Top 10 Ways to Use Natural Parenting for Children with Special Needs

Welcome to the March Carnival of Natural Parenting: Natural Parenting Top 10 Lists

This post was written for inclusion in the monthly Carnival of Natural Parenting hosted by Code Name: Mama and Hobo Mama. This month our participants have shared Top 10 lists on a wide variety of aspects of attachment parenting and natural living. Please read to the end to find a list of links to the other carnival participants.

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I like to say we weren’t looking for Natural Parenting but rather it found us.  Every parent wants to do what’s best for their children.  For instance you want to put the best food into their system just like you want to put the high-grade fuel in your car.  Slowly though regular grade gets introduced and things seem to run just fine.  Eventually the majority just end up going with what’s shoved in front of you and screams out, or gets screamed for, just about everywhere you look.  It takes focus to cut through that and we got that focus when our first child was born with a need for a higher caloric intake than most children.  When we introduced solid foods we made our own, mostly because he wouldn’t eat food from a jar, and we went into finger foods because that’s what worked for him.

There are other ways that Natural Parenting found us and we have taken it further.  We realize every child with special needs is going to have different needs but we wanted to share the ways that natural parenting has helped us.

Top 10 Ways to Use Natural Parenting for Children with Special Needs:

1. Breastfeeding
The most basic necessity for any Natural Parent.  Breastfeeding is especially important for a child with special needs.  The extra antibodies and nutrition that they gain should be encouragement for every mom!

Breastfeeding is natural but that doesn’t mean it’s easy.  When our son was born his severe jaundice caused him to be extremely drowsy. After being discharged we were readmitted within 24 hours (only 3 days old) and stayed for a week.  This made starting out with breastfeeding very difficult and inconsistent for the bonding process.  To help establish my supply and keep it up while he was in the hospital we purchased a hospital grade pump. We also went through a latching problem so I used a nipple shield which he finally weaned off of at 3 months of age.  We breastfed successfully until he self-weaned at 20 months.  Getting through that first three months was one of the greatest accomplishments in my life.

2. Extended Breastfeeding
Along with breastfeeding exclusively until introducing some solid foods 6 months and then breastfeeding with solid foods through the first year extending breastfeeding for as long as the mother and child feel is right for them is very important for any child. This is especially important for a child with special needs.  I ended up nursing my son until he was 20 months old.  At that point he was only nursing in the morning when we first woke up and he slowly dropped that feeding all on his own.  It was a comfortable experience for both of us and I knew that the benefits that I had been giving him in the first year of his life I was continuing to give him.  These benefits were especially important for him because he really needed the extra fats and nutrients in my milk as well as the extra antibodies to help protect him from getting sick since his body was already dealing with so much on a regular basis.

3. Co-sleeping
We began co-sleeping with our son basically right at the beginning.  This was not our original plan.  We had the bassinet next to the bed and had planned on him being the ‘perfect’ little baby who would sleep in his own bed all night long right from the beginning.

We were in for a very rude wake-up call!

Our sweet little baby would turn into a screaming monster at night.  As we now know looking back he was constantly hungry (and not being able to latch correctly must have been very frustrating for him) and he was uncomfortable all of the time due to constant itching that he could not relieve.  The only way he achieved comfort was when he was with us.  We achieved this by co-sleeping.

In the beginning it was honestly the only way any of us could get any rest at all, but as we have learned more about his condition and what he goes through he still comes into our bed for part of the night most of the time at 4 years old.  An inconvenience?  Yes, at times it is, especially since now we are also co-sleeping with our 9 month old, but since we are his parents this is our job for his life.  And heck they are only little for so long right???

4. Baby Wearing
As I have mentioned above our son was very uncomfortable in his own skin as a baby before we could figure out what was going on inside there.  One of the best things that comforted him (and still does) is being close to us, especially being close to mommy.  The best way I found to do this was through baby wearing.

I started out by wearing him in a pouch sling all over the place.  I then graduated to an Ergo carrier when he was about 10 months old.  It was the best way for him to be comfortable and for me to get some things done!  Even now he is many times the most comfortable cuddling with myself or his daddy.

5. Natural Foods

Our son has Liver disease; his liver fails to separate out the fats and vitamins that his body needs to grow, so everything – good and bad – just passes right through.

Because of this I keep very close track of his diet.  My hope is that if we try to put mostly good and natural foods in there that the stuff that does stick and stays in his body will be something that is worth it!

For instance, for breakfast every morning he loves to have a fruit and cereal bar with his milk (whole milk of course).  Instead of giving him the regular junk bars off of the shelf we have found an alternative that Whole Foods makes in their store 365 brand that has real fruit and grains in them instead of artificial flavoring and sweeteners (or HFCS) that the other ‘regular’ brands have in them.  And the kicker is that the Whole Food brand is quite comparable in price to the junky bars!

