Have you ever looked at a baby and just wanted to yell; “STOP IT. You’ve become TOO CUTE?”
Yes, well so have I.
Last year I babysat my cousin’s little baby one day a week. His name is Archie. This is his face.
How can one face be so perfect? Image supplied.
He is absolutely adorable. Every week I would look at his fat rosy little cheeks, his big blue eyes, his 'elastic band' wrists (fat rolls, so many fat rolls), his round tummy and his silly tongue that he appeared to have no control over and just gasp.
"How...how did you become so cute?" I would ask.
I simply could not get enough. His...thighs.
Goodness! Images supplied.
As it turns out, Archie's cuteness is no accident.
In a new study published in Trends in Cognitive Sciences, Oxford psychiatrist Morten L. Kringelbrach argues that "cuteness in offspring is a potent protective mechanism that ensures survival for otherwise completely dependent infants." In other words, if babies are to survive, they must "gain access" into the consciousness of adults - and the most effective way to do that is to be...Really. Damn. Cute.
Mothers in the Mamamia office confess to what they thought when they saw their baby for the first time. Post continues below.