The Boy Who Was Raised as a Dog (35 page)

BOOK: The Boy Who Was Raised as a Dog
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Unfortunately, we've become so afraid of unhealthy touch that we may actually make it more likely by failing to meet the needs of children for healthy physical affection. This can make them more vulnerable to pedophiles, not less, as children will tend to seek out those who appear affectionate toward them. As we increase distrust of others by keeping children inside, by not allowing them to play spontaneously in their neighborhoods with their friends, by rigidly structuring their lives, we are also destroying the community bonds that keep all of us healthy.
I've seen the horrors that sexual molestation of children can cause. They are clear in the Gilmer case, in Tina's story and so many others. I know better than most people that worries about sexual abuse are grounded in a genuine and terrifying reality. But I also know that predators thrive by picking off the most vulnerable, by getting in where the fabric of the community is weakest. Any predator looks for the weakest prey; it's another aspect of biology. In order to keep our children safe, therefore, we need to form healthy relationships and connect with others; we need to hug our children. Protecting children needs to be done in
ways that respect their needs by strengthening the community, not splintering it. To keep children safe in daycare, don't let lone adults touch children unobserved but, at the same time, don't ban physical affection and comfort. To create a safe neighborhood, get to know your neighbors. Don't keep your children locked away or only engaged in structured activities. We know enough about human nature to shape policies in ways that reflect and respect biology rather than ignoring it and then failing to recognize the consequences of doing so.
 
WHAT ELSE CAN we do to protect children from trauma, neglect and abuse? And how can we best help those who do get hurt? For one, we need to recognize that our current policies and practices do not put relationships first and that the current systems in place to help children don't work. We need to acknowledge that many of the “solutions” we currently have for social problems do not effectively address them and may exacerbate them in the long run. We need to understand what we evolved to need and then work on ways to provide those things in the modern world.
A good place to start is at the beginning, with the way we treat infants and new parents. As we've seen, in order to develop normally infants need the devoted attention of one or two primary, consistent caretakers, and those caretakers need the daily support of a loving community that recognizes and relieves the exhausting demands of new parenthood. When humans evolved they didn't live in a world where one woman spent her day alone with her offspring while her partner spent his day at the office. Both men and women worked hard to ensure survival, but women worked together with young children close at hand and older boys often accompanied men and were trained by them. An overwhelmed mother could hand her infant off to an aunt or a sister or a grandmother: there were, on average, four adolescents and adults for every young child. Today we think that a daycare center has an excellent adult/child ratio when there is one caregiver for every five children!
As primatologist and evolutionary theorist Sarah Blaffer Hrdy put it in an interview with
New Scientist
magazine, “Policy makers imagine that nuclear families epitomize the ‘golden age' but in terms of the deep history of the human family, it is unusual for children to be reared only by their mothers and fathers. Children accustomed to nurturing from others view their social world as a benign place and act accordingly.” Hrdy's book,
Mother Nature: Maternal Instincts and How They Shape the Human Species
, stresses the importance of extended family, whom she calls “alloparents.” She notes: “For children at risk of neglect, it is amazing how much difference alloparental interventions, say, from a grandparent, can make.” We have seen that throughout this book.
Further, when humans evolved, infants didn't have their own room—they didn't even have their own bed. They were usually never more than a few feet away from an adult or sibling at any time and most often were being held. Many of the sleeping and crying problems seen in infancy today are likely caused by the fact that a human infant left alone and out of sight distance of adults for almost the entire evolutionary history of humankind would have been facing near-certain death. It's hardly surprising that babies find being left alone to sleep distressing. In fact, what's startling (and what reflects the adaptability of the human brain) is how quickly so many get used to it. Infants might ultimately evolve such that being left alone doesn't so easily set off their stress systems, but evolution works over eons, not the timeline preferred by most parents.
We need to educate people about the needs of infants and create better ways of addressing them. We need to have an infant- and child-literate society, where everyone who has or works with children knows what to expect. For example, if an infant doesn't cry at all, like Connor, it's just as much of a cause for concern as if he cries too much. Becoming more aware of age-appropriate behavior will ensure that, when necessary, children can get help as soon as possible.
Further, we need to call an immediate cease-fire in the “Mommy wars” and recognize that everyone benefits when new parents have the
choice to spend more time with their children and when they have community support and access to quality childcare. As Hrdy says: “We evolved in a context where mothers had much more social support. Infants need this social engagement to develop their full human potential.”
Many European countries—particularly the Scandinavian countries—have managed to have both highly productive economies and provide high quality child care and lots of paid family leave. There's no reason that we can't develop similar policies.
 
 
 
