Your Toddler and Their Imagination - Dutch Lady Smart Moments

Breast milk is best for your baby

Breastfeeding is the best nutrition for healthy growth and development of babies. Exclusive breastfeeding for 6 months is the optimal way of feeding infants. Thereafter infants should receive complementary foods with continued breastfeeding up to two years or beyond. Good maternal nutrition helps sustain an adequate supply and quality of breast milk. Unnecessary introduction of bottle feeding, partially or fully, or of other complementary foods and drinks may have a negative impact on breastfeeding, which may be irreversible. Consult your doctor and consider the social and financial implications before deciding to use breast milk substitutes or if you have difficulty breastfeeding. Follow usage, preparation and storage instructions of breast milk substitutes or of other complementary foods and drinks carefully as improper or unnecessary use may pose a health hazard.

I have read and understood this. No thanks, visit Friesland Campina's website.

Your Toddler and Their Imagination

Your Toddler and Their Imagination

Imagination is an important and often overlooked component in a child’s development. A toddler’s brain is of greater density compared to an adult’s. Repeated use of a connection makes it permanent, while unused connections fade with age.

As you expose your child to new stimuli, you expand the horizons of his world. Triggering his imagination regularly when young will allow his brain to forge a connection with his imaginative abilities.

How you can help
Bring your toddler’s fantasy to life by reading picture books. It is good to select from varied sources for a healthy imagination. Doing so will also broaden his vocabulary and ability to express himself. Picture books also help visualise a story where words fail at this point.

Look for books with large, colourful imagery. Because the primary focus will be on the images, you can even improvise and customise the story for him. Your toddler’s brain craves for new input, so show him many pictures to feed his curiosity.

You don’t need to stick to visuals, either. Sounds help create associations with objects, too. Animal sounds, vehicle noises, and even commercial jingles become part and parcel of his world when repeated often enough. Some children are also better auditory learners, so be sure to give your child multi-sensory stimuli.

You can also go further and engage your child in ‘pretend play’. Pretending that he is a powerful wizard or comic hero makes him feel strong enough to take charge of the situation. In these pretend games, you may also find him creating rules for himself (a form of self-discipline) or putting himself in the shoes of a cat he passed by on the street (empathy). Children who pretend-play a lot are also found to become great problem solvers when older.

Be involved in these play sessions and let your child express himself. Let your inner child join him and go where his imagination goes. You might just learn a thing or two yourself!

Save time. Shop online!

Purchase Dutch Lady Nutri Plan™ for your little one in minutes.

Buy Now

You may also like

How to Manage a Fussy Eater

How to Manage a Fussy Eater

If feeding your toddler becomes more like a military operation gone wrong than a healthy mealtime, it can really wear you thin.

Read More

Playing is Learning

Playing is Learning

Many child psychologists advocate ‘playing as learning’.

Read More

Dispelling the Nightmares

Dispelling the Nightmares

Young children are especially prone to nightmares. After all, this is the stage when she actively absorbs new experiences with her growing imagination.

Read More