Category Archives: Parenting

DIT (Do It Themselves): Mother’s Day Fruit Plates… Help Them to Treat You Right!

Not to brag, but I am fairly lucky when it comes to my children’s eating habits.  My seven year old is not only willing to try anything, but she actually makes conscious decisions to eat healthy (ok bragging a little).  I’ve seen her bypass  a cookie for a peach, filling my heart with happiness. My youngest is pickier, but at age five she is also making smart choices, though will seldom pass up that cookie.

IMG_2112I’ve never had much trouble getting them to eat fruits and veggies, but when it is dessert time, some coaxing is often in order to keep them satisfied with simply fruit.  It’s my own fault.  I’m a big fan of dessert myself, so it sometimes becomes a bit of a habit until I remind myself to break that cycle.

My favorite way to make the fruit more enticing is toIMG_0982
make fruit plates. Sometimes they are elaborate, sometimes simply silly.  Regardless – they always get a great response and then gobbled up!  Not only do we enjoy eating them, but they are also a real pleasure to create.  It’s become something of a zen activity for me.

You can only imagine my joy when my little ones began asking me to cut fruit for them to design their own fruit plates!  It’s become quite a hobby for my youngest and I must say she’s got a knack for it.  We often incorporate veggies too.

Now I  really will start bragging.  Last weekend I was awakened twice with fruit plates IMG_2141made with child labor and love.  The one to the right was admittedly made with help from my man – there’s even an egg in the bowl at its center ~ super yum! Perhaps the best part, is when the girls announce themselves proudly and climb into my bed to help me eat their delicious art!

I can’t wait to see what my lovelies create for me next weekend!

Help your kiddos treat you!  Simply cut the fruit the night before and keep it in covered containers in the fridge.  Leave a plate out within their reach and earn yourself an extra 15 minutes or more of sleep!  Proudness and sweetness all around!

Please share any “Do it Themselves” Mother’s Day ideas by commenting below – the more the merrier!

Posted in Breakfast, Crafts, Creativity, Dessert, diet, DIT, DIY, Do It Themselves, Fast Healthy Meals, Food, Gift Idea, Gluten Free, GMO Free, Health, Memories, Mommy Time, Parenting, Parenting Advice, Recipes, Sharing, Snacks, Vegan, Villagers | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Repurpose Those Chocolate Bunnies ~ Easter Fondue!

images-8Still have Easter candy around a week later? After “candy holidays” like Easter and Halloween, I can’t wait to get rid of the stuff for a few reasons: the begging and the pleading, the cavities, the appetite ruining, and most of all my own midnight snacking.

Luckily Easter, at least for us, presents fewer issues than Halloween. Its nice to have some control over what goes into the basket and how much of it. I’m no grinch-bunny though and after having a gang of three year olds around our place for an egg and bunny hunt in the yard, there was plenty of candy left over. And my son knew it.

The following few mornings were the stuff of nightmares. He wanted chocolate bunnies 553752_10151569174216233_872037726_nfor breakfast. He refused all other options. No amount of explanation, negotiation or consolation seemed to make the slightest difference. Despite the screaming, I switched my focus to getting some waffles made, cutting fruit and then… the bunnies. I heated a small sauce pan, added a little coconut oil, two hollow chocolate bunnies, some milk, the little guy helped me stir… and Voila! We had fondue… for breakfast, how decadent and yet efficient.

Now this magical compromise wasn’t an immediate success. Although he helped me prepare the fondue chocolate, once it was served I got a round of, “You killed my rabbits! They’re dead!” and “I want rabbits, not waffles!” We needed some calm down time: a snuggle and reading of Green Eggs And Ham. Then he was ready to try it. Did he like it? Of course he did. In fact, he said he would eat it with a goat or on a boat!

To Make:

images-7For fondue sauce – any leftover Easter chocolate will do. I used a dollop of coconut oil to make it saucier. Butter would work as well. Just melt the oil or butter in the pan, add the chocolate on low heat and stir continuously. As the chocolate begins to melt, add some milk. We used almond milk, but cow’s or rice or soy or hemp would work as well. Berries, grapes and apple slices are great in fondue. Use your imagination and just shove a toothpick in it. I had some gummy bears with vitamin C in them (bulk section at Whole Foods) and put them on the plate as well. They were yummy dipped in chocolate!

