Thursday, August 4, 2011

Locking horns with a 3 year old: Are there winners?

A wild Hawk captured.

 I remember growing up and hearing about "the terrible twos," this mysterious time of defiance and confusion for parents and their toddlers where nothing made sense and rules were thrown out.  As I closed the gap to adulthood the story shifted to, "It's not The Twos, it's The Threes you should dread!" Once a parent this new idea was pretty much confirmed by everything I read and heard.

The Threes are an interesting time for everyone.  Our children can speak to us in English (or whatever language it is they've learned), they understand rules, expectations, and relationships.  Their emotional development can at once leap ahead to tenderhearted concern then recede to vicious tyrannical tantrums (and I use those loaded terms "leap" and "recede" deliberately - you'll see why in a minute).  And despite their supposed understanding of things they continue to defy, push, taunt, and sneer in our faces as often as they caress, kiss, fondle and massage our hearts.

So.  What the fuck do we do??  How do we handle these tiny mercurial beings in a way that keeps our values in line with our own hearts, goals, and ideals?

Here's what I've learned:

First, you're gonna feel like shit.  Some days you'll actually get dragged into a knock down drag out with your tiny dictator and be left reeling.  Did you really drag him into his room and lob him onto his bed, then oh so maturely slam the door behind you?  Yep.  You really just did do that.

And you know what??  It can't be helped.  The most important thing I've learned throughout this process is that I am only human.  I can only be taunted, defied, kicked, hit, screamed at, and generally dismissed so much, especially when it concerns a rule regarding a non-negotiable, such as safety.  Picking up spilled food is another matter; I'll be pushed around to a much great degree before I start feeling that prick in the back of my mind that this bullshit ain't flyin'.  But safety in the kitchen?  Not following the rules when there's raw chicken and knives laying around??  Forget it.  Mama's puttin' the kibosh on that shit, and fast.

So, there we were.  Hawk screaming on the floor, refusing to leave the kitchen, me firmly explaining the rules and why he'd been banned - repeatedly - and then he starts jumping in the kitchen just a foot, then another foot, and at that point I had to physically remove him.  Tantrums ensued, kicking, punching, yelling.  Then I told him he needed to cool off in his room, but he wouldn't go of his own accord, hence the dragging by the wrists (as gently as I could, naturally).

I was angry, but I didn't feel my reactions were angry towards him.  I disconnected as best I could, though I still yelled back.  I'd just reached my limit.  I'm just a woman, not a saint.

Second, he's going to forgive you.  I never leave Hawk alone too long after a spell such as this.  I don't want a pattern to develop where he acts perfectly normally for a 3 yo and then I unduly punish him for it.  I just want a period of separation to get my own cool, mostly.

This particular time I went back in and straightened up his room.  He said he was cooling down and he felt much better.  I said, "Good, Mama's not quite there yet, but I will be."  He says while sucking on his paci and clutching his blankie, "Ok, Mommy.  I do love you."

And when we talk I remind him of the rules and that when he defies me like that it frustrates me because I'm trying to keep him safe; that it's ok for him to be mad and frustrated with me, but he may not strike me in any way.  He solemnly nods his head and we hug fiercely and tell each other we love one another.

Third, perfection is a myth.  Sometimes you react badly to a situation.  It's human nature.  No one is above reproach, but every situation is a launching pad to learn something new about yourself, your limits, those of your child, etc.  What you may judge yourself on is settling; settling for the status quo, for what worked for your mother even though it doesn't feel right to you, for not educating yourself about the development of this tyrant at your knees, for giving up hope that you can do what feels right the next time it happens - because, oh lord, it will happen again.

It's easy to think they're forging ahead in development whenever they're soft and pliant and kind, and taking steps back when they're bullheaded and unreasonable, but really it's all a push forward in development.   That's right.  It's a movement of growth, truly.

When a young child defies his caregiver it's as integral to his development as following the rules.  You can't draw a chair without the negative space after all.  They have to discover the depths of the emotional spectrum as well as the highs; no one is all or nothing and certainly not children.  They're incapable of such emotional blandness.  They're programmed to feel all of it and it's our job as parents to help them navigate it, fights and all. 

Lastly, when you're in the middle of it try to remember how much power you have.  It's a trick that always seems to help me keep my cool for a ridiculously long time, if not entirely.  You are these kids' everything: their sun, moon, and stars.  Tread as lightly as you can in the scare-/mean-factor to get your point across.  It's all too easy to loom and boom and knock them around to drive home your point, but finesse - even loud finesse - works, too.

So, yeah, I fought with a 3 year old and technically won, but really I felt like I'd lost.  Then, later, I felt like we'd all won.  Funny how that works, but that's parenting in a nutshell: two steps forward, one step back, and another half-step forward.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ThisIsWorthwhile/~3/11Gron4zB2E/locking-horns-with-3-year-old-are-there.html

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How do I make money??

I played trivia with friends last night. Bought a $2 Lone Star, tipped a buck, then our team won and my share was $4.  So, essentially, I made $1 last night.  So now who's a bad ass?  


