Wednesday 31 May 2017

My 4 year old just said dad can I please have more broccoli. Im shocked and awed. Here's how I made it.


Preheat oven to 400. Line a cookie sheet with tin foil, spray with Pam. Put a layer of frozen broccoli on there, drizzle with olive oil. Sprinkle with coarse sea salt, pepper. Shedded parmesan cheese on top. Bake for about 30 minutes, you'll smell broccoli when it's done. I like the parmesan​ nice and brown. Personally I could eat this every day.Any other quick veggie recipes for picky kids? via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2rGzsdj

How do I tell my mom I have an adult daughter?


Hello! This is my first post on Reddit. Thought it might be a good outlet for this kind of advice.The situation is that I've known about my daughter her entire life, but her mother swears up and down the baby was never mine and cut me out of her life. Recently I've been in contact with my daughter, who is now a grown woman, and we took a DNA test and are awaiting the results. I am confident that she is mine for a number of reasons but we will know for sure soon enough.My mom has wanted grandkids forever. If the test comes back positive, how do I tell her that she has an adult granddaughter? via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2rGpzg0

My son is far smarter than I am and I feel liek a shit mother because I feel insecure and jealous around him


My son's birthday is in a few weeks. I asked him what he wanted as a present. He wants me to buy him 5 books. 3 books from the FAA about aviation: The Pilot's Handbook of Aeronautical Knowledge, the Airplane Flying Handbook, and the Federal Aviation Regulations Manual. And 2 math books. One for more algebra practice and another for trigonometry.He's 12. This is what he asked for, for his birthday. Not only this, he's a social butterfly. He swims and his coaches and teammates love him, his classmates love him.He does his chores, he helps with his baby sister.I should be elated. His father passed away when he was a baby and we live in a not so great neighborhood. My son is yet another black male growing up in these conditions and by all metrics he appears to be defying the odds.And here I am, his own mother, and I can't hell but feel jealous of him and insecure. It seems like this stuff all just comes to him.I wish I was more like him. I feel like a terrible parent. About a year ago, maybe more, he told me he wanted to be an astronaut. I encouraged him but in my head I thought that it was just one of those things kids say.But now I'm sitting here, thumbing through the second algebra workbook he's worked through, listening to him practice the phonetic alphabet in the next room and I'm shocked to think that he might actually do it.I'm going to see about getting myself some therapy so I can get past this and be more of an advocate for him. I'm just feeling very low and very alone right now. via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2rlqgbe

My partner hates my son and I don't know why


My SO has lived with me and my 4yo for a year now. We were friends long before my son was born, so he has always been part of the background for my son. My SO has never wanted children and when we first talked about being together the subject of my son was obviously something we covered in detail. He was adamant that he wanted this, and that he was ready for the responsibility involved. However, in the last few months he has become less and less engaged. He doesn't want to do things as a trio. Will spend as much time as he can in a seperate room to my son, even when I am not home. And has little to no tolerance with him. I left them at home together recently for a couple of hours and when I got back my son told me that my SO hadn't even spoken to him in that time. My son is very imaginitive and since the breakup with his father has developed a tendancy to play the adults off against each other, but I see the disconnection between the two getting worse and worse. It is making me feel very uncomfortable, and will absolutely make the summer holidays suck. Any advice? via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2qBCcIM

Very early music lessons?


I feel very silly asking this.My daughter turns two next month and is absolutely obsessed with music (as in playing instruments). While I'm a huge music fan and appreciate the art, I suck at every instrument I've ever tried to play. My husband, however, is self taught in guitar, piano, bass, drums, etc. It's second nature to him. That said, he likely never learned "properly" and wouldn't be able to really delve into music theory later on in years (in aware of how insane this sounds)When she hears weezer she goes and grabs daddy's guitar and Delilah's guitar and claps to the beat. She recently picked up a pair of sticks to pretend to drum and won't stop. For Christmas she got a Schoenhut baby grand that she also likes to jam on. Occasionally going upscale and downscale and having a blast. Unfortunately she also really loves the recorder that some awful person got her because why would you buy a child a recorder unless you hate the parents?Anyway, I am in no way saying my child is a savant in any sense but she CLEARLY loves instruments. I really would like to get her into lessons early. I imagine 2 is too young? How can I help her develop this at such a young age? It doesn't seem to be a random toddler phase; she's been like this for the last year and it's just getting more and more prominent. via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2rFCBua

How do I teach my stepdaughter how to recognize emotional manipulation without manipulating her myself?


Hey Folks.. first off, thank you for the years of sage wisdom. I have three step kids, the eldest is my daughter, Erica, who is 10 years. Erica is the only child that has any memories of living with her BD and as a result carries an enormous amount of guilt and longing for a lost life with him. She does see him every other weekend but naturally she longs for more interaction to the point she cries at night if he misses a weekend, or doesn't call her after saying he will.My concern in general is that her BD is a very manipulative person and often tries to use Erica's feelings as leverage and seems to feed into them as much as possible. He plays the victim for all of his hardships, blames me and his mother for their separation and has been quite vocal about it to the children which is incredibly unfortunate. BD believes we are the worst sort of people and makes little effort to hid his opinion of us to the children.When Erica was 7 he bought her an iphone for Christmas, demanding we get her online so she can message and call him anytime she wanted to. This was done without consultation with Mom or myself, who limit the children's exposure to the internet. I've been online. I know whats out there. We declined granting Erica internet access as we felt she was to young to be online unsupervised, and to be honest, we did not want BD being able to reach out and manipulate Erica at his will. To be clear we have never restricted contact between Erica and her BD, he has always been able to call her, or Erica call him. Here is the issue at hand.As Erica is entering Grade 6 next year, she has campaigned hard for a phone. She will be busing to school across town and cites that she needs a phone for emergencies, and that phones are commonplace among her peer group. I'm actually quite proud of the arguments she has made, but I digress. Erica also cited that she would like a phone in order to be able to communicate with her BD more regularly, to be able to imessage and facetime with him. This in turn opens the gateway for positive interactions with her father, but at the same time, opens the door for manipulation. So I am faced with this unavoidable evolution in her social life and I want to prepare her for it.How do I teach my daughter how to recognize emotional manipulation without manipulating her myself by forcing my world view, or projecting my concerns about her father onto her?What do I do here? I try to teach critical thinking, evidence vs rumor, the scientific method, but I don't know how to prepare her for the social puppetry that is emotional manipulation. Please, help or advice if you have any to offer. via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2rle7TO

Teens and Birth Control


I'm a parent to 2 teen girls, 15 & 16. Within the last 6 months, they've both asked to be put on birth control, after having longterm boyfriends, so I took them to planned parenthood and got one a prescription for the pill, and the other the shot (she's more forgetful.) I talk openly to them still about safe sex, still using condoms, etc. I take them to planned parenthood WITH the boyfriends to pick up condoms and talk to them as well. I still enforce the "living room" only rule when they are at my house, & have comfortable communication with both boy's parents. My husband and I both have to be at work at the crack of dawn each day, so they get dropped off at school almost an hour early. They're great kids, stay out of trouble, are pretty open with me, yet I know that if a teen wants to have sex, and they have a way, they will most likely do it. I feel my choice to put them on birth control empowers them, gives them a feeling of control over their body, and safe guards them from early pregnancy.I have a friend, however, who respectfully disagrees with my decision. She believes that if you don't allow teens to get birth control when they ask, they will "just realize they have to wait on sex." Her oldest daughter is 7. It really made me think about how much parenting styles, and our thoughts and philosophies, can differ so much just based on the age of our children. What are your thoughts on teens and birth control? via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2rpgFCn

How do you rebuild & teach trust to your child?


