Babies | First Steps | FULL EPISODE | Netflix

From nature to nurture, this docuseries explores the groundbreaking science that reveals how infants discover life during their very first year.

In this episode: Scientists venture into the ways that walking changes a baby’s world and unveil findings on neonatal reflexes, skeletal development and talking.

US Rating: TV-PG. Parental guidance suggested.

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Babies | First Steps | FULL EPISODE | Netflix
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27 thoughts on “Babies | First Steps | FULL EPISODE | Netflix

  1. so Eric claims that babies that are walking have a larger vocabulary compared to babies that are crawling, so i never crawled due to low mussel tone and i did not take my first steps until i was over 18 months old, however i actually started talking at 8 months old, my first word was "no" and "ha ha, ha ha" not laughing actually saying the words ha ha, the very next day i said "mama, daddy, mommy, nana" by my first birthday i could actually SAY happy birthday! and by the time i was 15 months i was not only now a big brother but knew (at the time of the written recording) 48 key words including every family members correct name, by the time i was walking i was speaking 2-4 worded sentences (something that happens by the time a child is 2 years old) and before my second birthday i was speaking full clear sentences, could sing nursery rhymes and carry on clear conversations with adults and children the same age (something that most preschool children struggle with)

  2. I do not recall my first words or first steps, however A night starry sky has a strong impression on my memory, circe 1946 ,travling by bus from Arizonia to California ,LATER CONFIRMED BY someons who should know, Mothe..❤John

  3. Hearing her comments on the need for the baby to “exercise”, makes me wonder about the babies of women who carry their babies on their backs all the time??? Is their physical development different because of that???

  4. I think the research is wonderful and fascinating, however, I tend to feel this baby stepping must be an inborn or instinctive action related to the natural instinct of survival. Like other animals, especially mammals, they automatically try to stand and walk right after birth. Horses, members of the deer family and so on, come to mind. It amazes us that within minutes of being born they begin to try to stand and within a couple of hours they are walking and not long after that they are running! It’s not something they are taught or coached to do. It’s hard wired, if you will. It’s a matter of survival. Couldn’t it be the same with babies? Because of the human baby having to be born so underdeveloped the signs are there but it takes much, much longer to accomplish locomotion? I speak of the physical not the mental. I’ve always believed that mentally babies are far, far more aware and able to retain what the see and what they hear than we may ever know.

  5. im not the only one feeling a bit upset looking at these multiple healthy living little babies walking around and running, then seeing the leg bone of a young child who may have never walked before….

  6. I get it all but why is it NECESSARY to ENCOURAGE early walking?! They'll do it when ready. It isn't late development it is regular development. Plus on relationship with walking and talking, maybe walking babies talk more because they just develop both simultaneously, I doubt that they are directly linked, simply happen in parallel, quick with one quick with another, slow with one slow with another and BOTH are NORMAL. And even if they are linked so what, get parents to be anxious when not happening and other parents overly confident because it happened "quicker" for theirs. Remember science is about examining the facts not predicting the future of kids. I read on LinkedIn about a kid whose mother was told that her young daughter had an "immature" pencil grip, today she says she is a medical doctor and still has that same "immature" pencil grip! The bum shuffling kid didn't "catch up", he simply walked when he was ready. And so will each child develop in their own time, unless diagnosed with a genuine problem/challenge.

  7. Nadia, the electromagnetic current can attract COVID and other bloodwork pathogens. Why experiment on baby and the stepping reflex? He can't walk. He will walk later. I would like to see the EKG and MRI pre and p st session. The baby was too stressed out. Bad Nadia! Sorry baby.

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