Saturday, April 30, 2011

Enjoy World Book Day with Priddy Books


To celebrate World Book Day (today), I have been reviewing some excellent children's books on the blog this week. I'm also running a competition to give away a copy of two of the books - check it out; winners will be announced tomorrow (Friday).

For my final book-ish post, I would like to highlight the very excellent Priddy Books who, as well as celebrating World Book Day are also celebrating their 10th birthday this Spring.

I'm sure many of you have one of Priddy Book's excellent titles among the bookshelves at home - from their Touch and Feel books for very young readers to their fantastic sticker books and activity books to first reference books, there really is something for everyone.

We were very lucky to be sent the set of sticker and colouring books pictured below. These are small, A5 size, very slim books which fit easily into a bag and will keep your children occupied anywhere you need them to be occupied! The themes of the books in this set include: Trucks, Baby Animals and The World. A sticker book each kept my two boys occupied for the entire flight from Dublin to Leeds. I was thanking Priddy Books several times as I drank my much needed cup of coffee in peace!
Whether you have come across Priddy Books already, or are looking for great ideas for encouraging your children to read, and interact with books, there can be few websites better worth exploring.

And if you ever needed an idea for an easter gift, which wasn't chocolate.......


Aaaaaaaahhhhhhhhhhhh.

Source: http://hotcrossmum.blogspot.com/2011/03/enjoy-world-book-day-with-priddy-books.html

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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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My 2 Year Blogversary - Thank you and Goodbye

Source: http://mummynew.blogspot.com/2011/02/my-2-year-blogversary-thank-you-and.html

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Mother? Woman? Both?


I read a very interesting post recently on the excellent Irish site 'The Anti-Room', which asks the question, 'can you be a mummy and a woman? (the question being based on something the writer's four-and-a-half year-old child said).

The basic premise of the article is to ask whether motherhood and womanhood are compatible? The writer suggests not - commenting that as mothers, are woman merely breeders, existing purely for the purpose of raising their young? There have been some vociferous responses.

This got me thinking: do women really have to give up their bodies, careers, financial independence, skinny jeans and festival tickets (based on the pelvic floor/toilet queue issue), just because they become a mother?

I think the reality for many is probably, yes (especially the festival tickets). It is surely a little naive to think that having children will not change you, your body, your circumstances or your outlook on life. I know some people seem to carry on regardless; celebrities in particular, but surely that's not the norm and nor should it be.

Having mulled this over while scrubbing the floor, darning some socks, pandering to everyone else's needs and weeping into my embroidery, I have come to the conclusion that, far from repressing it, motherhood actually benefits womanliness. I've certainly become a more confident woman since becoming a mother and have had a huge number of life-experiences which I simply wouldn't have had if I didn't have children (being vomited on at 30,000ft just one of many examples I could give). I'm probably more interesting, better organised, more resilient, make more of my time, set myself higher goals and am quite possibly a nicer person than before I became a mother.

So, can you be a mummy and a woman at the same time? Absolutely.

What do you think?


Source: http://hotcrossmum.blogspot.com/2011/02/mother-woman-both.html

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Baby Whisperer vs. Baby Smacker

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

breastfeeding interior design natural parenting

Will We Ever See Eye To Eye?

Written by relationships columnist Corey Allan of Simple Marriage. Every marriage has conflict. Every relationship has conflict as well. John Gottman, one of the leaders in the field of marriage research, has discovered that the majority of marital conflicts are perpetual in nature. They’re continual and repeated. In fact, 69% of all marital problems fall [...]

CURRENT SPONSORS:

Will We Ever See Eye To Eye? 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/cv_SRsKEzHY/

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My Experience of Being Married To a Partner Who Isn?t Always Sure That Attachment Parenting Is Best

I found this post in the draft section of my blog. It was originally written one year ago, and I have finally decided to publish it. My husband has been supportive of natural parenting, but I do get the sense that if he had married and had kids with someone else he wouldn’t be adamant [...]