I was told through one of the teachers today that my son (age 9) had given money to another student in his class amounting to $15.Our school has a fairly strict no candy / no toys / no money policy and we encourage all our children to follow that rule, it's not always observed by others and as a result our son comes home every couple of weeks with new trinkets / pokemon cards. I bring this up as previously another child gave our son a toy "for free" and the next day demanded a dollar for it to which our son attempted to oblige but was caught.He really struggles with this policy this year. About every 5 to 6 weeks we catch him trying to smuggle something to school (money, lego's, cars etc)…. Personally, I feel it's damaging our trust with him, I feel like I cannot trust my 9 year old son.His money was in piggy banks, I've just now cleaned them out to hold in trust…. I've noticed that his younger brother's piggy bank is completely empty, except a single penny and it wasn't like that before.He doesn't have any behavioural or learning issues, he's quite bright, near the top of his class academically, not a great athlete but he plays different sports and tries out for school teams all the same, he's got a wide group of friends that he plays with across a bunch of different grades.My biggest concern is the breaking of trust. I recognize there are reasons for him doing this and he isn't doing this to spite us, (we'll have to get to the bottom of his motive for giving $15 dollars away).He's done this before, this feels worse because of the quantity of money, but to him I recognize it probably doesn't really register. In the past we've talked about the problem, then taken television & video games away and then had him spend time alone in his room thinking about his actions…. and shamefully I've yelled at him about this.To be perfectly honest : Right now I am really steamed about this. I feel I cannot trust him and that he is deceitful / deceptive and a liar.I don't know what else to do with this child, how do I get the trust issue through that hard melon of his?How do you guys communicate the value of trust with your children? via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2roA5HC

Friend/sister in law deciding she will not vaccinate


First time posting.So I am looking for advice on whether or not I should keep my trap shut basically. My sister in law, my husbands brothers wife, has been a major person in my life as a first time mom. She is a mother of 3 kids, a 4 yr old, 3 yr old and 2 yr old. She gave me all the books, reassured me, helped so much. We became really good mom friends, practically sisters.Well yesterday she told me she was so excited she got injunctions to not vaccinate her kids anymore. She said she was so jealous her friend got one as well for a baby that "has never been poked". I was thrown off guard and not looking to start a debate, with her kids right there so I immediately up and left.I was so horrified on the way home, I had no idea how she felt. But the one thing I am strong on is VACCINATE YOUR CHILDREN. To me it is the most selfish and ignorant thing you can do as a parent. Now, my question is do I even say something? I feel we were so close I could speak my mind but it won't change hers, so is there a point? I kind of lost alot of respect for her. But I love those kids dearly.I am seeing her tomorrow for her 4 yr olds preschool graduation, and I offered to watch her kids a few days ago this weekend. But I don't think I can/should/want to bring it up around her kids. I'm just so blown away. via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2qBfLQ5

Weekly- Wallet Wednesday- May 31, 2017


This is a weekly thread where you can share pictures of your children and cute, crazy or awful things they have done. Please upload your pictures through Imgur and post the link as a comment. Feel free to share the context of the picture! If you are not a parent yourself, this is the place to ask us anything. Also, if you ever wonder who we are, click here to meet the mod team! via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2rUEhjc

CANNOT risk sleep deprivation with baby - advice please?!


Please no sleep deprivation horror stories or 'you will be a zombie' comments, just practical advice on how to mitigate sleep disruption.. Thanks experts!I'm first time pregnant. I suffer from epilepsy and my number one seizure trigger is sleep deprivation. I need to plan as many ways as I can think of to minimise disruption to my sleep with a baby. I've had such bad seizures before that I was mildly brain damaged and took 6 months to recover, so I am going to need to put my sleep needs higher than some of the 'ideal' baby raising practices - eg I'm not sure I can risk breast feeding if it means being up for an hour every two hours in the night. I'm keeping an open mind but prepared for the possibility that it might not be safe. I can't be much of a mum if I'm hospital with amnesia like last time I had severe seizures.Relevant circumstances :-2 sets of local grandparents-Partner works from home so will always be there-We have a spare bedroom-I'll have a year's maternity leave.Obviously all up for discussion with parents / partner but I know they'll want to help:How early can grandparents start taking baby overnight occasionally?How early can I go away for the night to my parents to ensure I get a good night?Any suggested ways to split night time feeds with my partner (I don't want him to be ruined either, I want to do my share)?How early can you try sleep training?Any recommended sleep / sleep training resources relevant to me in particular?Any tips to get baby into good sleep practices - eg scheduled naps, black out blinds..I will not be co sleeping, it's not safe for us.Just anything really which will help?Thank you :) via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2qFAly8

Update on my daughter who seems to be very gifted athletically.


Several months ago I solicited some advice from this channel on my daughter who seems to be a very gifted athlete. I wanted some advice on how balancing my parental responsibility to help her realize her potential without being an overbearing whip cracker.I received lots of good feedback and for that I am appreciative. For those of you who participated in the thread I wanted to give you an update. She tried out for a travel soccer team and made the squad of 14 not really having any soccer experience. I'm proud to say she did all of this on her own with little or no nudging from us. She asked to try out, she made practice a priority. I'm just so happy that she is the one who made the decisions, not us. via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2qArXEA

How did you know that as a family you were done having kids?


We already have 2. 8 weeks and 20 months and I think we kind of feel like a starter family. However every family I know who have 2 kids and are finished seem like a proper family unit.So I am curious as to how you redditors who have finished having kids knew it was time. How many do you have? Was it immediate or did you kind of get an idea as time went on? via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2sm1Qh5

Something odd happened with my daughter today.


So my daughter is 15 months old now and really starting to develop her personality. She is funny and active and always smiling. Nothing really bothers her unless of course she is tired. Well she has a few YouTube videos that she loves to watch all the time (nursery rhymes, Disney stuff, etc.). One video in particular makes her laugh like crazy. It's some video of Olaf sneezing and losing his nose and sven trying to get it. Anyways, we watched the video this morning and she loved it as usual. Then, this evening my wife tried to play it again and my daughter immediately started getting hysterical and even covering her ears. It was the strangest thing. This sudden change from pure joy to very upset has me a little worried. I was wondering if anyone else has experienced something similar. Is something like this common? via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2rTwKB5

Normal millenial tries to play hero and maybe gets in way over his head


I'm not sure if this is the appropriate place to post this as this is my first ever original Reddit post but since I can't sleep then I guess I will do it hereLong story short: me (31) and my wife (27) are two fairly normal people. I, a teacher, she, a nurse. We like to go on vacations and try new restaurants drink fancy drinks, go out with friends, have parties. All in all I would say we were pretty hip and cool (in a nerdy way) up until about 4 hours ago.I mentioned I was a teacher...well about two weeks ago I began hearing of a really bad situation that two of my students were in (brother and sister). The older sibling revealed some things about her home life to us that we had been unaware of. This came up during fifth grade human growth and development (sex education) which typically is a catalyst for kids realizing that they have been through abuse. Anyway, DCF got involved pretty quickly and I mentioned to them that my wife and I (married a year and a half) wouldnt mind having them stay with us if they needed a place to stay.OF COURSE, at the time (2 weeks ago), I thought there was less than 1% chance they would be taken from the family, and even less of a chance that they would go to me if they were taken(I have taught at a high poverty school for 7 years now and only remember one other time they actually placed students in a new home).To abbreviate the story, two weeks later (today) I find out DCF is taking them away from the parents and suddenly I am giving them my number STILL thinking this is never gonna happen​. Social worker is very casual and says "oh we will only call you if Mom doesn't give me any relative/friend names that check out okay"Right after work my friend is inviting me to bar. "No, lol, I might be fostering kids there's a small chance I will get a phone call." He thinks I'm kidding of course and I assure him I'm not. Three hours later I text him and say "okay we can go, I still haven't gotten a call so they must have had somewhere for the kids to be." You probably guessed that very soon after that I get a phone call saying they have done a background check on me and that they are bringing the kids to my house.BEFORE I KNOW IT TWO OF MY STUDENTS ARE FUCKING HERE. IN... MY... HOUSE... Reality sinks in. I ask her how long it normally takes to get the kids back to their parents or whatever. She says it always varies and I told her I understand that but what is the AVERAGE. She nonchalantly says "I think it's about a year." A YEAR... A YEAR... A FUCKING YEAR. Within a couple of hours I went from thinking I was gonna go out drinking to realizing I have two kids to take care of for... Possibly forever.And of course I could always give them back to the state or whatever and someone else nice would take them in but I'm too stubborn and I like these kids too much to do that. I just went from being a cool young person to a parent in a day. I mean, I am FREAKING out right now. Come on Reddit. Tell me it's gonna be okay. I was going to go to a bar tonight and maybe get drunk later on this weekend. Instead, I have a court date tomorrow, doctors appointments tomorrow for the kids, fingerprinting for me tomorrow and 3 days to figure out what they are going to do this entire summer.There are two kids sleeping in my house right now and my wife is working night shift so she's not home and hasn't even met them yet SHE is acting cool as a cucumber about it. We just spent too much money on a house too so I WAS worried about our finances BEFORE two kids materialized. My current self wants to lol at my yesterday's self for that. This is the most unplanned, crazy thing I have ever done, but something told me I needed to do it. I don't want everyone to know this is freaking me out except you Reddit. SOOTHE me Reddit. Baby me Reddit. Give me advice, for the love of God, Reddit.Edit: thought of a specific question: phone stuff? Do I let this girl (5th grade) just do whatever she wants to on her phone? Do I take it at night at a certain time? Do I wait awhile before starting to act like a parent? Ajhhhhhhhbhhh what am I doing via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2qAbooc

Tuesday 30 May 2017

Crushing mom guilt...or am I just a bad mom?


