Transcript

00:00:00Talk to me about daycare. What's the problem with daycare?
00:00:03Well, daycare, as I said, it's basically separating babies from their primary attachment figures,
00:00:11putting them in institutional settings with ratios of no less than five to one, usually
00:00:16eight to one caregiver to child ratio. And you're basically sending that child's cortisol
00:00:23levels, the research shows that salivary cortisol levels go through the roof. So babies go into
00:00:29high stress states. Now they're separated from their mother's bodies. And they're separated
00:00:33from the person in the world who's meant to make them feel safe. They're in a loud overstimulating
00:00:38setting with babies crying and caregivers, transient caregivers, alternating and some
00:00:44being absent. And it's a new caregiver because they're always out sick. And it's the worst,
00:00:51the worst possible caregiving situation for a child. There are so many better. If you have
00:00:56to work, the best is a mother or father, whoever's the primary attachment figure. The next best
00:01:03is kinship bonds, which are family or extended family members who have a more similar investment
00:01:09to children emotionally. The next best would be a single surrogate caregiver or a nanny
00:01:15or a babysitter who's going to be an alternative attachment figure to that baby, which will
00:01:19provide them with some sense of security and care for them in your home. And if you can't
00:01:23afford that, then share a caregiver. That's a big thing in California where they will split
00:01:28the cost of one caregiver. So that caregiver is now taking care of two or three children.
00:01:32You have now reduced the ratio and that child is being cared for in your home. And you have
00:01:36agency over that. Basically private daycare where you don't have to travel. And it's in
00:01:40your home. And so you have agency over who that person is, how they care for your child.
00:01:45You can put cameras in your house if you want. You can see what they do. You can observe them.
00:01:50You know who's taking, taking care of your children. And your child isn't going into this
00:01:55like high stress state of screaming, crying. If you go into a daycare center, you would
00:02:01cry. I always say to parents, you drop them off and you have this schizoid response where
00:02:07you shut down what you're feeling and go to work. But if you knew what happened in those
00:02:11daycare centers, if you heard those babies cry.
00:02:14What does happen? What happens in daycares? Crying babies because the bottom line is if
00:02:20I handed you eight babies and you're one person, could you soothe all those babies in distress
00:02:27at the same time? I'm not convinced I could soothe one of them.
00:02:30Okay. Now I'm giving you eight. And so what's happening is those one person cannot, you know,
00:02:38parents who have attachment disorders of their own think, "Oh, it's better for somebody else
00:02:44to care for my child because I'm not a good, I can't handle it." Without thinking, who's
00:02:49this person that I've just handed my baby to and how are they going to care for five to
00:02:54eight children and soothe them when they're in distress? And so parents just, it's like
00:02:59they shut down a part of their, it's like they shut down their empathy. It's like they have
00:03:04a schizoid response with empathy where they cannot see their baby's vulnerability or their
00:03:10baby suffering.
00:03:12What are your favorite studies that show how we shouldn't ignore early attachment in childhood?
00:03:20John Bowlby is the father of attachment. You need go no farther than John Bowlby, but you
00:03:25could look at all of the, what they call the stranger situation studies, which they've been
00:03:30doing since the 1960s. They have repeated this experiment over and over. In fact, I was, there's
00:03:38a researcher named Beatrice Beebe in New York. She's very famous. And I was in some of her
00:03:43videos because when I was a young social work student, I did some volunteering in a stranger
00:03:51situation study. Again, this situation is repeated over and over and over again. It's the most
00:03:56well-known attachment security study. And it sort of goes something like this. The mother
00:04:02and baby are playing in a room. A stranger walks in. The mother walks out of the room.
00:04:09The mother walks back in and there's a reunion. It's sort of, they look at the baby's reactions.
00:04:15They look at the interaction between the mother and the baby. The interaction between the stranger
00:04:19and the baby. They look at the reunion between the mother and the baby. So this is something
00:04:23that's done over and over. We have so much longitudinal research on attachment security
00:04:29going back to the sixties. So much research to show that attachment security, if you're
00:04:36not securely attached at 12 months, then 72% of those babies 20 years later will not be
00:04:42securely attached. And that insecure attachment is tied to depression, anxiety, borderline
00:04:48personality disorder. So we have the research, the research has been there for many years.
00:04:55We just, now we have, now we have the neuroscience research and the epigenetics research to support
00:05:01the attachment research.
00:05:03Square this circle with the heritability of attachment style for me.
00:05:09The heritability of attachment style? No. So it's generational expression. So I sort of
00:05:16balk at the idea of an inheritance. It's inheritance of acquired characteristics. So you don't inherit
00:05:23it genetically. You inherit sensitivity genetically, but you inherit through acquired characteristics,
00:05:30meaning your environment. A mother who is insecurely, anxiously attached will more likely produce
00:05:38an anxiously attached baby. A mother who is avoidantly attached will more likely produce
00:05:43an avoidantly attached baby. A mother who has a disorganized attachment and is a borderline