Related posts:
  1. Monday Musings: Becoming An Attachment Parent
  2. Self-Attachment: Smart Babies Want to Breastfeed
  3. What Is Natural Parenting? Embracing Real Food

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/BreastfeedingMomsUnite/~3/hKQQ3hCYdJ0/

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iPhone GPS Data Will Open New Doors in Litigation (Updated)

When I heard the news last week while on vacation, the first thing that hit me was this: The courts have a new discovery issue for personal injury lawyers to deal with. That news, as you can guess from the subject heading, is that Apple iPhone users have their movements tracked by GPS so long [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/NewYorkPersonalInjuryLawBlog/~3/l298kAox7IQ/iphone-gps-data-will-open-new-doors-in-litigation.html

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Friday, April 29, 2011

My Experience of Being Married To a Partner Who Isn?t Always Sure That Attachment Parenting Is Best

I found this post in the draft section of my blog. It was originally written one year ago, and I have finally decided to publish it. My husband has been supportive of natural parenting, but I do get the sense that if he had married and had kids with someone else he wouldn’t be adamant [...]


Related posts:
  1. Monday Musings: Becoming An Attachment Parent
  2. Self-Attachment: Smart Babies Want to Breastfeed
  3. What Is Natural Parenting? Embracing Real Food

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/BreastfeedingMomsUnite/~3/hKQQ3hCYdJ0/

breastfeeding interior design natural parenting

Authors for Japan


I don't think there can be many people who haven't been incredibly moved by the horrendous images and stories coming out of the earthquake and tsunami in Japan. We watch speechless and just cannot comprehend what we are seeing.

When a disaster on this scale happens it's difficult to know what you can do to help. Well, one inspiring woman, Keris Stainton, has set up a fantastic website 'Authors for Japan' where an amazing collection of authors are offering signed copies of their books, critiques of opening chapters, original artwork, book cover designs and other brilliant things - all to the highest bidder. There are a number of 'lots' being offered through posts on the blog - to bid, just leave your comment and the lot will go to the highest bidder by 8pm on Sunday (20th March). All the funds raised will go to the Red Cross Japan Tsunami Appeal.

Authors taking part include, Jill Mansell, Adele Parks, Caroline Smailes, Cathy Cassidy and Melissa Hill (to name but a few).

Full details of how it all works are at http://authorsforjapan.wordpress.com

Source: http://hotcrossmum.blogspot.com/2011/03/authors-for-japan.html

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New bank card

I'm exceedingly sad today.

For some reason today feels worse than all the other days.  And I'm not at all sure why.

Maybe it's because the test is over and done with and I don't have anything to fill my thoughts but with WHAT AM I GOING TO DO?  WHAT ARE YOU DOING? YOU AREN'T DOING ENOUGH!  DO MORE!  WORK HARDER!  TRY HARDER!

I have to get a job.  It's very simple.  Yet, I still feel horribly displaced and out of sorts by all of this.  My baby is away from me every day and I only see him three hours a day during the week.  That barely feels like mothering to me after doing it for 24 hours a day for more than 3 years.

I know that many displaced homemakers such as myself have gone through this and it's comforting to know there's a universe of women who know what this is like... but it still sucks shit.  It sucks. fucking. shit.  And a half.

This past Friday my financials with Rooster split.  Meaning, half his paycheck goes into my own separate account now.  I received my cards in the mail weeks ago, but never activated them.  I thought I was lazy, but really, I was in denial.  As I slid the card in the ATM slot Saturday to activate it a little piece of me shredded.  My own account.  Alone.  Separately.


Rooster is cracking under the financial strain of doubling our expenses.  I don't blame him.  Meanwhile, I continue to shatter into a million tiny bits and pieces.  A little here.  A little there.


I look into Hawk's ocean-colored eyes with the dark blond lashes and I see love and hope.  I look into the mirror and I see sorrow.  Stark and lingering.


I'll be ok, I know this, but... but I don't know what.


I look at my friends and I see more love and support.  I would drown if it weren't for them, their belief in me.  I am dried up inside.  I care about so very little anymore.  I feel almost nothing when I am alone.


Every day I think about my future and my baby's.  I am proud of myself and feel strong then I get sucked into a vortex of fear and self-doubt.  I love my life -- love it -- but it also feels like Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.  One week I am Jessica.  Rowdy, raucous, bold.  The next, I am Mommy.  Loving, responsible, devoted.


Each week causes me whip lash they are so utterly different and each so potent in their affect on me.


My bank card somehow proves this.  I am on my own.  Alone.  Both me and myself.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ThisIsWorthwhile/~3/z2_FOyoMr7Q/new-bank-card.html

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Cows engineered to produce "human milk," and why Bessie will never, ever replace you.