Throw away for obvious reasons.I have two children, one is 4 and one is 4 months. Throughout my children's lives I try daily to be a good mom but today there was an "event" and now I have mom guilt and don't know if I'm being over sensitive.A little background: I am the only child of an alcoholic father and a mother with raging mental health issues. As a child, I didn't have many friends and spent a lot of time alone and isolated in my room. There was a power and control issue with food and a lot of emotional abuse. I have semi-distanced myself from my family but see them more regularly now that I have kids.It took the birth of my daughter to make me realize some of the issues that took place in my home were not normal. Because I don't have a good barometer, I am constantly screwing up as a mom and it's extremely stressful. I try so unbelievably hard to do the correct thing, but I never get it right.Take for example, last year at my daughters daycare the staff came and spoke to me because my daughter didn't have an appropriate winter jacket. Growing up, I never owned a pair of snowpants or gloves and I built up a tolerance for "good enough". I was using a fall jacket with a sweater underneath and thought that would be an appropriate winter jacket. I was incredibly embarrassed that I didn't realize it wasn't the correct outdoor attire and I left daycare and went and purchased an appropriate winter jacket. I felt absolutely awful.Or the fact that I never want to stay home with my child when she's sick. I work a high profile job and am always so incredibly worried that I will miss something at work. I realized it's because my mother never stayed home with me and my brain has normalized that type of activity as being appropriate.Today my daughters daycare went on a fieldtrip. I am on maternity leave so I was able to drop her off and had the option of going. I chose not to. All the other moms did. I went, dropped her off and drove home. I got about half way home when I thought, ".....what am I doing? I have no reason not to go", so I turned around and drove back. I felt absolutely terrible. Why wouldn't I go? Why is my brain so broken that the option of sitting at home, watching tv is more appealing than experiencing something with my child? Is this normal? Is this guilt? Why can't I get being a mom right?As I reread this post, it sounds pretty ranty and full of angst. It's not suppose to...and I'm sorry. Maybe I just need someone to say "yah...you're a bad mom...fix it" or "no..you're doing great. We all screw up...some more than others". My children are fantastic. They are loved, fed, allotted endless opportunities and so happy...so why do I feel so guilty that I am not providing anything for them? via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2rmzZjQ

I had a bad mommy moment.


So I have deformities of my hips spine and feet that basically means OW. Recently, just for shits and giggles, I've developed tendinitis and muscle spasms in my left shoulder, because why the fuck not, right?Also, I'm two months into a vertigo episode. Thank god not a severe one, but it's not fun. I AM FALLING APART YO!!On the upside, my older two are 20 (living independently, in the apartment below mine) and 18. And I have a pretty kick ass boyfriend. So I have a lot of support these days.Except today A (boyfriend) was supposed to go frogging with youngest (10yo boy) and got up too late (works night shift). I had gone out to fill out a prescription and pick up fishing stuff and food... which means a lot of pain for me, and on my way my mobility scooter developed a short and the headlight that wouldn't turn on for 6 months came on and wouldn't TURN OFF. Those things suck your battery like a fundamentalist christian sorority girl. I had to beg a screwdriver off a garage and remove the casing off the steering column on the fly... more OW...So now Youngest can't go frogging. He sure does love him some frogging. So I did a stupid thing. I walked him the 1/4km across the street to the river to frog.This was a serious error in judgement. Thank god eldest came with. Because I just turned around and came home. I cried a fair amount. I wasn't able to take my mobility scooter because it's old and it was raining and needed charging... so I WALKED.Less than an hour later Eldest and Youngest are home from their (failed) frog hunt and I'm in the bathroom brushing my teeth and youngest comes in *whining at me about the fucking frogs and he wants to go to so-and-so's house to pick up his bike (can't, it's too late) and he wants to stay home from school to go on our shopping trip so he can get so-and-such their birthday present for this weekend and I'm in a lot of pain, overwhelmed, put myself out stupidly to get him goddamn frogs that keep escaping in the night and forcing me to spend 20minutes chasing flappy little slime-lords around my bedroom at 2am and now he's fucking asking me for MORE FUCKING THINGS!!?And I lost it. I yelled that I had hurt myself trying to accommodate him today and I was fucking done. I really don't need to be fucking railroaded with 101 goddamn requests for things he wants but doesn't fucking need when I'm doing my goddamn best to blah blah blah........."What does 'accommodate' mean?"... It means Ima gonna clip you to the clothesline by your toenails, you little shit.Then I go lay down and cry a little because I yelled at him and it's not HIS fault he got saddled with a gimp mom. An hour or two pass, he wanders into my room and we cuddle up to watch some failarmy. I say, "I'm sorry I snapped at you earlier, that wasn't fair of me. You have every right to inform me of your wishes. Doesn't always mean I'll be able to ACCOMMODATE them, but you should be able to talk to me without me yelling at you."..."You yelled at me? What? When!?"OMGlob Ima gonna kill you, kid.Turns out my tantrums are nowhere near as fierce nor fearsome as I think. We have agreed on a schedule of practice hollering.TL;DR - Bad Mommy Moments are often in your head. 20years from now he'll probably tell me I was a real bitch for making him catch his own escaped slime-lords. And never remember the shit I'm beating myself up over. via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2scqWQq

Traveling via airplane during first two months of pregnancy?


I just discovered that my wife got pregnant 2 days ago. We planned for our honeymoon trip to Switzerland which begins from 8 Jun 2017 to 17 Jun 2017. The flight from our country will take approx 12 hours to reach Zurich. Does anyone know if it is ok for her to take such a long flight? Will it affect her badly?We planned for this trip for quite some time and it would be a pity if I start to cancel all my tickets and reservations :( via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2rmrVQf

Wife cannot handle our kids (3 yrs 1 yr) and it is starting to become a problem with us.


Our 3 yr old is VERY disobedient. My wife and I were both hand-fulls as children. We had kids late (30 her 40 me). I work midnights and sleep during the day and when I wake up for work she is, more often than not, screaming-mad and even when I take the girls for an hour or so before work she is still pissy when I leave. It is a horrible cycle and I don't know what I can do for her. via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2skdolc

My toddler (3yo) recently started acting like a baby, is that regression or not really a problem?