This is a question I pretty much have on my mind 24/7.  It's difficult to figure out the exact equation for job:loss ratio.  I mean, at what point is a $10/hour job worth it?  Should I get "just anything"?  When I was nannying for friends a few months go they paid me $12/hour, but I doubled my gas bill and was literally so exhausted at the end of the day I could barely sit upright let alone look for work.  I know it sounds so simple to so many, "Well, just do it.  You have no choice."  But really, I did the best I could and it involved not having so much left over to look for real work.

So, how destitute do I have to be before that $10 seems adequate and worth the time/energy loss?  I haven't figured that out yet, but I'm hustling other ideas.  I'm going to open an Etsy shop once I've built up a library of things to sell.  My parents want to give me a commission for selling some of their shit on Craigslist.  Rooster will give me 100% of the profits if I can move an old armoire out of his garage so long has he has no involvement in it.  I'm going to sell my old car.  And my sister -- the loving, sweet, big little sister that she is -- has been sending me a few hundred dollars a month that helps me just barely stay in the black.

I've considered moving apartments, but then I'd probably be further from the city and Hawk's amazing school if I wanted to keep the level of comfort I have.  Should I sell my car in order to save about $50/month in gas?  It's paid off.  Does that make sense?  I don't have cable and so I watch Hulu and the Instant stuff off Netflix which is $9/month.  Rooster suggested I get rid of my iPhone, but it's only $85/month and I need a cell phone regardless.  Does that make sense?  I basically don't eat on the weeks Hawk isn't here, so I save money on food.  When I go out and have to buy my own drink, I get $2 Lone Star, because yeah, having a life and socializing is imperative for my happiness.

I think I'm missing something, though.  I try and pretend that I receive NO income whatsoever and think about what I would do differently.  But honestly, my brain can come up with no answers.  I'm worried I'm secretly a loser (yeah, yeah, yeah, this post was me on a good day).  Lazy.  Good for nothing.  A colossal piece of shit.  Shouldn't I be doing something work-related right this second, for instance??

June has been a really great month for job opportunities, though.  I've applied to half a dozen jobs this month alone!  Compare that with half a dozen since March since I have limitations on the jobs I can apply to: I'm not flexible with hours and shifts I can work and I don't speak Spanish (ohhh, how I wish I did!), and for the last 3 months most available jobs were weird shifts and required a language I don't know.  However, I start volunteering at a reputable agency here in Austin soon and I found a supervisor I highly esteem.  Things aren't all bad.  (You see this circular internal commentary?  You suck --> you're trying --> try harder --> you still suck.)

Friends and family are always telling me I should get paid for my writing so I did some research on freelance stuff.  Ohmyfuckinggodareyouserious??  Pages and pages of bullshit.  Cents per copy.  Business relationships.  Contracts.  Legal issues.  Casting a wide net.  It's who you know.  It's a full-time job.  Blahblahblah.  Can you say overwhelmed??  Maybe I should have taken up all those advertisers looking for space on my blog. Anyone want a Better Homes and Garden link up?  A post-swap?  Maybe Kraft dinners?  I'm into it now!!  Please come back!

In a post-Bush economy, where do the over-educated and slightly-behind-the-eight-ball folks go for cash??  Please.  I'd really like to know.  I need help!

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ThisIsWorthwhile/~3/zg7SlMieBtQ/how-do-i-make-money.html

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40 Years Ago Today (Apollo 15, Road Trips, and Instant Everything)

I’m going to start off topic today to reflect on my youth and the time we drove from from New York �to Florida when I was 11. As one of my older brothers likes to remind me, we drove �when I-95 wasn’t complete, using US-1 as we drove down the Eastern seaboard for a family [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NewYorkPersonalInjuryLawBlog/~3/kWspSivZVW8/40-years-ago-today-apollo-15-road-trips-and-instant-everything.html

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August Families, Create! Call for Submissions

The theme for August's Families, Create! carnival is "Weird and Wonderful." Childhood holds a wonder that abounds, prompting questions and curiosity at every turn. As parents, we are privy to the insight and creativity inherent in childhood and are reminded ourselves what is really important to us. While our children learn from us, we, too, learn from them. What weird and wonderful things can you and your family create this month?

Thank you for subscribing to my RSS feed at Code Name: Mama! I would appreciate your comments and feedback on the entry you just read, August Families, Create! Call for Submissions. If you write about similar topics, I would also like the opportunity to link to your blog or have you write a guest post. Contact me for details!

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/CodeNameMama/~3/0ickbaP8WTk/

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Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Note to self

I just wanted to write a few words to remind you that you should not be discouraged, or totally fed up or disheartened because everything you read and hear about the publishing industry at the moment seems to be bad news for writers, even the really successful ones with dozens of best-sellers behind them, let alone for the, frustratingly titled, 'Budding Novelists' out there.

I know it's very bloody frustrating that just at the point in your life when you finally had the maturity, discipline, conviction, ideas, inspiration, decent coffee and nifty Netbook to actually start writing those novels you've been going on about writing for literally 20 years, the publishing industry seemed to pack up and move to the moon but.........

......you should not be discouraged, or fed up or disheartened because, well, quite frankly, you're going to keep writing those pages anyway aren't you, because you can't not keep writing them.

