Archive for parenting

Pet Therapy

When thinking about how I want my daughter to be raise. And what memories I want her to have of her childhood. I began thinking that I wanted her to remember growing up doing something for the community around her that was outside of the church. I think that will be a good foundation for her. I searched everywhere trying to find volunteer organizations that allow you to take your child with you. It finally came to me, pet therapy. We have a dog now and nursing home patients respond well to visits from children and pets.

I began by calling the nursing home closest to our home. The receptionist answered and when I told her what I was interested in doing she said, well we have pets here and our patients all have visitors so I don’t think you’re needed. Honestly, that was not what I was expecting. I called the second closest nursing home to us and the receptionist transferred me to the Activities Director. Once I explained to her that I was interested in doing pet therapy with my 2 year old daughter, the woman began getting very excited. They really want pet therapy for one of their wings that has patients that are unable to leave their rooms and need one-on-one attention and intergenerational pet therapy (child, parent and dog) would be great for them. The lady said that most of them do not get the attention they really deserve.

We ran by the nursing home to fill out paperwork for them to do a background check on me (so far, it’s just like volunteering at a school), to turn in Maggie’s shot records (slightly like enrolling at a school), and let them meet Maggie to make sure she wouldn’t scare the patients (somewhat like getting into a school). Once the background check was approved I was given a list of patients that aren’t able to leave their rooms. These are patients that should be my top priority, although I am allowed to visit anyone in the facility.

The background check just came back and the city was on ice today, so I haven’t had my first pet therapy experience yet, although we did visit a church member when we went to turn in our paperwork for volunteering. Call that a practice round. My goal is to try making it the nursing home once a week. That way it will become routine and something Taylor will anticipate doing each week. Once we start I’m sure I will have some feedback whether it is stories or meeting friendly faces. I’m looking forward to it.

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Playdates

I love playdates! A mother that attends story time at our local library stood up at the end of class one day and announced that she would love to get together for playdates at a local park on Friday. If anyone was interested they could talk to her after class. I am always looking for ways my kid can interact with other kids so this was great. I exchanged email addresses and later that day she emailed everyone who was interested directions to the park and a designated time. I was also excited about going to a new park. Since we have a park in our neighborhood (which I love), I don’t venture out to other parks much. I have to say, I had a great time chatting with the mothers and grandmothers that came. And Taylor loved playing with all the kids. PLUS, I now know these mothers a lot better so story time is even more enjoyable (for me).

When the weather is too cold to go to a park then we meet in someone’s home. I have loved this. I am going again this Friday and can’t wait. I just wish I had thought about doing something like this sooner. And I wish I had the nerve to invite others I run into to our group. I met the sweetest mother and son at the park last week and I wanted so badly to invite her to the group but having just met her I was afraid she’d think I was weird. I did invite her to story time at the library, I figured that was a save invite. Let’s hope that if I meet them again I will have the nerve to invite them into our group. It’s good stress release for the mothers and fun play for the kids.

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Why would Palin run for V.P.?

There are lots of reasons to ask yourself why Palin would agree to be the republican vice presidential candidate. The media has given us a dozen reasons just today, but the one question that keeps playing through my head is one asked by Laura Hayes on her blog. How could Palin accept the harsh scrutiny of political media knowing her 17 year old daughter was five months pregnant? How could any parent, a father or mother, put their child in that kind of spotlight? Knowing that it’s difficult enough to be a pregnant 17 year old without having the entire country voicing their opinions about you. Did she even take one moment to consider what effect this would have on her daughter? I agree with Laura when she wrote, “Gov. Palin, I’m not impressed.”

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Just for Fun!

Just for fun I thought I’d list some recent quotes from our 2 year old.

We were in the living room and my husband did something she did not like. She stood up, pointed at him and said, “No ma’am, that’s a bad choice!”

While cuddled up on the couch, she looked over at me, petted my head like one would typically a dog and said, “You’re so cute.”

When changing a dirty diaper, she often tells us, “I stink bad! That’s gross! Yuck!”

Heard from the back of the van while in heavy traffic, “In Jesus name, Amen.”

When her Nana tried to explain to her that Travis was Taylor’s daddy, but was Nana’s boy, her reply was, “That’s my boy!”

Randomly while walking through the house she put her head down, started shaking it and said, “Ay, yi, yi.”

After watching Swiper on “Dora” she now says, “Oh, man!” when things don’t go her way.

Anytime she eats a meal, she’ll say, “Mmm, that’s good.”

And when she wants us to tickle her, she’ll come up to us and say, “I want tickles.”