I also try to encourage as much as possible whole grain carbohydrates and whole milk dairy products (as well as of course his fruits and veggies).  This is not to say that my child does not have an oreo or a twizzler here or there, but for the most part I really make a conscious effort to make the foods that he eats on a consistent basis foods that are worth it to his body!

6. Feeding on Demand
As I have previously said, he is pretty much always hungry because his liver does not function properly. He nursed about every 3 hours around the clock until about 10 months old when it went down to about every 4 hours.  It slowly decreased from there and he started dropping some night-time feedings at about 15 months until he self weaned completely at 20 months.  Even now he eats on average about every 3 hours when he is awake. And he eats a lot. I cannot imagine what it will be like when he is a teenager!  But this is what his body needs so it is what we will give him.

7. Natural Body Products
Since one of the things that causes issues with him is a constant itching sensation all over his skin, I have always had to be very careful about products that I use on his body.  The last thing we need is for him to break out from some chemical and have a rash or allergic reaction to a lotion when he is already dealing with so much.  I really do test things out on a “small area of the skin” before full application.

8. Cloth Diapering
When my son was born we were living in a small apartment and doing laundry in the shared coin-op machines. We didn’t really consider cloth diapering.  Now that I have learned so much more about the chemicals that go into making disposable diapers I really wish that I had not exposed his private areas to them for the first 2 1/2 years of his life.  Now that I am older and wiser *wink* we have switched to only using cloth diapers for our daughter and use cloth training pants for our son at night.

9. No Circumcision
When our son was born we knew nothing about what we were going to be facing in the upcoming years of his life.  When the doctor asked us if we wanted to have him circumcised we had no idea what to do.  We decided not to basically on a gut feeling.  And I am now so glad that we did not.  With everything else that he had to go through medically in those first few months of his life I am glad that we did not choose to put him through something else that was not even medically necessary.

10. Natural Learning
With our sons condition and how his liver does not properly process foods he obviously does not grow on the same curve as other children.  Now at 4 years old for instance he is only 30 lbs, which is roughly the size of an average 3-year-old.  Obviously this has brought about some physical challenges for him.  He is just not physically able to do them at the same time as other children his own age.  There is also an adverse effect for his cognitive skills.  We theorize that he is in a way making up for his lack of physical ability in his social and learning skills.

For this reason (and many others of course) we have chosen the natural learning path for our family.  At this point it means that our children learn from life and their experiences in it.  Such as letting our son help me make dinner each night or showing him the buds outside on the trees and explaining that is where the leaves will come from.  As we progress this will eventually bring itself into a home school situation which we are very excited to jump into!  We are already doing reading lessons with him as he is so excited to learn to read.  He really is a little sponge for learning and leading him in the natural way just feels so, well natural!!

We are very lucky to have found the Natural Parenting way of life for our special needs son and for our family.  The best thing is that he is our first child so what we learned with him will be passed down to all of our other children!

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Carnival of Natural Parenting -- Hobo Mama and Code Name: MamaVisit Hobo Mama and Code Name: Mama to find out how you can participate in the next Carnival of Natural Parenting!

Please take time to read the submissions by the other carnival participants:

(This list will be live and updated by afternoon March 8 with all the carnival links.)

Related posts:

  1. Why Natural Parenting Found our Family
  2. Menus 4 Moms

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  1. [...] Top 10 Ways to Use Natural Parenting for Children with Special Needs — Danielle at Mommy Makes Cents feeds the needs of her family and special needs child through the use of Natural Parenting. [...]

  2. [...] Top 10 Ways to Use Natural Parenting for Children with Special Needs — Danielle at Mommy Makes Cents feeds the needs of her family and special needs child through the use of Natural Parenting. [...]

  3. [...] Top 10 Ways to Use Natural Parenting for Children with Special Needs — Danielle at Mommy Makes Cents feeds the needs of her family and special needs child through the use of Natural Parenting. [...]

  4. [...] Top 10 Ways to Use Natural Parenting for Children with Special Needs — Danielle at Mommy Makes Cents feeds the needs of her family and special needs child through the use of Natural Parenting. [...]

  5. [...] Top 10 Ways to Use Natural Parenting for Children with Special Needs — Danielle at Mommy Makes Cents feeds the needs of her family and special needs child through the use of Natural Parenting. [...]

  6. [...] Top 10 Ways to Use Natural Parenting for Children with Special Needs — Danielle at Mommy Makes Cents feeds the needs of her family and special needs child through the use of Natural Parenting. [...]

  7. [...] Top 10 Ways to Use Natural Parenting for Children with Special Needs — Danielle at Mommy Makes Cents feeds the needs of her family and special needs child through the use of Natural Parenting. [...]

  8. [...] Top 10 Ways to Use Natural Parenting for Children with Special Needs — Danielle at Mommy Makes Cents feeds the needs of her family and special needs child through the use of Natural Parenting. [...]

