How My Daughter Knew Her Baby Was a Type 3 Even Before He Was Born!

Thu, Mar 31, 2011

Energy Profiling

My lovely, Type 1 daughter, Jenny, shares her insights of how she knew her second child was a Type 3, determined, active natured person, even before he was born. Jenny’s insights will help all parents understand how we can begin to learn a child’s true nature at a very early age. Learn more about Energy Profiling by clicking here!

Related posts:

  1. Carol asks her daughter how she knew her newborn baby was a Type 3
  2. Ask Carol! Question of the Week: How can my child be a constant, still Type 4 when he is SO energetic?
  3. Ask Carol! Question of the Week: How do I connect with my teenage son who doesn’t like my Type?
, , , , , , , , , ,

14 Responses to “How My Daughter Knew Her Baby Was a Type 3 Even Before He Was Born!”

  1. Trish Says:

    How fun! I loved hearing about her baby and her other son. I had some specific impressions about my son when he was in the womb too, and they definitely turned out to be true! Back then, I hadn’t learned the EP info yet so I didn’t have those to think about. But I did have the impression that he’d be quite a magnanimous little person. And that is so true, he is a mix of 1 and 3- not sure which leads. Everyone always says he is a happy baby, and he loves to be in new places, situations, and meeting new people. He’s never needed a set-in-stone schedule and just goes with the flow most of the time. He is very strong and independent too. He does not always repeat what we say back to us unless its something exciting (like us applauding and saying YAY!). He loves animals, and when he is allowed to pet one- he pats it. He also bites us and thats kind of annoying and cute at the same time. He is always drawing attention to himself when we are out and about, but not by tantrums or something major. Its like he’s got a magnetic personality that brings people to him. Everyone is always happy to see him.

    Reply

  2. Leslie Says:

    My T3 child had one ear that was wacky and a little misshapen. I didn’t know about EP at that time, but it is another way to identify a newborn.

    The one thing I don’t know if I would have followed with my children and DYT is handme downs. I saved baby clothes and used them for many multiple children. I so appreciated other people sending me their clothing. Adding the stress of the right colors on a baby when you have trouble getting yourself dressed and showered in the morning might be too much!

    More emotions to work on, I guess……

    Beautiful baby! Congratulations

    Reply

  3. Genevieve Beck Says:

    Loved this video! How fun to see Jenny with her two adorable little guys. I love any insight I can get as to how EP can help me as a mother with my T1 daughter and T2 son (I’m a T3 and my husband is a T4 so we have a full house). They are both still very young, but I’m starting to see different tendencies they both have that make sense to me now. It will be fun to see how their unique gifts can bless the world!

    Reply

  4. Stephanie Says:

    I loved this video. 2 of my kids are the same set up, a 4 and then a 3. They are best friends and worst enemies. I have a T1 baby who doesn’t talk much, except for “yay” and other fun exclamations like Trish’s baby.

    I wanted to ask a question to all the parents out there. If you had a colicky baby- what type are they? Two of my four boys had colic as babies and they are T1. This was so hard. One of the theories out there for colic is that after about two weeks a baby’s body changes in a way that it is harder to block out surrounding stimulus and some babies are overwhelmed by this. So I was wondering if there might be any connection between the types and experiencing colic.

    Reply

    • Suzanna Says:

      That is such an interesting question I would too love to hear people’s response. I have 2 girls, oldest is 10 and type 2/1. The youngest is 8 and type 4/1 (here I am second guessing because she seems very balanced between 4 and 1 and I get quite confused by her). Both my girls were colicky, however, I felt that my second daughter had FOREVER and I found her incredibly difficult and hard to connect with. IF only I had learned about energy profiling 11 years ago I KNOW I would have had a completely different experience with my daughters, especially my second. Since learning the truth, I am having less conflict with my second daughter and we are establishing a better bond. By the way, I am a type 4/3.

      Reply

  5. Moyne Says:

    How fun! My T3 daughter certainly showed her energy before she was born, although I didn’t have this info at the time. I’m a T2 and she was my first baby, so probably out of a desire to “connect”, when she would kick me, I would give her a little push back in the same spot she had kicked. She kicked back again! We could go back and forth, pushing each other back, for quite some time. I was working at the library at the time and started giggling at the game. Someone walking by asked what I was doing, to which I answered, “playing with my baby.” They gave me such a weird look! LOL Now, of course, I can see it as an expression of her active/reactive T3 nature, and even before learning EP, I saw it as a metaphor for the way she shows up in the world.

    Both my T3 and T2 babies had colic.

    Reply

  6. Audrey Says:

    My first child was a Type 1/4 daughter and she was such an easygoing baby. I was in college at the time and she had lots of people watch her and she was very adaptable. Whenever we rode the bus, and she would always bring a smile to people’s faces.

