Why “nothing is happening” is often the point
One of the hardest parts of early development is this phase:
Nothing looks different.
Nothing feels measurable.
And everyone around you is asking, “Are they doing X yet?”
This is usually the part where parents assume something is wrong.
But development doesn’t announce itself when foundations are forming.
It gets quieter before it gets obvious.
When a child’s nervous system is organizing, you might see:
  • longer pauses before movement
  • less frantic effort
  • more stillness, not more action
  • fewer “new tricks,” but better quality in old ones
From the outside, it can look like nothing is happening.
Internally, a lot is happening — just not in ways that photograph well or show up on checklists.
This is why milestone pressure is so misleading, it trains parents to look for output instead of integration.
And integration always comes first.
If you’re in a season where things feel subtle, slow, or unimpressive — that doesn’t mean you’re behind.
It often means the system is doing exactly what it needs to do. Trust the process!
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Rachael Somerman
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Why “nothing is happening” is often the point
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Unfiltered Guide to Parenting
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Early neurodevelopment, explained—because parenting comes with enough guesswork already.
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