Posted in Breakfast, Creativity, Dessert, DIY, Food, Holidays, parent-child activities, Parenting, Parenting Advice, Recipes, Recycling, Villagers | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Get It Girl!- The Importance of Girl/Me Time

A few weekends ago I was reminded of how important ‘girl time’ is. I was invited to one of my best friend’s bridal shower and had a blast!  My girlfriend is having an amazing DIY wedding, and she came up with the idea of getting all of her girlfriends together to make different items to be used for her wedding.  I was privileged enough to spend the afternoon surrounded by a group of very artistic and crafty women.  We all came together for the sole purpose of celebrating our friend by doing our best to make her wedding day gorgeous and special.  As I sat there wielding a hot glue gun, it all came flooding back to me.  Before being a mommy took up all of my time, I was always dreaming of and actually making different items for friends and family.  It was so much a part of my lifestyle I couldn’t hardly imagine myself not always doing it.  Yet, here I am with a completely different focus and now I spend my time dreaming up activities that I can do with my son.  The days of spending a whole afternoon in front of my sewing machine have now become play dates at the park.  I am in no way complaining, but after the weekend with my friends, I realized I miss my crafty time.  

As mothers, I think that we become so absorbed in our children we often lose important parts of ourselves. I don’t think it’s intentional – it just seems that our priorities shift.  At least for me, the things that were once so important became secondary to my child.  So much so that I didn’t even realize how much I was missing it. I think it happens to the best of us.  The time with my girlfriends made me realize that I too have needs, and those needs are every bit as important as my child’s needs.  Easier said then done, I know, but we mothers need to recognize it and not feel guilty about it.   Sometimes it’s important for us to put the kid down and pick ourselves back up again.  We will be much better mothers for it .

The short “kid-free” weekend with my friends left me feeling recharged and reenergized.  I came back a relaxed, happy and inspired mom.  Since then, I’ve made it a point to get back into the things I enjoy.  I came home and started my garden (something I haven’t even thought about in the last year), I’m taking steps to start a sewing group to learn to repurpose clothing I already have, and I’m hoping to dust off my sewing machine – and glue gun – and get crafting again.

In the end, I’m grateful to my friends for reawakening the part of me that needs to create something.  To think –  all it took was an afternoon with friends, wine, glue guns, and the hum of a sewing machine to get me going again.  I guess that’s what friends are for. Thanks Ladies!!

Posted in Adjusting to Parenthood, Commitment, Crafts, Creativity, DIY, Learning Experience, Memories, Mental Health, Mommy Time, Parenting, Villagers | 1 Comment

Turn and Face the Strange (and heartbreakingly unexpected) Ch-Ch-Changes

 

I’m not naive.  I knew full well that my life was going to change completely when I had my son.  I was totally prepared for sleepless nights, painful recovery, and drastic change in my social life; but I have to be honest, I wasn’t prepared for the loss of some very close friendships.  Sadly, it turns out that I have some childless friends that have adopted a very “US versus THEM” mentality.

I guess I was naive when I assumed that years of friendship would get us over that hurdle.  Unfortunately, that wasn’t the case.  I’ve noticed a serious gap in some of my relationships and to say the least, I’m a little heart broken.  After all, I did help some of these pals get through some pretty difficult times.  Is it too much to expect that after years of friendship, they would be there to see me though the birth of my first child (or at least check up on me with a quick phone call)?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I do have to admit that I am partly to blame.  My whole life (and every FB posting) has become all about my son.  In their defense, they probably can’t relate to me anymore.

Luckily, I have also noticed that my friendships with those that do have children have grown even stronger.  Honestly, I’m not sure I would have made it through the first few months of parenthood without them.  I had no idea what havoc my hormones would reek on my sanity.  Without the constant reassurance from my friends that what I was feeling was normal, I would have probably lost it. Really, who’s to say that I didn’t?  Kidding. Totally kidding.

