Your little one is growing up fast now; it seems only yesterday that they were just a small bundle in your arms.
Now they’re ready for the two most important milestones a child could ever go through: walking and talking.
But this is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the exciting new developments that await them.
Now that your infant is between the ages of 7 and 9 months old, here are the physical, cognitive and emotional milestones that they will go through.
Physical Development
At 7 to 9 months old, your child’s rapid growth is slowing down a bit. They’ll be gaining approximately 500 grams each month. They are also now growing only around 1.3 cm in height per month.
As they are still teething, they will still be putting objects into their mouths.
Your baby is now able to sit on their own without help, freeing their hands for more playtime. This sets an important foundation for standing and walking later on.
Crawling and Standing
Your baby is now becoming more restless. They are no longer satisfied with just sitting around anymore. They would have learned how to crawl by now. If not, you may notice them scooting about or rolling over.
Your baby is also now able to sit on their own without help, freeing their hands for more playtime. Previously, they may have been impeded with their tripod sitting position. Now, they can anchor themselves without using their arms.
Sitting up is one of the key indicators that they are now ready to start standing.
By the end of their first 9 months, you’ll find that your little one is already beginning to pull themselves up. You may see them grasping the edge of a chair or sofa and getting on their feet all on their own.
Babies at this age don’t even need encouragement to start standing.
It is important to keep an eye on them at this stage to help them. Your baby may still not be strong enough to stand without holding onto something. Most only get strong enough to do so by 10 or 12 months old.
Visual and Motor Skills
With their overall vision and sight improving, your child can now see farther away and can point to faraway objects approximately 6 metres away.
With this improved eyesight, their fine motor skills improve too. By the end of their 9th month, they can now deliberately use the pincer grasp.
This is where they use their thumb and forefinger to pick up small objects such as toys, finger foods, etc. This marks an important achievement for children this age: hand-eye coordination.
With this new skill unlocked, they can now do more interesting and complex things, such as transfer objects between either hand, bang objects together, and throw objects on the floor.
Throwing objects is also part of their cognitive development, which will be explained further later.
Other than that, your baby might also be able to stack blocks on top of one another and to put objects inside other objects (e.g., putting a ball in a cup).
Cognitive Development
Your baby’s neurons are firing at hyperspeed now, creating new formations as they learn and absorb new information about the world. Between 7 and 9 months they now have a basis for language development.
Their sense of imagination and understanding of cause and effect are also growing. Many of these skills overlap with their physical milestones, as you will see later.
Understanding
Your baby is now able to understand what you’re saying to a certain degree. They can follow simple instructions.
When they want attention, they’ll squeal, babble, or make some other noise. Through imitation and observation of adults and other people around them, your little one is also able to understand how things work.
By 9 months old, you’ll notice them doing things like pretending to drink from a cup, putting on a necklace, hugging a doll, or making a stuffed animal walk.
They’ll also be able to put a spoon in their mouth, run a brush through their hair, and even turn the pages of a book.
Cause and Effect
As part of this deeper understanding, your little one is also testing the limits of their reality. They do this mostly by throwing things onto the floor.
Throwing things or banging things, etc., is all part of how they try to understand causality: If I do A, B happens.
They are not just trying to figure out the laws of gravity but also about the reactions of other people when they do what they do.
You’ll see the results of this experimentation phase when they see a wind-up toy stop moving and give it back to you for you to start it back up again.
Baby Jargon
Your little one’s vocalisations are becoming more and more sophisticated. They can start to speak simple words like ‘hi’ and ‘bye-bye’or ‘yes’ and ‘no’. This is part of their baby talk, or ‘baby jargon’.
This is where you can hear them talk in babbles that sound like sentences but are actually just gibberish. You’ll notice they’ll try to join in on adult conversations this way as part of their learning by imitation.
However, they might also start saying actual words like ‘mama’ or ‘dada’. By 9 months of age, your little one is now able to recognise their own name. When someone calls them, they’ll turn their heads and smile.
Emotional Development
Your baby is starting to understand their role in the family better. Because of all the attention they’re getting, they begin to enjoy interacting with others.
Between the ages of 7 and 9 months old, your little one’s sense of attachment will be fully developed. They will be like a barnacle, attached to you or your spouse 24/7.
Here’s what else is in store for them as they go through this area of development.
Attachment
Now that your baby is spending all their time with you 24/7, they will begin to form attachments. You are their anchor and their north star. They will look to you for safety, comfort and security in a more profound and self-aware way.
As their parent, their relationship with you from this moment on informs every relationship they will ever have throughout their life. Their friendships, their romantic rrelationship, and even their relationship with strangers.
So how you conduct yourself in your own relationships will determine whether your child has a positive or negative experience with others in the future.
Attachment is a normal part of their social development. It allows them to learn social cues, manners, courtesy, eempathy, and other important social behaviours.
However, as a side effect of this attachment, they also now may develop separation anxiety. They will want you in their sight all the time; you may even find it difficult to use the bathroom with the door closed.
Stranger Danger
Another side effect of this budding child-parent attachment is what is known as stranger fear or stranger anxiety. Before this, your baby may not have minded being held by others. Back then, they have yet to develop a certain level of self-awareness or attachment to their primary caregivers.
But now that they’re conscious of others and themselves, they begin to fear and even mistrust others. If someone unfamiliar approaches them, they will hide behind their parents or even cry.
Unless they see someone every day, they will immediately get stranger anxiety.
They will trust a housekeeper that comes every day more than they will a close blood relative who visits only a few times a year.
Empathy
Your baby is now extra sensitive to emotional cues. When other people are happy, they are happy. When they see someone cry, they will cry.
They will also start to understand things like sharing and turn-taking. They may ask others to participate in their playtime by giving them their toys. Most of the time, this will probably be you or another caretaker.
Their sense of compassion and self-service will grow in proportion to how you interact with others in your own life as an adult.
Remember the saying, children do as you do, not as you say. There is never a more important time in your journey as a parent than now to start being a proper role model for your child.
Making Progress
At 7 to 9 months of age, your child is already beginning to show their identity. They are putting their foot down, so to speak, learning to stand on their own two feet. They may also start to form more complex vocalisations with their mouths.
These are all positive indications of their development going as planned.
Remember to shower them with lots of warmth and affection. How you build your relationship with your child now matters more than ever, as it will determine the trajectory of their own lives forever.
And that starts by fostering a happy marriage, a happy family, and making sure your little one has the happiest childhood they could possibly have.
Disclaimer: The information provided in this article is for informational purposes only and should not be considered as medical advice from Mamahood. For any health-related concerns, it is advisable to consult with a qualified healthcare professional or medical practitioner.
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