So recently, my toddler began to act like a baby at times - meaning, not talking, running around making baby noises with his tongue out and flailing his arms like a baby does.He knows how to talk decently for his age, but has started doing this and went back to grunting for things. His sitter recently began caring for 2 additional children that are babies, so my wife and I think that it's because of this that he acts the way he does to get the same type of attention a baby does.Would this be something to truly be concerned about? via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2rm96MU

3yo won't put in effort to problem solve or surmount challenges, or play independently


I have a daughter that recently turned 3. I've never had any experience with children, but others often tell me that she is advanced for her age (in terms of her independence, speech and social skills/understanding). Awesome! She knows her letters and numbers, she's sleeping in a regular bed, she's not using any more diapers, she's speaking in complex, grammatically correct sentences, she can get dressed by herself, feed herself, fetch objects, clean up, etc. I have always tried to take a hands-off approach, preferring to let her make a mess for a short time in order to give her the freedom to learn how to do things herself.And yet, whenever anything can't be done almost right away, she turns to me, asking me to do it for her. I'll usually say something like, "Oh, you can figure it out, I'm sure you can get it done by yourself. Why don't you try again?" or I'll add in a little hint for how to do it right. She'll either ditch the problem, or cry and insist on my full assistance (i.e., do it for her).So today she got a toy where there are different plastic geometric shapes, and you have a shape on a piece of paper, and you're supposed to take the pieces and arrange them to make the figure on the paper. For example, take two half-circles and put them together to make a circle, or take two triangles and make a rhombus - those are the easy ones. Then they get harder. Take three rhombuses and make a hexagon. Etc. She seems to have understood with the easy examples, but as soon as it became 3 shapes, she just won't do it. She won't even begin to place a shape within the lines. Even after me putting down one shape, and then helping her arrange the other two so that the design is made, she'll agree to try to re-do it herself and utterly miss the mark. She asks me to help her again. Come on! I practically did it for her and she seemed to understand and be glad when it was accomplished. But she won't keep at it, she won't really try.It's driving me crazy. How do I encourage her to work things out for herself? I feel like I've been trying. I'm worried about her development if this continues, and her future. I have a similar problem - I was always the smart kid, breezed through school without ever having to really work, and now I find I have no habit of working hard and persevering to accomplish anything. I can't work steadily, regularly towards a goal, I have a million interests that I pursue part-way and leave. I don't want her to turn out the same - especially since this tendency is starting so much earlier for her than it ever did for me. I at least used to like working things out by myself, and the structure and curriculum of school beat it out of me.What can I do to encourage this manner of independent learning? I am wondering whether I should remove all technology - tv, computer, phone. I don't believe it's necessary or even good, I am just exhausted and need a break sometimes. My daughter's very socially-oriented; she doesn't play by herself for more than a few minutes, but videos and pictures can hold her attention for much longer. I'm sad to say they are like my salvation (SAHM). But if they are making her passive and mind-numbed, I especially have to encourage independent play and problem-solving. Help! via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2sk4eoA

Son's father shamed him for playing the violin and now my son wants to quit.


My son is 10 and started playing the violin this year. This was completely his decision. I didn't push him towards it.My ex-husband and I have been divorced for 5 years and my son only gets to see his dad during summers or vacations. He is visiting his dad for 2 weeks now and then he'll go visit again towards the end of the summer.My son called yesterday and ended up telling me that he doesn't want to play the violin anymore. I was pretty shocked because he loves it and it really good. He ended up telling me that his dad told him it was a girly instrument and that people would think he was gay if he plays in middle school. He told him that he will get tortured if he continues to be "violin boy." My ex blamed me for forcing my son to behave feminine.I told my son that plenty of men play violin and it isn't considered to be a girly thing, but it was clear that he wasn't really listening.He'll be back home next week. Any ideas to encourage him to continue? I don't mind him quitting, but I am mad at the reason he wants to quit. via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2rCnDEY

Opinions on physical punishment for toddlers?


At work yesterday a family came in with their 19 month old son (who was absolutely precious.) I was filling their water later (Im a server) and the kid was bugging his dad, grabbing at his plate or something. The dad lost his temper and grabbed his son's hand, positioned it, and smacked it hard. I walked away fuming. I get that kids are difficult to deal with sometimes and your temper can get away from you, but I just feel like hitting a toddler is so, so wrong. Do you feel the same way, or am I naive in thinking that there are other ways of dealing with misbehaviour? via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2qzkYbb

Serious: Siblings, did you ever notice growing up if your parents spent more/less money on you than your brother(s)/sister(s)? How did it affect you then, and how did everyone turn out in the long run?


Husband and I are reflecting on our own childhoods, and I wanted to know how to equally spend on our children so that it's fair. If baby #1 wants to do sports that cost $xyz, but baby #2 likes staying at home/something less costly than $xyz, do we spend as much on baby #2 until it equal's baby #1's expenditures on sports?We've also reflected on our own experiences growing up, and we've realized that the siblings who typically get "spoiled" montarily also tend to have less drive to become independent and are less appreciative than us. (We're both the eldest of four in our families, repectively, youngest siblings got pricey educations and private music lessons, we were expected to figure college etc. out on our own.)I'm sure everyone has a different story, I was interested to hear different perspectives on how you were raised, what works and what doesn't with your kids, and most importantly, if you ever noticed monetary favoritism growing up and how it made you feel?So many run-on sentences, sorry! I truly appreciate any insight you may have and thank you deeply for any advice you have to offer! via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2qCZcm0

I'm looking for food guides for toddlers. Any recommendations?


I want to make sure that my son (16mo) has a healthy diet. I'm planing on asking our pediatrician next week, but was wondering what do/did you feed/fed your toddlers.Thank you. via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2saJEIe

LPT: travelling with kids? Bring some balloons with you. They take up no space, and are great for airports, especially on the way home when the kids are sick of all the toys they brought.


Many times I have been saved travelling with balloons. We've played with them in a hotel room when the kid need to get energy out. And when I had a plane that was delayed at O'hare I was able to whip out a balloon that was in my carry on & blow it up. We found a gate that was empty and play volleyball over the seats for 90 minutes before the plane boarded. There's almost infinite games you can invent with a balloon, and they work as well for 15 year olds as they do for 2 year olds. All hail the great balloon.PS. its fun for me too. via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2r88hqF

Tips or book recommendations for teaching patience, frustration tolerance, and anger management


tl;dr 8 year old girl has pretty much no patience or tolerance for frustration/anger. Lashes out frequently with a rude tone over very small issues. Looking for books or general advice on teaching my kid some anger management skills and helping her remain calm and polite when feeling frustratedWe are currently fostering an 8 year old girl who has been with us for about 2 months. We are her pre-adoptive placement. Considering everything she has been through in her young life, she's turned out as much like a normal 8 year old as could be expected. I believe she is a good child at heart who wants to please. Hands down our biggest struggle with her is her level of patience and her tolerance for frustration and anger (which are non-existent). I would say she has the emotional maturity of a 4 year old. She hasn't developed the coping skills that most 8 year olds have developed at this point for remaining calm.It mostly comes out in her tone. For example, if she asks me a question and I am not able to answer it immediately (mostly if I need to ask her a clarifying question because I didn't quite understand what she meant, or I didn't hear her properly) she just says "ugh nevermind!" or she will say "NOOO, I meant THIS" and her tone becomes very short and rude VERY QUICKLY. Sometimes she will even stomp her feet on the ground while she says "nooo" and her face becomes very red. This happens in the middle of what had previously been a very calm and pleasant discussion. It's like a switch flips and she turns. The good thing is it is usually pretty quick and once she gets it out a lot of times she goes back to being happy and calm as if nothing happened.When we try to talk to her about this and coach her at times when she is calm, she will say "okaaay, we don't need to talk about this anymore" and avoids discussing anything real as much as possible. Lately what we've been doing is just not giving her what she wants until she is able to be calm. If she gets frustrated while trying to ask a question, we refuse to answer the question until she has asked it in a calm tone of voice. If she is getting frustrated while playing a game, we turn the game off until she has calmed down (and if the meltdown was bad enough, we make her apologize for her rude behavior before we turn it back on for her).We knew going into this that this was going to be a long road. I am aware that there is no quick, magical solution. This is going to take a lot of time for her to learn and there will be setbacks along the way. I just wanted to see if anyone could recommend any good books that teach parents the best way to help their kids learn patience and anger management, or any tips that you have found effective with your own children.She is in therapy for her trauma, and is also enrolled in a therapeutic day treatment program through her school. Her TDT program is doing a summer camp that is going to be focusing on these issues (as well as her social skills, which are also non existent, but that's a whole other post) so she is getting real professional help. But obviously she needs effective and consistent help with this at home in order for her to fully master it. via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2qy5dRP