Source: http://breastfeeding.blog.motherwear.com/2011/04/cows-engineered-to-produce-human-milk-and-why-bessie-will-never-ever-replace-you.html

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My Kids Have Taught Me That It?s Time To Stop Blogging

Welcome to the January Carnival of Natural Parenting: Learning from children This post was written for inclusion in the monthly Carnival of Natural Parenting hosted by Hobo Mama and Code Name: Mama. This month our participants have shared the many lessons their children have taught them. Please read to the end to find a list [...]


Related posts:
  1. I Know Blogging Has Taken Over My Life When…
  2. Simple Indoor Activities For Kids
  3. Explaining Sex To Kids Is Much Easier Than Explaining War

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/BreastfeedingMomsUnite/~3/19fGliiqGfE/

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A Thank You Card

As many of you now know, I am not going to be blogging anymore. The day before my announcement post went up I was treated to a complimentary night’s stay at the Inn At Laurel Point in Victoria, B.C. It was such a wonderful gift and the perfect way to end my past two years [...]


Related posts:
  1. A Mother’s Day Card from Your Kids

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/BreastfeedingMomsUnite/~3/GaffE6rp9xA/

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Weekend Links

Buying an Education or Buying a Brand? :: Seth Godin Learning to Think Like Your Child :: Steady Mom Making Museums Fun :: A Quiet Spot Is Sugar Toxic? :: New York Times Eat Well, Spend Less: Homemade Substitutes for Grocery Staples :: Simple Bites I get to announce 15 winners today! First up are [...]

CURRENT SPONSORS:

Weekend Links 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/~3/0xKeGjatCXA/

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Will We Ever See Eye To Eye?

Written by relationships columnist Corey Allan of Simple Marriage. Every marriage has conflict. Every relationship has conflict as well. John Gottman, one of the leaders in the field of marriage research, has discovered that the majority of marital conflicts are perpetual in nature. They’re continual and repeated. In fact, 69% of all marital problems fall [...]

CURRENT SPONSORS:

Will We Ever See Eye To Eye? 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/cv_SRsKEzHY/

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Thursday, April 28, 2011

Wordless Wednesday: Babywearing & pregnant

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/HoboMama/~3/dgjl0z0nkoA/wordless-wednesday-babywearing-pregnant.html

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Last weekend: picnics, interstate family visiting, lunch party with friends

Cloud watching. Bushwalking. Shell-collecting with an Aunt. Last swim in the sea before winter? At a lunch party with friends.

Source: http://bluemilk.wordpress.com/2011/04/27/last-weekend-picnics-interstate-family-visiting-lunch-party-with-friends/

natural parenting pre school education autism

New bank card

I'm exceedingly sad today.

For some reason today feels worse than all the other days.  And I'm not at all sure why.

Maybe it's because the test is over and done with and I don't have anything to fill my thoughts but with WHAT AM I GOING TO DO?  WHAT ARE YOU DOING? YOU AREN'T DOING ENOUGH!  DO MORE!  WORK HARDER!  TRY HARDER!

I have to get a job.  It's very simple.  Yet, I still feel horribly displaced and out of sorts by all of this.  My baby is away from me every day and I only see him three hours a day during the week.  That barely feels like mothering to me after doing it for 24 hours a day for more than 3 years.

I know that many displaced homemakers such as myself have gone through this and it's comforting to know there's a universe of women who know what this is like... but it still sucks shit.  It sucks. fucking. shit.  And a half.

This past Friday my financials with Rooster split.  Meaning, half his paycheck goes into my own separate account now.  I received my cards in the mail weeks ago, but never activated them.  I thought I was lazy, but really, I was in denial.  As I slid the card in the ATM slot Saturday to activate it a little piece of me shredded.  My own account.  Alone.  Separately.


Rooster is cracking under the financial strain of doubling our expenses.  I don't blame him.  Meanwhile, I continue to shatter into a million tiny bits and pieces.  A little here.  A little there.


I look into Hawk's ocean-colored eyes with the dark blond lashes and I see love and hope.  I look into the mirror and I see sorrow.  Stark and lingering.


I'll be ok, I know this, but... but I don't know what.


