Communicating and Providing for Children Today


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Nov
20
By: angelie | Discussion (0)

 

Christmas is one of the most awaited time of the year. This is the season that you can have fun with your family without thinking of your work. This is also the time that we go to the mall with our family and buy gifts for friends and relatives. All the excitement makes you lose track of your child in the hustle and bustle of holiday shoppers. The following are no-panic rules that will help you find your child quickly:

Speak up! – Don’t waste your time searching store aisles yourself – alert security immediately or go the information counter for them to announce that your child is missing. You can also teach your child to find a safe adult (such as cashier, guard or a mother with kids) and say, “can you help me find my mom”

Remind your child to stay in the area – Tell your child before you go the mall that she should never leave the store, go out to the parking lot by herself or with someone that she doesn’t know.

Teach names and numbers.- Help your child memorize your address and phone number or you can place a card with your information written on it inside her pocket.

 Carry a photo. – Keep your child’s picture in your wallet or purse. Note his height and weight on the back, and update often. If you’re consistent on reminding your child of all the rules, it will be easy for her to do it. Happy shopping!

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Jul
23
By: kathy2 | Discussion (1)

I have two daughters, 12 and 13, so we’ve been wrestling with the question of style for a long time.  One of the chief problems, according to my daughters, is that I have none.  To which I usually respond, “I may not have style, but you’re still not going out of the house like that.”

They’re right, though.  My girls are much more stylish than I am, or even than I was at their ages.  And they are very different from each other, as well.  My son, on the other hand, is 6, and could not care less what he wears, though he will occasionally request one of the shirts with a dinosaur on it.

So  how do we help our children develop their own personal style without sacrificing our own judgement about what is and isn’t acceptable?  Here are a few tips that have helped our family achieve relative (if not total) peace on the style front.

  • Let them be themselves!  My mom, God love her, wanted to dress me up like her own life-sized Barbie doll, but I have always been a jeans-and-t-shirt kind of girl.  My own daughters have gone through frilly-and-pink phases, only-black phases, tailored slacks phases, and oh-my-God-I-have-breasts phases.  Obviously I have my favorites, but my favorites don’t have to be their favorites. 

 

  • Keep your values clear and consistently enforced.  We don’t do low necklines or bare midriffs, because we’re trying to teach our children to respect their bodies, not flaunt them, and modesty is an important part of that.  DH and I want people to look at our kids and see intelligent, polite young people, not just exposed body parts.     But besides consistent rules, we also have talks about what the culture is saying about women and men when everyone in their favorite magazines has so much skin showing.  They’ve all begun to take some pride in being a bit counter-cultural. 

 

  • Look at pics with them.  Look at the Oscar issue of People Magazine with your daughters, for example, and talk about why certain dresses are flattering and why others aren’t.  Ask your sons if they like certain shirts in the Penney’s catalogue, and if they would wear them.  Ask why or why not.  They might not be able to articulte their reasons fully, but it gets them thinking about their own likes and dislikes. 

 

  • Praise, praise, praise.  When they look nice, say so.  Be specific, because they really don’t know what works and what doesn’t.  They’re trying to figure that out.  You might say, “That color really goes well with your skin,” or “You look really handsome in that T-rex shirt,” or “Those jeans are really flattering on you.”   We don’t want our girls or boys to focus over-much on their appearance, but we do want them to take pride in it and know how to dress themselves to bring out their best. 

 

  • The Rule.  The rule in our house is, “I won’t make you wear anything you hate, but you’re not allowed to wear anything I hate.”  They are still kids, much as they might sometimes like to deny it, and you can’t replace your judgement with theirs.  You still have to set boundaries and protect them from their own inexperience. 

 

  • Get back-up!  There should be an adult in your life whose opinion matters to your child.  If Uncle JoJo says he looks cool in that shirt, he’s more inclined to wear it.  Sometimes they just can’t hear us parents, and the input needs to come from somewhere else.

Don’t forget, they’re their own people, with their own taste and sense of themselves.  You can’t ultimately suppress that, but you can help it develop in the right direction.



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