“The Ultimate Game” That Is Easy to Play and Develops Important Skills, Psychologists Emphasize That Parents Should Play with Their Children the Most!

Psychologists emphasize 1 simple game that parents should “play with their children” to help develop emotional skills. But people don’t know!
Finding the “right” way to raise and discipline a child can be difficult. As many people have taken to social media to share. What they believe other parents should be doing to foster good development. There is so much advice on each topic that it can be overwhelming to make decisions, especially for new parents.
Dr. Alisa Pressman, a developmental psychologist who focuses on helping parents find the best ways to raise their children. Recommends that all parents play a เล่น UFABET ผ่านมือถือ สะดวกทุกที่ ทุกเวลา game with their babies to help promote their children’s emotional development. I believe many people may be doing this already. But are not aware of the benefits that I am about to discuss.
Dr. Alisa recently appeared on Jamie Laing’s Great Company podcast. Where she interviewed different guests on each episode. Where she talked about “the best games to play with babies” that teach them that their parents are always there, no matter what.
Why is peek-a-boo an important game?
“Look, I’m gone,” she said as she hid her face behind her hand. Before revealing it again and saying, “I’m back, I’m gone, I’m back.”
Dr. Alisa continues, “When you have a young child. If you give a pair of glasses to a child who is about six months old and then cover the glasses with a cloth. The child may not be interested anymore. They don’t know the glasses are still there. Because they don’t have the ability to sense that an object is still there even though they can’t see it.”
“This ability is called ‘object permanence. Which is the intellectual ability to understand that objects and people still exist even though they are not in front of us,” she says . “By about nine months, ten months, or eleven months, they have this ability with both objects and people.”
Dr. Alisa goes on to explain that face-hide games like peek-a-boo help babies practice their object-person recognition skills and teach them that lost people always come back. “So if I was a baby and I saw my glasses on the table and my dad covered them with a cloth. I would lift the cloth and find my glasses,” she explains.
“And when my mom or dad does this [hides his face behind his hand before revealing it again]. They’re saying, ‘I’m gone, I’m back, I’m gone, I’m back, I’m always going to come back,’ and they’re practicing this skill, which is why it’s such an important game to play with kids and why kids love it.”
She also concluded by saying, “No one cheats or runs away from you. It makes you trust. It teaches you that people still exist even when they are gone.”