There is a particular kind of parental anxiety that arrives the moment your baby starts pulling themselves upright. It's not the dramatic, emergency-room kind of anxiety — it's the low-level, constant, background hum of watching a small person wobble on two legs for the first time and knowing, with absolute certainty, that they are going to fall. Repeatedly. On hard floors. Near furniture. In ways you cannot always prevent.
My name is Aisha. I'm 30, I live in Leicester, and my son Eli started cruising — pulling himself up and moving along furniture — at about nine months. He was fearless in the way that babies are fearless, which is to say he had absolutely no concept of consequences and would launch himself in any direction with complete confidence. I was less confident. I spent a lot of those early weeks following him around the living room like a very anxious shadow, arms permanently outstretched, unable to relax for a moment.
The Problem With Being a Human Safety Net
The issue with following your baby everywhere with your arms out is that it's exhausting, it's not sustainable, and — more importantly — it doesn't actually help them learn. Babies need to fall. They need to experience the consequence of overbalancing, to develop their own sense of where their body is in space, to build the muscle memory that eventually becomes confident walking. If you catch them every time, you're not protecting them — you're slowing them down.
I knew this intellectually. I couldn't make myself act on it. Every time Eli wobbled near the coffee table I was there, hovering, heart in my mouth.
A friend whose daughter had gone through the same stage a few months earlier mentioned the baby plus My Head Protector Friend. I found it on ALTOE that same evening.
Why This One
The design immediately made sense to me. It's a backpack-style protector — it slips over the baby's arms like a small rucksack, with a front clip to keep it secure, and the soft cushioned back panel protects both the head and the back during backward falls, which is the most common direction babies topple when they're learning to stand and walk.
The lightweight construction was important — at 170 grams, it adds almost nothing to what Eli was carrying, which meant it wouldn't affect his balance or make movement harder. The 100% polyester fabric and silicone bead fibre filling are BPA and latex free, which for something a baby wears against their body matters. And the adorable design — it genuinely looks like a cute little backpack, not a piece of medical equipment — meant Eli was happy to wear it rather than immediately trying to pull it off.
The First Time He Wore It
I put it on Eli on a Saturday morning. He looked at it, grabbed the straps, decided it was interesting rather than threatening, and went back to pulling himself up on the sofa. I sat down. Not hovering. Just… sitting. Watching him.
He fell twice in the next twenty minutes. Both times the protector did exactly what it was supposed to do — he sat back onto the cushioned panel, his head was protected, and he looked mildly surprised rather than distressed. Both times he got straight back up. I didn't move from the sofa either time. That felt like a significant achievement.
What Changed
The anxiety didn't disappear entirely — I'm his mother, some level of anxiety is part of the job description. But it reduced to a manageable level. I stopped following him around the room. I stopped flinching every time he wobbled. I started actually watching him learn rather than just watching him fall, which is a completely different experience and a much more joyful one.
Eli walked independently at eleven months. I genuinely believe he got there faster because I stopped hovering, and he stopped hovering because the protector gave me the confidence to step back. That's a chain of cause and effect I hadn't anticipated when I ordered it.
For Any Parent in That Hovering Phase
If you're where I was — following your baby around with your arms permanently outstretched, unable to relax for a moment — this is the thing that will help. Not because it prevents falls, but because it makes falls safe enough that you can let them happen. And letting them happen is how your baby learns to walk.
You can find the baby plus My Head Protector Friend on ALTOE. Browse the Clothing Accessories collection for more options, explore the full Apparel & Accessories range, and check the Latest Products collection for new arrivals.
Step back. Let them fall. Watch them learn. You've got this.
— Aisha Thornton, Leicester
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