So, when your characters have an entire conversation in your head while you blow dry your hair and when you wake up in the middle of the night and seem to have found a clever way to get your plot to go in the right direction, you should keep writing it all down. Block out the cynics and the sceptics and those who tell you it is practically impossible for an unpublished author to be signed 'these days'. Keep going to book launches in the hope that by the laws of probability it should work out that, one day, maybe, it will be yours.

Keep writing and make it the best bloody writing you are capable of and then edit it to make it even better. And then keep your fingers crossed and your anti-rejection force-field switched on. After all, everyone loves a trier!

Source: http://hotcrossmum.blogspot.com/2011/05/note-to-self.html

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Profeminist fathers

The writer, Jeremy Adam Smith has adapted the piece he wrote in response to my 10 Questions About Your Feminist (Parent)Motherhood for the Good Men Project. His full response to my questions has been included in his new book, an anthology called ?Rad Dad: Dispatches from the Frontiers of Fatherhood.? Whenever I show a woman [...]

Source: http://bluemilk.wordpress.com/2011/08/02/profeminist-fathers/

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6 Ways To Promote Your Home Business

Written by work-at-home contributor Heather Allard of The Mogul Mom. In my last post, I gave you five great ideas for starting a home business. Maybe you took the plunge and grabbed one of those ideas for yourself. Or, maybe you already had a business in the making and are well on your way. Now [...]

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6 Ways To Promote Your Home Business is a post from Simple Mom

� 2008-2011 Simple Living Media, LLC | All rights reserved - This feed is provided for the convenience of Simple Mom subscribers. Any reproduction of the content within this feed is strictly prohibited. If you are reading this content elsewhere, please contact hello@simplelivingmedia.com to let us know. Thanks.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/simplemom/~3/nnFoeIlJJ2c/

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Pushing buttons

Cormac, age 2 years and 3 months. Cormac is at an age where if he finds a button he just has to push it. Lucky for him in this day and age there are buttons for pushing everywhere. Cause and effect. Over and over again. Annoying the crap out of people. All day long. Pushing [...]

Source: http://bluemilk.wordpress.com/2011/07/29/pushing-buttons/

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That's not my child.....


That's not my child, his nose is too snotty.
That's not my child, his face is too mucky.
That's not my child, his fingernails are too filthy.
That's not my child, his clothes are too crumply.
That's not my child, his knees are too muddy.
That's not my child, his shins are too bruisey.
That's not my child, his trousers are too grassy.
That's not my child, his hands are too sticky.
That's not my child, his voice is too noisy.
That's not my child, his pretend gun is too army.
That's not my child, his monster face is too scary.
That's not my child, his bedroom is too messy.
That's not my child, his mother is too shouty.

Oh, hang on. That is my child. Thank goodness for that. Thank goodness for normality.

Source: http://hotcrossmum.blogspot.com/2011/07/thats-not-my-child.html

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My baby is 1 year old. Here's where we've nursed.

Source: http://breastfeeding.blog.motherwear.com/2011/07/my-baby-is-1-year-old-today-heres-where-weve-nursed.html

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40 Years Ago Today (Apollo 15, Road Trips, and Instant Everything)

I’m going to start off topic today to reflect on my youth and the time we drove from from New York �to Florida when I was 11. As one of my older brothers likes to remind me, we drove �when I-95 wasn’t complete, using US-1 as we drove down the Eastern seaboard for a family [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NewYorkPersonalInjuryLawBlog/~3/kWspSivZVW8/40-years-ago-today-apollo-15-road-trips-and-instant-everything.html

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An Open Letter to the HERS Foundation on the Anniversary of my Hysterectomy

Source: http://honest2betsy.blogspot.com/2011/03/open-letter-to-hers-foundation-on.html

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Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Yoga

If the mood takes you…

Source: http://bluemilk.wordpress.com/2011/07/29/yoga/

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Twiddle Me That

Do you have an older nursling who has developed some poor nursing habits? It's not too late to change! Here are some tips and suggestions to gently help your little one mind his/her nursing manners.

Thank you for subscribing to my RSS feed at Code Name: Mama! I would appreciate your comments and feedback on the entry you just read, Twiddle Me That. If you write about similar topics, I would also like the opportunity to link to your blog or have you write a guest post. Contact me for details!

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/CodeNameMama/~3/YLytlLIu130/

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More evening walks

Looking at my archives it appears I obsess rather a lot about evening walks. Self, insight. By the end of the day when you’re totally over it? Get out and walk with the kids.. and keep walking until it is a respectable hour to go home and start drinking*.   * Sorry about my shameful [...]

Source: http://bluemilk.wordpress.com/2011/07/29/more-evening-walks/

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A Moment vs. Every Single Moment

Source: http://honest2betsy.blogspot.com/2011/04/moment-vs-every-single-moment.html

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Functionality of the babywearing nanny

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/HoboMama/~3/0vgbSjDo0Z4/functionality-of-babywearing-nanny.html

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Decisions


Seriously, which should I get?

One attracts bees (lavender), one attracts ladies at tea (chamomile), one tastes good on just about anything (olive oil), and one is soft and fuzzy and makes a good brown-butter (sage).