Changing schools


Hi. Long story hopefully not too long, my ex wife and I split 4 years ago and she moved to the adjacent city (20 minutes away). I stayed in the city where the kids (I have 5 kids with her and now have a step son with my fiance) went to school so they could have some consistency and stability. However, after 4 years that city became unaffordable and housing was extremely limited. Made the decision to move to the same city as ex as there were better housing options.Backstory on the ex - she was previously homeschooling the children with most of the focus being put on religion (she subscribes to the Quiverful ideology - Google it if you feel like being creeped out). What I believe ultimately ended the marriage was that I was adamant about putting the kids into public school because I wasn't comfortable they were receiving a proper education. Ex took the kids and ran and tried to cut off contact. I battled her in court and the court awarded me with final say on education for the reasons previously mentioned.Fast forward, ex has been engaging in parental alienation and trying to make me the bad guy to the children at every turn. Now back to the school situation... My elementary aged kids have been experiencing a lot of bullying issues and problems at school. I have also confirmed the widespread bullying issues with a number of other parents - it seems systemic at the school.My oldest is in high school and has been very happy with her school. My second oldest has expressed that she wishes to go to the same high school as my oldest next year given that her current friends are going to move there. I don't have any particular issues with the high school.Now the challenging part - given that we've moved to the same city as the ex, it seemed a logical choice to move the children to new schools within the geographical area. In my mind, it was also a good opportunity to get the elementary kids away from the troubled school and given them a fresh start. Additionally, the children would not have to wake up extra early to account for the commute. Finally, from a logistics standpoint, it would be very difficult to maintain extra curricular activities for the children as both my fiance and I work. I am able to work from home 3 days per week, but have a very demanding job and need to stay pretty close (i.e. I can take them to and from school as long as they're close by, but it isn't feasible to drive to the old city as it consumes almost an hour round trip depending on traffic).The younger kids expressed that they would be good with the change. The older two expressed that they want to stay at the school in the old city. The challenge with a big family is that it isn't always possible to please everyone and it really seems to me that moving the kids' schools makes logical sense. However, the ex wants to villify me to the kids and has given them the impression that she is going to fight me to stop me from moving the older kids to new schools in order to protect their wishes. She is unwilling to open a dialogue with me and discuss the issue like an adult and instead is bombarding me with letters from her lawyer telling me I'm not considering the best interests of the children.That couldn't be further from the truth and honestly I have lost so much sleep over this issue because I care so much. As mentioned, I do have final say regarding education, but I can see that my ex is going to try and undermine that with the courts under the guise of me not considering the children's best interests and unfortunately, there is a strong gender bias as I've seen. I love my kids more than anything in the world and would do absolutely anything for them. It just doesn't make sense to me that they would keep going to the same schools in another city when my ex and I both live elsewhere and for the other reasons mentioned.Any thoughts / advice would be appreciated. via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2rRcct1

Guardianship for Children, Creating a Will


My wife and I would like to set up a simple "will" of sorts for if we both were to die (God forbid). We are young and healthy today, but you never know. We want to ensure our children are taken care of.Is there a simple way to do this? I wonder if a short notarized letter will suffice. All we really want to do is provide direction for who will take care of the children and also funnel our money to this same person - one of our siblings. via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2r7Ii2h

Our 2 Year Old doesn't want to apologize.


"We don't hit each other. Say sorry to me for hitting, please.""I don't want to say sorry. Do you want a pretend carrot?""No, I don't want a carrot, I want you to say sorry.""How about some model trains?" via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2rAVBdl

Favorite jogger stroller for toddler?


I need to get a new stroller, we are currently dealing with a rickety hand-me-down. What's your favorite jogger? I am searching craigslist looking for the right one for my 15 month old. Any price range. via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2sa6qzP

Weekly - Ask parents everything - May 30, 2017


This bi-weekly thread is meant as a place for non-parents and parents to ask questions to the community.Note - Remember that all questions and responses must adhere to our community rules.For daily questions see /r/Askparents via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2rAyVtw

Light sleeping kid and daddy, are we crazy to add a second kid to the mix?


My husband has always been a very light sleeper and it looks like our two year old is going to be the exact same way. When trimming his nails turned into a fight every time I tried the trick of sneaking in with a dim head lamp to trim them while he slept. Nope! I didn't even get one finger done before I had to bail out or risk fully waking him up.We already have white noise in each bedroom. Our house is laid out so all the bedrooms are together and then there's a large open living room. There is no basement or second level to the house. We're looking into redoing the kitchen but after a sleepless night last night (the two year old had a nightmare and couldn't get back to sleep) I'm wondering if maybe we shouldn't just move. We've looked online at other houses in our area, though, with the idea of moving instead of redoing the kitchen and didn't see any other good options in our price range.Has any one else had a similar situation and added a newborn to the household? via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2r7chHS

Sleeping tips for our 10 weeks old baby?


So we have an almost 10 weeks old baby girl, and while we had a bumpy start with feeding her (breastmilk took a while to get properly stablished and she took 3 weeks to get back to her birth weight) now she is gaining weight nicely and she is a really happy baby.However she just won't sleep unless we hold her or cuddle her. The most sleep she gets is maybe 3 or 4 hours if mum or myself have her on the baby sling, or in the bed with mum being cozy in her arms. Even if she is in a deep sleep, we put her in the cot or the pram and she will wake up in 10 or 15 minutes!!And putting her to sleep is just really, really difficult was well, because she is really alert about everything. Wide open eyes, looking at any small shade of light, or something that gets her attention. Sometimes we even cover her eyes somehow and she goes to sleep, but most of the times she will have none of it and get grumpy.Maybe is too early to have concerns about this, but I'd love somehow to be able to put her in the cot for a couple of hours and let my wife to have a bit more time for herself and sleep a bit more too! via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2r76MJe

Advice on 'week on - week off' custody arrangement please?


Okay so a quick background history:I have a 4 year old daughter, and we live in QLD, Australia. She will be starting her Prep/Primary School education as of February 2018.The original custody arrangement between my daughters father, Luke, and I was I had her Monday - Friday (She attended daycare these days, so handover was done via daycare e.g he would bring her to daycare Monday morning, and I would pick her up that afternoon) and Luke would have her Friday night till Monday morning.I was a non working parent at the time so this worked okay.I then started full time study, and due to travel I would not be able to see my daughter through the week except 2 hours at night which I would spend doing dinner/bath etc. Then not have any time with her on the weekend.So now our current arrangement that has been in place about 6 months is that firstly we do rotating weekends - which is common between separated parents. Our daughter is now attending daycare full time Mon - Fri. Except that on the week leading up to MY weekend with our daughter, he picks her up from Daycare Wednesday afternoon and keeps her till drop off on Friday morning, in which I then pick her up Friday afternoon.He is now requesting that when school rolls around next year, we switch to a full rotating week each. Has anyone else done this? Do you know people who have? Is this going to affect our child?It just seems really crazy to me. I know that time with both parents is important, and as you can see my daughter has a lot of time with her Dad and I've never tried to come between that. But something about an entire week on and then off seems wrong to me.. am I being crazy? Can you convince me why this is a good or bad idea? via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2s9I7Cb

Monday 29 May 2017

What to do about increasingly hostile, violent, and dangerous teenage boy


(Posted in r/autism too) Boy, age 15,who has been diagnosed with PDD-NOS. Along with that, he has ADHD and intermittent explosive disorder. Has had maybe 3-4 total hospitalizations. He has been problematic ever since childhood, but now well into his teen years, he's created a very unsafe, dangerous environment in his family household. The family has resorted to hiding knives because on numerous occasions he has threatened to kill me or other family members. He has become aggressive with parents, even grappling with or kicking them and giving them scars. He screams abuses at his family, classmates, and teachers, throwing around the N-word and saying the most hurtful and offensive things possible. He idealizes homicide and talks about slitting throats or "having fun" with anyone who manages to tick him off (doesn't take much). No amount of kindness or patience is taken by him-- it is only met by grimaces, swear words, or middle fingers, making professionals, teachers, in-home therapists, or social workers not willing to work with him. He is arrogant and pompous and thinks himself reasonable and the voice of reason, but in reality his logic is flawed and his reasoning is absent. He offers his flawed, dare I say stupid, opinions when no one has asked, and even when he has no experience on matters. Opening curtains, or forgetting to turn off lights will without fail put him in a rampage. He doesn't respond to directions to even brush his mouth, shower, leave for school, and practically still shits his pants. He has a computer addiction, which has pervaded for years and has left him overweight, and spends his early mornings to late past midnight on the laptop. This is the only thing keeping him "sane" but basically non-functional. He enjoys watching ISIS beheading and torture videos, and has looked up how to make bombs. I do believe he knows he is in the wrong, as he at times recognizes his behavior is absolutely monstrous, yet he does nothing about it and cannot seem to change. The parent deals with boatload of health problems, on top of raising 4 kids alone on a poor salary and sending them through college. The parent does not need this additional load of stress. He has been kicked out of schools, and the school system has failed to help the parent properly place the boy somewhere where he can get the counseling and proper help he needs (preferably in a residential program so he is no longer a threat to his family). The family is at a loss for what to do next. The school system is failing the family and the boy, and the boy only seems to bring out the worst in everyone he encounters. What can be done for him and the family? Sorry for lengthy post!! via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2qtJZbX

Child favors one parent since birth, causing marital strife....