I guess it takes major life changes to help you weed out the petty, superficial things and relationships that really don’t work for you anymore.  While it is undoubtedly painful to come to the realization that some of these friendships have become petty and superficial, I can only look to the future to help heal those wounds.

In the end, it’s been an interesting transition.  I’m finding myself forging new friendships for myself and my son.  Thanks to “Mommy and Me” classes, I’ve managed to meet a few moms that have babies around the same age as my boy.  The relationships are still pretty new and we are all on our best “mommy” behavior. Who knows?  Maybe I’ll get lucky and find a few cocktail swilling, naughty joke telling mammas to pass the time with and help make up for my losses.  After all, those other friendships didn’t happen overnight either.  I guess only time will tell.  I’ll keep you posted…

 

Posted in Adjusting to Parenthood, Community, Learning Experience, Loss, Memories, Mental Health, New Baby, parent-child activities, Parenting Advice, Villagers | Tagged , , , , , | 3 Comments

Magical Experiences

38As parents it is oddly important to us that we introduce our children to the world.  These new experiences could be the things we always wanted in our lives but didn’t have. It could be memories of things that we experienced and remember fondly.  So we go through the effort of taking our kids places, paying for things, and wearing ourselves out to fulfill this endeavor.  My most recent adventure was taking my children to Washington D.C. for an overnight trip.  A city I’ve been to many times before, but it suddenly became new through their eyes.  My daughters are age four and six.  They won’t REALLY remember this particular trip to D.C., but as I see it I’m adding layers to their childhood memories, little bits at a time.

So a two day mini-trip was plenty for us.  When asked what we might do down there I ran down a rather ambitious lengthy list of options that seemed impossible to accomplish.  There was a puppet show, the Air and Space Museum, the outdoor ice skating rink, the Museum of Natural History, and on and on… In my heart of hearts I knew that the truth is you can plan all of that stuff and then kill yourself trying to achieve it.  So while I entertained the notion of visiting all of these places, I knew I didn’t stand a chance in the world of getting it all done and so I entered the city with NO plan, NO map, just a starting point, and even that didn’t go so well.  The good news is it didn’t really matter that it didn’t go well, because going well wasn’t part of the plan.

While down there I did encounter parents who DID plan their day, and were soldiering54 on incessantly, almost immune to the protests of their children, but you could see the hopelessness in their eyes.  They didn’t want to be doing it any more than their kids did, and yet, they pushed at it like it was a competition. In the end we did make it to quite a few places, but it was at a mosey. Yes, we enjoyed the Air and Space Museum, they really do have some COOL stuff to explore, and it is well-geared towards young kids.  The Natural History museum was ‘eh, so, so’ to the girls, a place I remember solely for the big elephant that still graces it’s central gallery.  Oddly they enjoyed the architecture just like I do, pointing out beautiful buildings, columns and statues that grace our beloved nations capital.  We didn’t ice skate due to a lost glove, protecting soft little hands is so much more important.

Our ‘agenda’ was disrupted happily by carousel rides, ice cream pit-stops, magic dirt, circling fountains endlessly, 56the wonder that is the D.C. Metro train, a hole-in-the-wall delicious D.C. café, and a game of tree hide-n-seek.  Their favorite thing?  The hotel room.  Oh, the luxury.  Oh, the entertainment…two beds three feet apart make for quite a splash of fun.  Speaking of splashes, they enjoyed ‘spa treatment’ baths and manicure/pedicures and indulged in the hotel robes, shower caps, and other little delights found there. I’m pretty sure their jaws didn’t leave the floor during the entire Metro ride, and the only hiccup there is that my younger daughter didn’t realize that the subway was NOT Subway, and she was disappointed at the lack of sandwiches in the joint.  They loved the golden doors of the hotel, and the huge sparkly chandeliers.  The bellmen were especially kind to us, spoiling us some, perhaps out of sheer amusement at the amazement painted heavily across my children’s faces.

We still have the magic dirt rocks.  Those made it home with us.  All these years that I’ve been to that city and never once did it occur to me that there was magic to be found in the dirt paved sidewalks of the mall.  Now, a little piece of that magic lives on in our home.  No, it’s not moon rock such as the display encased in glass in the museum with a description of the where, when and how it was retrieved from outer space.  OUR rocks are sitting in our rock collection (don’t all families have a rock collection?) and the where, when and how we got them is fairly simple, just a one hour jaunt away, a25 wonderful weekend in November.