Hope you enjoyed! Have a great week everyone!

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Home Births

I just watched for the second time this week “The Business of Being Born.” It is an amazing and well done documentary I think everyone should see. Especially since this past week the American Medical Association announced they would like to state (it has to be voted on first) that the safest place for a baby to be born is in a hospital or birthing center. I am glad they included birthing centers since licensed midwifes deliver babies in birthing centers, but these same midwifes can also deliver in your home. Anyway, the AMA is not the point of this post, the film is.

I approached each viewing differently, but had the same outcome each time. The first time I viewed the film, I viewed it as a mother. Not just any mother, but a mother who had a worry free pregnancy that ended with a cesarean section. If you are a mother who has experienced this before, you know where I am coming from. Every thing’s going well, the baby is a little late and your doctor is pressing you to induce. You trust your doctor, because he’s the one with medical experience, so of course, you agree. During the induction process, you are given countless drugs. Sometimes they tell you what they’re giving you, but you don’t have a choice. They are caring for you the best they know how to. And then all of a sudden something happens, they baby is in distress and you are rushed to the operating room and undergoing major surgery. Then someone shows you your baby swaddled up with a hat on for literally two seconds and you are left there on the table to be stitched up all by yourself. All alone and not knowing anything about your baby. To be honest, I didn’t even know what to say when my husband said, “See her?” as he was heading out the operating room going to the nursery. All I managed to get out was “OK.”

I replay that moment in my head a lot. “OK” that’s all I could say. Everything happened so fast. What was I suppose to say? I wasn’t expecting a cesarean. My baby was in the right place and my body was doing what it was suppose to do. Why do I feel like I’m a bad mother for only saying “OK”? Why couldn’t I have said, “She’s beautiful!” and leaped with joy instead of crying on a table all alone? Then, to make this matter worse, while I’m in recovery my husband brings me our child, my baby. I remember being able to hold her for that first time. It was not what I had expected it to be. She was all swaddled up with that same little hat on as before. She was calm and quiet. I remember looking at her and thinking, is this really my baby? She doesn’t look like me. She doesn’t look like my husband. This is a cute kid, but I think they switched my baby with someone else. After a moment of holding her and introducing myself I began examining this little person whom I had dreamed about and felt move inside me over the past months. It wasn’t until I unswaddled her and saw those cute little thighs that I knew she was mine. She had her daddy’s thighs. They were just like his and I knew this was in fact my child. I even thought of the chances of my husband having another child born at the same time in the same hospital to figure out that this was indeed my baby. These were not the first thoughts I was anticipating having of my child. I pictured holding her and seeing her all gooey. I wanted to see her as she came out. I wanted to be able to hold her when she came out and to feel the pains of childbirth. I wanted to have that connection and bond to my child instead of being immediately separated from her.

I have spoken with other mothers who have had cesareans and they too felt this distant separation from their babies. So, within the first thirty minutes of my child’s life, I didn’t feel like I was the most supportive or loving mom. I didn’t get to hold my baby during any of that time, when they showed her to me for two seconds before taking her to the nursery all I got out was “OK”, and when I was able to eventually hold her I didn’t even know if she was mine. I say all of this to give you some idea of where I was coming from as a mother while I watched this the first time.

I watched this documentary about mothers giving birth to their babies in their homes. Mothers who were able to reach down and pick up their babies. Mothers and fathers who had active rolls in the delivery of their babies. Mothers who allowed their bodies to do what they were intended to do. It brought tears to my eyes each time I saw a mother achieve that task. That was what I wanted. That is what I missed. I now feel so cheated by the experience I had. I also feel like an idiot for not doing more research before having a child. I did all the research I thought was right before we got pregnant with her. I thought I had it all planned out so well. I had interviewed mothers about which obstetrician to have deliver my baby. I had learned from these mothers and nurses what to expect and which medications did what and why they were given. Yet I didn’t even research midwifes and home births. Now I realize, I dropped the ball.

*Disclaimer: I don’t know why I feel that I have to add this, but I will, just to clear things up a bit. Even though I had these doubts and strange thoughts runny through my head after my daughter was born. I also had this overwhelming joy that I had my baby. That she was alive and healthy and that I was able to finally hold her. After unswaddling her and examining her little hands and tiny feet, the first thing I did was begin nursing and bonding with my baby. I don’t look at her birth as a terrible experience. I look at it as a blessing. I have a beautiful and smart little girl who rocks my world every day of my life. I’m blessed. And that’s how I felt that day and that’s how I’ve felt every day since.

