chapter one<br >CHARACTERISTICS<br > OF THE AGE<br > Just as the tides have their rhythms, so does human be-<br > havior have its own pre, dictable rhythms. As the child<br > grows older, "good" ages , alternate with "bad"; times of<br > equilibrium alternate with times of disequilibrium; and<br > periods when behavior tend~ to be expansive and outgoing<br > alternate with periods when everything seems to be pulled<br > in.<br > It should come as no surprise, then, to the mother or<br > father of a rambunctious Two-and-a-half-year-old, that<br > sometime around the age of Three their son or daughter<br > does seem to calm down conspicuously. He says "yes" in-<br > stead of "no"; "will" instead of "won t." He smiles instead<br > of frowns, laughs instead of cries, gives in comfortably<br > to your requests instead of resisting them.<br > Around thirty-three months of age, many children go<br > through a stage of reliving their babyhood, of thinking<br > about themselves in terms of their own past. The child<br > may pretend that he is a baby, even going back to the<br >glozqous ~cquisitlon of sFeech. So, ~ child may say, "I m<br >//tt/e baby. I can t walk, [ have no teeth, I drink from a<br >bottle. But I can talk."<br > However, by Three, most have caught up with them-<br >selves chronologically and are now in a state of equi-<br ><br >
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