The Continuum Concept

Jean Liedloff

Written with warmth and personal insight, this book blends memoir and parenting guide. Mayim Bialik shares her journey as a mother practising attachment parenting, offering both practical advice and reflections on the philosophies that shaped her choices—from gentle discipline and co-sleeping to breastfeeding and babywearing.

Why It’s Included:

This book has been profoundly influential in shaping modern attachment parenting philosophy. While some parts reflect dated language or limited cross-cultural analysis, its core message — that babies thrive when cared for responsively, in arms, and in relationship — deeply aligns with our values.

Who It’s For:

Best for reflective parents and professionals interested in the philosophical roots of natural parenting. Not a practical how-to guide, but a thought-provoking text that invites readers to question Western norms around independence, crying, and infant care.

For many of us, this is the seminal book which leads us towards a more gentle style of parenting. When you remove the trappings of post-industrial western society, religious teachings and beliefs and the behaviourist approach to raising children; what is left is the examples of those people still living the traditional hunter-gatherer or subsistent farming human lifestyles. And their approach to raising children is enlightening.
— Yvette O'Dowd

Further Reading:

Previous
Previous

Breasts: A Natural and Unnatural History

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Next

Milk: A 10,000-Year Food Fracas