The second time I watched the documentary I viewed it from the health care perspective. I looked at the birthing process as a business for doctors, hospitals, drug companies, insurance companies, etc. Wow! It’s just eye opening. All those drugs and typical hospital routines are done without hesitation. Doctors and nurses know that Americans don’t want to be uncomfortable and they know how to medicate and numb us to the point where we’re not quite human anymore. We lack actually feeling the pains of childbirth and feeling our bodies telling us what it needs us to do. And because of how our society works, doctors have the mentality that if anything goes wrong, anything, they need to perform surgery. Why? Because they’re less likely to get sued. That is their motivation and that shouldn’t be their motivation. Doing what’s best for the mother and child should be motivation enough.

It blows my mind that we have hospitals that don’t have midwifes available for patients who choose to deliver naturally in a hospital. (Now, I know some cities have this, but they are few and limited. I did not have this option where I delivered my baby. Nor did I know of or seek out any midwifes or doulas in the area.) I think we as people, not just as citizens of the United States, but as living breathing people, should do what is right, what is best for women and babies during labor. After all, we aren’t really sure what affects these medications are going to have on our kids or ourselves years down the road.

Most women giving birth, if educated and supported properly, would (IMO) be able to deliver their babies naturally or with minimal intervention. Those women need midwifes, trained and certified (licensed) people who know what they are doing to help them through this very important process. Other women need obstetricians to help them deliver their babies. Both midwives and obstetricians are needed. And I think they need to start working together instead of against one another.

It’s a great film. I have already started looking at licensed midwives in this area that could deliver our next child in our home. (I think I’ve found her. And for the record, no we haven’t started trying for the next one yet. Still trying to pay off the miscarriage bills. (Two more bills came in this past week.) Just trying to plan ahead and to be prepared this next time around.) The price difference between delivering in your home and in a hospital is amazing. Actually, it’s about a $5,000 difference. Crazy!!! (And yes, the midwife is cheaper!) And if you were wondering, some midwifes give you the same 40% off discount if paid in full by the end of the second trimester just like a lot of hospitals do. And most insurance companies allow their clients to deliver in a birth center or at home as long as the midwife delivering works for a licensed birth center.

Watch the film. I learned that we as people, needed to be better informed of what happens during hospital births and what happens during home births. We need to be better educated for ourselves and our children. Do what you want for your own birth. I’m not trying to persuade anyone in their decision. I just think that having knowledge of the birthing process in general (hospital births, birthing center births, water births and home births) is good knowledge to have.

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The Proof

Here it is, the Dixie paper plate commercial I mentioned in April. (Thanks Adam!) Any additional thoughts?

Here’s the link to my previous post.

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Dixie Paper Plates Commercial

I was watching television this morning and an appealing commercial came across the screen. Various mothers enjoying time with their families. At the end it was advertising Dixie paper plates. The punch line to why these mothers were able to spend extra time with their families was due to all of them using disposable Dixie paper plates. No offense, but that just annoys me. Yes, I found myself drawn to the idea of spending more time with my family and the idea of eating a healthy dinner with my family around the table each night was appealing. Yet, to give the credit to paper plates? You cannot give props to paper plates for time spent with family or a healthy meal.

And as for disposable plates, I really don’t think it’s that big of a hassle to wash a few dishes. And let’s face it, a lot of people have dishwashers now a days anyway, so all they have to do is put them in the dishwasher instead of the trash can. How lazy can America get? And at what expense? If everyone used disposable plates instead of reusable ones, we would be wasting money, time, energy, transportation, trees, etc….the list could go on. I just really didn’t appreciate message the ad was giving. If anyone can find the commercial online send me the link and I’ll post it. I couldn’t find it on you tube, only an old 1986 commercial.

Have a good day everyone. I am going to go wash some dishes with my family!

*Added May 2008: The Proof (Video of the commercial).

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Parent’s Magazine

I am a subscriber to Parent’s Magazine. I locked in on an incredible deal when Taylor was born, a three year subscription for $12. I figured I couldn’t beat that price and it would keep me up to date on toys, parenting material, etc. I do enjoy reading through the magazine each month. I love the fact they update you on recalled toys and baby products. I enjoy looking at all the cute and creative foods I can make for and with my child. I also enjoy some of the articles that help parents parent. However, in the April 2008 issue, I found myself truly disappointed. And not by a specialist or guest child psychologist that they are quoting. (I often disagree with some of those.) This time it was one of their own that had disappointed me.

I was very excited when I began flipping through the magazine and saw the title, “A Man of the Cloth” and saw a child pictured in a cloth diaper. Yet after reading the article I realized that not only are DC and mainstream journalists lacking work ethic, but so are the little guys.