I'm so conflicted.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ThisIsWorthwhile/~3/FANAoeMrAJ0/decisions.html

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Show us your cats

Image: Tacocat I highly recommend “Sexist Queers” by Bree McKenna over at the Stranger about the expectations placed on feminists by their own community and the sexism of music media: I’ve always wanted to write a review of a dude band in the same way that some journalists write about my band, Tacocat. Because Tacocat [...]

Source: http://bluemilk.wordpress.com/2011/07/27/show-us-your-cats/

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5 Reasons To Line Dry Your Laundry

I love the response this post got when I first published it in summer 2009 ?�it really show the vast diversity of all our living spaces and cultures. I‘m not a luddite — I love technology. I love the ways it enhances our home life in so many ways, from storing our food at adequate [...]

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5 Reasons To Line Dry Your Laundry is a post from Simple Mom

� 2008-2011 Simple Living Media, LLC | All rights reserved - This feed is provided for the convenience of Simple Mom subscribers. Any reproduction of the content within this feed is strictly prohibited. If you are reading this content elsewhere, please contact hello@simplelivingmedia.com to let us know. Thanks.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/simplemom/~3/-K36r-VjA2A/

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Monday, August 1, 2011

Bread, Roses, and a side of Guilt

Source: http://honest2betsy.blogspot.com/2010/10/bread-roses-and-side-of-guilt.html

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If you?re in the mood for clicking

.. then would you care to sign this petition that Gemma has started? (Australian based). As the mother of a 16-month-old daughter, I eagerly awaited this year?s toy sale catalogues. As predicted, the girls? toys pages were full of stereotypical female gender roles such as dolls, fluffy animals, and miniature replicas of cooking, cleaning and [...]

Source: http://bluemilk.wordpress.com/2011/07/26/if-youre-in-the-mood-for-clicking/

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Motherwear's June contest winners. You can enter, too!

Source: http://breastfeeding.blog.motherwear.com/2011/07/motherwears-june-contest-winners-you-can-enter-too.html

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Note to self

I just wanted to write a few words to remind you that you should not be discouraged, or totally fed up or disheartened because everything you read and hear about the publishing industry at the moment seems to be bad news for writers, even the really successful ones with dozens of best-sellers behind them, let alone for the, frustratingly titled, 'Budding Novelists' out there.

I know it's very bloody frustrating that just at the point in your life when you finally had the maturity, discipline, conviction, ideas, inspiration, decent coffee and nifty Netbook to actually start writing those novels you've been going on about writing for literally 20 years, the publishing industry seemed to pack up and move to the moon but.........

......you should not be discouraged, or fed up or disheartened because, well, quite frankly, you're going to keep writing those pages anyway aren't you, because you can't not keep writing them.

So, when your characters have an entire conversation in your head while you blow dry your hair and when you wake up in the middle of the night and seem to have found a clever way to get your plot to go in the right direction, you should keep writing it all down. Block out the cynics and the sceptics and those who tell you it is practically impossible for an unpublished author to be signed 'these days'. Keep going to book launches in the hope that by the laws of probability it should work out that, one day, maybe, it will be yours.

Keep writing and make it the best bloody writing you are capable of and then edit it to make it even better. And then keep your fingers crossed and your anti-rejection force-field switched on. After all, everyone loves a trier!

Source: http://hotcrossmum.blogspot.com/2011/05/note-to-self.html

interior design natural parenting pre school education

A Midsummer?s Check-In

In some ways, this summer is flying by. In other ways, it’s just inching along, one day after another after another. It’s mid July already? We’re in the thick of summer. Nicole, editor of Simple Organic, had her baby in June. Kara, Simple Kids editor, is due any second. Jamie of Simple Homeschool and I [...]

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A Midsummer’s Check-In is a post from Simple Mom

� 2008-2011 Simple Living Media, LLC | All rights reserved - This feed is provided for the convenience of Simple Mom subscribers. Any reproduction of the content within this feed is strictly prohibited. If you are reading this content elsewhere, please contact hello@simplelivingmedia.com to let us know. Thanks.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/simplemom/~3/EzyRU2uMuEU/

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Source: http://honest2betsy.blogspot.com/2011/04/this-is-my-yummy-baby-somewhere-between.html

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My baby is 1 year old. Here's where we've nursed.

Source: http://breastfeeding.blog.motherwear.com/2011/07/my-baby-is-1-year-old-today-heres-where-weve-nursed.html

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Laughing all the way to the Breastmilk Bank

Source: http://honest2betsy.blogspot.com/2011/04/laughing-all-way-to-breastmilk-bank.html

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Sunday, July 31, 2011

Calling for submissions for the August Carnival of Natural Parenting!

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/HoboMama/~3/bBpiDRdWgao/calling-for-submissions-for-august.html

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Rakofsky Motion #10: Washington City Paper Moves to Dismiss

The Washington City Paper, a freebie delivered around the streets of our nation’s capitol, is also a defendant in the Joseph Rakofsky defamation case. They published this article on April 4th about the mistrial, written by Rend Smith. The paper is represented by the same attorneys as Jeanne O?Halleran, that being�James Rosenfeld and�Samuel Bayard of�Davis [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NewYorkPersonalInjuryLawBlog/~3/Uz9ZaSaC2b4/rakofsky-motion-10-washington-city-paper-moves-to-dismiss.html

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Friday Song - Step Back From The Daily Mail

Source: http://mummynew.blogspot.com/2011/02/friday-song-step-back-from-daily-mail.html

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He Grew Out of It

Source: http://honest2betsy.blogspot.com/2011/07/dear-internets-youre-bit-judgy.html

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My Health Scare (or Why I Had To Write A Post Today)

There’s nothing like thinking you might die to get you thinking about all the things you’ve never said to your kids. This morning when I was having breakfast, I didn’t feel like I had the same motor control over my mouth as usual. It was harder to chew and to swallow and difficult to suck [...]


