Thursday, May 7, 2015

#48 - Check!

Bet you think I forgot all about this list huh?  Well, you’d be right.  I totally 100% did.  I also don’t blog quite as much as I used to.  I always thought that when I started staying at home I would have more time for stuff like this.  Nope.  Two kids is a full time job folks.  Heck, one kid is a full time job.  I digress.  So number 48 on my forgotten and neglected list of 101 things to do in 1,001 days was to take Carter to the aquarium.  Even though I wasn’t physically there, I’m going to mark it off the list anyway because the goal was really for Carter to go to a big aquarium,  not that I was the parent that had to take him. 

Justin had a brilliant idea a few weeks back to pick Carter up from school on a Tuesday and drive to Chattanooga to spend the night.  The next morning they would wake up and he would take Carter to the Tennessee Aquarium.  This was just too much for a 6 month old, so me and Garrett opted to stay home.  I also wanted Carter to have some one on one time with daddy.  He is out of town so much and when he’s in town it’s great to be together as a family, but ever since Garrett came along, Carter hasn’t had much one on one time with me or with Justin.  So I thought it was a great idea to make a trip all about him.  It also just so happened to fall on my birthday.  So they got to have fun at a super awesome aquarium and I got to stay home with the baby that sleeps 18 hours a day.  Win win for everyone!!!

We really thought Carter would take a small nap on the way to TN after school but not so much.  He was too excited.  They got to the hotel and Carter even wanted to roll his own bag into the hotel lobby.  He watches daddy roll his luggage around so much and I think he wanted to copy him.  After they checked in they went to the room and Justin let Carter just sit on the balcony and look at the view for a while.

IMG_0478IMG_0477

They walked around and ended up finding a little museum similar to the McWane Center here in Birmingham.  Justin decided that after taking him to the aquarium he would take him to the museum since it was just across the street.  They went ahead and got tickets for the next day just in case there were a lot of school trips.  This way they wouldn’t have to stand in line to get tickets.  I wouldn’t wish that on anyone with a three year old!

They came back to the hotel and Justin made up Carter’s bed.  He’s only slept in the room with us one other time and that was at Camp Sumatanga.  We realized then that when we’re in the room with him that he thinks it’s a party and he takes FOREVER to go to sleep.  Eventually he did…with the five animals that he got to pick out from his bed to take with him.  His love for the stuffed animals has STILL not ended.

IMG_0488

The next morning they got ready and ate breakfast in the lobby downstairs.  Fruit loops and yogurt for Carter!

IMG_0490IMG_0489

And then they headed to the aquarium!  I kid you not-it took 45 minutes for Carter to see the entire aquarium.  That was all.  45 minutes.  He ran so fast through each of the animals, likely because he was worried he was going to miss something, and 45 minutes later he was done!  3 year olds…

IMG_0491IMG_0492

He really enjoyed the sharks.  Justin told him that if he was good and obeyed him all day that he would buy him a stuffed shark that he saw in the gift shop.  Sure enough we now have stuffed animal number 465 in his bed.  His name is Sharkie.  Kids are so original when it comes to naming things.

IMG_0493IMG_0494

He was originally scared to put his head in that little hole to see the crabs so he made Justin go with him the first time to show him it wasn’t scary.  Justin said the little tunnel he had to go through was teeny and quite suffocating.   Clearly made for kids only.

That’s all the pictures I have of the aquarium.  Justin barely had time to take more because Carter moved so fast through it!  After the aquarium they went to the museum thing across the street.

IMG_0495IMG_0496

IMG_0498

Meet Sharkie.

Luckily, this little sucker was worn out and passed out on the way back home.  He slept for about an hour of the ride.

IMG_0499

Carter clearly had a blast because he is still talking about the aquarium and all the things he saw.  And it’s been over a week since he went.  Just this morning he was having a “conversation” with Gizmo telling her that when she’s older she can come with him to the aquarium so that he can show her the sharks and crabs.  Love that little boy!

Monday, April 27, 2015

Garrett - 6 Months Old

IMG_0452

Diapers

Rocking the size 3’s.  His weight gain has slowed down significantly so we’ll probably be in size 3’s for a while.

IMG_0072IMG_0113

Shoe Size

He doesn’t wear shoes yet so I have no idea!

