Baby bathing
Baby bathing tips
Baby shower
Baby sponge bath
Bathing your newborn baby
Bathing your growing baby
Bathing your toddler
Baby immunisation
Immunisation advice
Immunisation chart
Local reactions and management
Whooping cough (Pertussis) vaccine
Baby cold
Baby colds and flu
Baby illness/symptoms
Sneeze safe
Seeking medical help for babies
Pain and fever relief
Baby conditions
Baby reflux
Signs of reflux
Reflux management tips
Baby colic
SIDS and reflux
Baby eczema
How to manage eczema
Nutrition for eczema
Baby asthma
Baby thrush
Chickenpox
Circumcision
Baby teething
Baby teething chart
Baby teeth care
Tooth tips
Oral hygiene for babies & toddlers
Prevent tooth decay
Water and fluoride
Healthy eating equals healthy teeth
Dental associations
Baby massage
Baby massage benefits
Preparation for baby massage
Basic baby massage
Premature babies massage
Newborn massage
Growing baby massage
Toddler massage
Baby massage strokes
Full body baby massage & yoga
Baby butterfly & froggy excercises
Baby bliss
Upper body massage & yoga
Scalp circles
Smiling face
Touch relaxation
indian milking
Open hand
Back and forth & sweeping the back massage
Raining
Lower body massage & yoga
Water wheel
Hands of clock & I love you massage
Colic routine
Hug and glide & indian milking massage
Fanning the foot & squeezing the toes massage
Scooping the foot
Health checks for infants
Baby massage benefits
Baby massage has a great number of benefits and some of them will be completely unique to you and your own baby. Here are some you may be interested to consider.
- Allows ‘time out’ from the stresses of the day for both parents (great for moms and dads) and baby, and gives an opportunity for one-on-one bonding time. Bonding is a “big” word! The one-on-one, focused, uninterrupted time sharing touch, eye contact, body smells, body sounds and voice helps you understand each other more deeply. It helps both you and your baby to be more aware of feelings you have about yourselves as individuals and for each other.
Massage time together helps build trust.
- Giving your baby a massage can be a calming experience for both of you.
Massage stimulates the production of certain ‘feel good’ hormones including endorphins and oxytocin. Oxytocin in particular is ‘catchy’. So when your baby starts feeling a sense of bliss you are likely to too! - Pain relief. Endorphins released with massage are a natural source of pain relief for the body. So if your baby is feeling sore (e.g. teething or suffering from some wind or colic) massage may soothe them. In addition, there are specific strokes for commonly experienced baby discomforts that can help minimise distress.
- Enhances your baby’s awareness of their own body (e.g. size and location of body parts).
- Assists balance between ‘high’ muscle tone and ‘low’ muscle tone. Most of us tend to be a little unbalanced one way or another, in terms of how we hold our posture, and babies can be this way too. Some hold their bodies more tightly while others are ‘laid back’ and even overly relaxed. When we approach massage in a holistic manner, we tend to add more stimulation for the ‘laid back’ baby and a slower, more ‘deliberate’ approach for the ‘tense’ baby. You may find yourself adapting your massage style, depending on the baby’s mood in a particular occasion.
If your baby has special needs, speak to your paediatrician or doctor about ways to massage your baby. - Supports your baby’s ability to fulfill their individual developmental potential. Massage does this by supporting maturation of the nervous system, which in turn assists brain / body communication.
- Relieves physical and emotional stress in your baby. Babies that had invasive procedures (i.e. medical care or an operation), experienced separation from family, a difficult birth or other event, may experience anxiety with any form of touching. Focused time during massage, ‘listening’ to your baby, and approaching the massage with respect and sensitivity, can help to heal fear and rebuild trust and enjoyment of the ‘skin’ they live in.
- The experience of receiving massages helps your baby to be more aware of how to relieve stress (e.g. through mom or dad jostling and stretching baby’s limbs your baby more readily learns to do this for themselves whenever they need it, and it is a great way to release tension from the body).
- Massage may pave a smoother path through childhood illnesses because it supports a healthy immune system. It does this by assisting efficient circulation of blood and lymph around the body and also by causing feelings of happiness!
- Giving massages to babies helps them discern what is ‘safe’ touch and therefore to recognise, as they are growing up, what is not. People that experienced a secure infancy, who were held and listened to, who had good eye contact with their parents, and who were generally cherished, tend to have healthier relationships with others.
- Massage may facilitate a peaceful sleep.
- Massage is a great way to let your baby know they are loved and cherished.
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