Your baby’s brain has a lot of growing to do. You can help your baby’s brain development through bonding – lots of smiles, cuddles and loving words.

It’s no coincidence that brand new humans are called ‘newborns’ instead of ‘just-borns’ or ‘recently-borns’. To these tiny humans, everything is new.
Although a newborn’s brain has about 100 million cells, the parts of the brain responsible for thinking, remembering and movement are not well developed. For example, newborns can’t figure out how to move their limbs to get more comfortable. They’re still not sure if they’re feeling hungry, tired, uncomfortable, ‘this-is-all-too-much’, or ‘I think I’m happy’.
Your newborn needs:
Love actually makes a baby grow physically. This is because it causes the brain to produce chemicals that make the cells connect together and develop. In practical terms, you can make those connections happen by:
Being physically affectionate
This can be holding, cuddling and rocking, talking, smiling and singing. Babies feel reassured and secure when held – they can identify the smell of mum, dad or whoever looks after them.
Babies particularly love warm skin-on-skin contact and soft reassuring stroking. Contact that is part of a baby’s routine (such as changing, washing and breastfeeding) is not only pleasurable for most newborns. It also makes a baby feel secure.
Responding to crying
Sometimes babies will cry because something is wrong – the nappy is wet, or they’re hungry, or the light is too bright. When you fix it, you make baby feel more comfortable and safe.
You might not be able to tell why baby’s crying. But by responding, you’re teaching baby to trust you – that you can be relied on. You cannot spoil your newborn.
Making baby feel safe
You can make your newborn feel safe and secure by:
Your newborn’s world is much more about seeing, hearing and feeling than it is about thinking. Providing sensory experiences for your newborn’s eyes, ears and skin puts baby’s brain to work and makes it grow. This in turn helps the parts of the brain responsible for memory, thought and language to connect and develop.
Try the following ideas to give your newborn mental stimulation:
Bornstein, M. (2002). Parenting infants. In M. H. Bornstein (Ed.), Handbook of parenting: Vol. 1. Children and parenting (2nd ed., pp. 3-43). Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.