There is nothing more pure in this world than the love between a child and a caring parent. But even in the world of healthy attachments and strong family bonds, this viral video takes the cake.
Twitter user @TeesePeese shared a compilation of highlights showing her son’s reaction at daycare pickup, and it’s seriously the most precious thing ever.
“I really do love this video,” she wrote. “I recorded my son’s pick up almost every day and this is his reaction every single time. For his 5th bday (yesterday) I took my favorites and made a lil compilation, from infancy to just last week.”
The squeals. The smiles. The skipping for joy. Gracious, it doesn’t get any sweeter.
i really do love this video. i recorded my son’s pick up almost every day and this is his reaction every single tim… https://t.co/19YGEPWED8
— Teese (@TeesePeese)
1635624659.0
Clearly that’s a boy who adores his mama—and also has an adorable sense of enthusiasm.
Some new parents may worry that sending their child to daycare will negatively affect their child’s attachment to them, but according to psychologist Noam Shpancer Ph.D, that worry is unfounded as long as the family environment is healthy at home.
“Available data indicate that, for most children, parental attachment processes are not disrupted by daycare participation,” writes Shpancer. “Home variables, such as maternal sensitivity, are the strongest predictors of parent-child attachment, even for daycare children.”
Clearly this kiddo’s parent-child attachment hasn’t suffered from being in daycare. Research also shows what common sense should also tell us—the quality of daycare matters.
Unfortunately, quality daycare can be prohibitively expensive, which is why the proposed affordable childcare provisions in the Build Back Better plan are a huge deal. Millions of parents have to work to support their families and middle-class American families spend an average of 14% of their income on childcare—double what the limit would be under the Build Back Better framework. And the U.S. is an outlier in this area. According to The New York Times, other wealthy nations contribute an average of $14,000 per year for a toddler’s child care costs, while the U.S. contributes merely $500.
The virtues of stay-at-home motherhood versus working motherhood have been debated for decades, but no one can deny that childcare should be high quality and affordable whether a parent chooses to work or has to work. I was able to and chose to stay home during my kids’ early childhoods, but I would be thrilled for my tax dollars to go toward helping all families get the support and childcare they need to make their individual situations work. That feels like much more useful and important spending than building bigger and better bombs we’ll likely never use, but maybe that’s just me.
At any rate, love seeing kiddos loving on their mamas, especially ones with infectious grins and delight-filled squeals. Thanks for capturing your sweet boy’s joy and sharing it with the rest of us @TeesePeese. You brought a smile to so many faces that needed it.