Hey all, have a situation I'm sure most parents have gone through, I just need some advice on what to do. Have two kids, the older one went through a phase of preferring myself to my wife. I can't remember it lasting too long, but time is just one big blur with little ones so I couldn't be sure. But our second one, who is now 3 1/2, has been on 'team dad' since birth. From the time we took him home from the hospital, for whatever reason, he has always shown a preference towards me. He would scream his head off with my wife as a newborn, the second I picked him up and held him, he would calm down. He'd be super fussy during the day, when I would get home, he would be just a little bit less fussy. He'd always eat better for me then her. This started a vicious cycle where my wife would be hurt and upset and then get angry (I couldn't blame her, I would feel the same).He was a difficult child, and because I was trying to be a considerate father and husband, I would always wake up with him in the middle of the night and wake up with the kids in the morning (when I was able to) to allow her to sleep. At first I worked 5 days a week and my wife worked per diem with very odd hours, but right after he was born, I changed jobs and started working 3 days a week. Shortly thereafter, my wife started working more and about a year and a half ago, she started working 5 days a week. Sometimes she would double up shift and go 2-3 days without seeing the kids, but for the most part, she was home for dinner every night.So here we are, with him being 3 1/2. He still shows a strong preference towards me, even going as far as saying stuff like "I love daddy, and (sissy), and grandma....but not mommy". He will play with her occasionally and intermittently show her affection, but more often than not, EVERYTHING is "I want daddy" or "daddy can do it". Especially when it comes to the everyday tasks of parenthood (showering, putting the kids to bed, holding hands when crossing the street, getting the kids in and out of the car, etc). It's exhausting, and it's caused a lot of friction between my wife and I. I've been accused of everything from not disciplining them enough (I'll get to that in a minute), to colluding with a grandparent to program the kid to hate her (the farthest thing from the truth; I've always gone out of my way to try and talk up her role...."mommy loves you sooo much" or "I'm so excited mommy is coming home"). By nature, my wife is more the disciplinarian. I've tried my hardest to be the tougher parent, but no matter how hard I try or angry I get, my wife always seems to one-up me with discipline. My parents were fairly lax, but her parents, especially her dad, was extremely rigid and strict (but still a good parent), and I think it's completely ingrained in her personality to be the tough one. She still gets silly with the kids on occasion (she isn't a total square), but I'd say about 75% of the time is all business. I just don't know what to do anymore. I was really hoping this would be a phase and he'd grow out of it, but 3 1/2 years later he's still going strong. We've had countless fights about it (it's pretty much the only topic we argue about), and I know there is a strong sense of resentment towards me. I have literally tried everything; stepping back with certain tasks, not hogging all the fun activities, not being the 'fun' parent, talking her up to him, etc, but it hasn't done much to help. She constantly says stuff like "he hates me" and "if I died tomorrow he wouldn't care"...which breaks my heart as I know it does hers. Aside from my own exhaustion about being the on call parent, I genuinely feel bad for her. We are moving and our schedules are changing yet again, however this time I will be working the normal 9-5 and she'll be a stay at home parent for a while. While I think this might help (having more one on one time with him while our oldest is in school), I'm still terrified that this might get worse.I also have to add that discussing any of this with my wife (or any parent for that matter) presents its own set of challenges. How do you tell your spouse that they should consider doing something different, or 'maybe he'll like you more if....'? The crazy part about this, and I don't know if I can ever admit this to her, is that my biggest trepidation about having another kid is the fear of this type of favoritism again, which will surely increase the resentment even more. Anyone have any suggestions or words of encouragement? via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2ryXkiY

My baby is suddenly a toddler and I was not prepared.


In the span of about a week, my sweet innocent baby (10.5 months) has transformed into a toddler. He is still cute, and funny, and loving, but he's also biting and throwing food and screaming at the top of his lungs. He doesn't want me to feed him anymore, but he gets bored/tired feeding himself and starts tossing food at the dog and throwing his water cup, so then he's not eating enough and winds up hungry/cranky an hour later. He doesn't want me to help him with the sippy cup, but he intersperses drinking with shaking it all out all over himself and everything else....and when I take away, he has a fit.This screaming...is it normal? I have tried to be very patient and explain to him i.e. "When you throw your food on the floor, that tells me you are done eating, so lunch is over." Whether or not he can understand me, it makes me feel better. (I have been reading the RIE books.) His face turns all red and he screams like he is being murdered. It's just for a couple of seconds and he gets over it, it's just that there is so much screaming going on all day long because it seems like everything I do (really, stop him from doing) upsets him. And it's not like I micromanage him and correct everything he does, it's like....don't eat your own dirty diaper. Don't dig in the cat box. Don't climb in the toilet. Don't throw your toys in the toilet.Have i been too permissive?? Is he spoiled?? He has always been curious and an explorer, and I've let him, as long as he's not doing something that could hurt him or someone else. It's just this week that he's really started to misbehave. (I know that's not the right word, he is a baby...but you know what i mean. Act out?) He thinks it is funny when he bites me and pulls my hair, he thinks it's hilarious when he screams like he is being murdered while I am trying to grocery shop.Is this just what toddlers are like? Or am I just screwing up the parenting? He is teething, which I'm praying to god is part of the problem....Please send help and booze. via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2s8kmdA

15 year old son won't go to school part 2


I posted the other day and received really good advice. Same son, different problem.His sister, former heroin addict is living with us again with her 4 year old son and boyfriend.My son is very unhappy about this and wants me to kick them out. It's my understanding that her boyfriends grandparents are buying them their first home so they are living here short term.They have been here about two months. They were living in apartment for about a year and a half, but they didn't have a lease and they had problems with the landlord. I let them move back in knowing this isn't forever, it's short term and they have been looking at houses.Here is the problem. When they lived with us 3 years ago and they were using, they stole from not just me, but my son too. He had a DS which I replaced and they stole the replacement and all the games. They stole PlayStation games from him too. They took all my good jewelry and my phone, numerous things were taken and pawned for drug money.Whenever something was taken from him I got it back and or replaced it. There were some games he didn't want back so I bought new games that he wanted. I tried to make sense out of a no win situation. I had a baby grandson. I couldn't kick them out when he was so vulnerable.They got clean but never apologized to him. He is angry. I had promised him I wouldn't let them back. But they are clean now.He took money from them in the last few days. $25 and some quarters. And he took a shirt yesterday. I got the shirt back and I'm washing it to give it back. I took $40 out of my checking and gave it back.I made him promise he wouldn't take anything else. His sister has said she will start taking his things. I have to tell her if she retaliates that they will have to leave..I have a crisis management team involved and plan to call the case manager tomorrow. We are going to have family therapy set up in the next couple of weeks but in the meantime it feels like world war three in this house. I work from home and I'm always here and feel every bit of tension. And I have to work like this, it feels like a sinking ship with no lifeboats.Any thoughts or impressions I would greatly appreciate. I got really good advice with the last thread and I hope you can help. Please, don't hold back. Any advise is helpful to me. via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2s8hTzW

A stay at home dads worth.


