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Give the Egg!
Give the Egg!
gentle tickle
6 Months old
Before You Read
Find a quiet, comfy spot and hold your baby facing you
Here is the egg
And here is the one who found it
And here is the one who boiled it
And here is the one who peeled it
And here is the one who fried it (browned it)
And here is the one who ate it—nom nom nom!
And here is the one who said: "Give me a piece! Give me a piece! Give me a piece!"
Listen to the Story
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The Moral of the Story
How this helps
Short repetition + a predictable, joyful finish teaches:
Anticipation & memory:
Babies learn the sequence and look forward to the tickle as a safe reward.
Social trust & joy:
Offering their hand or waiting for the tickle shows trust and shared delight.
Turn-taking & gesture:
When baby gives you a hand to ask again, they’re practicing communication and social requesting.
Sensorimotor learning:
Touch, tapping and gentle movement support hand awareness and body mapping.
After reading — 3 very simple observations
Anticipation:
Does your baby brighten, look at your face, or kick slightly before the tickle?
Hand offering:
Does your baby offer a hand or a foot after the first tickle to ask for another?
Pleasure or pause:
Do they smile, coo, wiggle happily — or do they pull away?
(If they pull away, stop and soothe.)
Tips — Look for this tomorrow
Repeat the cue:
Use the same short phrase before the tickle (“Tickle time!”) so it becomes a gentle sleep/play ritual.
Follow baby’s lead:
If they bring their hand, repeat once more; if they tense or cry, stop and try a softer touch later.
Make eye contact & name it:
Say “You wanted tickle!” when they offer a hand — this builds intentional communication.