Communicating and Providing for Children Today


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May
01
By: bryboy | Discussion (0)

New England Clam Chowder  On Saturday, May 8 a mother in landlocked Omaha, Nebraska received a special Mother’s Day gift from her favorite son living in Phoenix, Arizona–live and kicking Maine lobsters.

Plus, Mom received Boston’s best chowder, handmade Harbor Sweets chocolates and all the accouterments, even right down to the red and white checkered cotton napkins. This special lobster dinner, called the Rockport Romance, arrived next-day air, beatifically gift wrapped with the look and feel of old New England courtesy of LobsterAnywhere.com. For over 10 years, LobsterAnywhere.com has delighted Moms coast-to-coast with the finest live Maine lobster, lobster dinners and award-wining chowders.

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Oct
26
By: angelie | Discussion (1)

 

 ”honey, it’s time for you to sleep now.” “but mom!!!!!!!! I’m not yet sleepy and besides I’m not even tired yet” 

This is a normal conversation between a mom and her little one who prefers playing than sleeping. During this moment, your patience will be tested and yes, It won’t be easy. It is important that your child understands why she needs to sleep.  That heavy and groggy feeling shows that your child is not at her best condition. She needs to know that her body is like a celphone battery that needs to be recharged.  So here  are the following things that you can do to help your child love sleeping.

  • Sleep with your little one. It helps your child get into a routine.
  • Try bedtime routines like, reading, or taking a warm bath. It helps your child to  be calm and relax.
  • No sodas, ice tea or any food contains caffeine before bedtime.
  • Avoid having TV inside your child’s room. Study shows that kids who have TV’s in their rooms sleep less.
  • Remember that children has wild imaginations. Avoid watching scary movies or TV shows close to bedtime because it makes it hard for them to fall asleep. Just incase this situation happens, pray with your child before they go to sleep.
  • Use your child’s bed only for sleeping. In that way,you’ll train your child’s body to associate her bed with sleep.
  • Have a “bedtime chit-chat”. This is the time to ask your child how her day was. This will  help your child relax and It will be easy for her to sleep.

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Oct
05
By: angelie | Discussion (2)

Everybody was so excited when my sister-in-law had her first baby. I saw how they took care of the precious little girl. I was 7 years old then and I didn’t know that babies are really fragile. They need “super extra” care from all the people around them. One time, I saw my sister-in-law and she was feeding my niece (she was 6 months old). She told me that a child’s nutritional and eating habits will change drastically as they grow from a baby into a toddler.

Nutritious food are important when it comes to your child’s health, but how will you know if it’s the right kind of food? Below are few examples of food that you may give your babies.

  • Infant rice cereal – It provides extra iron that your baby needs at this age. It is glutten-free and the least allergenic of all grains.
  • Pureed or strained veggies and fruit – I suggest that you let them eat veggies first. Naturally babies like sweets and may not be willing to accept peas once they they’ve tasted pears.
  • Oat, barley and baby cereals – Once you’ve fed them rice, make sure you give other grains one at a time, so you can watch for allergies.

It is common for babies to spit out their first bite. Infants are like taste testers, they need ten tries to see if they like the new flavor and texture. To make it more inviting for your babies to eat why not try the squirt baby food dispensing food?

This spoon holds up to 3 ounces of food. You just have to squeeze it and it will give the right small amount of food that your baby can eat. The squirt has a special cover to seal the food and keep the spoon clean in between feedings. This product will make your feeding time fun minus all the messy food on the table.

Where to buy: Tottini Seattle

Price: $8.00

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Sep
18
By: bryboy | Discussion (0)

minui HandySitt ChairDanish children’s furniture maker, minui, will unveil a new high chair product in September at the All Baby and Child Show in Las Vegas. The product extends the versatility of their already eco-friendly, modern, safe and great looking children’s seating system.

The new product, called the minui HandySitt Chair, works in tandem with the portable high chair acting as a ‘base’ for the home. Together, the multi-functional minui HandySitt seating system can be configured and used as a freestanding high chair, a compact and portable high chair for traveling or taking to restaurants, a seat for an older child (less than 5 yrs old) and a step ladder for adults to get to upper cabinets and for kids to help mom with meal prep

(Source) Press



Aug
25
By: kathy2 | Discussion (2)
Image courtesy of PianoLessons.com

Image courtesy of PianoLessons.com

Ah, piano lessons…the curse of youth. As parents, we read the reports and studies tying music education to success in learning everything from math to science, and dutifully enroll our kids in piano lessons. The first years aren’t bad – the novelty of playing an instrument and the sponge-like minds of children generally make the beginning of their musical career relatively pain-free. But eventually fun becomes work, and work leads to whining.

“I hate piano, Mom! How much longer do I have to do this?”

Just getting my daughter to sit at the keyboard and practice became a chore, and even my husband questioned how much she was getting out of the whole drama piano had become. Stubborn mom that I am, I wasn’t about to let her quit after investing all that time! She was just getting good! But something had to be done to make lessons more palatable before we killed each other. Here’s what worked for us:

  • Tell the piano teacher! Maybe I’m just a less-than-caring mom, but after lessons became routine, I’d just drop my daughter off, head to Starbucks, then pick her up. I didn’t see her teacher much, and assumed that the wall we’d hit on lessons was something between my daughter and me. Once we talked to the teacher, she had some great ideas about how to vary the lessons, including letting my daughter pick some of what she wanted to play. Knowing she had some control over the lesson helped immensely

 

  • Include other activities, like song writing. We’re fortunate in that our piano teacher includes a lot of music theory along with the actual piano playing. When presented with the opportunity to write her own music, my daughter immediately started using up music paper like it was Kleenex. Learning that all those scales and chords could be put to use to accompany her own melodies opened a whole new world for her.
  • Get some popular music to play. So many piano ‘standards’ are filled with songs that kids have never heard (and will never hear again), that they can’t relate to what they’re playing. A few newer primers include standards from the Disney movies or Star Wars, but investing in a copy of the Spongebob sheet music or even some of the music from my kids’ video games has made sitting at the piano a fun thing, rather than torture.

Having crossed the line from tween to teen, my house now sounds like a top-40 radio station as my daughter willingly sits down to play songs by The Fray or Linkin Park. I occasionally sneak in one or two songs that I like, and she even plays those too!

Not every kid is cut out to play piano for so long, but by varying lesson content, working with the teacher, and adding some fun extras, kids can actually stick with piano long enough to realized what a gift they have – and move on to complaining about other things.

 

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