And, the magic of those rocks is the girls remember that trip and all the oddly fascinating experiences of the Metro, the hotel, the water fountain and the architecture every time they see them.  So much for the White House, the Monument, The Capital Building and Smithsonian. The experiences they walked away remembering may not have been the ones I’d imagined for them, but I love what it became to us.  I should have known it would be that way.

After all when I remember my visit to Rome as a young adult, my most enjoyable and perfect memory was laying barefoot on the grass, with a great friend and a bottle of wine, surrounded by a gorgeous Italian garden on top of a raised fortress overlooking the city.  So much for the Vatican and the Roman ruins….

Posted in Learning Experience, Memories, Parenting, Travel, Villagers | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Citizens Aren’t Powerless to Prevent Atrocities

I’ve known Adam Lanza too. (He isn’t my son.) He had a different name, but the same profile. We’ve all met these people. They live in every community. And it’s not too late to stop them.

They are too disabled to hold a job. Their disability doesn’t lie in their limbs, but in their minds. They live with their parents, or in a group home, have no friends, and no reason to leave the house.

This is not the picture of a happy life. Shunned by society, they have only their family, or hired caretakers, who may be very sick of them. Just think about how you feel after a week with your parents. Then multiply that by 1,040. That’s how many weeks Adam Lanza spent with his mother and almost nobody else, from what it sounds like.

The solution proposed by experts and amateurs alike: Adam Lanza, and Jared Loughner, and the other mass murderers were mentally ill. They needed help, from mental health professionals.

Adam Lanza did need help. As my brother said on the phone yesterday, “six-years-olds draw hearts and want attention. They have nothing to give but love. Anyone who would kill them…it’s sick.”

It’s heinous. And such indiscriminate violence must be borne out of great pain. When animals and humans are in a great deal of pain, their cognitive functioning is not optimal. High emotions block rational thinking. Targets are missed. Social cues are misread. They lash out or in, hurting others indiscriminately, or hurting themselves. A mental health professional can help a person identify this behavior. He or she can prescribe medication to improve functioning, teach coping skills, and refer the client to community resources and activities. But here’s what mental health professionals can’t do: they can’t reduce the pain.

The pain that comes from isolation and dysfunctional relationships with family members who many disabled people depend upon for survival will not go away through talk therapy alone. A mental health professional is not a friend. And being a mental patient is not a role that carries esteem. Humans need friends, esteem, and activities that offer a sense of achievement in order to stay healthy.

The Adam Lanzas and Jared Loughners of the world needed to be part of society in order for that pain to go away. They needed to have roles that prevented them from getting so sick. They needed to be welcomed somewhere, and to do something well. A mental health worker could have helped them find those things if society had provided them.

There are plenty of roles for disabled people: bagging groceries as a volunteer, discussing American presidents with old folks in an assisted living facility, walking the neighbors’ dogs, weeding gardens for a landscaper, playing chess at the corner store or park, participating in synagogue or church events, writing fan fiction for a thriving fan fiction community, or working with a group of Linux users to create a new Java-based widget platform.

When society obsesses over the need for mental healthcare for the Adam Lanzas of the world, it passes the buck. It undermines the importance of social acceptance for disabled people. It’s like a person with a messy house who throws a banana peel on the floor and screams, “I need more housecleaners!”

If we keep our houses cleaner, we won’t be dependent on housecleaners.

We can welcome disabled people and offer them small roles that get them out of the house or into a social milieu. When they apply for jobs at our businesses, we can give them small, manageable tasks once a week. When they apply to join our synagogues but can’t afford the membership fee, we can waive it. When they apply to join our quilting group, bowling team, or gardening club, we can accept them, even if they make us slightly uncomfortable. We can greet them with kindness and conversation when we encounter them in public or at their homes.

If having disabled people around frightens you, that’s understandable. Check with their family members, their doctors or therapists before inviting them into your world. We do that with employees for good reason. But don’t categorically reject them. Because that’s what has occurred in the case of Adam Lanza and Jared Loughner, and the result is atrocious.

