Posts tagged Being a Mom

Seeing Isn’t Believing: Helping Young Girls De-Bunk Media Myths

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http://youtu.be/iYhCn0jf46U

Check out this great video for sharing with daughters and talking about beauty pressures.  As adults, we know that seeing isn’t necessarily believing, but it’s amazing (read: sad) how much kids buy in to what they see in the media.

 

 

Teaching Our Daughters to Love Their Bodies

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I love this post about Teaching Our Daughters to Love Their Bodies, by Andrea Owen.  “I know I can’t shelter my daughter from seeing and sometimes believing that she needs to be prettier, thinner, firmer, sexier, smoother, younger-looking, etc. But, I can sure as hell tell her from my own mouth that her body is the most perfect thing created, just as it is. That it was meant for kicking ass…”

 

http://thefeministbreeder.com/guest-post-teaching-our-daughters-to-love-their-bodies/

 

This is a key lesson in the Friendship & Other Weapons curriculum as well; part of fortifying girls against the pressures of bullying has to do with teaching them to be proud of who they are and the bodies they live in, rather than becoming overwhelmed and swept away by media messages to the contrary.

ParentCentral.Net: A Great Online Resource for Parents

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In 1998, professionals from KidsPeace National Centers founded TeenCentral.net, a unique website designed as a safe place for teens to share their personal stories and receive feedback from peers as well as professional counselors. In the last decade, this award-winning site has responded to hundreds of thousands of stories and provided timely guidance to teens via its anonymous, free platform.

In response to increasing feedback from adults who have shared their parenting challenges and struggles, the founders of TeenCentral recently created ParentCentral.net. ParentCentral is designed to allow parents and caregivers the opportunity to post (more…)

3 Lessons on Kindness

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Check out this link for a post I wrote about my Mom, one of the best role models of kindness I’ve ever known:

http://www.ourmommyhood.com/2011/06/01/3-lessons-on-kindness-modeled-by-my-mother/comment-page-1/#comment-10213

3 Ideas for Teaching Empathy to Kids

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Check out this post from Mom It Forward for strategies for enhancing your child’s emotional intelligence:

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When the Children are the Teachers: 3 Kid-Inspired Lessons on How to Live

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In the run up to Mother’s Day, the stores are full of cards that help children express their appreciation for all of the things their moms have taught them over the years.  I like to read the messages and consider how to be the type of mother that Hallmark greetings are made for.  Likewise, I enjoy taking my time to select just the right sentiment for my own loving, giving mom.  Most of all, though, as I read the cards about gentle hearts and wise souls, I think about all of the life lessons that my children are teaching me.  This year on Mother’s Day, I honor and thank my daughters for showing me so much about how to really live:

Mind the Journey

As a student and a professional, I was always a Type-A worker, with my nose to the grindstone and a deadline forever in mind.  Then one night, about two years into motherhood, I learned an unforgettable lesson about “minding the journey” as I was putting my daughter to bed.  I was exhausted on that eye-opening night and ready to call it a day, so when my toddler took my hand in hers and led me toward a 50-sheet pathway of yellow construction paper that she had laid through the house, my first instinct was not my finest one.  I wanted her to put it away and hop into bed—simple as that. 

If not for her Daisy Duck-like two-year old voice explaining enthusiastically that she had built a yellow brick road and inviting me to “skip to Oz, Mama?” I might have stuck to my Type-A guns.  Instead, my heart simply melted.  In that instant, years of “destination” thinking gave way to savoring the journey that is life with little ones.  We skipped along the pretend path and giggled all the way until my daughter finally fell asleep in my arms.  Seriously—it was that good.  Letting my task-orientation go and seizing the moment made for one of the best learning and loving moments with my daughter and I always remember that yellow “brick” pathway as one of her finest teaching moments.

Notice Everything

I am an outdoor Mom, hoping to inspire outdoor kids.  As a family, we love to go on hikes.  Our favorite spot is nothing rigorous—simply a well-worn path between an old shipping canal and a lake.  Pre-Yellow Brick Road night, whenever I thought about a hike, my mind usually went right to a destination; the peak’s summit, the end of the trail, etc.  I can’t lie and say that instinct has totally disappeared, but I can say that hiking with kids is like the world’s best exercise in re-training my brain to put aside the destination, and focus on the journey. 

In the last year, our family has grown by two—snapping turtles, that is.  Whereas my eyes are usually following the path ahead, my naturally curious daughters are noticing everything, including two quarter-sized, baby snapping turtles.  Since my little nature-lovers bring their Bug Kits with them on every hike, we had collection jars on each of the hikes in which the turtles were spotted.  Now, a full-year after we first found “Snappy,” he is about 15 lbs and has become best friends with our cat (from within the safety of his aquarium). 

Tiny reptiles, interesting-shaped rocks, colorful weeds (er, flowers); you name it, my kids see it, pick it up, name it, and want to keep it.  They teach me to slow down and notice the world, rather than just walk right through it.  Best.  Hiking.  Guides.  Ever.

Savor Moments

If I needed a Mommy mantra, this would be it.  Though I have spent the first part of my life multi-tasking with the best of ‘em and priding myself on what can be accomplished in a day, my children have taught me that it is better to be a human being than a human doing.  When we hike together or spend an extra 20 minutes before bed laughing and playing, we enjoy our finest moments.  My task list will always be there, but my children are only young once—and the time is flying by.

In honor of Mother’s Day, I thank my kids for showing me all that I really need to know about life, love, and living well.

A designer clothes boutique is working with me to bring parenting articles  to their community.  If you are in the market for trendy baby clothing, including unique headbands, baby hats, and fun Spring pettiskirts and tutus for little ones, please check them out.

>Parents, Don’t Dress Your Girls Like Tramps by LZ Granderson

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>”Friends bow to peer pressure. Parents say, ‘No, and that’s the end of it.'”

Just came across this article on CNN.com by LZ Granderson.  It is so brilliantly written and so completely true regarding the clothing options available for young girls…and a parent’s role in making decisions for their kids–cool points notwithstanding!

http://www.cnn.com/2011/OPINION/04/19/granderson.children.dress/index.html?hpt=T2

A designer clothes boutique is working with me to bring parenting articles  to their community.  If you are in the market for trendy baby clothing, including unique headbands, baby hats, and fun Spring pettiskirts and tutus for little ones, please check them out.

>Empathy for the Bully?

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>While empathizing with the victims of bullying comes naturally to most of us, this article, originally posted on Parentella.com, shows how understanding the roots of a bully’s rage can benefit us all:

Empathy for the Bully?

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It’s Alright if They Fight

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>“Conversations in the family is crucially important, and it doesn’t matter what they are about. There is nothing more important a parent can do than talk to their children.”

Read on for a great article about the benefits of sibling rivalry by researcher, Claire Hughes, recently published in the Times, London.

Read more: http://www.ottawacitizen.com/life/right+they+fight/4592024/story.html#ixzz1JOQhccJM

A designer clothes boutique is working with me to bring parenting articles  to their community.  If you are in the market for trendy baby clothing, including unique headbands, baby hats, and fun Spring pettiskirts and tutus for little ones, please check them out.

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