IMG_0140IMG_0154

Clothes

Mostly 6 month clothes now, though we are still in 3-6 month sleepers.  I’ve packed up all of his newborn and 3 month clothes to give away.  I’ll have to write a whole separate blog about this, but instead of trying to consign their clothes, I am donating them to an organization called Olivia’s House.  I read a book called “Delivered” about a woman’s journey through addiction to drugs, her life of prostitution and her lack of care for the numerous children she gave birth to during the process (it wasn’t an easy book to read).  But during the birth of baby #4, this woman heard the voice of God and her entire life changed at that moment.  She was able to keep her baby and raise her while living in Olivia’s House.  God completely changed her life and she was able to kick all of her bad habits and spend the rest of her life preaching about Jesus to any and everyone that would listen.  She described her time at Olivia’s House in the book and lots of people trying to get clean live there with their children but they don’t provide baby clothes so lots of the kids wear dirty clothes and they just don’t have many pairs of clothes.  So instead of getting a small amount of money that, let’s be honest…I don’t truly need, I’m giving the kids clothes to these women so that their babies can have some clean clothes.

IMG_0158

Feeding

We did it!  We made it 6 months off of breastmilk (with a few formula bottles during those first months when he woke in the middle of the night).  Unfortunately, my sweet baby can no longer thrive off of only breastmilk.  He needs iron and therefore needs to begin eating cereal, his first form of solids.  We started the oatmeal cereal last Friday (24th).  With Carter I didn’t know what to expect and followed the instructions to a “T” on how to make it.  It was very runny and soooooo hard for Carter to eat.  It also took some patience for me because I didn’t understand why he had such a hard time swallowing food.  Well I get it now and the experience with Garrett was exactly how I expected it to go.  I didn’t follow the instructions on the box this time (because when I do-it’s too soupy) so the consistency was just right.  I considered his first time a success because he grabbed at the spoon to get more food, but unfortunately, he wore more of it than went into his mouth, which I expected.  Think about it-they have been either sucking a bottle or nursing for 6 months.  He’s not going to just magically understand a spoon overnight.  By day 3, he was still wearing a lot of the food, but he was also actually eating it.  He still does the tongue thrust because that’s what he’s use to doing when he nurses, but he’s gotten a little better at it each day since we started.  I will probably do just one meal of cereal (the breakfast meal around 8:30/9am) for another week and then I will move up to feeding him cereal two/three times a day.  Once he does really well with that, then I will introduce the orange/yellow veggies.

IMG_0410

Schedule

No big changes to his schedule.  He’s still on a 4 hour schedule which means he eats, then stays awake for about an hour and a half and then sleeps for about 2 and a half hours before we have to wake him up to start it all over again.  An hour and a half is about as long as I can get him to stay up without getting fussy.  He can make it longer if we are out and about doing things, but if we’re at home he just gets bored too fast and would rather go to sleep.

IMG_0302

Sleep

This kid y’all.  He sleeps A TON.  He absolutely loves sleeping.  More than Carter did and Carter loved it too!  He very rarely wakes up on his own.  We have to wake him up every single morning and after about 98% of his naps.  Sometimes he will wake up on his own and I will see him on the video monitor.  He’ll lift his head up and look around as if saying to himself “I’m up…wait…the lights are still off…no one is in here….guess I’m supposed to still be asleep….alrighty then” and then he lays his head back down and goes back to sleep.  It’s hilarious.  People look at me like I’m crazy when I say that Garrett’s only awake for about 5-6 hours a day.  I get that look that says “really??  I mean…is something wrong with him?!?!”  To answer that question-no, nothing is wrong with him.  The pediatrician said that some babies just need more sleep than others.  On top of that, Garrett is still hitting milestones faster than average, so obviously he’s taking full advantage of those 5-6 hours!  And we are so thankful to have such a HAPPY baby when he wakes up.  He doesn’t scream for food.  When we walk in there he usually wakes up and just looks at us and laughs.  He also frequently gets up on all fours and starts rocking like he’s trying to go somewhere. 

IMG_0384

Waketime

We still like spending time outside during waketimes, but haven’t been able to do it much the past couple of weeks because it’s been raining a ton here.  But he still likes Baby Einstein DVDs, his music playmat and he’s been spending some time in a Johnny Jumper that’s connected to one of our doorways in our house as well as spending time in his exersaucer.  I’ve been working with him a lot on sitting up and he’s getting SOOOOOO good at it!  Carter was sitting up extremely well on his own by 6 months and Garrett is right there with him.  I was expecting it to take him a bit longer than it has because his head is so much bigger than Carter’s was and he has a lot more weight on him than Carter did, therefore a lot more weight to hold upright while sitting up.  But he was only about a week or two behind big brother so he’s doing really well with it.  He can probably go up to three or four minutes without falling over.  But I still am not at a point where I will leave him in a room unattended while he’s sitting up.