Related posts:
  1. Taking A Mental Health Day
  2. We Interrupt This Breastfeeding Post…
  3. Guest Post: Identifying Plants With Young Children

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/BreastfeedingMomsUnite/~3/vaT4NEpQboQ/

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So Fuckin' Lucky Week

Source: http://honest2betsy.blogspot.com/2011/03/so-fuckin-lucky-week.html

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Baby Whisperer vs. Baby Smacker

Source: http://honest2betsy.blogspot.com/2010/09/baby-whisperer-vs-baby-smacker.html

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Saturday, July 30, 2011

40 things I've enjoyed on the way to 40: Part 1

Yes, I was a child of the '70s and '80s and as I will be celebrating the ripe old age of FORTY in a couple of weeks, I thought I would become a bit nostalgic and rummage through my decaying brain cells for some gems from my misspent youth. So, here are the first 20 things I have enjoyed immensely on the way to being 40. Any young 'uns reading this won't have a clue what half of the below means (and I offer no apology for that whatsoever!), but for anyone reaching their middle-age years, I hope this brings back fond memories!

1. Midget gems, especially the white and red ones, Wham Bars, Space dust (aka popping candy) and the strictly forbidden candy cigarettes.
2. Lilt, Monster Munch and potted meat sandwiches on school trips.

3. The Dooleys - my first childhood crush on some odd man with alarmlingly feminine hair


4. Sticks of rhubarb straight out of the garden, dipped into bowls of sugar
5. Miss World and Eurovision Song Contests - oh, the excitement, the excitement!
6. The Incredible Hulk on Friday night telly
7. The Dukes of Hazzard on a Saturday teatime
8. Swap Shop
9. Jim'll Fix It
10. Grange Hill
11. Babycham, Asti Supmante, Blue Nun, Mateus Rose and Black Tower wine

12. Making perfume out of rose petals from the garden
13. Mr Benn, Bagpuss, Barbapapa, Ivor The Engine, The Clangers....the list is endless.
14. Sindy dolls
15. Look In, Smash Hits and Just 17 magazines
16. 'Frankie Says Relax' t.shirts
17. Pedal pushers, ra-ra skirts, pixie boots, Batwing jumpers, satin dungarees (or maybe they were my sisters - not quite sure)
18. My Raleigh Wisp bike and wooden Maxply McEnroe tennis racquet birthday presents
19. Seeing Abba live at Wembley Arena
20. Athena posters

Ahhh, the memories! More next week.

Source: http://hotcrossmum.blogspot.com/2011/05/40-things-ive-enjoyed-on-way-to-40-part.html

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My Friday Song and Some Blogger Love

Source: http://mummynew.blogspot.com/2011/01/my-friday-song-and-some-blogger-love.html

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3:41 pm: In my best friend's cooler

 
It's how mommies roll, am I right?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ThisIsWorthwhile/~3/AUEy16BKMnE/341-pm-in-my-best-friends-cooler.html

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Bread, Roses, and a side of Guilt

Source: http://honest2betsy.blogspot.com/2010/10/bread-roses-and-side-of-guilt.html

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Let Them Look

Source: http://honest2betsy.blogspot.com/2010/11/let-them-look.html

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Wordless Wednesday: Didn't this kid's mother warn him not to sit too close to the TV?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/HoboMama/~3/Hp-FklzFd5U/wordless-wednesday-didnt-this-kids.html

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Rules for Blogging

Source: http://mummynew.blogspot.com/2011/02/rules-for-blogging.html

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Friday, July 29, 2011

Functionality of the babywearing nanny

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/HoboMama/~3/0vgbSjDo0Z4/functionality-of-babywearing-nanny.html

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Hobo Mama Giveaway: Wool Dryer Balls from The Green Belle Shoppe $17 {8.8; US/Can}

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/HoboMama/~3/vb0F2Vti-q4/giveaway-wool-dryer-balls-from-green.html

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Hobo Mama Giveaway: Wool Dryer Balls from The Green Belle Shoppe $17 {8.8; US/Can}

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/HoboMama/~3/vb0F2Vti-q4/giveaway-wool-dryer-balls-from-green.html

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Q&A: What?s your opinion on ?kid-free? zones?

The hot topic on the Internet this week has been “kid-free” zones in certain places ?�essentially banning children from certain events and arenas. The buzz really got going when a Whole Foods Market in Missouri announced a new event: two hours of free babysitting while you go shopping, every Friday in August. Parents can drop [...]