First off, the poor guy writing the article did not have a clue what he was doing. If you cloth diaper and read this article, it is evident, he has not done enough research on the basic “how to’s” of cloth diapering. To judge cloth diapering on the three diapers he chose, is insane!!! Then, the journalist, who admitted to being a germophobe, decided he would just pull the one study out that went against cloth diapering being environmentally friendly (instead of the tons that are for it) to back up the fact that he wasn’t going to do it. Well, that and the fact that doing the laundry took time away from his son. Let me just tell you I was hurt. I almost felt like I myself, being a cloth diapering parent, was completely misrepresented. And in front of LOTS of people. Everyone has heard of Parent’s Magazine. (I know I have extra hormones going through my system right now, but I really felt betrayed as a parent and as someone who is doing their best to make this planet safer for her children, grandchildren and all of God’s creations.)

First off, yes, cloth diapering can be very overwhelming. There are tons of brands and different styles. Each diaper you invest in, is an investment. They do not come cheap. Yet he never talks about the selection or choices that you have if you opt to cloth diaper. He never tells about the many companies who will help or assist you in your diapering needs. He doesn’t even give basics on how to launder cloth diapers. It was not informative at all, only degrading. Then he used the old British study that many have found flawed to say that cloth diapering is not an environmentally friendly option. Seriously???? You cannot honestly tell me that having plastic disposable diapers made in a factory (plastics produced and toxic materials put inside the diaper) is safe for the environment. Or that the packaging, transportation it takes to get the product to the store shelves, or it lying in a landfill for over 500 years with possible human feces in it is more environmentally friendly than cloth diapers. Yes, cloth diapers are manufactured, but without the use of plastics or toxic materials. They are transported as well. But where disposable diapers are continuously having to be made and transported, cloth diapers do not. And yes, cloth diapers have to be washed. They do use more water than disposables. But they do not use any more water than a potty trained child or adult. Using a small amount of water (two loads of laundry a week) is not worse on the environment than the manufacturing of plastics and the waste that is polluting our landfills.

I bet that most Americans don’t even know that it is against the law to dispose of any human feces in a landfill. Yes, everyone who uses disposable diapers does it, and nobody checks to make sure they have flushed the waste before setting their trash out on the curb. This feces can (and probably already has) found its way into the ground where our drinking water is located. Yes, we have water treatment facilities for a reason, but I don’t want to contribute to the rising problem. I will continue to use my cloth diapers and continue to do what I think is best for my family and for the planet.

I am just disappointed that a magazine that is directed to parents who are caring for the next generation, are not setting the example I had hoped for. I am planning on writing a letter to the editor, (hopefully my hormone level will be normal that day). I understand cloth diapering is not for everyone, but if they are evaluating differences between cloth and disposables, they should at least do it without any biases.

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Potty Training

Today is a monumental day for the Stanley household. Taylor has learned that it is ok to pee pee in the potty!!! In the past, she has stood up every time and relieved herself right beside the potty chair. This time, she looked at me strangely and decided to go in the potty chair. Yay!!! To make sure she understood I was very proud of her, I jumped up and down and hugged her and kissed her and clapped my hands and began singing the potty song all over again. She thought that was hilarious and even decided to join in the fun.

Hopefully this change of events will continue and by the time the next baby arrives (which, by the way, is November 21st) she will be fully potty trained. That’s my goal at least. I figured it would be fine if we don’t meet that goal, but only having to wash one child’s diapers will suit me fine.

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Who’s house is this? It’s OUR house!

Before beginning our family, my husband and I decided to splurge on ourselves a little. We decided to get furniture for our home. That way, when kids came along we could just focus on them without wanting anything for ourselves. Now that our daughter is 18 months old, she is in the “big toy” stage. For some reason all 18 month toys are HUGE!!! She loves all of them, especially the really big ones. When I look around at our home I sometimes ask myself, who’s house is this? Her toys are starting to outnumber our pieces of furniture. Come to think of it, it makes me wonder, why did we get ourselves furniture?

For Christmas this year, between our two families, the grandparents are getting her a kitchen playset with shopping cart and a table with chairs set. I just spent all day rearranging my kitchen to make room for these new toys. And the weird thing is, I have often wondered while looking at our living room, what could we get rid of to make more room for her to play? To be honest I love watching my daughter play. Playtime is learning time and watching her learn is so amazing!

I just find it funny that our home really is OUR home. It’s not my house, my husband’s house, or my daughter’s house. There are items for each of us in every room. It’s our house!

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