point they maintain an intense attention. Pediatric neurologists say that babies can't focus their eyes yet at this age, and certainly the concept of an "object" hasn't yet entered her eager brain, but she certainly pays attention to color, form, and movement.
For the Pre-socratics, the world was made of up of four elements: water, fire, earth, and air. For Helena Iara, the elements are probably movement, color, smell, and sound... but they still come together to form a world.
I'll be continuing these reflections on another blog, so as not to confuse it with Shine a Light. helenaiara.blogspot.com
Parabens!! Congratulations!!!Felicidades!!!
ReplyDeleteEstou muito feliz por voces!!!
I know both of you will do the best!!!
Abrazos para los 3!! Bella Familiaaaa
Bsss
Bemvinda linda!
ReplyDeleteParabéns e atenção.
Agora é que vocês vão ver o que é bom.