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Q&A: What’s your opinion on “kid-free” zones? is a post from Simple Mom

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My Brits 2011 Highlights

Source: http://mummynew.blogspot.com/2011/02/my-brits-2011-highlights.html

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Rakofsky Motion #9: O?Halleran Motion to Dismiss

Yesterday we saw motion #8, the Washington Post‘s motion to dismiss the Joseph Rakofsky defamation case. Now today we see #9, regarding defendant Jeanne O’Halleran, a Georgia attorney, who was swept into this mess because she posted about this story on a local Georgia forum. She is represented by James Rosenfeld and Samuel Bayard of [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NewYorkPersonalInjuryLawBlog/~3/8ySxp5dU5II/rakofsky-motion-9-ohalleran-motion-to-dismiss.html

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Baby Whisperer vs. Baby Smacker

Source: http://honest2betsy.blogspot.com/2010/09/baby-whisperer-vs-baby-smacker.html

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So Fuckin' Lucky Week

Source: http://honest2betsy.blogspot.com/2011/03/so-fuckin-lucky-week.html

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Thursday, July 28, 2011

When Hot Cross Mum met Edith Bowman


Last week I had the absolute pleasure of spending an evening in the company of Edith Bowman in the fabulously swanky surroundings of the Soho Hotel in London. Just a regular Tuesday night, right? Well OK, not quite - although I could very easily get used to it!

Edith is one of the ambassadors behind the Proctor & Gamble 'Proud Sponsor of Mums' campaign in Ireland and the UK (have you seen the gorgeous TV ad yet - tear jerker or what?). Edith spoke to the press about the findings of Proctor & Gamble's report into 'The Changing Face of Motherhood', which highlights how the role of mothers has changed over the decades. The report was commissioned by P&G (the company behind brands such as Ariel, Fairy, Pampers and Olay) in the run up to Mother?s Day. I then scooped a private interview with Edith about her role as a busy working mum and her involvement in the P&G challenge to live as a 1930s housewife for a day. Here's what happened.

HCM: Hi Edith. Gosh, you're stunning. I'm a little bit starstruck. (why didn't anyone offer to do my hair and make-up? Hmm). Would you like to sip your champagne and munch on a mini burger while we chat?

Edith: Hi Hot Cross Mum. Oo, yes, that would be fab.

HCM: So, Edith, tell me about your challenge to live as a 1930s housewife? You certainly looked a lot more glamorous doing your challenges than I did!

Edith: The challenges were amazing, but I never want to see another washboard for as long as I live. It really shows you what hard work it was back then.

HCM: I agree. Did you see me trying to wash clothes with a washboard? Pathetic! So, what was the hardest part of the challenge for you?

Edith: Erm, everything! I basically wouldn't be able to work if I had to live like that now. I think we take for granted all the modern appliances and products we have now to make our lives easier - although we do fill up the time we have gained with other stuff. Life is very busy for mums now.

HCM: So you won't be trading in your dishwasher for carbolic soap and a wire scourer then?

Edith: (laughs) No!

HCM: Did I mention that your hair looks amazing? I did. Right, let's carry on then. So, Edith, you're clearly an extremely busy woman. What is your schedule and how do you manage to juggle your career with family life and your little boy Rudy?

Edith: (clearly melting at the mention of her little boy) - It's really tough. As a working mum I know how hard it is to juggle everything. I absolutely love my job and am very lucky to to do the job I love. I want to work to give Rudy the best I can, and for myself because I still have things I want to achieve. I leave the house at 6am for The Breakfast Show and am usually home by 11am. Rudy is in nursery 5 mornings - we try to keep his schedule as normal as possible. We don't have family living nearby and haven't had a nanny since last August so me and Tom (Edith's husband - the lead singer with The Editors) have to be very organised and juggle our schedules. I'm hugely appreciative of the support networks I have of my mum and friends who step in and help out. I had to put my mum on the sleeper train from Scotland so she could mind Rudy while I am here tonight.

HCM: So, you don't have a nanny? Is that through choice?

Edith: Yes. We made that decision because we want Rudy to have a normal, family life and be surrounded by family and people who are important to him; who will be there as a constant, whether that is me, Tom or his nana. It's hard work but we just have to be very organised.

HCM: How do you spend your free time with Rudy?

Edith: When I collect him from nursery I love taking him swimming, or we go to the cinema -just normal, everyday things really. Our time together is really, really important to me.

HCM: So, is Rudy into music? I guess he must be with such musical influences around him?

Edith: He is! He goes into the studio with Tom and bashes on the drums! He's into the Beatles at the moment - he calls John Lennon 'John Lemon' and likes singing 'Yellow Submarine'. He also thinks the Dizzee Rascal song 'Bonkers' is hilarious.

HCM: You clearly adore your son.

Edith: Rudy is amazing - I learn from him on a daily basis. He's the first thing I think about in the morning and the last thing I think about at night. As a mum you just feel this massive sense of responsibility.

HCM: Ahhhhh -that's so lovely. You're so normal and down-to-earth. Please can I sit and chat to you all night? So are you doing any of the summer festivals?

Edith: Yes, I'm doing T in the Park in Scotland. Coldplay, The Arctic Monkeys and The Foo Fighters are headlining. It should be fantastic.

