How Music Can Mold A Child’s Mind

When a baby is born, they have unlimited potential, and one way that parents can help unlock this potential is by exposing them to music at an early age. It’s common for babies to react to music and sound with enthusiasm. In fact, an infant’s hearing develops right after they are born, so if you start exposing them to music at an early age, their brain starts to develop, and it doesn’t matter how old they are.

When you encourage an infant to listen to music, you bond with them, boost their language skills and peak their curiosity about the world. Parents who expose their children to music at an early age see the following benefits:

Faster Learning Times

Your baby’s mind is genetically wired to learn, and it’s always working to learn new things. It’s common for babies to babble a lot before they learn how to speak, but most people don’t know that babies babble in a musical way. Your child uses rhythm and various musical ideas to make learning easier, and if you expose them to music regularly, you encourage new musical passageways in their brain. When these develop, they have them forever, and you help them develop a brain that picks up on things quickly.

Bonding Time

Musical artists like Steve Wynn have been quoted as saying that music helps people bond with one another. Research supports this statement; when you listen to music, it releases oxytocin in your brain, and this causes you to bond with the person that you are experiencing it with. This bonding also occurs when you listen to music with your child; the same chemicals are released, and you form an unbreakable bond with your child.

Studies show that this happens with all types of music, so you aren’t stuck just listening to children songs and lullabies. All music is child friendly, so listen to music that you enjoy; it’ll encourage more bonding when you listen to something that you like.

Learn To Speak Faster

Studies have shown that infants who play with toys like drums and sound shakers tend to develop communicative gestures before other children in their age group. These gestures are their way of communicating, and they lead to faster learning times.

If your child learns to be expressive through music, they’ll want to be more expressive with words as well. Setting words to music also helps children pick up on language faster, so it’s a win-win situation for parents who want to give their children an early understanding of language and expression.

When you listen to music with your child, you spend quality time with them. Most parents are super busy during the day, and they often find that it’s very hard to give their children all the attention that they deserve. Throw on some music, and encourage your child to listen to it. It’s a great way to build new pathways in their mind, and it encourages communication and bonding. You really can’t lose when you expose your child to music at an early age.

About Jammie Morey

Jammie is of Native American descent, her family is from the Ojibway/Chippewa tribe in Mount Pleasant, Michigan. She was born and raised in Michigan and currently resides there with her daughter. She is a single parent and enjoys spending time with her daughter. Jammie is a home healthcare aide and loves what she does outside the home. Jammie is Owner of The Neat Things in Life.

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