They are hand signs that are specific to what a baby can do with their
hands. Much of ASL (American Sign Language?) involves using fingers and
babies (or at least ours) wasn't able to do ASL style signs. These I
guess are more akin to gestures. He learned roughly 6 of the 12 we
decided to use on a regular basis and he made up around 6 of his own
that we picked up on. We did not go through the frustrated
non-communicator stage. It was soooo cool when after a shower and we
had dried him off, when he asked for More Shower (since those were two
signs he could do). So we stuck him back in the shower and he was
amazingly happy.

Wonderful stuff, Kee,


How I wish I had known about these signs! Here is an amazing experiment you can try, Malte... I did it with our newborn, some years ago.

When you walk the baby up and down the passage, and you will, and you do that slow smooth turn at the end of your length, watch your baby. If there is something that grasps his attention (a light pattern on the wall is a good one), you'll note that as you turn your body and his away, his head stays lined up with the object of his attention. Now you can move around, dip and lean, duck and weave, and his little head will adjust as required to keep looking at the spot of light. The muscle control is unbelievable, and supposed not to be there at all. I believe that our lives are governed not by fate, not even by free will, but by the play of our attention. Ah, how I wish I had known about this book!

Ryno.
http://artistvision.org ...a work in progress...

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