    My second child was a Type 2/1 son and he cried most of the time for about four months. He was diagnosed with reflux, although he didn’t spit up (they said that arching their back after eating is a classic sign.) When we started giving him Zantac he was a happy baby.

    I think that Type 2 babies are going to be extra sensitive to things. I am also a Type 2 and my mom said I was the same way and I cried all the time at first. My poor Type 1 mom said she wasn’t going to have any more children after me. Thank goodness her next child was a VERY easygoing Type 1 daughter. We ended up with six kids in our family. :)

    Reply

  7. Julianne Says:

    This is all so true! My daughter was a type 4 and she really was a very still, calm baby when I was pregnant, I had such an easy pregnancy too. I on the other hand, am a type 3, and my mother cared for me and another little girl who was a gentle type 2, I was always racing about getting us both into trouble. My earliest memory is of me running into the road, much to the despair of my type 2/1 mum, she just didn’t know what to do with me. I was always running away very quickly, my mum used to find me all over the neighbourhood. This was in New Zealand, Mum said I just used to run into people’s houses and sit myself down, right at home! My type 4/2 daughter is now a teenager and very reflective and still quite quiet, but knows her own mind and has fixed ideas about what perfection is. My wish is for her to not be so critical of herself, she is beautiful but will very rarely acknowledge that, only if all the ducks are lined up in a row are things right in the world.

    Reply

  8. Cassandra Says:

    This was so wonderful! To know the feelings I had about my own son over 15 years ago were and are so simular. I am so new to all of this but feel so strongly about what I am learning. Of all my 4 children, he is the one I felt I knew the most before their birth. I believe he is also a 3/1. Years ago I told my father that I “knew Caleb would be a challenge even before he was born”. I desperately wish I had the tools I am striving to apply now when he was a baby. Seeing Jenny’s baby was like looking back in time at my own. He was such a good baby. Calm and tender most of the time. I LOVE how Carol refered to the “determined nature”. That is MY Caleb. He crawled at 3 months, always on the go. My husband and I haven’t always known how to parent him properly. Caleb is such a joy with a magnetic personality. It breaks my heart when he struggles with what we are learning now is his nature. It is my prayer that through learning more about his true nature, as well as that of all my children, I can parent him better and help him to gain his full potential. That he may gear all of his determination for good and bless the lives of others.

    Reply

  9. Cindy Says:

    I have 2-year-old identical twin girls. I know they are different energy types, but I cannot seem to pinpoint them! One I am almost certain is a 4, although I just reached that conclusion reading these posts tonight! The other I think is a 1 or a 2. She cannot seem to sit still, and bounces from place to place, but then she has that blended, Type 2 softness about her face, and does not like to be thrust into new social situations. She also is really good about cleaning things up – she’s always putting things away where they go, or coming to me with a wrapper or a thread and saying, “Mommy, trash!” Then she takes it to the trash can. And she notices when a cupboard or door is left open, and tells you about it until you close it! She’s very insistent that things be put back where they go and lined up neatly, which sounds like a Type 4, but I think maybe it’s more the detail orientation of a 2. On the other hand, she also has been the more aggressive twin in general, hitting, pushing or taking what she wants. Just not certain, and I wish I could know, so that I could dress them both in their truth!

    Reply

  10. Cindy Says:

    Forgot to mention that I LOVED this and would love to see more of these videos with information on children! Thank you Carol, Jenny and the boys! That bit about Seth being reflective really helped me pinpoint my little Type 4! She repeats everything back to us so clearly, while her sister seems unable to enunciate as clearly yet.

    Reply

  11. Melissa Says:

    Interesting how Jenny knew before he was born what type he was. I’m a Type 1, but my mother often commented on how remarkably quiet and still I was even in the womb. It seems I was leading with my secondary 4 before I was even born. My face is very clearly a Type 1, yet it took me a long time to accept that I’m a Type 1 because I wasn’t ever super-energetic or bouncy. I was a quiet, still child and I’ve always struggled to have enough energy just to do normal things. My mother told me about something that happened to her when she was carrying me that was deeply wounding on every level-physically, emotionally and spiritually. Could that incident have wounded me and pushed me into my secondary energy before I was even born? Yikes, if that’s what happened no wonder I’m struggling to live my truth. How can I undo a wound that happened before I was born?

    Reply

    • Carol Says:

      Hi Melissa. Thanks for your comment. In my work as an energy psychologist I have assisted many people in clearing their birth issues. I do believe that you take on the energy of your mother when you are in the womb, it would be impossible not to. So you observation and sense that you may have taken on the trauma energy is very possible. I highly recommend you invest in my CD titled “Clearing the Issues we Take on at Birth.” You can find it here: http://caroltuttle.com/storecd_dvd.asp I am confident that you have not abandoned your dominant Type 1 energy in life, it just took on some fear and shame that can easily be cleared with this program’s help. Thanks, Carol

      Reply


Leave a Reply