I look at my friends and I see more love and support.  I would drown if it weren't for them, their belief in me.  I am dried up inside.  I care about so very little anymore.  I feel almost nothing when I am alone.


Every day I think about my future and my baby's.  I am proud of myself and feel strong then I get sucked into a vortex of fear and self-doubt.  I love my life -- love it -- but it also feels like Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.  One week I am Jessica.  Rowdy, raucous, bold.  The next, I am Mommy.  Loving, responsible, devoted.


Each week causes me whip lash they are so utterly different and each so potent in their affect on me.


My bank card somehow proves this.  I am on my own.  Alone.  Both me and myself.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ThisIsWorthwhile/~3/z2_FOyoMr7Q/new-bank-card.html

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Influenced Vegetable Stew

Influenced by whom you wonder? Mollie Katzen again. While everyone else I know is loving up and “Tackling Mark Bittman” (blog hop anyone?), I remain in a state of Bittman ignorance and find kinship with my old pal Mollie instead. I had no idea what to make tonight. All I knew is that I wanted [...]


Related posts:
  1. Foodie Fridays: Vegetable Pie with Grated Potato Crust
  2. Foodie Friday: Greek Red Lentil Soup
  3. Vegetarian Foodie Fridays: Chickpea Potato Stew

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/BreastfeedingMomsUnite/~3/bqjpJ7gDwh8/

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Win Liz Earle goodies for Valentine's Day


Oh, Valentine's Day. Here you come again; taking over the garage forecourts with displays of red roses, pressuring people to declare their undying love for each other in a HUGE greeting card and tempting us all with special offers on pink champagne. I'm never quite sure what to do with it all - ignore it completely, hope for a romantic surprise or just sort something out myself. Hmmm...

Well, whatever you're planning to do next week, here's something to think about. How about, instead of celebrating the day by getting dirty in the bedroom, how about celebrating by getting clean in the bathroom? Tenuous, I know, but bear with me.

You see, I have up for grabs a His (pictured below) and Hers (pictured above) set of the award winning Cleanse and Polish Hot Cloth Cleansers from the lovely people at Liz Earle. As ever, the products come beautifully packaged and are guaranteed to get you both racing into the bathroom for some steamy cleansing. Phwoar.

I have reviewed Liz Earle products here and here and can honestly say they are among the nicest and most effective beauty products I've ever tried (and I've tried a few over the years, believe me).

So, if you're of the male variety reading this and are looking for inspiration, check out the full range of products and Valentine's gifts at Liz Earle. If you're a hopeful female, why not leave the Liz Earle website open and make loud comments about running out of face cream. You never know....

Or, if you would simply like to be in with a chance of winning the prize, just leave a comment below and the winner will be chosen at random on Thursday 10th February 2011.

Good luck.

Source: http://hotcrossmum.blogspot.com/2011/02/win-liz-earle-goodies-for-valentines.html

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Writers and Volunteers Wanted!

Are you a writer who’s interested in natural parenting topics? Are you a dear soul who wants to volunteer to help a thriving community of like-minded parents? We need more fresh new content and volunteers for Natural Parents Network, a site that connects like-minded natural parents and parents-to-be. Lauren from Hobo Mama1 and I cofounded [...]

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, Writers and Volunteers Wanted!. 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/dQIjKoDAFUM/

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My 5 Most Popular Posts

Source: http://mummynew.blogspot.com/2011/02/my-5-most-popular-posts.html

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Motherwear's semi-annual bra sale

Source: http://breastfeeding.blog.motherwear.com/2011/04/motherwears-semi-annual-bra-sale.html

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Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Weekend Links

What Reaching a Goal Really Looks Like :: Small Notebook Parents, Don’t Let Your Girls Dress Like Tramps :: CNN 31 Days to a Better Photo series :: My 3 Boybarians What if Moses had Facebook? :: AISH Is God Good? :: Roscommon Acres Thanks again to Meagan for blessing five Simple Mom readers a [...]

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Weekend Links 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/ADNo2UHgfT8/

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My Erotic Rock Collection

Source: http://honest2betsy.blogspot.com/2010/07/my-erotic-rock-collection.html

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Betsy vs. the World

Source: http://honest2betsy.blogspot.com/2011/03/betsy-vs-world.html

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Music I want my children to listen to - ABBA!


Voulez vous....a-ha......

