Tag Archives: kids

Would You Make These Parenting Decisions?

Would You Make These Parenting Decisions? - There's no looking glass into the future to know if your parenting decisions are the "right" ones. Here's hoping we made good choices that will make a positive difference. | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

Trust us when we say that once you get past potty training, kids start growing at an exponential rate. While we cannot quite believe the days of diapers are so far behind us in our rearview mirrors, we do appreciate the breathing room we have now. Less time wiping noses and butts means more time to look around and check out how things are going. While we stand by each of these parenting decisions and think that they have made a difference for our families, the verdict is still out, so you can decide for yourself.

1. We ask them to work hard.

We try to instill in our kids that they are blessed and for them to appreciate that. Everybody gets a gift and challenge. If you are talented, you need to bring your A game. If you have struggles, you can beat them with hard work and determination. Ellen loves to say, “Hard work beats talent when talent hardly works.” She may have read it on t-shirt, but we pretty much want to tattoo it on our kids’ foreheads.

Would You Make These Parenting Decisions? - There's no looking glass into the future to know if your parenting decisions are the "right" ones. Here's hoping we made good choices that will make a positive difference. | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

In Erin’s House, we say “Fight the Tiger. Embrace the Mountain.” Hard things aren’t the enemy but worthy of the climb.

2. We support, but we don’t do excuses.

We are all kinds of available. Whether our kids need a ride, a good meal, help conjugating a verb, or advice, we make it a practice to put down the cellphone and really listen. This means that tough subjects like dating, sex, and drinking are all on the table along with “what’s your favorite episode of Friends?”

We don’t mind offering a shoulder after a heartbreak or one of life’s disappointments either. However, if they skip practices and don’t make the team or they blow off studying and get a “D,” we are here to tell them they got the results that equaled the effort they put forth. No pity parties.

And on that note…

3. We don’t do confetti canons.

Participation trophies are not the end game here. A rich life is not about just showing up. Achievement is for it’s sake alone. Sometimes the joy in a job well done is all you will have at the end. Your reward then is not just that you get to lead the life you want to live, but you get to be a person that you like and respect.

Would You Make These Parenting Decisions? - There's no looking glass into the future to know if your parenting decisions are the "right" ones. Here's hoping we made good choices that will make a positive difference. | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

Stepping outside of her comfort zone is its own reward.

4. We respect their successes as THEIRS alone. 

We revel in their achievements and are thrilled for them, especially as they are moving on and away from us. But when it’s their moment to shine, we exit stage right and let them have that limelight all to themselves. We are absolutely the proudest Moms ever but we have chronic shoulder injuries; we refuse to tweak them by straining to pat ourselves on the back.
Would You Make These Parenting Decisions? - There's no looking glass into the future to know if your parenting decisions are the "right" ones. Here's hoping we made good choices that will make a positive difference. | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

And to take it a step further…

5. We respect them.

They are not our products or our possessions. They are their own people with their own thoughts, goals, and likes. But with that in mind, we do our fair share of influencing . . .

6. We immerse our kids in culture.

Ugh. Sounds dreadful, right?

Would You Make These Parenting Decisions? - There's no looking glass into the future to know if your parenting decisions are the "right" ones. Here's hoping we made good choices that will make a positive difference. | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms.

If you just make learning fun. . .

Well, only if you think watching movies, reading books, using technology, dancing to Wii games, watching Youtube videos, visiting museums, traveling, listening to music, dining at restaurants, attending sporting events, and talking about what is going on in the world is a chore and not the joyous, good stuff of life. It’s a great big world and we are all just living in it. We want our kids to embrace all of the beautiful, bright things the world has to offer. To that end, we jump in with both feet and drag them along with us. Also, life’s a whole lot funnier if you get the jokes.

7. We turn family into friends.

Family is your first best friend, so siblings are included always. This one is non-negotiable. In spite of the daily grumbles and petty fights, we still try to make our homes places of safety and kind words. Sure, teen hormones can make that challenging, but we emphasize every time we are able to get a word in that our home team is the ultimate advantage. Then we cross our fingers and hope that this is the recipe for turning blood bonds into actual ones.

Would You Make These Parenting Decisions? - There's no looking glass into the future to know if your parenting decisions are the "right" ones. Here's hoping we made good choices that will make a positive difference. | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

Nothing says “I share DNA with you” like a sibling sandwich

But don’t get us wrong, we’re not some freaky Von Trapp cult . . .

8. We turn friends into family.

Friendships are the true gifts in life, and we have been very fortunate in finding some that have moved into the realm of family.  Our kids are lucky enough to be surrounded by loving people. We hope they appreciate how special this really is.

Would You Make These Parenting Decisions? - There's no looking glass into the future to know if your parenting decisions are the "right" ones. Here's hoping we made good choices that will make a positive difference. | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

That’s right. We even have matching t-shirts. Hmm, maybe we ARE some freaky Von Trapp cult.

But when you are this blessed, it is your responsibility to give back . . .