TO HELP CREATE a biologically respectful home environment, parents can also do simple things like setting boundaries on media and technology—for example, having regular family meals when all phones, televisions and computers are off. In addition they can model behaviors that emphasize the importance of relationships, empathy and kindness in their interactions with people, whether they be relatives, neighbors, shopkeepers or others they encounter in their daily lives.
Schools, too, need to change. Our educational system has focused nearly obsessively on cognitive development and almost completely ignored children's emotional and physical needs. Only two decades ago elementary schools had both significant lunch periods and recess times, and gym class was mandatory several days a week. Homework rarely took more than an hour to complete each night and children were thought to be capable of remembering deadlines and meeting them on their own. Big projects that required parental assistance were undertaken only a few times each year.
All of those things were respectful to the biology of young children, particularly that of boys who mature more slowly than girls do. Schools recognized that a short attention span is characteristic of childhood, that children need free time to run and play and learn how to socialize with each other. My co-author Maia's nine-year-old nephew once told his mom that he didn't know who his friends were. His days in school were
so structured that he didn't have enough free time to build real relationships. There was no recess. This is insane. In our rush to be sure our children have an environment as “enriched” as that of the neighbors' children, we are actually emotionally impoverishing them. A child's brain needs more than words and lessons and organized activities: it needs love and friendship and the freedom to play and daydream. Knowing this might allow more parents to resist social pressures and begin to push schools back in a more sensible direction.
In addition, our educational system and our society's general disrespect for the importance of relationships is undermining the development of empathy. Like language, empathy is a fundamental capacity of the human species, one that helps define what a human being is. But like language, empathy, too, must be learned. Ordinarily, we pick up both during early childhood, but as Connor's and Leon's stories illustrate, the development of empathy and the relational skills that rely upon it require critical input from the environment. While fortunately very few babies are left on their own for long periods of time the way those two boys were, all too many young children are spending more and more of their lives in environments so structured and regimented that there is little time to build friendships and get the practice and repetition needed to support empathetic caring. Worse yet, time spent with their parents is often limited as well, and what remains is rapidly filled up with hours of homework or, alternatively, hours of television, computers and video games.
Brain development is use-dependent: you use it or you lose it. If we don't give children time to learn how to be with others, to connect, to deal with conflict and to negotiate complex social hierarchies, those areas of their brains will be underdeveloped. As Hrdy states: “One of the things we know about empathy is that the potential is expressed only under certain rearing conditions.” If you don't provide these conditions through a caring, vibrant social network, it won't fully emerge.
We also need to recognize that not all stress is bad, that children require challenges and risk as well as safety. It is natural to want to protect
our children, but we need to ask ourselves when the desire for risk-free childhoods has gone too far. The safest playground, after all, would have no swings, no steep slides, no rough surfaces, no trees, no other children—and no fun. Children's brains are shaped by what they do slowly and repeatedly over time. If they don't have the chance to practice coping with small risks and dealing with the consequences of those choices, they won't be well prepared for making larger and far more consequential decisions. In today's safety culture we seem to swing from strictly monitoring and guiding our children from infancy through high school, and then releasing them to the absolute freedom of college (though some parents are trying to encroach there as well). We have to remember that for most of human history adolescents took on adult roles earlier and rose admirably to the challenge. Many of the problems we have with teenagers result from failing to adequately challenge their growing brains. While we now know that the brain's decision-making areas aren't completely wired until at least their early twenties, it is experience-making decisions that wires them, and it can't be done without taking some risks. We need to allow children to try and fail. And when they do make the stupid, shortsighted decisions that come from inexperience, we need to let them suffer the results. At the same time we also need to provide balance by not setting policies that will magnify one mistake, like drug use or fighting, into a life-derailing catastrophe. Unfortunately, this is exactly what our current “zero tolerance” policies—that expel children from school for just one rule violation—do.
We know that our biology predisposes us to mirror the actions of those we see around us. We know that what we repeat, we reinforce and ultimately incorporate. The more we do something, the stronger the system devoted to it becomes in our brain. These facts are wonderful when what we are considering repeating is loving and nurturing, but they are frankly terrifying when we think about violence and the increasing number of simulations of violence that surround us and our children.
Living in a pervasively violent community, being economically disadvantaged or witnessing or being victimized oneself by violent acts are far
more important factors in determining which children will grow up violent than simple video game or television exposure. Reducing economic inequality and helping victims of domestic violence and child abuse are critical if we want to cut violence and crime. While most abused children do not grow up to become abusers themselves, the odds that a parent will be abusive or neglectful increase dramatically if he or she has had such experiences early in life. But this can be made even worse if such children live in frayed communities, are surrounded by simulations of violence and have few countervailing positive social interactions.
The American Psychiatric Association estimates that the average child views some 16,000 simulated murders and 200,000 acts of violence on television alone by the time she turns eighteen, although no research yet even documents the amount of exposure from violent video games or explores how it affects children's behavior. To build a society that emphasizes “the better angels” of our nature, limiting children's exposures to such violence is important. We've seen throughout this book how small influences and decisions can add up to big problems over time. As a result, changing many little negative influences could ultimately have a large effect.
 
FURTHER, HUMANS EVOLVED in a situation in which cooperation was critical to survival. Although we have never been entirely peaceful, some societies have raised children and settled disputes in ways that tend to tone down our violent tendencies, while others have acted in ways that amp them up. One of the most difficult questions facing evolutionary theorists was understanding how cooperation evolved, because the “winners” in evolution are those animals that reproduce most successfully, and quite often selfish behavior maximizes the chances of survival and reproduction. Evolutionists had long emphasized “nature, red in tooth and claw,” but a view that focused on the competition of the fittest for survival missed one of the most fascinating and important characteristics of humans and quite a few other species: the propensity for altruism.
Over time researchers discovered that in certain, delicately balanced situations, cooperation will arise in nature because those animals that do cooperate in these conditions are more likely to survive than those that always act on their own. In order for cooperation to persist, however, these favorable circumstances must also continue. In humans, the requirements for the maintenance of cooperation include a sense that others are likely to treat you fairly and the recognition and punishment (whether through legal systems or social rejection) of those who violate trust and cheat to benefit themselves at the expense of others.

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