Oh, the memories, the blue eyeshadow, the alarmingly tight bodysuit Bjorn was wearing! I was there. I saw it all. Yes, I was one of the very, VERY lucky children to see ABBA live at Wembley Arena on 10th November 1979.

I was 8 and a half. My sister had just celebrated her 11th birthday and her present was tickets to this amazing, once-in-a-lifetime event. I know - my parents were the coolest parents in the world at that particular moment.

We lived in a small village in Yorkshire - a LONG way from Wembley. There is an entire book waiting to be written about the journey from our house to the dizzying excitement of London - let alone the concert itself, which was utterly brilliant.

I vividly remember peering through my dads binoculars (don't ask) to get a closer look. I could actually see Anna's bright blue eyeshadow and the slinky cats which adorned the silky capes they all wore, before ripping them off to reveal the dreadful bodysuits underneath. Yikes! It was an amazing experience and I can still hardly believe we were there!

So, as you can probably tell I am a huge ABBA fan and this is why I want my children to listen to their music. It is, surely, a great musical place to start for any child. My boys have been listening to ABBA Gold since they were tiny tots and we still listen to ABBA regularly in the car. The music is undeniably brilliant and they sing along - probably because they can actually hear the words being sung (unlike popular musical artists these days who just mumble and mutter - moan, moan, grumble, grumble, reaches for zimmer frame).

There have been some great posts written as part of the 'Music I want my children to listen to' series - Ghost Writer Mummy and The Alexander Residence to name but two (apologies if there are others).

So, there's my addition to the mix and I will happily have a heated debate with anyone who dares to suggest that ABBA is not, simply, a musical essential.

In their own words, 'Thank you for the music'.

Grab the badge, and join in.

Source: http://hotcrossmum.blogspot.com/2011/02/music-i-want-my-children-to-listen-to.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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My 5 Most Popular Posts

Source: http://mummynew.blogspot.com/2011/02/my-5-most-popular-posts.html

breastfeeding interior design natural parenting

Baby sign is teaching me more about how my daughter thinks about nursing.

Source: http://breastfeeding.blog.motherwear.com/2011/04/baby-sign-is-teaching-me-more-about-how-my-daughter-thinks-about-nursing.html

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Send your guest posts for the babymoon!

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/HoboMama/~3/Kp1_UyvvQ5M/send-your-guest-posts-for-babymoon.html

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Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Music I want my children to listen to - ABBA!


Voulez vous....a-ha......

Oh, the memories, the blue eyeshadow, the alarmingly tight bodysuit Bjorn was wearing! I was there. I saw it all. Yes, I was one of the very, VERY lucky children to see ABBA live at Wembley Arena on 10th November 1979.

I was 8 and a half. My sister had just celebrated her 11th birthday and her present was tickets to this amazing, once-in-a-lifetime event. I know - my parents were the coolest parents in the world at that particular moment.

We lived in a small village in Yorkshire - a LONG way from Wembley. There is an entire book waiting to be written about the journey from our house to the dizzying excitement of London - let alone the concert itself, which was utterly brilliant.

I vividly remember peering through my dads binoculars (don't ask) to get a closer look. I could actually see Anna's bright blue eyeshadow and the slinky cats which adorned the silky capes they all wore, before ripping them off to reveal the dreadful bodysuits underneath. Yikes! It was an amazing experience and I can still hardly believe we were there!

So, as you can probably tell I am a huge ABBA fan and this is why I want my children to listen to their music. It is, surely, a great musical place to start for any child. My boys have been listening to ABBA Gold since they were tiny tots and we still listen to ABBA regularly in the car. The music is undeniably brilliant and they sing along - probably because they can actually hear the words being sung (unlike popular musical artists these days who just mumble and mutter - moan, moan, grumble, grumble, reaches for zimmer frame).

There have been some great posts written as part of the 'Music I want my children to listen to' series - Ghost Writer Mummy and The Alexander Residence to name but two (apologies if there are others).

So, there's my addition to the mix and I will happily have a heated debate with anyone who dares to suggest that ABBA is not, simply, a musical essential.

In their own words, 'Thank you for the music'.

Grab the badge, and join in.

Source: http://hotcrossmum.blogspot.com/2011/02/music-i-want-my-children-to-listen-to.html

pedophile divorce breastfeeding

Using breastmilk to assess breast cancer risk: Study I've worked on is in the news!

