Helene Goldnadel on Making Home Safe for a Child How would you feel when you find out that your toddler found his way up the stairs? Would you find it amusing to see your child managing to open the oven door? Let's face it. No matter how vigilant we might be, our children are bound to get into some kind of trouble every now and then. However, the "level" of danger that they get themselves into is our main concern.
Making home safe for a child takes some planning. Child proofing your home may start from the time your newborn baby comes home from the hospital, until the time your child complains that you're treating him like a baby. By then, he would have been wise enough to flee from the kitchen and avoid cleaning the dishes. Well, making home safe for a child does not really mean that you put on safety gates or fences till your child reaches puberty. Actually, parents would know when it is safe to let him wander off anywhere in the house.
Helene Goldnadel says that the most common mistake that parents make is to underestimate the development of their children. Some parents never expected their children to have already learned how to go up the stairs until they fell down the steps. Had the parents anticipated the development of their children, they would have installed gates to keep them off the "risky" areas of the house.
Making home safe for a child should not mean that you confine them in spaces that would not allow them to explore and play. No matter how thorough your childproofing is, there will eventually be instances of tumbles and falls. The important thing to remember is that no amount of childproofing can take the