In Need of a Hug, Lisa Shambrook

A friend of mine, Lisa Shambrook, recently wrote a wonderful post called: In Need of a Hug. I loved it so much I wanted to share it on my blog too.

Here are some highlights, but to read the full post (with some great video links too) go over to Lisa's blog, HERE.  

****
In Need of a Hug - How Hugging offers affection, love, protection, and compassion - the last krystallos
I read this week that the more you hug your children the faster their brains develop. New-born babies shown more affection had stronger brain responses. This shouldn’t be a surprise. Touch and hugs show affection, love, protection, and compassion, everything a child needs. It’s one of the reasons babies are born and placed on their mother’s chest or at their breast – skin-on-skin touch helps bonding and gives comfort.

I also watched a report of a man, Antar Davidson , working with children recently separated from their mother in a migrant detention home in Tucson , who was asked to intervene and explain to three siblings aged 16, 10, and 8 that it was against shelter policy to hug . He was told to tell them to stop hugging. Antar refused and quit his job. These children only had each other left in a terrifying and alien situation and they were asked to relinquish touch between each other. It seems an atrocious and altogether backward move to make.


Removing touch from a relationship can be dangerous. The ability to convey love and emotion within a relationship is paramount to keeping a bond and an emotional connection. One of our basic needs is to feel closeness, to touch each other, and to feel security within love. Animals know this . My dog welcomes us home with physical touch, and my cats rub against us and crave being stroked.



Shared with permission.



 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on July 06, 2018 07:12
No comments have been added yet.