Source: http://breastfeeding.blog.motherwear.com/2011/04/using-breastmilk-to-assess-breast-cancer-risk-study-ive-recruited-for-is-in-the-news.html

breastfeeding interior design natural parenting

Weekend Links

Buying an Education or Buying a Brand? :: Seth Godin Learning to Think Like Your Child :: Steady Mom Making Museums Fun :: A Quiet Spot Is Sugar Toxic? :: New York Times Eat Well, Spend Less: Homemade Substitutes for Grocery Staples :: Simple Bites I get to announce 15 winners today! First up are [...]

CURRENT SPONSORS:

Weekend Links 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/~3/0xKeGjatCXA/

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The magic that is a child (this is not a year-end recap)



Every morning I am awoken by Hawk climbing into bed with me; my mattress is on the floor and he delights in the ease with which he can snuggle down next to me.  Today was no different.

Yet, somehow, today is different.  Just a little.

It's my 5 year anniversary.

I feel some sadness about this, though it's more like I feel a kind of heavy pressure regarding its presence rather than any real emotion about it.  Maybe it's more accurate to say, I think I feel some sadness about today.

Hawk rustled under the covers and my eyes blinked open to see the sunlight streaming in over the back of his spiky bedhead.  His little shoulder rising and falling with his breath accompanied by a slight motion from rubbing his blankie between his thumb and forefinger.

Then he rolled over and we were nose to nose looking deeply into each other's eyes.  His dark brown lashes blurred into white tips as they caught the soft light and his cobalt blue irises reflected me back like a tiny, tiny mirror.  Everything else in the universe ceased to exist as I stared at myself in his eyes.  He lifted his hand, placed it on my face gently and said, "It is a good day."

The last five weeks have been incredible; such a tangle of every emotion possible.  I am happier than I've been in years, yet I am also sad; I'm angry, I'm at peace; I hurt, I rejoice.  The death of my marriage has conjured up the ghosts from my father's and Levi's deaths and I have re-experienced that pain all over again, as well.  Apparently, despite my grief over these things being so vastly different, they're still all in a "grief file" in my brain and when I pull out one, I revisit the others whether I want to or not.

Grief aside, life is pretty fucking ok.

Rooster and I are doing well.  We have our moments of locked horns, but just as in our marriage our separation and road to divorce is full of decorum and respect.  We're like little barnyard goats, not bighorn sheep.  I couldn't ask for a better man in my life than him to share this with -- is it weird to say I wouldn't want to divorce anyone else but him??  I think you get the point: his kind, gentle intelligence is serving us now just as it did when we were working to stay together.

My friends have been supportive and caring; gently reaching out, but never crowding me.  I've had some incredibly low moments this month and if it weren't for the steady trickle of concern from far and wide my pain surely would have run away with me.  Thank you to all of you.  I cannot imagine my life without you.

Tuesday, January 4th, Hawk starts day care.  Full time.  I got him enrolled in an amazing school which is centered around child-led play.  Seventy-five children, aged 18 months to 5 years, run amok playing with potions, piles of sand, old tires, and the ugliest castoff toys I've ever seen which somehow magically turn into the shiniest, most spectacularly special toys when I use the eyes of my youth.

A lot has been going on, yes... yet, I haven't been dreading today as you might think.  I believe in regular days and their mundane power and try not to give importance to arbitrary dates (with the singular exception of Hawk's birthday and those days which those I love find important).  I'm having some of my dearest friends over tonight, people who were at my wedding 5 years ago, and Rooster has asked to join us.  Of course I said he was more than welcome.

So I will be ringing in the New Year much the same as I did five years ago: with hope, with expectation, with love and friends surrounding me.  The biggest difference now is that everyday I have a small, cherubic face to remind me what a good day it is today lest I forget.

And as his early morning words faded into the space over our heads comfortably cradled in my down pillows he moved his hand to rub my arm.  He took a small breath and added to his assertion about today's goodness, "You are so precious."

Indeed, I thought, but it's more like lucky. I am so, so lucky.



Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ThisIsWorthwhile/~3/DwlB6Bhzrjk/magic-that-is-child.html

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Nursing in Public, with a Twist

Kieran and I needed to make a quick grocery store run last week, and he grabbed his stuffed penguin to come along for the ride. While we were walking amongst the bedding things, I looked down at him and saw this: Thank you, Kieran, for helping us normalize nursing in public. ~~~~~~~ I love you, [...]