  9. [...] Top 10 Ways to Use Natural Parenting for Children with Special Needs — Danielle at Mommy Makes Cents feeds the needs of her family and special needs child through the use of Natural Parenting. [...]

  10. [...] Top 10 Ways to Use Natural Parenting for Children with Special Needs — Danielle at Mommy Makes Cents feeds the needs of her family and special needs child through the use of Natural Parenting. [...]

  11. [...] Top 10 Ways to Use Natural Parenting for Children with Special Needs — Danielle at Mommy Makes Cents feeds the needs of her family and special needs child through the use of Natural Parenting. [...]

  12. [...] Top 10 Ways to Use Natural Parenting for Children with Special Needs — Danielle at Mommy Makes Cents feeds the needs of her family and special needs child through the use of Natural Parenting. [...]

  13. [...] Top 10 Ways to Use Natural Parenting for Children with Special Needs — Danielle at Mommy Makes Cents feeds the needs of her family and special needs child through the use of Natural Parenting. [...]

  14. Great Post! It’s wonderful that you’ve been able to provide such loving and wholesome care to your son despite the rocky start. It’s really great to hear other mamas are doing the same thing we are – breastfeeding/extended (we’re at almost 7 months now, no end in sight!), cloth diapers, feeding on demand, good wholesome natural foods, no circumcision. I think all of the above are great ways to take care of children, special needs or not.

    1. Ana, thanks so much for reading! I agree, natural parenting is the way to go because it is so, well, Natural!!

  15. [...] Top 10 Ways to Use Natural Parenting for Children with Special Needs — Danielle at Mommy Makes Cents feeds the needs of her family and special needs child through the use of Natural Parenting. [...]

  16. [...] Top 10 Ways to Use Natural Parenting for Children with Special Needs — Danielle at Mommy Makes Cents feeds the needs of her family and special needs child through the use of Natural Parenting. [...]

  17. [...] Top 10 Ways to Use Natural Parenting for Children with Special Needs — Danielle at Mommy Makes Cents feeds the needs of her family and special needs child through the use of Natural Parenting. [...]

  18. [...] Top 10 Ways to Use Natural Parenting for Children with Special Needs — Danielle at Mommy Makes Cents feeds the needs of her family and special needs child through the use of Natural Parenting. [...]

  19. I love this post! You’re so right, special needs or not, these things are so beneficial to our kids.

  20. [...] Top 10 Ways to Use Natural Parenting for Children with Special Needs — Danielle at Mommy Makes Cents feeds the needs of her family and special needs child through the use of Natural Parenting. [...]

  21. [...] Top 10 Ways to Use Natural Parenting for Children with Special Needs — Danielle at Mommy Makes Cents feeds the needs of her family and special needs child through the use of Natural Parenting. [...]

  22. Great post. I wish more people knew these practices could be so beneficial to babies with special needs! My friend’s baby started having seizures at 3-4 months old, and she too has said that natural parenting helped them cope not only with the seizures themselves, but also with all the testing and hospital stays, etc they’ve had to endure. Cosleeping gave them a lot of peace of mind because they knew their daughter was safe right there next to them.

  23. Great work natural Mama! Your children are so blessed that you follow your instincts and your heart.

  24. [...] Top 10 Ways to Use Natural Parenting for Children with Special Needs — Danielle at Mommy Makes Cents feeds the needs of her family and special needs child through the use of Natural Parenting. [...]

  25. Natural parenting was something that also found us – as you said, by doing just what came naturally. And man I cannot say enough good things about our Ergo!! ;) It sounds like in your situation, though, this was exactly what your child needed and is no doubt healthier physically, mentally and emotionally because of the love and care that you gave him – following his cues and not setting false limits on things. Great job, mama!!!

  26. I love hearing these success stories – the families who stumble into NP naturally because they are concentrating on their child’s needs. Thank you for sharing your own experiences!

  27. I really appreciate reading about this topic. As much as I speak to natural parenting in general and have experience with my own children, it is wonderful to read about how well it has worked for your son’s special needs and can now point out such anecdotal evidence when speaking about NP to other people. Thanks!

  28. That’s incredible. I really appreciate the way you’ve been able to intersect natural parenting practices with your son’s special needs. I’m sure this will be an inspiration to other parents who have kids with special needs. I’m sure sometimes people think that doing things the “natural” way is more work on top of everything, but you’ve shown how it’s better for your son to follow his instincts and leading and to give him the most wholesome start to life. Thanks so much for sharing!

  29. Your information Helped me Thanks you Much

  30. [...] Top 10 Ways to Use Natural Parenting for Children with Special Needs — Danielle at Mommy Makes Cents feeds the needs of her family and special needs child through the use of Natural Parenting. [...]

  31. [...] Top 10 Ways to Use Natural Parenting for Children with Special Needs — Danielle at Mommy Makes Cents feeds the needs of her family and special needs child through the use of Natural Parenting. [...]

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