Facts About Odd Parenting Practices


Parenting techniques vary from culture to culture and there are fads that come and go. But does mother always know best? Below are 22 odd parenting techniques throughout history.


Odd Parenting Practices Facts

22. Fresh Air Babies

In the 1920s, experts encouraged parents to sunbathe their babies and to keep little ones out in the fresh air for as long as possible.

 Shutterstock

21. Baby cages

Continuing the fresh air mandate, city dwellers in the 1930s hung baby cages outside apartment windows so their children could get the recommended amount of fresh air and sun...while they were perilously suspended high above busy streets.

 Getty Images

20. Open Air Parking

In modern Denmark, parents dine and shop for hours while leaving their babies curbside in strollers to get fresh air.

 Pixabay

19. Spitting Image

Greek tradition has it that you should spit at a baby three times to ward off evil spirits, bad luck, and the evil eye.

 Shutterstock

18. Spitting Up

Wolof mothers in Mauritania spit in their newborn’s face, while fathers spit in the ears to give blessings that stick. For an extra dose of good luck, the parents rub saliva over the baby’s face.

 Wikimedia Commons, Mishimoto

17. Out of the Mouth of Babes

Before they even utter their first words, Igbo babies in Nigeria are given a blessing to ensure that they will be well-spoken: An articulate relative spits chewed up alligator pepper on a finger and then rubs it in the baby’s mouth.

 Pixabay

16. Thumbs Down

Parents went to great lengths in the 1940s to curb thumb-sucking. One product, made with nail polish peppered with capsicum and acetone (yep, that's a flammable liquid), was put on the baby's thumb to stop the habit.

 Flickr, Nelson Kwok

15. Swaddled Up

In the Middle Ages babies were tightly wrapped in linen bands until eight or nine months to help them to grow straight.

 Pixabay

14. Lard Bath

Many babies in the early 1900s had their first bath with lard.

 Getty Images

13. No Hugs

For many years in the early twentieth century, children were not to be hugged, kissed, or even touched too much. A 1928 parenting manual also cautioned against children sitting in their parents' laps.

 Getty Images

12. Proof of Lazy Parents

Baby-proofing was seen as a sign of laziness in the 1950s. Experts believed that mothers could keep their children in check by simply yelling at them. Did these "experts" ever actually talk to a real mother?

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11. Keep Calm and Carry On

People in Victorian England kept their kids calm with medicine laced with opium and other narcotics. That'll do it. 

 Shutterstock

10. Cold Bath

Mayan babies in Central America are given an ice-cold bath to treat heat rash and to sleep well. The babies scream a lot, but the mothers expect this. Sounds about right.

 Pixabay

9. Whistle Training

In Vietnam, babies are often potty-trained using a whistle. It works; Vietnamese babies are potty-trained at as early as nine months.

 Shutterstock

8. Wasting No Time

The Vietnamese might be onto something: in 1932, a US government pamphlet advised parents to start toilet training babies immediately after birth.

 Wikimedia Commons

7. Look Mom, No Diaper

Following these potty-training trends, modern moms and dads are choosing to skip diapers altogether; they raise their children diaper free from birth. The movement is called Elimination Communication or EC for short.

 Pixabay

6. They Grow up so Fast

As recently as the mid-1900s, two- and three-year-olds were expected to wash, feed, and dress themselves. The question parents are asking is: when did this end?

 Pixabay

5. The Seven-Year Hitch

In medieval times, seven-year-olds in England could be engaged to marry. They could also be held criminally responsible and even selected to be a priest.

 PxHere

4. Grounded

Until they are three months old, babies in Bali are not allowed to touch the ground; doing so is thought to defile their purity.

 Wikimedia Commons, CEphoto, Uwe Aranas

3. Smoke it Out

Three-day-old babies in the Eastern Cape of Africa are held upside down over a smoking bush to rid them of fear and shyness.

 Shutterstock

2. No Eye Contact

Parents in the Kisii ethnic group of Kenya dare not lock eyes with their newborns for fear of giving too much power to the infants. Hey, adults still use this on first dates.

 Shutterstock

1. Breast Dad in the World

The Aka tribe in central Africa is home to perhaps the best dads in the world. In this tribe, the men do the breastfeeding while the women go to work or hunt. Yes, men can breastfeed; they have all the equipment and only need the stimulation. Yes, we just found this out too.

 Shutterstock

 

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