I have been caring for my son during the day since he was 2 months old, he is now 18 months old. His mother and I live together but the relationship has been rocky since before he was born. When it was time for his mother to go back to work I quit my job to stay at home as I would have been the only one of us able to provide any type of income while caring for him during the day.I care for our son alone during the day from about 7:30am to 5:00pm while his mother works and run a small home based business during the evenings. Since I started caring for our son during the day I have be relentlessly disrespected by his mother and her family. I have been threatened to be kicked out weekly and told our home is not mine because I dont pay the bills. I have been told almost daily that I'm not doing my fare share to contribute to my family.In an attempt to defend what I contribute to my families expenses I added what we save in daycare costs to what else I contribute monetarily to show that Im not the bum they portray me to be. I asked my sons mother to add up all of our expenses and to give me a total of what she thinks I owe her every month. The figure she came up with was less than what we save not having to pay for day care and also didnt include any other money I contribute to the household and bills.My sons mother and her family think its absurd that I would include what we save in daycare to what I contribute to our family. They say trying to take "credit" for watching my son during the day doesnt count because its "my son". I tried to explain if I didnt do it we would have to pay someone but it fell on def ears. In an attempt to clarify my position I brought up a scenario where we both worked during the day and put our son in daycare with us splitting the bills in half. With me working during the day my salary could easily cover half of the daycare expenses plus what she calculated that I would owe. Ibwould also have the income from my business.The whole idea behind me staying at home with my son was to do whats best for him. I believe Being with a parent until he is old enough to tell us what happened during the day is whats best. We only saty together because living in separate homes amd doubling our expenses would only make things worse finacially.The whole idea of me having to monetize what i do as a stay at home parent is silly to me but i dont no how else to defend my self and what i contribute. I'm starting to think I'm the crazy one. Is it absurd to add what we save in childcare to what I contribute?I would like any ones opinion on the matter. via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2qvYZlu

Goodnight Moon theory


I have been reading Goodnight Moon almost every night for the last year and a half, so I've had some time to think about it. Goodnight Moon is the second book in a trilogy by Margaret Wise Brown, with pictures by Clement Hurd. The first book is The Runaway Bunny and the last book is the lesser-known My World. Ostensibly, because this is a trilogy, we can assume it is about the same family of bunnies.The first part of my theory is that the mother from The Runaway Bunny is the "quiet old lady whispering hush" (QOLWH) from Goodnight Moon. In the Runaway Bunny, she is neither quiet nor old, she is rather active, chasing the bunny around everywhere. We see in that book the same Cow Jumping Over the Moon painting that appears later in Goodnight Moon, albeit in a different room. In Goodnight Moon, we also see a painting that depicts the scene from the Runaway Bunny where the mother goes fishing for the bunny. (Notably, the painted version is in black and white, while the original scene in RB is in full color).I believe that the bunny from The Runaway Bunny grows up and becomes the father to the bunny from Goodnight Moon.My World, chronologically, comes between The Runaway Bunny and Goodnight Moon, and in this book we learn a lot more about the bunny from RB's life as a new father. We know this book comes before Goodnight Moon because the baby bunny still sleeps in a crib (not a bed), the fishing painting is in the dining room, and they haven't set up the child's room from Goodnight Moon yet. The QOLWH does not appear in My World because she has not moved in with her son yet.Presumably, the QOLWH moved in some time shortly after the events of My World, and she brought her Cow Jumping over the Moon painting with her. That is when they moved the Bunny into the room from Goodnight Moon, moved the paintings in there too, and the QOLWH moved into the bunny's old nursery.And one more thing:Most of The Runaway Bunny features anthropomorphic bunnies in various fantastical situations. The second-to-last situation has the Bunny being "a little boy" and the mother being his anthropomorphic mother. We see them in this scene in a house, with the cow jumping over the moon painting. In the very next scene, however, the Bunny says "shucks, I might as well stay where I am and be your little bunny" and in this scene we finally see the bunnies, not as anthropomorphic bunnies wearing human clothes and living in a house, but as actual bunnies living in a hollow under a tree. These bunnies clearly have huge imaginations, so I believe that the stories of Goodnight Moon and My World are imagine and told by these bunnies from their hollow. That's the second part of my theory.How old should I wait until my child is before I explain all of this to him?? ;) via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2rPsdzH

Should I let my daughter play the harp on the street?


Let me explain this; My daughter is 9 years old and plays the harp. This summer she wants to go to a Christian kids camp with her sister. Her bible class teacher thought it would be a good idea for the group to do small activities to earn the entry fee for the camp (like baking cookies or waffles and sell them).My daughter wanted to earn her part playing the harp on the streets, so last weekend we had a local festival in the city, and my wife and her went there and played. They made quite some money and people loved seeing the harp in real life. Most of them had never seen someone play it up close. She played 3 days for about 1 hour a day.She loved being in the centre of attention and show her talent. People were very positive about it but somehow some parents at school saw her play and commented to my wife we should be more careful because she was very exposed .... and I dont really see the problem. As long as she likes it, I have no problem to let her play on the street.She got invited to play the harp on a medieval festival coming weekend in a neighbouring city. We were excited to go, but now I dont know if this is the right thing to do.Ps: she is paying 3 entry fees for the camp with the money she earned. As parents we are not keeping money for us, in case you wondered!What do you think? via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2rdNgci

Amazing keepsakes for remembering your child's early years?


Every once in a while, I come across something, be it a series of photos/posters, a book, a cross stitch, a scrap book, or something else entirely, that parents made to remember the early years of their child.For example, my cousin writes a couple sentences about his kid on a sheet of paper, and then takes a photo of his kid holding said sheet of paper.Unfortunately, despite thinking "Oh my god, that's so cool - I'm going to do that with my kid!", I never actually keep a link or write down what said idea was - so now I don't remember any of them...Which brings me to my question today:What have you done (or seen someone else do) to preserve memories of your child's first years? via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2rycWn2

I don't know how to play with my child (3yo).


Okay, so I stay at home with my son except a few hours on the weekend (in which my husband is the one at home) and I'm feeling a bit crap about me as a mom.I just don't know how to play with my son anymore. It was easy when he was a little baby because...well...babies are easy. Now he's turning 3 and he's constantly, "Mama. Mama. MAMA....etc" Mama play. Mama come here. Mama mama mama. Totally normal, I know this. But I'm utterly exhausted just thinking of sitting on the floor playing or running around outside (we live in NC and it's humid and 95 most days.)Now, we do stuff everyday (I probably need to give myself more of a break, but that's really just a character flaw.) We go on bike rides, walks, to the neighborhood pool, the local trails, the beach, the golf course we live on, library, storytime, trampoline park, etc etc. He gets out and DOES stuff multiple times a week.He's an only child though and we have pretty much zero children on our street/neighborhood (though we may have our friends over a few times a month) so he's not really playing with anyone except my husband and I.BUT HERE'S THE THING. I get so ridiculously bored. There, I said it. I want to clean the house and the garage and maybe just sit and knit a row. I am a go go go type person and just chilling in my house on the playroom floor makes me so tired and bored.We're getting better with screen time in our house but I don't know how to become a more engaged parent. I desperately want to become the doting, patient parent I invisioned myself being. Sadly, I'm usually busy, tired and impatient (with a few good weeks of "Let's do this thing I found on Pinterest!" spattered over time.)I love my child. I can't afford daycare/preschool. I need to be present but I'm just having trouble training my brain to be on a preschoolers level.Please, if you have advice on how to be content playing all day, I'd love to hear it. Or if you're also not good at playing toddler games for hours on end, some commiseration is always nice too... via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2s7G6X6

My spouse says we will have to move the baby's room to the same floor as the toilet when it's time to potty train. Is this true?


Baby is currently in a room upstairs. This is great because once she is asleep we can be as loud as we want downstairs. Moving her to the same floor as the bathroom will seriously hamper our post sleep activities as the sound isolation on the main floor is very poor.Im hoping someone will chime in and tell Me that a potty trained 3 year old can manage the stairs at night without falling down and hurting herself. Is this true?My spouse is concerned about her having accidents because it will take longer for her to get to the toilet.What say you? Did you potty train a kid with stairs to get to the bathroom in your house? via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2rOESTi

Constant struggle with sleep and bed time. Does anyone else have a child that doesn't get tired, ever?