IMG_0345

Mother’s Day Out

Summer school for both kids starts the first week of June.  They will go three days a week from 9-1pm.  Carter is fine with this…he’s been doing MDO for years at these hours.  But this will be Garrett’s first time at school.  He’s been in the nursery before on Sundays at church, but this will be his first time going for that long too.  He struggles with falling asleep without being in a bed in a dark room so we’ll see how he does with sleep.  If they can get him to take at least one quick 20-30 minute nap I will call it a win.  He gets fussy when he’s tired, but the good thing about him is that even though he takes 2.5 hour naps at home, he doesn’t require one that long to be in a good mood.  If he can take a quick 20 minute catnap, he thinks it’s been 2 hours and he’s fine.

IMG_0390

IMG_0391

And as you can see in the pictures above, he’s really aware of Gizmo now and likes watching her and trying to touch her.

Statistics

His 6 month appointment was on his actual birthday, April 27th.  His head is still big, but not as big as it has been.  It’s been consistently in 90th percentile since birth but it’s down to 70th percentile now.  He’s about 25 3/4 inches long which is the 25th percentile and weighs 17lbs, 8oz which is 50th percentile.  So overall, the reason he looks fat, is because he’s short, not because he’s actually fat.  I agree that he is definitely short, but I don’t think he’s in the 25th percentile and neither does Justin.  The way they measure these babies is so jacked up and as I was watching her mark the paper to measure him I almost said something but decided against it.  Garrett is really a little over 26 inches and I don’t know what percentile that is, but it’s not 25th (at this age, a mere 1/4 inch can shoot you up in the percentiles a lot...you’d be surprised!).  But yes, he is definitely short.  I was expecting higher than 50th percentile on weight too.  He is also NOT 17lbs, 8oz.  The timing of the appointment was immediately after drinking a 7oz bottle and eating some cereal.  I weighed him the other day when he woke up before he ate anything and he was 17lbs even.  So this likely puts him a little less than 50th percentile in weight.  Regardless, his weight is slowing down because as he gets older he’s getting more active.  He’s sitting up all the time and is constantly bouncing in our laps and in swings and toys so he’s working those muscles and burning calories now.  He looks like a Michelin baby (see picture below) because he’s just not quite proportional yet with his height but Dr. D says that is totally normal and that babies grow at their own rate.

Other things noted during the doctor’s appointment:

  • Baby boy has a minor cold so doc told me to go get some baby Zyrtec for him.  I’m hoping it clears it up and that he’s not developing allergies.
  • He still has a mild case of eczema.  Carter never had this so it’s new to me.  I’ve tried using Aveeno products because they’re supposed to be best on sensitive skin but I swear there’s something in it he’s allergic to because everytime I’ve used the Aveeno lotion on him it makes him break out.  So I’m throwing it out.  We’re going to keep using hydrocortisone and aquaphor.
  • There’s one spot on his tummy that we think is just some eczema, but doc said it also looks a little like ringworm.  So I’m going to use the hydrocortisone for a few days and if it’s not better then we’ll call in a prescription for ringworm medicine.  However, both doc and me think it’s just eczema.
  • He got shots as always.  I teared up this time though.  I don’t know why, but when Garrett cries it makes me cry.  Maybe because he NEVER cries.  He’s more of a whiner and grunter than a crier.  So when I see those tears it just breaks me in two.
  • Next appointment isn’t until 9 months.  My boy is growing up too fast y’all!!!

IMG_0401

Abilities

Like I mentioned above, the big accomplishment in the last month was the ability to sit up unassisted.  He can sit up for several minutes on his own without falling over, however I still wouldn’t call him a “master” at it just yet.  I would never leave him sitting up in one room while I’m in another room.  It’s gonna take some time for me to be comfortable doing that!  He’s also been getting up on all fours and rocking back and forth.  See, Garrett tends to be about a week or two behind on doing things when big brother did them.  The rocking on his knees, however, he did way before big brother did.  Carter didn’t rock on all fours until he was close to 7 months old and Garrett does it almost every morning when he wakes up.  Both boys started out just doing it in their cribs and eventually did it when they were just laying on the floor.  This is the move that is the prerequisite to crawling, so Garrett may not be too far off from crawling!  He is also showing a HUGE interest in standing up.  He loves it when you help him stand up in your lap or on the floor.  He’s also grabbing at stuff constantly.  He adores touching my face for some reason.

