Top 12 Quotes & Sayings by Frederick Leboyer

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a French author Frederick Leboyer.
Last updated on December 18, 2024.
Frederick Leboyer

Frédérick Leboyer was a French obstetrician and author. He is best known for his 1974 book, Birth Without Violence, which popularized gentle birthing techniques, in particular, the practice of immersing newborn infants in a small tub of warm water — known as a "Leboyer bath" — to help ease the transition from the womb to the outside world. He also advocated low lighting and quiet in a warm room to limit the supposed shock of birth,[Reynolds, Concise Encyclopedia of Special Education, 138] and that a newborn be laid on its mother's stomach and allowed to bond, instead of being taken away for tests.

Yes, hell exists. It is not a fairy tale. One indeed burns there. This hell is not at the end of life. It is here. At the beginning. Hell is what the infant must experience before he gets to us.
This howling mouth, this head which rolls back and tries to escape.
This tragic brow, these closed eyes, eyebrows raised and knotted. — © Frederick Leboyer
This tragic brow, these closed eyes, eyebrows raised and knotted.
These hands which stretch out, implore, beg, then rise to the head in a gesture of calamity.
Imagining birth as the baby experiences it was an entirely new way of looking at it.
Once we remember that all that takes place during the first days of life on the emotional level shapes the patterns of all future reactions , we cannot but wonder why such a torture has been inflicted on the child. How could a being who has been aggressed in this way, while totally helpless, develop into a relaxed, loving, trusting person? Indeed, he will always never be able to trust anyone in life. He will always be on the defensive, unable to open up to others and to life.
Yes, we should not forget that the five senses are one. And all of them extensions of the skin
It is through our hands that we speak to the child. That we communicate. Touch is the child's first language, understanding comes long after feeling
The one you confront in Yoga is yourself. All that is rigid and stiff in you, all that says 'No.
Birth may be a matter of a moment, but it is a unique one.
Learn to respect this sacred moment of birth, as fragile, as fleeting, as elusive as dawn.
Being touched and caressed, being massaged, is food for the infant; food as necessary as minerals, vitamins, and proteins. Deprived of this food, the name of which is love, Babies would rather die. And often they do.
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