We can cry out for more psychologists, more welfare spending on mental health services, do nothing ourselves, and accept the collateral damage. Or we can step up and be citizens. Those are the choices.

Emily Meehan is a writer and a children’s advocate who is producing a feature film she wrote after spending six months working with foster children living in a Northern California group home. Learn more about the film here.

 

Posted in Altruism, Behavior, Child Advocacy, Education, Family, Loss, Sharing, social awareness, Special Needs, Teaching Compassion, Theory, Villagers | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Double Giveaway! Creative Gifting: Laurence King Publishing Ltd. Gift Guide

If you’ve read any of my posts then you’re familiar with my obsession with giving children gifts that promote creativity and learning.  Books are an obvious choice, I know.  But these aren’t just any old books.  Laurence King Ltd., a British publisher distributed in the U.S. by the  beloved Chronicle Books brings us some modern, interactive titles and more to fuel your child’s imagination, rocket-style!

Here are my picks for the kids in your life:

1. Magic and Fairy-tale Dice -  These give new meaning to the term “conversation starter”.  Simply roll the beautifully crafted wooden dice and include your resulting image in a story.  At $14.95 these are great for the classroom or home and fun for all ages – I quite enjoy them myself!  The whimsical images include an array of creatively classic storytelling components, including a frog, witch, phoenix, shamrock, and you-know-who’s little red cape.   The most magical thing about these magic dice is the way they get the gears in motion, my girls are so excited to add on to the story and love the challenge of including the random element determined by their rolls!

2. & 3. Let’s Make Some Great Placemat Art and Let’s Make Some Great Fingerprint Art by award winning illustrator Marion Deuchars are interactive workbooks designed in such a way that the child is practically collaborating with the author on some pages and being guided by her on others.  In the tradition of her Let’s Make Some Great Art (a personal favorite), these activity books provoke your child’s imagination.  Great springboards in the placemat book include inventing one’s own pasta shape and imagining what some illustrated people and birds might be dreaming about, at only $12.95 and 72 pages, this book is both affordable and will provide hours of inspiration.  Also, inspirational, the fingerprint book is exactly what you’d imagine, and then some!  Be sure to wrap a stamp pad or two with this one, as your recipient will use her own fingertips and hands to create a plethora of creatures and critters.  At $14.95 for a whopping 128 pages this is a winner for elementary kids and up!

4. My Wonderful World of Shoes by Nina Chakrabarti rides on the heels (pun fully intended) of My Wonderful World of Fashion and My Even More Wonderful World of Fashion, which I gave to my daughter last year and she still enjoys.  Inspire your future designer with styles from vintage to couture to color, embellish, and make their own!  $15.95 is a small price to pay for 144 pages of high fashion and more!  For an adorable sample of Chakrabarti’s adorably detailed footwear, check out this cute little video!

 WIN!

Enter to win one of two awesome prizes generously provided by Laurence King Publishing Ltd.!  They are giving one Takes a Village reader a set of Magic and Fairy-tale Dice and another reader will receive a My Wonderful World of Shoes activity book!

Plenty of ways to enter are below:

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Huge thanks to Laurence King Publishing Ltd. for providing terrific review materials!
Posted in Book Review, Creativity, Development, Education, Gift Giving, Gift Idea, Giveaway, Holidays, School, Toys, Villagers | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

Life is Learning: Recycling as a Lesson

At age six my daughter really wanted an iPod Touch like mine.  She is very gentle by nature and extremely careful with the old (and heavy) laptop I had refurbished for her as a holiday present.  Do I think that a girl her age needs an iPod? Of course not!!! Do I think this presented amazing opportunity for a learning experience?  Oh yeah!

I told her last spring when she started asking (pleading) for the gadget, that she’d have to buy it herself.  The devices start at around $200, but I’d seen them refurbished for $150.  That’s a steep price tag for a first grader, but she was determined.

Aside from putting some holiday gift money in the bank account she opened, the little saver started collecting recycling from friends, family, and neighbors.  She even used a paper towel to pick up littered water bottles at the park.  My girl is hygienic and thrifty!