IMG_9994

Teething

These teeth are going to be the death of me!!!!  I was sure they’d be in by now but not so much.  Overall, he’s honestly not that fussy, but he is just CONSTANTLY drooling and it’s driving me bonkers!!!

IMG_0418IMG_9972

Discipline

Again, definitely not there yet!

IMG_0207

Other Notable Things

Likes

  • Sleeping
  • Car rides
  • Pull toys that are connected to his carseat.  He really likes pulling them to make noise!
  • Watching brother play outside.
  • Watching Gizmo.
  • Being outside when it’s warm.  He prefers to sit in the shade because he doesn’t like sunlight in his eyes, but he does enjoy being outside.
  • Seeing himself in a mirror
  • When daddy plays peek-a-boo with him
  • When I roll my tongue-it makes him laugh hysterically!
  • Sucking on his fingers – he prefers the index and middle finger of his right hand and as weird as this sounds, he prefers to suck them upside down.  See below picture for what I mean.  Brother was a thumb sucker but this kid refuses the thumb.  He wants two fingers instead!

IMG_0459

  • The toy that is connected to his crib.  It lights up and plays lullabies for a few minutes and then it turns itself off.  We usually turn it on right when we put him down for a nap and he stares at it for a while before falling asleep.  Now that he’s sitting up really well, I will sit him up next to the toy and he will grab at it to try to play with it.
  • Baby Einstein DVD’s – preferably one with land animals on it (he’s not a fan of the ocean one for some reason-which was Carter’s favorite one!)
  • Still obsessed with almost anything on the Baby First channel, particularly Vocabu-Larry (it’s a bird named Larry that spells words…get it??)

Dislikes

  • Sun in his eyes
  • Being kept awake for too long
  • Teething
  • Loud noises-this is a new one.  If a loud noise startles him unexpectedly he will cry…like actual tears.  Justin sneezed one day and Garrett started bawling.  But if he expects the loud noise it doesn’t bother him…like vacuuming.  He’s fine with it because he sees me getting the vacuum out so he knows it’s going to make noise.
  • Getting bored with one activity-just like his brother did when he was this age, he likes to change up his activities every 15 minutes or so unless it’s a Baby Einstein DVD.  He can usually sit through a whole 25-30 minute DVD pretty easily.
  • Missing nap.  It’s when he gets the fussiest.  If he can’t have his nap in his crib we try to rock him until he falls asleep.  Eventually it will work, but it takes FOREVER.  He wants to be in his own bed.
  • A pacifier.  Just like brother, this kid won’t take a pacifier!  I love it because I don’t have to worry that he will lose it in the middle of the night and start crying because he needs it to sleep.  This is why I was glad Carter was a thumb sucker.  I got worried about when Carter would stop sucking his thumb (upside of the pacifier is that you can take it away-you can’t exactly cut their thumb off) but around age 2ish, he stopped all on his own and hasn’t done it since.  So hopefully if Garrett becomes a big finger sucker, he will drop it on his own before I have to take drastic measures!
  • Shots (because who likes those?!?!)

Wednesday, April 15, 2015

5 Ways Modern Parenting Is In Crisis

I saw this article floating around facebook a super long time ago and I was in love with it.  I wrote out this whole blog as a draft but never posted it and even completely forgot about it.  I just now found it and remembered why I loved the article and decided that even though it’s a whopping year after the article came out, I wanted to post about it anyway because I believe in it that much.  I’m pretty big into researching parenting.  I feel like I’ve read so many books on helpful ways to raise kids to be respectful, obeying and have well tempered manners.  Some of them I agree with, some of them I don’t.  Some of the tips have worked WONDERS for me, some of them haven’t.  But when I read this article, I was amazed.  This woman literally summed up everything in 5 key points. 

Please keep in mind that as I discuss these things, you may not agree with them.  That’s totally fine.  I’m not writing this to have the final say on how to parent.  God knows I am still researching and reading trying to find out everything I can to raise good Christian boys.  But I know that when I read this, it encouraged me to change a couple of things that I was doing wrong and it also encouraged me to keep doing the things I was already doing.  To see the article yourself, you can click here.