HCM: Excellent. So, you won't be wearing your 1930s headscarf to that event then? Well Edith, I know you want to sit and chat to me all night but I really must be fair and let some of the other people talk to you and take your photo. It has been an absolute pleasure meeting you. Please feel free to pop in for a cuppa if you're at the Oxygen festival in Ireland this year - I live just down the road.

Edith: My pleasure Hot Cross Mum (shakes my hand). Love your ring by the way.

And with that she drifts off into the waiting crowd. She liked my ring. That must make me cool, surely?

Edith Bowman is the loveliest lady and clearly a doting mum who works hard to balance her career and family life just as the rest of us do - her 'me time' is as limited as the next person's. It's really refreshing to talk to a celebrity mum who isn't surrounded by nannies, but who faces a familiar struggle to schedule and organise and spend time with her child while holding down a job she loves. Cheers Edith - you rock! Follow Edith on Twitter @edibow

Source: http://hotcrossmum.blogspot.com/2011/04/when-hot-cross-mum-met-edith-bowman.html

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The Secret of Success for Work-at-Home Moms

Written by organizing contributor Mandi Ehman of Life…Your Way. What if I told you that there was one principle that would have the biggest impact on whether or not you’re successful as a work-at-home mom? Hint: It’s not the industry or niche you choose. It’s not the structure of your business or what trade organizations [...]

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The Secret of Success for Work-at-Home Moms is a post from Simple Mom

� 2008-2011 Simple Living Media, LLC | All rights reserved - This feed is provided for the convenience of Simple Mom subscribers. Any reproduction of the content within this feed is strictly prohibited. If you are reading this content elsewhere, please contact hello@simplelivingmedia.com to let us know. Thanks.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/simplemom/~3/MWj4gpiz8dI/

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What is a displaced homemaker?

Displaced dog-lover.

This is a displaced homemaker:


A woman who was once dependent on another's income, but is no longer due to a change in marital status (divorce or death) or a sudden change in financial situation (partner loses his/her job), and is forced back into the workforce.  

Apparently, officially speaking, I'm right on track with my loss of identity, confusion, and fear.  As is my defensiveness and unspeakable desire to run away from it all.  We displaced homemakers have a lot of bullshit going on (emphasis mine):
She must cope with the rigors of basic survival, provide for herself... and get on with the business of deciding what she will do with the rest of her life.  These are no small tasks under the best of circumstances.  Goal setting may appear to be an easy task, but for an individual whose entire life is in disarray, even setting the goal of picking up an employment application is a major activity.  The displaced homemaker, at this point, is usually struggling to make it out of bed each morning, and often feels incapable of more formidable efforts.*
So... now I have another label.  First it was small, like, College Graduate; then a little bigger, Owner of a Masters Degree; then huge, such as Wife and Mother (do they keep getting bigger in life??); and finally, Divorcee and Displaced Homemaker.  

Ok, I'll take it.  I'm a displaced homemaker, a mother, a woman, and struggling.  Really fucking struggling.

I mean, half of my life includes being wrapped in soft, sweet arms; kissed with innocent lips; snuggled with and adored; filled to the brim with purpose and meaning.  The other half I am alone; wholly grown-up; drunk with friends; adrift; empty, terrified, and jobless.

I am thrilled at my freedom to be Me, but also deeply struck down by it.  I don't entirely know who that is anymore.  I am a mother without a son half the time, I am a wife without a husband, an ambitious woman with no job, an animal lover with no animals, a care-taker with no one to take care of, a lover with no one to love.

This separation/divorce thing is splitting me in ways I didn't even know were possible.  Not only have I separated from my life partner, but I have been cracked away from ideas and identities that were integral to who I was as a human being.  I had no idea I would be this shattered, this broken.

I feel dead inside every moment I am away from Hawk without exception.  My heart is icy, downright black.  I care about nothing.  Getting out of bed, being industrious, holding conversations are all becoming feats in and of themselves.   I do it all, every day, but I'll admit it's a struggle.

As I see myself slipping I understand that it's part of the process.  I knew this was going to suck.  -- What?  Did I really think that everything would be peachy?  No.  I knew it was going to get dark, I just didn't know it'd also lose who I was in the process of discovering who that was in the first place.

I think, "If only I had a job.  It'd keep me busy, give me something to do, someone to be..." But it's not that easy.

I had a conversation the other day I wish I hadn't.  I can't tell you how many times people ask me about my job search and how it's going.  I'm getting used to it.  I know that people care about me, but it's like asking "So, how's the cancer thing going?"  I don't really want to talk about it (it's painful and terrifying), but I do because I know friends and family are worried.  But this particular chat struck me to the bone like the others hadn't.  I was asked, "Why don't you just open a private practice while you look for other work?  That's what so-and-so did."

The question is innocuous, I know, but the message I got was, "You're not doing it right.  You're not doing enough.  Look at this other woman, she did it right.  You have no excuse to not be working."

This is a perfect example of my current state of mind, of how goddamned wounded I am.  I don't really know if that's what this person thought about me by their "helpful suggestion," I just have no buffer because I am lost and I am mourning.

