<div>>Spike wrote:</div> <div>>We have done this. During gestation, we played music to Isaac. Our<BR>>reasoning was that if we played the same discs often enough, he would learn<BR>>these, consequently having them played for him after his birth would remind<BR>>him of the womb. For that reason, we carefully chose music that we could<BR>>play at night. We have a CD player that hangs on his crib. We played for<BR>>him Shaker music with hammered dulcimer and english horn, called Simple<BR>>Gifts by Coulter and Phillips. Now at bedtime he tends to calm down if the<BR>>Shaker music is on. I don't like music playing at night, but the exhaustion<BR>>level overpowers the disturbance. </div> <div> </div> <div>Anna Replies:)</div> <div>In my opinion, with having no particular experience to elaborate on:)</div> <div>I would think, that Isaac, likes Shaker. (I don't know Shaker:)</div>
<div>If you want him to sleep to music, then, find music that helps him be relaxed.</div> <div>It might not be what relaxes you and your wife:)</div> <div>But, it will relax him:)</div> <div>Anna</div> <div> </div> <div>Amara wrote:</div> <div>>My father used to sing this ditty to us (my sisters and I) when I </div> <div>>was little. </div> <div>>If you want, I can sing it to Isaac:<BR>><A href="http://www.amara.com/aboutme/ugunskurs.au">http://www.amara.com/aboutme/ugunskurs.au</A><BR><BR></div> <div>Anna Replies:)</div> <div>Using the word "singing" in this instance:</div> <div>Preaching is an analogy.</div> <div>Singing requires discipline in that domain.</div> <div>Don't try to sing an analogy when you don't know the domain, just preach.</div> <div> </div> <div> </div> <div>Anna:)</div> <div> </div> <div> </div> <div> </div> <div> </div> <div> </div> <div><BR> </div><p>
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