1)  Parents have a fear of their children. The woman gives an example of a toddler that has a sippy cup of milk in a certain cup and throws a fit because they want a different cup.  The parent that fears their child takes the original cup, goes to get another cup and pours the milk into the new cup.  Now this is one I was doing prior to reading this article.  Carter used to be specific when it comes to bowls (he doesn’t care about cups), but sometimes he wants his cereal in the blue bowl instead of the green or yellow bowl.  If it wasn’t a hassle to me, I just obliged what he wanted to keep from having a meltdown.  As the British author of the article says, “RUBBISH!”. 

You just committed a parenting fail.  You feared your toddler was going to have a temper tantrum over something stupid, so you gave in.  If we keep doing this, it will only teach our children that we fear their temper tantrums, therefore, they will throw them in order to get what they want.  Before having kids, when I saw a child throwing a temper tantrum in the grocery aisle because mom wouldn’t buy them M&M’s, I thought to myself “good lord woman-buy the kid some M&M’s to shut him up!”.  Nowadays, I look at the mom that won’t give-in to their child’s tantrums and say “good job mom-hold your ground!  Let him know you’re boss and you make the rules!”.  Now that’s not to say that you should pick your battles with kids.  You totally should because otherwise your kid will cry and feel unloved 24/7.  Here’s how I do that with Carter.  Going with the cereal bowl example, I changed my pattern to asking Carter which bowl he wanted BEFORE I poured the cereal.  He could choose green or blue.  If he said blue, I’d pour the cereal and give it to him.  If he changed his mind and wanted green after I’d already poured it and put it on his table, well too bad.  If he chooses to throw a tantrum because of this, then he gets removed from the table until he calms down and chooses to eat.  I like giving him options (I never give him more than 2 or 3 options for things) because it does make him feel like he has some say and that his wants are valued.

2)  We’ve Created a Low Bar For Kids To Meet.  When our kids throw tantrums in front of others and you get “that look” from another mom or even someone that doesn’t have kids, our response is “well-that’s just how it is with kids.  Nothing you can do about it”.  I assure you that’s not true.  Especially in the toddler age.  Now when they’re still newborns or even around 1 year old, your expectations can’t be too high.  One of the books I’ve read said that once they hit toddler age (about 18 months) you should expect about 60% obedience.  As they get older and learn more about what you expect in certain situations, that percentage goes up.  Carter is almost 3 1/2 years old and I would say he obeys about 75-80% of the time. 

We started working on saying “no” to him around 10 months old.  I know that sounds early, but not according to the books I read.  By 11 months, we started using timeouts for about a minute each time.  Again, I know this seems harsh, but it’s really not!  They learn so much quicker than you think they do.  And for the record, a time out at 11 months old consisted of placing baby in the pack-n-play away from the thing you’re telling them not to do.  Carter knew what “no” meant by the time he was 1 and was already starting to obey me when I said it.   There are so many moms out there that just let their kids run rampant through a store or physically hurt other children (pulling hair or pushing them down when they try to play with certain toys) that say “well you can’t expect much out of a two year old”.  I’m calling BS friends!  They do those things because we let them.  We haven’t shown them what we expect.  We’re just now at the stage where Carter notices when he gets punished for something that he did that some other kid also did, but the other kid didn’t get punished.  This is beyond frustrating to explain to a 3 year old, but I do the best I can. 

I should also clarify what I mean when I say “punish”.  90% of the time, punishment means time-out.  We take a chair from the dining room and move it into the corner by the front door and he stays there for a few minutes.  He’s not allowed to get out of time out until he acknowledges what he did wrong and apologizes for it.  For example, saying “I’m sorry” isn’t enough.  He has to say “I’m sorry for throwing the toy car at Gizmo”.  Otherwise, he will learn that he just has to say “sorry” to get out of timeout without actually relating the time-out to what he did to get there.  Make sense?  If we’re not at home, punish means to remove him from the situation.  If we’re at church, I’ll take him to the bathroom to stay there for a few minutes and explain to him what he did wrong and make him apologize before we can leave the bathroom.  The other 10% of the time, punishment does include some sort of spanking, whether it’s getting popped on the bottom or popped on the hand.  I’m definitely not taking the time to discuss spanking vs. non-spanking.  It’s a choice every parent has to make and only you know your child well enough to determine how he/she takes punishment best.  So basically what I’m trying to say in these three paragraphs on #2 is that yes, toddlers will be toddlers and they will throw toy cars at the dog.  But we, as parents, are the ones that set the bar.  If we don’t punish them for it, they will always throw toy cars at the dog.  And even worse, they may throw a toy car at you or at a visitor in your home.  Raise the bar folks.  Lets teach our kids what we expect of them.