 

The lesson here is two-fold: help the environment AND her pockets!  And me?  I couldn’t be prouder.  She stockpiled bottles in our garage and our monthly trips to the recycling center provided a great bonding and educational experience.  We would sort the bottles at home and she would feed them into the self-service machines – just her height and she could watch the tally and profit rise on the machine’s monitor!  As for the containers that couldn’t go into the self-serve, we sorted them into the large barrels at the plant to be weighed by the attendant.  Admittedly, she eventually tired of feeding in the bottles one by one and decided to have everything weighed in bulk.  It was less money, but saved time and energy when she started to lose interest in the machines.

The pay-outs came in the form of certificates to be spent or cashed in at the adjacent grocery store.  I would redeem them and transfer the earnings into her account. The totals added up pretty quickly with recycling coming from all different comrades of her cause and she earned herself an iPod in about 6 months.  I ended up giving her my old one for $100. (which I secretly left in her account).   She uses it to “play dj” in the car and rarely for games and checking the weather.   Of course, its use is limited and she always asks first.

I really recommend this activity for those with child aged 6 or up in their life.  My daughter is so proud of her achievement and so excited to use her iPod she bought herself.  Environmentally, financially, educationally, and self-conceptually – this is a win – win – win – win situation!

To find your nearest recycling center in California click here.  For other states, try Google!

Do you have any experience with or ideas for real-life learning activities?  Please comment below or email me at julie@takesavillage.net to submit your own guest post!

Posted in chores, Education, Environmental, Extra curricular Activity, Greener Living, Learning Experience, Parenting, Parenting Advice, Recycling, Spending, Villagers | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Love your Mother-Motherlove products Giveaway

It’s official, I’m a mom!  Boy has it been a wild ride so far! I’ll be honest, my life has changed in so many ways, and not all of it has been magical.  Take breastfeeding for example — I’ve had a very difficult time.  Like most mommy/baby teams my little one & I have had to work really hard to get it right (and I’m still not sure we have).  The first few weeks of breastfeeding can be very painful. Luckily for me I have been using Motherlove nipple cream.  When my overused and very abused nipples started to chap while my little guy perfected his latch, I’d dab a little on my girls & I’d get instant relief.  With natural ingredients such as extra virgin olive oil, shea butter, and calendula flower (amongst other great stuff) – I felt confident using Motherlove nipple cream, and was comfortable with my son attempting to latch on soon after application.  I didn’t have to worry that he’d be eating any harmful chemicals that could hurt him.  The cream went straight to work soothing, moisturizing, and calming inflammation.  I also found that it works great on lips & any other parts of the body that need a little extra TLC.

 

Not only did I get relief, but my son also benefited from Motherlove products.  Turns out he has sensitive skin & I was able to use their diaper rash and thrush cream.  In his case I quickly learned that prevention was key.  Newsflash – newborns poop & pee a lot – so there is plenty of action going on down there.  After a few days, my little guy started to get some very red & irritated areas on his butt.  I quickly applied the Motherlove Diaper and Thrush ointment –  and within a few applications the red subsided.  I’ve since then applied it every time I change his diaper and we have had zero problems.  My husband especially loves the wonderful scent. He said it’s like vanilla & butterscotch.

I have always expressed my disgust in all of the harmful chemicals that are used by many conventional baby products out there, so I’m constantly on the hunt for safe and healthy products.  Motherlove is a company that takes it’s ingredients seriously, and only uses organic natural ingredients that won’t harm mom (or baby).  I feel totally comfortable using any of their products (and they have plenty to choose from).  Motherlove has all of your pregnancy and post pregnancy needs covered.  From products like their Pregnant  Belly Oil to their very popular More Milk Plus products (that help boost breast milk production).  There’s nothing they haven’t thought of!

Thanks to the people at Motherlove, one of our lucky readers will win a Diaper Rash and Thrush Ointment, a $20 value!  Enter below!

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Special thanks to Motherlove for providing fantastic samples for my review!
Posted in Adjusting to Parenthood, Giveaway, Health, natural, New Baby, organic, pain relief, Pregnancy, Skincare, Villagers | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Me, 2 kids and 20,000 miles…Tips for the traveling mama.