00:05:48personality disorder kind of patient will more likely produce a child who has a disorganized
00:05:53attachment and probably a borderline personality disorder. So we call it generational expression
00:05:59of mental illness. So inheritance of acquired characteristics.
00:06:08I guess it's interesting to think about predisposition versus predetermination with stuff like this.
00:06:15The raw materials are there. I've always thought this about, I'm a big Plowman fan. I think
00:06:21he's one of the best researchers of all time. He's about the fifth most cited psychologist
00:06:27in the 20th century. The guy that, kind of the grandfather of behavioral genetics. I think
00:06:33he rules. And when I think about the first few years of a child's life, it's such a weird
00:06:40confluence of what were the raw materials that you were made of? How would they expressed
00:06:47in the people who gave you them? They are expressed in behavior. And that behavior happens to be
00:06:56the environment. It would be like a cow that cuts its own leg off to then cook it in a stew.
00:07:04You know, like the very thing that it's made of is the thing that's creating it. And that's
00:07:09a fucking horrific analogy. But it seems so unfair. This is what I sort of came back to
00:07:17when I started to think deeply about behavioral genetics and attachment style. That you have
00:07:23presumably an anxiously attached mother has the raw materials to be anxiously attached
00:07:30and then is presenting in an anxiously attached way. Which means that the child that has the
00:07:34raw materials to be anxiously attached gets that reinforced. And all of this happens pre-verbal.
00:07:40All of this happens before you can even remember. I can't remember anything basically before
00:07:44age nine or ten. Really spotty memories. You know the song from Hamilton, you want to be
00:07:51in the room where it happens? The room where it happens is zero to three. That's what it
00:07:57means to be in the room where it happens. And no one wants to talk about the room where
00:08:01it happens because they can't remember it consciously because it's pre-conscious memory, but it's
00:08:05what shapes your personality. So nature versus nurture is always an interesting question because
00:08:14we are born with a constitution, meaning constitution is the amount of aggression we're born with.
00:08:19Babies are all born aggressive. Was it the most aggressive people on the planet? Three-year-olds?
00:08:24Well, no actually. Babies are born dysregulated and babies are all born aggressive. So people
00:08:30get it wrong. People think that babies are born regulated and we dysregulate them by neglecting
00:08:37them or abusing them. No, actually babies are born dysregulated with highs and lows. If you
00:08:44ever just observe a baby, infants that are newborn infants, they will go from being happy
00:08:53one second and zero to 60 in three seconds. Boy, they'll be screaming. Just the most bipolar
00:08:59little blobs. Okay, but they're not blobs. They're incredibly sort of present, but they
00:09:07have no emotional regulation. And it is by that skin-to-skin contact, that calm, soothing
00:09:14tone of voice of the primary attachment figure. Every time the baby's in distress, the mother
00:09:19soothes the baby. The way I would describe it is babies are born like sailing a sailboat
00:09:26in the Pacific in a storm. This is how babies are born. By having a mother physically and
00:09:32emotionally present in those first three years who is calm and present and loving and soothing,
00:09:39you don't want to get the baby flatlining. That's not what we call homeostasis. We call
00:09:45homeostasis more like sailing in the Caribbean on a sunny day. There's waves, but you can
00:09:51manage them and then they're kind of manageable and pleasant. And that's where you want to
00:09:57get the baby. But you cannot do that if you throw your baby into a daycare setting. If
00:10:02you disappear 10 hours a day and go to work and the one person that's meant to help them
00:10:08to learn these things, they're not learning. So we have children who are going into primary
00:10:14school years and then adolescence completely dysregulated, which is why they're all breaking
00:10:21down in this mental health crisis. It's not a mystery, but you have to go back to the
00:10:26room where it happens. But aggression is one of the things that you're born with constitutionally.
00:10:33In the old days, you used to go into a hospital, into a maternity ward. Thank goodness John
00:10:37Bowlby got rid of the maternity wards. John Bowlby went into the hospitals in the UK,
00:10:43and he said, "No, no, no. Those babies, they need to lie in with their mothers. They need
00:10:48to be, they've come out of their mothers." What was a maternity ward? It was a room where
00:10:53they took the babies from the mothers so the mothers could rest and they took them. So now
00:10:59nurses who they didn't recognize this were just mammals, didn't recognize the smell or
00:11:05the voice, couldn't find their mother's eyes because they saw their mother's eyes when they
00:11:10were born because they would show you the baby, "Here's your baby. Now, bye." They would take
00:11:14the baby away, put it in this maternity room with other screaming, crying babies. The mother
00:11:20is sleeping and they're telling the mother, "This is normal." I mean like cuckoo, right?
00:11:26So he said, "Wait a second." He studied cultures all over the world. He wrote a big book like
00:11:31this called Attachment, which I recommend everyone who has a baby to read. And another book like
00:11:36this is big like this called Separation, where he studied cultures all over the world, universal.
00:11:42The idea that attachment security is critical to a baby's emotional regulation and conditioning.
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Key Takeaway

