Making it to the corner shop can be challenge enough when you’ve got a newborn in tow – let alone making it to a class at a scheduled time where you’ll be expected to make polite conversation and be fully dressed.
But classes offer a wonderful opportunity for you to bond with your little one, as well as being a great way for your baby to socialise and learn new developmental skills.
And while the idea might seem daunting at first, getting out of the house and socialising with other mums could ultimately save your sanity, and be the catalyst for some long-lasting friendships.
Here are five of the most stimulating and fun classes...
Based on this healing power of touch, baby massage offers a whole host of benefits, from helping your baby to feel secure, loved and reducing emotional distress to developing body awareness and coordination.
Research has also shown that gentle massage can promote sleep and offer relief from wind, constipation and colic.
“The body undergoes huge change during pregnancy and childbirth,” says Cheryl MacDonald, founder of Yogabellies. “Yoga for mum and baby focuses on mum’s three main areas of concern: the back, the abdominal muscles and the pelvic floor. You will also learn breath awareness and relaxation techniques, which can help to increase energy levels and allow you to relax while with baby.”
Meanwhile, gentle yoga poses for your little one offer similar benefits to baby massage, including body awareness and the promotion of sleep, as well as soothing, calming and aiding digestion.
Research suggests that exposing babies as young as nine months old to music can improve their ability to process both music and speech rhythms. But beyond that, most music classes offer a multi-sensory experience, that can help with everything from eye-tracking, balance and exercise (dancing and movement) to language development (singing) and hand-eye coordination and motor development (shaking instruments).
(WARNING: Never attend this activity with a hangover!)
Swimming is also a great all-over body workout that will help to strengthen your baby’s muscles – and the sooner you introduce them to the water, the sooner they will learn to swim. Plus, have you seen how cute babies look when they swim underwater?
As they learn to control their arm and hand muscles long before they can speak, this bridges the communication gap. For baby, this means less frustration at not being able to express their needs. For you, it means potentially understanding more quickly why your little one is distressed and what they want.
They will learn simple words like “milk”, “more”, “eat” and “done” alongside lots of singing and fun games.