Skill

Seeks Comfort from Familiar Adults

Infant or toddler turns to trusted adults for comfort and expects positive responses.

Ages 0–30 months

Why it matters

A secure attachment — knowing a familiar adult will reliably respond — is the foundation for emotional security, exploration, and every later relationship. A child who can seek and accept comfort learns the world is predictable and safe.

Builds toward this milestone

  • develops expectations of consistent, positive interactions through secure relationships with familiar adults. — Head Start ELOF

Explore milestones →

What mastery looks like

  • Quiets, relaxes, or settles when a familiar adult holds or soothes them.
  • Turns to, reaches for, or moves toward a familiar adult when tired, hurt, or distressed.

How to observe it

  • When upset, does the child seek out a familiar caregiver for comfort?
  • Does the child settle more easily with a familiar adult than alone?

Accessibility

  • Offer consistent caregivers and predictable soothing routines for children who are slow to settle.
  • Honor each child's comfort cues — some prefer rocking, others firm holding, swaddling, or quiet.

Activities

Evidence