Are your children’s vaccines up to date?

Set a reminder

Please or to access all these features

Behaviour/development

Talk to others about child development and behaviour stages here. You can find more information on our development calendar.

When do babies become really smily / engaging?

6 replies

Thankyouandgoodnight · 22/09/2008 21:34

My 8 week old smiles occasionally and will 'get in to' being played with but it takes quite a bit! He still seems happy to just sit and stare at things around him with quite a blank face. When will he become noticeably more in to people interacting with him?

OP posts:
Are your children’s vaccines up to date?
purpleturtle · 22/09/2008 21:38

My first instinct was to say about 12 weeks. But it may be a bit longer. Depends what you mean by interaction, I suppose!

whomovedmychocolate · 22/09/2008 21:40

Between three and four months so you have a while to go yet. At four months some with respond with a gurgle and a grin when you talk - ie make first attempts at responses to what you say.

pinata · 23/09/2008 09:51

3/4 months i would say, as WMMC. my DD really loved being played with by 6 months, i would say - before that it was fairly random, so something that got a big grin one day would leave her completely uninterested the next.

HolidaysQueen · 23/09/2008 09:59

3 months was a big turning point - he was already a smiley baby but started to become much more 'interactive' then (i know, that makes him sound like a computer game!) and just got better and better really - now 6 months old and just a joy to be with, except at 3am

Shooflypie · 23/09/2008 10:57

Because we are told babies start smiling at 6 weeks, I'd kind of expected DS to be more smiley and interactive at 2 mo than he actually was. As everyone has said 3/4 months sees a big change, as does 5/6 when they can hold objects and play with them.
In the meantime keep singing .

whomovedmychocolate · 24/09/2008 09:13

pfbs of course smile at 2 days old because their parents interpret every expression as a smile including pre-flatulent face gurning!

New posts on this thread. Refresh page