 

The journey included 2 cross country trips in a truck,  5 months in a hotel room in Louisiana with my husband and our two kids, roundtrip flights between LA and DC, and roundtrip trans-atlantic flights.  Plus 2 weeks abroad and 1 week on the opposite coast.  All of this within 6 months, and totaling nearly 20,000 miles (FYI thats about 4,900 miles shy of Earth’s circumference).  What follows are some tips that came about purely by trial and error and would certainly have been useful information for me before I set out. Hopefully, these notes will offer you the opportunity for some happy and, relatively, stress-free traveling with your youngster(s).

  • First and foremost, the Order of Operations.  Yes, we are taking it back to algebra people.  A simple thing like an ordered plan will do wonders for your travel experience.  This is not your “When we get to Paris, we are going to the Tour Eiffel” kind of planning, however.  This is more “micro-planning,” for common traveling tasks.   For instance, while unpacking cars or making your way through security lines, take a moment to determine the best order to do things. Envision the steps you must take to accomplish each task, efficiently.  When traveling with kids, it is easy to get overwhelmed and start overlooking small details.  Avoiding simple mistakes like putting diapers in the bottom bag of your luggage stack, or unloading your 2 year old from the car before your suitcases, can save you unnecessary stress and wasted time.

 

  • KNOW your child.  Sounds straightforward right?? Well, not ALWAYS as simple as you’d think.  Know their sleeping and eating habits and schedule; know how long they can go, before exhaustion induced, tantrums begin.  Plan your travel times around your child’s schedule, not yours.  This is crucial if you want things to go as smoothly as possible. For our outbound flights we always flew at night.  Inbound flights, we often didn’t have a choice and had to fly during the day.  These were by far the most stressful flights, not only were my kids awake and needing to be occupied, they were also going backwards in time and by mid-flight were utterly inconsolable. Always hope for the best, but prepare for the worst mentally.
  • Bring your own car-seat, travel cot/packnplay, as often as possible.  For a week before you leave, let your child sleep on the cot, and keep the car seat in your living room, for your child to sit in.  This way, these items become recognized places of comfort, security, and most importantly, sleep.  In a hotel room, or rental car, you cannot underestimate the power of having a place where your child already feels comfortable. My daughter even began requesting her car seat when she was ready to sleep!

  • Pack your carry on with enough to last 3 DAYS. Plan your wardrobe accordingly, choose lightweight, easily layered clothes and then pack your bag military style, first folding, then rolling, then stacking your clothes like bricks. You will be AMAZED at how much you can fit in your bag using this technique. But beware of overloading yourself with a heavy bag, keep things simple.
  • Practice makes perfect. Establish how best to portage your things and then practice at home, (I had: 2 kids, 2 car seats, 2 suitcases, a double stroller, as well as a purse and laptop bag)  For my air travel I purchased 1 large suitcase and 1 carry on that both had 4 wheels which spun 360 independently of another.  Now let me paint the picture for you, using a sturdy luggage strap and wrapping it tightly around the handles, I was able to link the two bags together creating a kind of luggage “float”. On top of that, I hooked my infant car seat, with base attached.  The other car seat, a toddler seat, I wore as a backpack by loosening the LATCH system strap and wearing it over one shoulder and across my chest. The kids went into the stroller and my purse and laptop bag were attached to stroller using large carabiners purchased inexpensively from the camping section at a large retailer.  This brings me to my next point:
  • Have a REALLY GOOD, LIGHTWEIGHT, NARROW stroller (I bought mine, a double, specifically because it is measured to fit through any standard doorway). Check that it folds compactly, has lots of storage space, and most importantly, TURNS ON A DIME.  Make sure it can be maneuvered EASILY with one hand, since you will need your other hand to pull your makeshift luggage cart, etc. (I cannot sing the praises of the Baby Jogger City Mini Double enough!!) I could write a whole article about my love for that stroller alone. Practice with your stroller while its loaded down. Know how to pack it efficiently and maximize the built in-storage space etc.