9. We model service.

One of our dear friends once said that she would feel like an utter failure if her kids achieved personal success without any regard for other people. We agree with heads nodding wildly in solidarity.  There is no aspect of our lives where we don’t give a little of our time and talent. It makes all that time we spend on dusty trails and in snack booths worth it, right?

Would You Make These Parenting Decisions? - There's no looking glass into the future to know if your parenting decisions are the "right" ones. Here's hoping we made good choices that will make a positive difference. | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

Don’t mock. Khaki is good for the complexion.

But you can’t feel a need to serve unless . . .

10. We teach responsibility.

We teach household tasks and hold them accountable. We let them know that our teams require team players so there are no gold stars for pitching in. Some things just need to get done, and nobody is going to do them for you. Best to learn this lesson from those who know you and love you best, especially when you try to sweep the kitchen floor with a dust brush. Your future wife doesn’t need to know about that.

That being said, we sometimes have to take a walk around the block as they clean the kitchen. All of the <ahem> negotiating that goes along with learning said responsibility is enough to drive a mother to just go ahead and do it herself.

So there you have it, some of our key parenting decisions all laid out for you. We see inklings of solid, hard-working citizens and fine young men and women emerging over here, so it feels like this was not all for naught. Decide for yourself and your family if any of them will work for you.

-Erin and Ellen

We probably should also add that we douse both of our families heavily with humor to keep them chugging along.

What would you add? We would love to hear!

You can follow us on Google+, Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and Pinterest.

Check out our books, “I Just Want to Be Alone” and “You Have Lipstick on Your Teeth.”

 

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Teach Kids to Take Responsibility for Their Schoolwork

Practical Tips for How to Teach Kids to Take Responsibility for Their Schoolwork. Before you stop hovering, you must teach them the skills to be self-sufficient. Think of it as giving them training wheels for responsibility. | Parenting | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

You know how foals basically drop out of the womb trotting? Wouldn’t it be great if human babies had some self-sufficiency like that? Minus the hoofs, of course. Instead, they are helpless lumps who train us parents from early on to take care of all of their needs . . . and it’s hard to stop. We’re conditioned to swoop in even when diapers are a distant memory and the “needs” at hand are that they NEED to turn in their blasted math homework on time.

Even if you’re bound and determined to not be a helicopter parent, it’s hard to know just how to back off. They needed your homework checking/grade tracking/assignment monitoring ways in early elementary school, but as they approach middle school it’s time to give them the tools to manage their schoolwork on their own.

Think of teaching responsibility the same way you would teach your child to ride a bike. It’s a rare kid who can go from tricycle to bicycle without some training wheels in between. Teaching them to be self-sufficient with assignments works the same way. There are going to be some particularly hard knocks if you expect your child to go from hand-holding to “you’re on your own!” in one great leap. It’s going to be dicey at times, regardless.

Erin has four sons and one daughter and Ellen has two daughters. With the experience earned from parenting seven kids between us, we have developed some tools–training wheels, if you will–your child can use to monitor their own tasks and schoolwork without you slipping into the role of nag. If you have to remind them to do their work, they are not really taking responsibility, but if you teach them how to remind themselves, they have a valuable skill for life.

Training Wheels for Responsibility

Ellen’s Focus for Five

In my house, with my two daughters, much time is spent in front of the bathroom mirror, so when they began middle school, that is where we posted our “Focus for Five” reminder sign. This was their visual cue to take five minutes to think about their day. A pad of sticky notes rested on the counter so my girls could jot down reminders as they thought of them to stick them on the mirror or place in their planners as needed.

Practical Tips for How to Teach Kids to Take Responsibility for Their Schoolwork. Before you stop hovering, you must teach them the skills to be self-sufficient. Think of it as giving them training wheels for responsibility. | Parenting | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

  1. What do I have to take today?
  2. What do I have to turn in today?
  3. What do I have to do today?
  4. What do I have to get today?
  5. What dates and deadlines do I need to share today?

Click to print the Focus for Five PDF.

Number five is essential to this training wheel program. It was and is their job to inform me of deadlines instead of the other way around.  Them reporting to me keeps things from (mostly) slipping through the cracks.

Bonus: By giving the system a name, I only have to ask, “Did you focus for five?” at the breakfast table to make sure they did not forget their forgetfulness prevention tool.

Erin’s Backpack Tags

I have five kids–four sons and one daughter–so in my house, if everyone put sticky notes on the bathroom mirror, we would no longer have a mirror. We took a more personalized approach: luggage tag-sized reminders on each of the backpacks. I made checklists on 3 x 5 index cards, covered them with an adhesive laminating sheet, punched holes through the tops, and attached one to each backpack with simple loose leaf binder rings. We started this with my oldest son when he was in elementary school. He was a bit of a distract-a-bat, so I started the tags with things like “Do I have a pencil? My homework? My folder? Did I turn everything in? Did I give Mom papers to sign?”