Since my daughter, who is 4, has been a baby we have had trouble with bed time. She was pretty good to sleep through the night (and still is) but getting her to sleep is a rodeo show.As a baby, short of rocking her to sleep with white noise and singing and bouncing and nursing for an hour, nothing would make her sleep. People told me to "sleep train her". That in three nights I would have a baby who would go to sleep and self soothe. Except when I tried sleep training, I instead ended up with a baby who cries for 30 minutes+ before she finally falls asleep. Now my options were, rock her for an hour or let her cry for an hour.I tried all the different methods and none of them worked. I tried sitting next to her. Sitting at the door. Slowly extracting myself and strict cry it out as well as just waiting it out and rocking her. She never found a method that worked for her. She would have a two week stretch where she slept well. Fell asleep right away. And then back to not sleeping.Then, she began to talk. That's when it really became party time. Especially when I transferred her from a crib to a bed. Now she could get out and play with toys. Sing. Get a book. Jump on her bed. Etc. She would do this for hours. No amount of boundaries or discipline could stop her. Every night was 1.5 hour struggle to get her to bed. Eventually I gave up and just put her in her bed, left and just ignored her. She will stay up and play for hours. Some nights she will even lie in bed quietly for 1.5 hours. Not even playing. But she just can't sleep.When I talked to my pediatrician, she just shrugged it off as my routine not being good enough. She gave me suggestions (which I had already tried, and she told me to just try again. "She'll settle" was her advice)When I asked about melatonin, since her problem is primarily falling asleep, but she felt 4 was too young to start melatonin.I'm at my wits end now. I think there's something wrong with her but no one will listen to me. My therapist says to enroll her in swimming or soccer. "She will fall asleep at the kitchen table because it will tire her out so much" except it won't. I have taken her swimming, rock climbing, to the park, playing soccer, to indoor amusement parks, parties, play dates, etc. She will still go home and stay up late.I can wrangle her to bed by 9 by now with my extremely strict bedtime routine, but if she sleeps at someone else's house she will go to bed at 11 or 12am.She will often tell me she hates sleep. She has tantrums often at bed time because she doesn't want to sleep. Forget nap time. I stopped having her nap at 3 years old because I couldn't handle the stress anymore. She absolutely refuses to nap.Throughout all this, the weirdest thing is that she doesn't even get tired. She has no sleepy cues for me to follow. She goes from 110% to asleep from one second to the next.I am sure she is overtired. 9-6 with no nap is not enough sleep for a 4 year old. But I don't know what to do. I have tried all the different bedtimes in the world.She will occasionally have a great 2-3 weeks where she will fall asleep within 15-20 minutes, and then it just stops.Does anyone have any advice? via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2quRMCh

When you teach your kids way too well


I've grown up with parents that basically did every single thing for me ranging from making my own bed to putting away my clothes, cooking, etc. It was very nice while it lasted but it was also a HUGE change for me when I moved out and learned that my husband couldn't do my laundry and the dishes for me and that they weren't magically going to get clean by themselves.Anyways, I'm happy to report that a decade later I'm fine and adapted well to the new environment however I did promise myself that I'd teach my kids to do basic things themselves. I did that, and now (4 & 5) they can easily clean up after themselves, put their toys and clothes away, put their dishes in the sink or dishwasher, make their beds and put their clothes in the laundry, which trust me, was quite the challenge for me at 18, yup. ANYWAYS, you get my point.So my kids woke up today, I fixed some breakfast, they ate, put their plates away and came upstairs to get dressed. My daughter comes into my room and noticed the clothes on the bed side tables and the purses on the floor, she immediately gave me the death stare and told me "Mom, your room is so messy, how do you expect us to clean our rooms if your room looks like a mess!"And let me tell you, when your 4 year old tells you to clean your room, you clean it. via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2sdZnFA

Just added a little one to family... Seems time to get a new vehicle; what has worked for you guys?


We have a newborn, a medium sized dog and obviously all the stuff that comes with that (stroller, bags, etc). Planning to have another 1 or 2 kids in the next 5 years. Would a smaller suv work, like a cr-v sized vehicle, or should we go bigger? Pilot felt way too huge to use when we got in one. Murano felt good but still only has 5 seats. Just not sure how it will work with 1-2 in car seats and another im a booster (potentially). via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2rcJmjW

parents of tweens: how much do you personally get involved in tween friendship drama? (long, vent, request for other stories?)


I am just curious for those of you who have or have had a 11, 12, 13 year old girl who has drama with her friends or other girls - how much do you get involved? how much do you step back? What are your metrics? how much is too much?I specifically am asking for tweens or older because friendship drama as an 8, 9 or 10 year old was nothing like we are experiencing now. This is very new to me. My girl was always very sweet, a mediator, who was friends with everyone. Now that she's in grade 6, things are changing, cliques are forming. She thinks she is cool as heck, and as such, is pretty much drawn in with the "cool girls", although she has other friends as well that she has shared interests with.lately, she won't talk to me as much about her day, or about her friends and their dynamics but i've seen glimpses of troubles. Last week she came home and cried to me (which was new, has never happened before) because one of her supposed "cool" best friends (we will called her Helen) went off with another girl at recess and completely blocked her out. But she said it was ok because then another friend (we will call her Amy) put her arm around her and made her feel better. I told her well Helen has shown that shes not a great friend and Amy is. This is something i had always thought before as i hear Helen often making fun of other kids for being poor, or having pimples etc, and being a bit manipulative and commandeering. Amy, on the other hand, has a lot of pimples, low self esteem, and Helen always says she hates her. They both have spent a lot of time at our house (separate of course). Amy has low self esteem in general, but is very uncomplicated, sweet, doesn't talk badly about other kids (she has no interest really), and just wants to have fun. Helen has a knack for getting one kid to spend recess JUST with her and to shut out others, by complimenting that kid and telling her how much she is better than the others, and they just don't have time for other kids because they have important things to talk about. Those types of shenanigans.Today my kid comes home and says Helen apologized to her for blocking her out last week and they are friends again and everything is alright. I made a small comment that i hope Amy wasn't ignored or pushed away and she said no, everything is fine. But later i heard her call Amy to ask her about homework and Amy said they weren't friends, sounded like she had been crying, and hung up on her. Then there was massive drama in the house as my kid basically snapped and was rude and insulting towards both me and her sister. I asked her if she wanted to talk about anything and she said no, it wasn't any of my business and she doesn't want to talk to me. She said "if i tell you what happened at school today, it won't help anything it will just make things worse". She also blamed me for taking away her phone last week (because she was spending too much time on girl drama stuff). (the only reason she has a phone is because she goes to school 20 km out of town and is reliant on a car pool for rides home)Normally even getting this far into the story is too much drama for me, but i am really worried about her getting meaner and meaner and basically being a shitty friend. This is not the first time i have heard undertones of her being crappy to someone. And quite frankly, the entire topic is taking up a lot of time and nearly ALL of her attention so she isn't getting homework or chores done at all. On one hand i think, she will learn on her own right? but on the other hand, it kills me to think that there's another little girl out there crying today because of my kid. And what if she doesn't learn? What if this is her transition from being "friends with everyone" to "in-group snob who is mean to other girls"??? And how do i stop it? Or can i? I should also add that my life is super low drama. I get along with everyone and haven't had a fight with a friend since i was in high school. So i don't think this is just her personality but i do worry about how i can help or teach her when she won't talk to meI should also add that she is in grade 6 and we are not in the US. That means she IS in high school now, and these classmates will be the ones she will do her exit exams with. I am the PTA (equiv) rep for her class. In this country, parents rarely get involved in friendship quarrels, even in the earlier grades - i was about to text the mom of Amy just to ask her if Amy is ok, but then i thought it might be overstepping, and it might REALLY make my daughter close off all communications with me. I just don't know.I should also add that the additional stress on my kid is very noticeable. They have their class trip coming up, where they will be gone for a week and the girls are already discussing who's going to room with who. Helen told my kid that she wants to room with her but not Amy because Amy has too many pimples. I responded, well, you should room with Amy then, and my kid responded "i know but......I also want to be in the "fun" room too". ugh.Thoughts? similar stories? Any tips for getting a kid to talk when you know they aren't because they know they will get in trouble for their behaviour?? via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2rxozdV

Weekly - Stories from the week/end - May 29, 2017


This weekly thread is meant as a place to share stories that happened to us as parents over the weekend. Share good, bad, fun, not fun, etc. Also, if you ever wonder who we are, click here to meet the mod team! via /r/Parenting http://ift.tt/2s6OPIX