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Happy Easter

Happy Easter or however you celebrate it.. or don’t. Personally, I’m a big fan of celebrating chocolate.

Source: http://bluemilk.wordpress.com/2011/04/23/happy-easter/

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Six misconceptions about 'extended' breastfeeding

Source: http://breastfeeding.blog.motherwear.com/2011/04/the-biggest-misconceptions-about-extended-breastfeeding.html

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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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Monday, April 25, 2011

Uterine Orgasms - Myth and Mayhem Online and Between the Sheets

Source: http://honest2betsy.blogspot.com/2011/03/uterine-orgasms-myth-and-mayhem-online.html

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Loopty-lou of life: Some seminal moments

Hawk 'n Rooster.  My dudes, redefined.

There have been some seminal moments in my life since I last posted.  All good, some sad.  I'll list them in order of precedence in my mind:

Numero Uno:
While at Rooster's house, Hawk grabbed a curtain rod (don't ask) and pulled the two pieces apart.  He handed me one, kept the other for himself and started making light saber noises with his.

"Mommy," he says between "vhooms", "you're Luke Skywalker and I'm Darf Vader."  And he raises his sword and strikes mine down.

My freakin' heart exploded.  I mean, intelligent, imaginative play; a worthy opponent; Star Wars!?!
?
No. 2:
Rooster and I officially filed for divorce.

The day it happened I was in tears.  I felt like each cell had a tiny string attached to it and they were all being slowly pulled in different directions.  It was a feeling of implosion and explosion all at once.

I spent the evening at Rooster's eating chicken tetrazzini and sharing the documents with him.  It was at once horrifically sad and wonderfully exciting.  I love the way our relationship is transforming and molding to our situation.  As adept as we were at communicating through our marriage, we're equally agile in dissolving it.

I'm proud of the way we're handling things and I am eternally grateful for his support, intellect, kindness, and devotion.  We have our moments, for sure, but honestly I'll take our "moments" over other divorcing couples' any day.

No. 3:
Hawk has become very popular at school.  Numerous times teachers have come up to me to tell me that the other children like him very much, particularly the girls.  One little girl he's always with, Fleur, even told the teachers that she loves him "very much."  And whenever she's around when we pick him up she races over to hug him.  Sometimes multiple times.

Ok, that deserves another ?

I can't tell you how happy this makes me.  For kids to be successful, they have to be liked in some manner.  Either it's a spirit they have or a talent, but it's something other kids are drawn to.  And by "successful" I mean navigate through life towards their own goals with as little barbarism as possible.  Likeability is a key factor in this.  I know some people are born with it, others have to learn it, but I'm glad it's coming naturally to him at this point in his life, because who knows?  it may not last his entire school career.


Hawk's two best friends at school: Keenan on the left, Fleur on the right.



 

 

   
 Spiderman. 

  

 Spiderman again.

 Today it's a cape.

 

 

  
Safety first, yo.


No. 4:
Hawk wrote his name (with some direction from me).

 



No. 5:
I took my body measurements and I'm 41-32-43.  This makes me very happy; I've never been so content with my body in my life.  The numbers aren't what I used to want, but I love them now.   It's true what I've heard about your 30s all along: they really do fucking rock.  I think the days of hating my body may very well be over.  Woooooo!

No. 6:
Hawk prefers Rooster over me, in a major way.  I'm toughing it out, but it hurts like a bitch.  I'm finding little moments to connect with him and keeping a stiff upper lip about the whole thing, so it's not too fucking awful (no, wait.  It actually really is), but it still sucks ass.

In Hawk's eyes, it must seem like I've abandoned him -- we spend so much less time together than before.  It's another hurdle we have to get over, I guess.

I often repeat, "It's a phase, it's a phase, it's a phase."

 What I woke up to one morning.  Yay!

  
A cupcake after dinner. There may or may not have been a meltdown incident after this.

 
A Wednesday morning (on an off-week) spent reconnecting over pancakes.

It's been an eventful week or two, for sure.  I can do this, though.  I'm feeling the momentum building...

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ThisIsWorthwhile/~3/VAw85wLgwng/loopty-lou-of-life-some-seminal-moments.html

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