I totally agree with most everything posted. With our first child, we removed anything breakable, put outlet covers on, had baby gates, left doors shut - really confined him - and in some ways, that backfired. He was terrified of closed doors at places like the doctor's office, wanted to be on the other side of the closed door. Weird, I know - but with our next two, we chose to be practical. We crawled around and looked for serious problems. Cords hanging out in the open that, if tugged, could topple a lamp down - meant rearranging the cord - simple and quick fixes for the most part. Furniture that could topple - simple 'L' brackets solve the problem - usually under a dollar - install on the top of bookshelves with one screw into a stud. Simple - and removes the fear. Around sharp edges (bed frame, fireplace brick?, sharp countertop corners, etc - we either wrapped towels or foam - and there are sticky foam-ee corner thing-ee's that we bought for desk corners, etc. Moved heavy breakables to either upper and out of reach places or lower to the floor. I wanted pretties around - and taught the girls that - but didn't want them to crash on their heads. Baby gates - we didn't even do it for the girls. We started by distracting them from the area - and when we couldn't be with them, put them in a playpen or took them with. Occasionally, that meant putting them back in their crib with fun toys ... like if i was in a shower. Really, you want them to feel like this is their home and learn to respect your things - without having heavy things falling on them. Both girls discovered the stairs when they were actively crawling, and we began showing them how to scoot down feet first. It requires a lot of diligent coaching, but once then had the hang of that, they could and would scurry down on their own. Yet they had NO interest in getting caught on a level of the house alone - So once they figured out going down the steps meant coming back up to play, they stopped going there. Probably the most disturbing thing to M. with the girls was their ability to find and destroy paper (books, magazines, newspapers) - in a second. And pens, markers, crayons - all fair game. We kept my son's littlest toys in his room - and that was the one shut door. Good luck !