Hello my friends. Today in our quest to heal childhood trauma from narcissistic parent abuse, I'm exploring some abusive practices we don't talk enough about. I'm going to show how they create the very trauma that we spend the rest of our lives struggling with. I'm talking about blanket training, Ferberizing, "cry it out", locking children in rooms, and other need or want shaming techniques. These punishments are baby gaslighting and grooming and they have disastrous affects.
Need shaming techniques
The Origins: To Train Up a Child
The modern concept of blanket training was popularized by Michael and Debi Pearl in their 1994 book,
The Method: The Pearls instructed parents to place an infant (as young as six months) on a blanket with a few toys. If the child attempted to move off the blanket, the parent was told to "train" them back using a "rod"—typically a flexible ruler or a plastic plumbing tube—to strike the child.
The Goal: The explicitly stated goal was to achieve "instant, unquestioning obedience" and to "break the child's will" before they were old enough to reason.
Expansion: The method was further amplified through the
, an organization that heavily influenced large homeschooling families like Jim Bob and Michelle Duggar of "19 Kids and Counting" reality TV fame.Institute in Basic Life Principles (IBLP)
Historical Precedents
While the Pearls "branded" the term in the 90s, the logic behind it draws from two earlier historical shifts:
The 19th-Century Industrial Model: In the mid-1800s, as mothers began working in factories, parenting manuals (like those by Dr. Luther Emmett Holt) began emphasizing
. The idea was to make babies "convenient" for a working adult's schedule.strict schedules and "crying it out" Anti-Coddling Movement (1920s): Behaviorists like John Watson argued that parents should treat children like young adults—avoiding hugging or kissing—to prevent them from becoming "weak" or "spoiled." Blanket training is a modern, more extreme evolution of this "anti-coddling" philosophy.
Ferberizing (The "Check and Console" Method)
While "blanket training" is about physical confinement during the day, Ferberizing is a popular behavioral sleep training technique focused on the night. It was developed by Dr. Richard Ferber, founder of the Pediatric Sleep Disorders Center at Children's Hospital Boston.
The Method: Often called "graduated extinction," this involves putting a baby to bed while they are still awake and leaving the room. If the baby cries, the parent waits for a specific, increasing interval of time (e.g., 5 minutes, then 10, then 15) before returning to the room to provide brief comfort without picking the baby up.
The Intent: The goal is to teach the child "self-soothing"—the ability to fall asleep and return to sleep without parental intervention.
The Controversy: Critics, particularly those in the attachment parenting and trauma-informed communities, argue that infants do not actually "self-soothe" (a complex neurological skill). Instead, they may experience "learned helplessness." From a trauma perspective, the baby stops crying not because they are calm, but because they have learned that their distress signals will not be answered—a core component of the "baby gaslighting."
Baby gaslighting
As a parent and grandparent, (I'm Omi, grandma, in Dutch) these practices are abhorrent to me. But it took me till Omi-hood to get why they were wrong for ME. That's how the childhood trauma brain processes parent cruelty, as "good enough for who it's for." And THAT is how it starts, by deceiving kids into thinking normal needs are shameful, evil, selfish. It is completely anathema to God's commands to love children.
Triggering but also eye-opening
The sick, twisted legacy
"Train up a child" trauma informed explanation
Spare the rod, spoil the child, no seriously
Why else have kids if not to love them?
- They own their kids. (they don't)
- It's the child's job to do provide narcissistic supply for them. (it's not)
- They owe nothing, the kid owes everything. (wrong, wrong)
- The narcissist thinks it's all about them. But it's not. That's just narcissistic fantasy



