Want to read more about the benefi ts of carrying your baby?
Here are a few of our favorites.
Granju, Katie Allison
. Attachment Parenting: Instinctive care for
your baby and young child. New York, New York: Pocket Books,
1999.
Heller, Sharon.
The Vital Touch: How Intimate Contact with Your
Baby Leads to Happier, Healthier Development. New York, New
York: Henry Holt and Company, 1997.
Liedloff, Jane.
The Continuum Concept: In search of happiness
lost. Cambridge, Massachussetts: Perseus Books, 1985.
Sears, W. and Sears, M. The Attachment Parenting Book. Boston, Massachusetts: Little Brown, 2001.
Small, Meredith F.
Our Babies, Ourselves: How Biology and
Culture Shape the Way We Parent. New York, New York: Double-
day, 2001.
BB•SLING > User’s Manual
Please read through carefully before starting!
Babies Yearn for Skin
After nine months of warmth, movement and constant contact
with mother, birth is a huge transition and babies are in need
of intimate contact with their parents. Babies who are carried
close to the body, visibly enjoy this direct physical contact. The
cherishing body-to-body contact fulfi ls baby’s primal and deep
needs and offers an ideal position from which to discover the
big wide world.
Safe and Secure
In a simple sling, your baby feels safe and secure. He feels your
physical warmth and hears your voice and heartbeat. He recognizes your scent and can have permanent eye contact with you.
Babies Cry Less
Research indicates that babies who are carried on a daily basis
cry signifi cantly less. In a sling your baby is not forced to passively spend the day. He participates naturally in your daily activities. Hence, your baby can observe and hear quite a bit, which is
benefi cial for his psycho-social development. When he has had
enough, your baby simply closes his eyes and falls asleep on
your chest.
Stimulates balanced development
In the security of a sling, your baby experiences the world from a
safe position. The huge amount of stimuli he has to deal with in a
brief period of time does not frighten him because he is so close
to you. This feeling of security results in the development of a
positive self-image and later on, it forms the basis of a confi dent
and assured personality. Contrary to old popular belief, it has
become quite clear that carrying your baby in a sling does not
lead to spoiled and dependent children, but that the opposite
is accomplished.
And the father
During the fi rst few months it is not always easy for a young father to develop an equally close bond with baby as the mother.
However, with a sling, he can undertake a lot of things at a very
early stage with the baby safely tucked on his chest.
When using a baby carrier that is adapted to the wearer as well
as the baby, it is possible to carry a child as long as he wishes.
Children who are 2, 3, 4 or even 5 years old often get tired of
walking and will ask to be carried. Holding a child of this age in
your arms can put a lot of strain on one’s shoulders and back.
A baby carrier, however, will distribute the weight of the child
evenly. As a child progressively gains his independence, he
will go back and forth between wanting to do it all by himself,
and wanting help from others. Contrary to popular belief, meet-
ing his needs and reassuring him will boost his confi dence and
make him more independent.