Subscribe
The Carousel
No Result
View All Result
  • Beauty & Fashion
  • Wellness & Health
  • Travel & Leisure
  • Food & Drink
  • Lifestyle & Homes
  • News
  • About Us
  • Beauty & Fashion
  • Wellness & Health
  • Travel & Leisure
  • Food & Drink
  • Lifestyle & Homes
  • News
  • About Us
No Result
View All Result
The Carousel
No Result
View All Result
Home News World

Author Antonella Gambotto-Burke Talks About Attachment Parenting

Franki Hobson by Franki Hobson
26/06/2023
in World
0
Kids And Resilience: The Missing Link!
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

By Antonella Gambotto-Burke

“I didn’t start out as an attachment parent. Pregnant, I studied Gina Ford’s soothingly bureaucratic baby manuals. I stocked up on pacifiers, bottles and bought a bottle warmer, lots of sparkly things to suspend from the ceiling, little white sheet sets, a cashmere blanket and a beautiful walnut cot. I drew up a feeding schedule that would allow me to work without too much interruption. Like a general anticipating hostilities, I had armed myself against the Invasion of Baby.

And then I gave birth.

Related articles

What is Wellness Stacking … And Why Was it the Hottest Health Hack of 2025?

Why July is a Goldmine for Creators

I did not experience those graceful doula-directed births featured in Shea Caplice DVDs – neither doulas nor Shea Caplice had ever featured in my consciousness – but endured your standard seventeen-hour hospitalised drilling in brute fear, involving much lowing, cursing and the flying of random cannulas. My husband Alex, who had conscientiously pored over birth partner manuals and joined me for birth preparation classes, held my hand, his eyes wide with animal terror. When the midwife asked if I wanted a mirror to see my baby’s head as she crowned, I summoned all the dignity anyone can summon whilst naked on all fours before strangers, and said: “I’d rather die.”

The midwife slid my baby under me, hoping for some show of interest. “Is it dead?” I asked, looking down at the inert violet jellybean. “OXYGEN!” the midwife bellowed. The jellybean, now breathing and a fetching shade of orange, then screwed up her dear little face and squeaked: “MA!”

Which is when the universe as I knew it was washed away like so much mouthwash.

Once in the suite, I lifted my baby out of her Lucite cot and bundled her into bed with me. The desire to be with her was surreal. I wanted only to smell her, feel her, kiss her, gaze at her. When the midwife carted her off for her first wash, I crept after them into the bathing room.

“Oh,” the midwife said, surprised, “you’re here?”

Casually indicating the bare grey walls, I replied, “I was curious about the décor.”

The idea of being parted from my baby was unthinkable. Having survived the suicide of my 32-year-old brother, I understood the importance of seemingly irrelevant moments and the deep value of presence. My child’s infancy was a symphony that would never be repeated. I wanted to relish every moment: her first laugh, her first cry, her first word. Her fragility was in itself a gift, allowing me to develop a patience and tenderness I had never before experienced. I remember tracing my index finger over her face, watching her eyes widen with the surprise of sensation.

Babies, I realised, give us the opportunity to rewrite our lives in the language of love.

On returning home, I threw Gina Ford out. We never used a single pacifier, and donated the cot and bottle warmer to DOCS. Alex and I stripped our bed back – deeply-tucked low sheets, light blanket – and took our baby into bed with us (she slept between me and the wall; men are not hormonally primed to be awoken by their baby’s voice). Bethesda rarely cried, other than during the week I mowed by way through seven family-sized chocolate bars in an effort to restore the energy depleted by breastfeeding (the caffeine in the chocolate had seeped through my breast milk). I stopped the chocolate, she stopped the crying. She doubled her birth weight in three months and weighed ten kilograms at six. Years later, a doctor scoffed, “That’s impossible; you must mean ten pounds.” But she really did. She was taller than most boys. In her immunisation book, the numbers. And as she slept, I worked – in shifts, like a security guard. I was exhausted but spiritually sated.

Without ever having heard of William Sears, I was practising attachment parenting.

The joy I experienced in those first six sleepless months was both glorious and fathomless. I was wild with love, as high as a kite on breastfeeding hormones – prolactin (responsible for feelings of satiation) and oxytocin (superstar of the neuroanatomy of intimacy). My husband watched me transform from a stressed workaholic partial to Chanel La Précieuse lipstick and Boucheron into a merry if utterly disoriented woman who barely remembered to brush her hair. Still overweight from the pregnancy and in those vast maternity underpants – I gave birth during a heatwave – I sang to my captive baby at the top of my voice, great operatic bursts of passion as I danced about the house.

The enemy I had prepared for turned out to be the greatest love I have ever known.”

Antonella Gambotto-Burke is a regular contributor to Vogue. Her book is Mama: Dispatches from the Frontline of Love. She can be contacted through www.antonellagambottoburke.com.

Previous Post

7 Influential Celebrities Steering The Wellness Revolution

Next Post

TINA – The Musical Is Simply The Best

Franki Hobson

Franki Hobson

rajawd Rajawd diesel99

Related Posts

What is Wellness Stacking
World

What is Wellness Stacking … And Why Was it the Hottest Health Hack of 2025?

23/12/2025
liver
World

Why July is a Goldmine for Creators

22/07/2024
eyes
World

What Your Eye Colour Says About Who You’re Attracted To

07/06/2024
Vanuatu
Destinations

Vanuatu – Five Reasons To Put It On Your Bucket List

03/05/2024
April Brodie Buccal Facial
World

This Facialist Sticks Her Fingers in Your Mouth. And There’s a Six-Month Wait List to Try It!

16/04/2024
vitamin C skincare
World

Vitamin C For Your Skin: Your Complete Guide

16/04/2024

Recommended

Easter Holiday Hobbies To Sink Your Teeth Into

Easter Holiday Hobbies To Boost Your Happiness

30/03/2024
Point Danger. Coolangatta, Qld

Australia’s Most Important Art Collection Up For Auction

22/06/2021

Recent Posts

What is Wellness Stacking
World

What is Wellness Stacking … And Why Was it the Hottest Health Hack of 2025?

by Marie-Antoinette Issa
23/12/2025
0

If the past decade of wellness has taught women anything, it’s that quick fixes rarely fix much at all. Juice...

Read moreDetails
How to get over a relationship break up

6 Proven Ways To Get Over A Relationship Break-Up

23/12/2025
Impress Your Guests With Carb-conscious Canapés This Party Season

Impress Your Guests With Carb-conscious Canapés This Party Season

23/12/2025
Embarrassing Parents: 5 Fast Ways To Make Your Children Blush

Embarrassing Parents: 5 Fast Ways To Make Your Children Blush

23/12/2025
Echuca Moama

48 Hours in Echuca Moama … Where You Can Be in Two Places at Once

22/12/2025

Subscribe to Newsletter

Be the first to get daily fitness news & tips from JNews Fitness.

  • Beauty & Fashion
  • Wellness & Health
  • Travel & Leisure
  • Food & Drink
  • Lifestyle & Homes
  • News
  • About Us
Foyster Media Pty Ltd Copyright 2025
No Result
View All Result
  • Beauty & Fashion
  • Wellness & Health
  • Travel & Leisure
  • Food & Drink
  • Lifestyle & Homes
  • News
  • About Us

© 2025 Foyster Media Pty Ltd. All rights reserved