Are we Manufacturing our Children?

Are we Manufacturing our Children?

We live in a society that is further and further separated from the Natural world and the Natural law that guides all living creatures.

We have built concrete jungles and have created a consumerist society focused in superficial values, where acquisition, accumulation and stock-piling of possessions is of high priority; whether we need them or not, we acquire things simply for the reason of having them because they are there. We feel we need everything we see advertised... We seem to have lost control of seeing the difference between needing and wanting, and believe that what we want is what we need.

Until one day, a major change in our life may bring us the experience of having to do without: we may find ourselves in a crossroad where we may need to start afresh in a new country, or we have a baby, or we lose our job, and other similar situations that break the inertia and routine of our everyday life.

Part of the set-up in our lives may involve children.

After years of building a particular lifestyle, we manage to finally completely organize our life when… our children arrive.

We think that they must fit in the system that already exists. We resist making any substantial changes mainly because of the loss of the independence and freedom we used to enjoy. And rather than following our children’s natural prompts and flow with their needs (especially at the beginning when they are babies) we follow guidance such as:

  • Sleep training - or the process of breaking our baby’s spirit by leaving him or her cry until s/he gives up. How will this nurture the child’s trust in the world?
  • Stop breastfeeding – it is inconvenient, hard to do, limits your independence and mobility, it is not socially acceptable. But the result is that we clutter their guts with man-made foodstuff, too much meat protein, sugars, sweets, and convenient foods in general – anything in a jar. How will this strengthen their immune system, endocrine system, nervous system… to mention but a few?
  • Mother confusion - We get them raised by nannies of different kinds (day nanny, night nurse, au-pair, crèche, etc) understandable if the mother must go to work. Who are they creating a bond with? If you are a mother, would you like your child to miss her or his nanny when she moves on to a new job or a new life, knowing that gap may stay there forever? Wouldn’t you like your baby to know that no matter where or when, you are the one who will always be there, the first port of call, the safety and protection of home?
  • They must have the best toys – We entertain them with an endless amount of toys and games that we are made believe (by clever marketing companies targeting parents’ insecurities and fears of their children not coming up to scratch) to be needed if we are to have a properly physically, mentally and emotionally developed toddler.

You get the picture.

In the meantime, due to geographical separation of families and other reasons for the different generations lacking meaningful relationships, these children miss out on knowing their grandparents, aunts, uncles and cousins, not learning valuable information of their cultural background among other things.

In the past, when I was little, all the children in the neighborhood used to play in the street. There were no cars then. Today, there is not enough parking space in the street and the council finds it very difficult to create undercover parking spaces. There are 3 rows of parked cars in the street where I used to live as a child, just enough for a small car to pass among them.

The number of toys we had was limited and I remember always enjoying Christmas as a very special day. Our birthdays were the second other occasions when we could receive some presents and in general, we were allowed to eat sweets only on Sundays (paid of course with our own pocket money, some of which was still expected to be saved!).

We were allowed to watch TV only on Saturday mornings (children programs) and I remember my sister and me getting up from bed, going to the TV room after breakfast, closing down the blinds and covering ourselves with blankets until midday watching TV. It was a very special time! No obligations and nothing else to do during those 2 or 3 hours.

We used to go outside to play in the dirt and I remember that every 24th of June (San Juan = Saint John) the whole neighborhood would get together, build a massive bond-fire, and eat hot chocolate and churros going around for free. That day, we would sing songs and play games until late at night… It was really memorable.

During the summer, all the children in the family used to get together in a very big and old house in the middle of nowhere in Burgos, in the centre of Spain (yes, the home town of El Cid Campeador!) and we used to spend countless hours in the river, catching frogs and tadpoles, pinching fruits from trees, going to the fields to help the caws with their work (well, maybe not exactly) and jumping from the massive pile of sacs of grain into a sea of grain underneath (how we didn’t suffocate ourselves is a mystery to me!).

I remember the wonderful smell of freshly cooked bread in the village’s bakery and its flavor. You could just eat bread all day long, every day!

Life seemed much simpler then. Nature seemed to play a very important, yet understated role in our lives, making so many memorable moments and fond memories. But today, there are so many dangers, limitations, schedules, meetings, arrangements and in general, trying to fit life into small compartments, that it seems rather incredible that there can be any creativity in any area at all. In fact, it is quite usual that people, including children, are doing so many things that we have hardly the opportunity to be and enjoy a moment of contemplation, which can get fixed in our mind as a fond memory.

We think of these moments as a waste of time because they don’t seem to accomplish anything… and so we perpetuate the separation from the natural world by stopping ourselves from identifying with the cycles and magnificent world of detail in nature.

But although the natural way is no longer natural nowadays, there is a growing concern among the parents who do not want their children to experience anything else than love, care, responsibility, family, friendship, nourishment, instead of having their family replaced by a group of strangers, their love replaced by toys and material things, their time together replaced by lack of quality in their time, or they simply don’t play together… because creativity and imagination seem to be today in the list of endangered species.

There is a growing amount of parents who can appreciate how special children are and who have decided that although the natural way is no longer natural nowadays, they are turning it all round making natural law become the ruling factor in their lives.

And so the cycle becomes complete and when we reach a critical mass of parents who think and act this way, our world will be ready to shift.

From the book: “Magical Conception, Effortless Pregnancy: Aligning with Energy, Allowing Life to Flow”. Link: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B007CLF3RU


Copyright ? Dr Ana Garcia PhD, DTM (2003 – 2019)

All rights reserved. No portion(s) of this book can be copied, used or reproduced for any manner without the expressed written consent of Dr Ana Garcia.

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