  • There are times a stroller is not practical, however.  In this case, know how to wrap your baby. I highly recommend wrapping, over a carrier, because baby is more comfortable and secured more safely.  You also have much greater ease of movement and you can nurse anywhere discreetly. An added plus, baby will be more at ease being near you and can sleep in a dark cocoon.  The wrap I used was simply a 5m piece of stretch cotton jersey which I used to carry baby on my front, facing me in the cross carry style.
    • To keep kids active on flights, and in car, I did not use DVD players or tablets.  I went more old school.   For my 2 1/2 year old daughter, I chose: small board books, matchbox cars, stamps and ink pads, hundreds of stickers and construction paper, a small tea set and my personal favorite a magnetic/dry erase board, with mini sized, dry erase markers in various colors, as well as large magnets.  The added bonus to dryerase markers is they actually wipe clean from most surfaces, and are reusable.  I also purchased a small travel backpack on wheels, for my daughter.  She was thrilled to have the important task of carrying/pulling her own bag, and saved me some much needed space. For my 9 month old son I had a couple of koosh balls, 2 soft animal books, a set of toy car keys with buttons that made a bunch of cool sounds, and probably best of all, his big sister and mommy for entertainment!  Also, to help ease little ears during take off and landing, have chewy foods ready and nurse or bottlefeed baby, sucking and chewing will help pop ears.
  • When traveling through many time zones (we were 8 hours off),  allow one day’s adjustment for every hour time zone, off home time. Adjust sleep schedule incrementally by one hour each day.  i.e. If you travel ahead in time and your child goes to bed at 2 am the first night..push it back to 1 am the second night, midnight the 3rd night etc.  Allow your child to nap when they really need to, but I did try to keep them up longer between naps.
  • When traveling with a potty training child, Be Prepared! If you can travel with a small potty, that is obviously ideal, but there is always the chance you will be caught unprepared.  At the risk of giving too much information, I will say that stuff happens, and sometimes, you gotta do what you gotta do.   In the worst case scenarios, I improvised a potty for my child, using my arms to create a bucket seat, by interlocking my hands. I had her hold my upper arms and sit with her knees crooked over my wrists. The main trick is to keep your feet out of the way!
  • Don’t underestimate your need for small bills and change.  Have a small amount of local currency in a pocket or hip sack that is incredibly easy to access, though not more than $20. You will need this for tipping and quick purchases of snacks or drinks on the go.
  • In airport security lines, make as much direct eye contact with security officials as possible, wearing a pleading look on your face.  This is usually enough to get you ushered to the front of the line.  Let people help you, maybe you are not as stubborn or hardheaded as yours truly, but it took me a bit longer than it should have to allow myself the help that is often offered (and necessary) from strangers.
  • SMILE, BE POLITE, ENJOY YOURSELF.  If you get stressed and/or look stressed dont let it affect you outwardly, or your children will pick up on and mirror your attitude/behavior, and even if they don’t, you will only make your own travel experience miserable if you allow things to get under your skin.  SO-the airline lost your bags, the rental agency cancelled your reservation and your kids are screeching full force through the London underground.  Focus on the positive.  You have less weight to carry for the time being, your lack of having to pay for a rental car will allow you to buy more gifts for friends at home, or even better, will keep you under budget and increase your take home cash, and best of all, what a story you will have to tell down the road.
  • When you ultimately experience disastrous behavior, from an exhausted child, travelling across multiple time zones,  don’t apologize or even make eye contact with people around you. Put imaginary blinders on and don’t think twice about the stuffy suit rolling his eyes or the young lad who’s complaining into his cell phone that he can’t hear where the party is tonight because of some wailing kid. Nope.  In that situation, don’t even put yourself in the same dimension as those around you. Remember, the majority of people have some experience with a screaming child, yours is not the world’s first.  Generally, people are far more understanding than you are making them out to be in your head, and most, are likely feeling sorry for you, not themselves.  Those few, who truly do find your presence, with your wailing kids and frazzled demeanor, to be a genuine annoyance, are destined for colicky babies of their own someday.

So take courage! With your chin up and the knowledge that you are a ‘Memory Making Machine,’ in your heart, mop your kid’s face up, and charge forward to your gate! (quickly now they’ve started boarding!).  Safe & Happy Travels!

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