Institutional daycare with ratios as high as 8:1 triggers high cortisol stress in infants, disrupting the critical zero-to-three-year window required for developing lifelong emotional regulation and secure attachment.

Highlights

Infants in institutional daycare settings typically face caregiver-to-child ratios ranging from 5:1 to 8:1.

Research on salivary cortisol levels indicates that babies in daycare environments experience significantly elevated stress states.

The 'Strange Situation' study reveals that 72% of infants who are not securely attached at 12 months remain insecurely attached 20 years later.

Insecure attachment is a primary precursor to adult depression, anxiety, and borderline personality disorder.

Human infants are born in a state of emotional dysregulation and require skin-to-skin contact and consistent soothing to achieve homeostasis.

Generational expression of mental illness occurs through the inheritance of acquired characteristics and environmental reinforcement rather than direct genetic coding.

Timeline

The Biological Stress of Institutional Care

  • Daycare separates infants from primary attachment figures during critical developmental windows.
  • Staffing ratios often reach eight children per single caregiver in institutional settings.
  • Salivary cortisol data confirms that infants in these environments enter high-stress states.

Separation from the mother's body removes the child's primary source of safety and security. These settings are often overstimulating due to loud noise and transient caregivers who are frequently absent or replaced. The high-stress response is a direct result of placing biologically vulnerable infants in an environment where their immediate emotional needs cannot be met.

Hierarchy of Optimal Caregiving Alternatives

  • Kinship bonds represent the most effective alternative when parents must work.
  • Nannies or shared caregivers in the home environment provide a safer surrogate attachment.
  • A single caregiver cannot effectively soothe eight distressed infants simultaneously.

The ideal caregiving structure prioritizes the mother or father, followed by extended family members who have an emotional investment in the child. If private care is unaffordable, sharing a nanny between two or three families reduces the ratio and allows care to remain within the home. Parents often engage in a 'schizoid' emotional response to cope with the guilt of leaving a crying child, effectively shutting down their own empathy to function at work.

Longitudinal Impact of Attachment Security

  • The 'Strange Situation' protocol measures infant reactions to maternal separation and reunion.
  • Attachment status at 12 months predicts adult psychological health with high statistical accuracy.
  • Modern neuroscience and epigenetics support 60 years of longitudinal attachment research.

John Bowlby’s research establishes that secure attachment is the foundation of mental health. In the 'Strange Situation' experiment, researchers observe how a baby interacts with a stranger and, more importantly, how they react when the mother returns to the room. Failure to establish security in the first year of life creates a trajectory toward personality disorders and chronic anxiety in adulthood.

Generational Expression and the Pre-verbal Room

  • Attachment styles are passed down through acquired environmental characteristics rather than genetics.
  • The period from age zero to three is the most influential phase for personality formation.
  • Anxious or avoidant maternal behavior reinforces identical traits in the child before they can speak.

While sensitivity may be genetic, the specific style of attachment is a product of the environment. An insecurely attached mother is statistically likely to produce an insecurely attached child because her behavior serves as the child's primary environment. This 'room where it happens' occurs during the pre-conscious memory phase, meaning the foundational traits of a person's character are set before they have any narrative memory of the events.

Emotional Regulation and the Myth of the Regulated Baby

  • Infants are born naturally dysregulated and aggressive rather than calm and stable.
  • Homeostasis is achieved only through the consistent physical presence of a soothing caregiver.
  • The current mental health crisis in adolescents stems from early childhood dysregulation.

Babies function like a sailboat in a Pacific storm, moving from happy to screaming in seconds. They lack the internal mechanism to calm themselves and must 'borrow' the nervous system of their mother through skin-to-skin contact and soothing tones. Removing this support for 10 hours a day in a daycare setting prevents the child from learning emotional regulation, leading to a breakdown in mental health as they reach primary school and adolescence.

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