3)  We’ve Lost the Village.  You know that old saying “it takes a village to raise a child”?  Well back in the day, that was true!  Actually it is still true.  As parents, we can’t be around our child 24 hours a day.  Sometimes grandparents babysit overnight.  Sometimes they’re at school with teachers.  Sometimes they’re with a babysitter.  A parent can only control the raising of their child when they are with them.  Other times, they depend greatly on whoever is taking care of their children.  Back in the day, parents depended on these other caregivers helping correct their child when they acted out.  These days, however, parents get offended when someone else tries to correct their child.  As the author of the article says, we should all be working towards the same goal-raising proper boys and girls. 

If Carter is acting up at school, I don’t just want to hear about it, I EXPECT to hear about it.  I want to know what he did so that I can keep an eye out for him doing it at home too.  I want to know, so that after he gets a “talking to” by the teachers, he also receives a “talking to” by me and Justin.  I want Carter to know that all of us are on the same team.  Teachers, grandparents and babysitters are all supposed to be the eyes in the back of mom and dad’s heads.  I never want Carter to think to himself “oh mom and dad are out of town and I’m staying with Nana and Papa or Gigi for a few days.  Time to act out to get what I want!!!”.  We have to help eachother out!  Friends that are reading this that are around my child, if you see him do something he shouldn’t be doing….PLEASE TELL ME!!!  I want to make sure he doesn’t do it again and I can’t punish or correct what I can’t see!  On the flip side, don’t be offended if another parent tells you that they saw your kid do something wrong.

4)  We Rely Too Heavily On Shortcuts.  We are so bad about shortcuts these days!  Technology is great y’all, don’t get me wrong, but it can be awful too.  We live in an age where our toddlers expect us to entertain them by giving them the iPhone or the iPad.  I don’t mind doing this with Carter, but we only do it for so long.  As it turns out, my child is extremely active and would rather play with things in the floor or outside than sit down and watch TV.  I take zero credit for this….this is how he’s always been.  He won’t watch TV unless he’s strapped in his car seat (we do have a DVD Player in the car).  Otherwise, he’s running around playing with any and everything he can get his hands on.  As the author states, if we allow our kids to take the iPad to watch television shows so that we can have an hour to ourselves, then we better expect to take that iPad everywhere we go.  Bottom line, children need to learn patience.  And handing them an electronic device whenever they’re bored isn’t teaching them patience.  It’s all about balance.  By all means, let your kid play with the iPad, especially if it’s a game that helps them learn their ABC’s or counting, but let’s not allow them to spend all their time on it.  There is a lot of value in kids playing with actual toys.  They learn from those too!  Another example the author gives are always rushing to your toddler when he falls to pick him up and make him feel better.  Toddlers have to learn to pick themselves up and just “shake it off”.  They will never learn to do this if you swoop in and come to the rescue all the time. 

5)  Parents Put Kids Needs Over Their Own.  As parents, we are internally wired to dedicate all of our time and efforts to our children.  To putting their needs first.  Now this isn’t a bad thing necessarily, but the author makes a point that we’ve taken this WAY too far in recent years.  Clearly our children’s safety should always be first priority, but the author isn’t talking about safety.  She gives an example of a kid at the zoo with her dad and the kid wants something to drink.  The closest place to buy drinks is across the other side of the zoo so instead of telling his daughter to just wait until they pass a water fountain or until they come to the next concession stand, he runs as fast as he can over there to get her what she wants.  This also ties in with making them learn patience.  If we’re always running to get them what they want when they want it, they won’t learn patience.

These are all things that I am having to constantly remind myself.  I didn’t blog about them because I’ve mastered them and want to teach other parents “how it’s done”.  Gosh…I’m still learning myself!!!  But I loved the article so much and believe so much in these 5 things that I felt the need to put it out there in case anyone else was interested in changing their parenting ways.  I don’t think it’s a secret that we’re starting to see a transition from the hard-working baby boomers who had to do everything for themselves to this new, recent generation who expects a trophy just for participating.  If we want to stop this trend, then start it in your own home!

Archive