My face, neck and chest flooded with heat and I had to fight the tears as I took a deep breath and responded as non-defensively as humanly possible that a) I don't want to start a private practice right out of the gate after a 3.5 year absence from the field, b) I have zero capital to do so even if I wanted to, c) I don't want to be isolated as a new therapist from my colleagues and would prefer an agency setting or other cooperative, and d) I don't think it's as easy as this friend of a friend made it seem; I have friends whose private practices are only just now in the black after a year of work and they had monies in the cache to do so.

I was gently argued with on these points, then given a couple of concessions.

I felt somehow simultaneously vindicated and even more defeated when I walked away.

I'm treading water from technical skill alone, not strength.  I only look normal:  I bathe, put on makeup, laugh easily, socialize.  I don't think people understand what's really happening to me; how sensitive I am.  How hard I'm fighting to keep my walls up and remain protected from the outside world.  What a big fucking deal this all is.


I have lost everything I knew and loved.  Everything I thought I was.  This isn't just some fucking bad mood.  I'm not weak.  I'm not making this a bigger deal than it really is.  This is awful.  And I don't give a fuck if someone else has it worse or it could get worse.  Of course it could get worse.  I'm not so self-absorbed or ridiculous that I don't know that, but really, what good does that line of thinking do other than make me feel stupid?  It doesn't make my feelings go away.  I appreciate some perspective, but I'd really rather skip over the idea that I'm not allowed to feel this way just because some other schmuck has it worse than me.

When I visit Hawk and his dad, Rooster, at my old house my heart clenches.  I see the plants I painstakingly put in the ground, the wall colors I spent weeks debating on, the old friends from across the street, the hopes I had sunk into those four walls.  When I look closer I see nail-holes from removed pictures, rearranged furniture, a masculine feel, a new smell; Rooster feels different.  He doesn't need me.  Hell, he doesn't want me. -- But of course!  It's all (say it with me) part. of. the. process.  The mother fucking process.

I feel like that house and its inhabitants are my ghost arm.  I'm limbless and I can still imagine I feel it, but it's gone forever.  What I had is gone.

...
sigh
...

And in case you were all wondering, I'm actually ok.  I'm just hurting.  An ok, hurting, displaced homemaker.

*I did a search for the psychological definition of "displaced homemaker" and stumbled across this paper written in 1981. 

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ThisIsWorthwhile/~3/jZPIkEO-tJQ/what-is-displaced-homemaker.html

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My Health Scare (or Why I Had To Write A Post Today)

There’s nothing like thinking you might die to get you thinking about all the things you’ve never said to your kids. This morning when I was having breakfast, I didn’t feel like I had the same motor control over my mouth as usual. It was harder to chew and to swallow and difficult to suck [...]


Related posts:
  1. Taking A Mental Health Day
  2. We Interrupt This Breastfeeding Post…
  3. Guest Post: Identifying Plants With Young Children

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/BreastfeedingMomsUnite/~3/vaT4NEpQboQ/

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10 Reasons Why I?m a Crap Mum

Source: http://mummynew.blogspot.com/2011/02/10-reasons-why-im-crap-mum.html

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3:41 pm: In my best friend's cooler

 
It's how mommies roll, am I right?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ThisIsWorthwhile/~3/AUEy16BKMnE/341-pm-in-my-best-friends-cooler.html

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Source: http://honest2betsy.blogspot.com/2011/04/this-is-my-yummy-baby-somewhere-between.html

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July 2nd: A Day to Celebrate Independence (And Celebrate Juries)

Each year I have used July 2nd as �jury celebration day, as this is the day that the Continental Congress voted to liberate the Colonies from the Crown. �John Adams thought that this was the day that would be ?solemnized with Pomp and Parade, with Shows, Games, Sports, Guns, Bells, Bonfires, and Illuminations from one [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NewYorkPersonalInjuryLawBlog/~3/IVK_mSTA9ik/july-2nd-a-day-to-celebrate-independence-and-celebrate-juries.html

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Wednesday, July 27, 2011

"They said you can't breastfeed a baby with Down Syndrome"

Source: http://breastfeeding.blog.motherwear.com/2011/07/they-said-you-cant-breastfeed-a-baby-with-down-syndrome.html

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Baby Whisperer vs. Baby Smacker

Source: http://honest2betsy.blogspot.com/2010/09/baby-whisperer-vs-baby-smacker.html

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Wordless Wednesday: Babywearing a newborn

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/HoboMama/~3/gLunvVA5GdA/wordless-wednesday-babywearing-newborn.html

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Honest to Betsy Blogiversary!

Source: http://honest2betsy.blogspot.com/2010/06/honest-to-betsy-blogiversary.html

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For you, Erica

Last week I went out for a night with some very lovely mother friends and we spontaneously talked about sex for well over an hour, before I even had a chance to bring up the Erica Jong article. Lots of discussion about masturbation and libido and physical changes after babies and scheduling sex and orgasms [...]

Source: http://bluemilk.wordpress.com/2011/07/24/for-you-erica/

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New York Times: "The Breast Milk Cure"

Source: http://breastfeeding.blog.motherwear.com/2011/06/new-york-times-the-breast-milk-cure.html

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Me v. The Trash Can



I'm 2 for 3. Take that, you tiny trash can 8 feet away!!

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ThisIsWorthwhile/~3/GIefcFEcX94/me-v-trash-can.html

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