Practical Tips for How to Teach Kids to Take Responsibility for Their Schoolwork. Before you stop hovering, you must teach them the skills to be self-sufficient. Think of it as giving them training wheels for responsibility. | Parenting | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

This is a system that easily grows with your kids. As we progressed through the years, we added things like “Did I remember my recorder? My gym bag? My cleats?” I just made a new list each time. Easy-peasy.

And there is a super duper parenting bonus! Did you notice that both of these techniques encourages your children to talk to you about their days? That is a great habit to instill as you approach the teen years.

By turning over their planners to them, you are empowering them with your trust, building their confidence, and communicating that they are in charge of their own accomplishments. Since life skills are not compartmentalized, this is going to serve them, and you, well when they are faced with tough choices such as lying, cheating, or drinking alcohol. Studies show confident kids are resilient kids who avoid risky behaviors.

Erin’s oldest son is a freshman in college and Ellen’s oldest is a high school senior. Our children went from scattered disasters to assignment managing, grade tracking, college applying, (mostly) deadline meeting young adults. We’re happy to say the rest of our broods are falling in line using these techniques too.

What “training wheels for responsibility” have you used in your home?

Ellen and Erin

Practical tips for how to teach kids to take responsibility for their schoolwork. Before you stop hovering, you must teach them the skills to be self-sufficient. Think of it as giving them training wheels for responsibility. | Parenting | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

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Our Top 10 Posts of 2015

We are suckers for a yearly top ten list. The good, the bad, and the totally cheesy are all winners in our eyes.  So now that all the presents have been unwrapped, all the ribbons unfurled, and all the calories consumed, we thought we would make one just for you.

Looking for a great break from holiday stress? Check out our top parenting, fitness, and humor posts of the year | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

Feel free to use this Top 10 to fill the void of shopping, cooking, cleaning, and wrapping or as a much-needed break from this “some assembly required” phase of the season. It’s also your chance to catch up with The Sisterhood and our year once and for all.

1. The 12 Commandments for Surviving Your Daughter’s Teen Years

Surviving the Teen Years Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

2.Ten Things I Want to Say to My Son Before He Graduates

Looking for a great break from holiday stress? Check out our top parenting, fitness, and humor posts of the year | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms3. 5 Ways to Earn Money and Rewards with Your Fitbit

5 Ways to Earn Money and Rewards with Your Fitbit! It's like getting paid to exercise! | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

4. The Truth about 10, 000 Steps and your Health

Looking for a great break from holiday stress? Check out our top parenting, fitness, and humor posts of the year | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

5. What Your Kids Need to Know Before Staying Home AloneLooking for a great break from holiday stress? Check out our top parenting, fitness, and humor posts of the year | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

6. The Worst Ways to Answer Texts in Two Words or Less

Looking for a great break from holiday stress? Check out our top parenting, fitness, and humor posts of the year | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

7.  20 Great Ideas for Family Game Night

Looking for a great break from holiday stress? Check out our top parenting, fitness, and humor posts of the year | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

8. You Know You’re a Mom When

Looking for a great break from holiday stress? Check out our top parenting, fitness, and humor posts of the year | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

9. Handle with Care: A Sweet and Simple Guide to Helping Your Friend Send Her Kid to College

Looking for a great break from holiday stress? Check out our top parenting, fitness, and humor posts of the year | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

10. Stages of Shutterfly Delusion

Stages of Shutterfly Deadline Delusion: Photo books are such a personal, wonderful gift . . . that will drive you to the brink of insanity as you try to make that Shutterfly deadline. |Christmas| Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

Of course, if you are still looking for more winning posts, our Great Gifts for Teen Guys and Fabulous Gifts for Teen Girls and this year’s 2015 Teen Gift Guide always hit it out of the park. Or you can check out the perennial favorites 10 Songs to Celebrate Women and Prayer for My Son on His 16th Birthday.

And as a bonus for being a great reader, here’s a highlight from each of us from our year.

Looking for a great break from holiday stress? Check out our top parenting, fitness, and humor posts of the year | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

Scenes from Ellen’s family trip to Paris this summer.

Looking for a great break from holiday stress? Check out our top parenting, fitness, and humor posts of the year | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

Lots of soccer, family time, and a little Pope action on the way to college was Erin’s year

We hope you enjoy  our ten most popular posts from this year all wrapped up with a little bow just for you.

All the best from The Sisterhood, Erin and Ellen 

You can follow us on Google+, Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and Pinterest.

Check out our books, “I Just Want to Be Alone” and “You Have Lipstick on Your Teeth.”

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The Other Side of the Mountain: Adjusting to Parenting Your Kid in College

Even if you are not a fan of Joni Mitchell, you have to concede that she was on to something when she sang about that big yellow taxi. My son is a freshman in college. You don’t know what you’ve got ’til it’s gone, sang Joni. You also don’t know what you’ve got ’til it’s situated nicely on a college campus 300 miles away.

The Other Side of the Mountain: Adjusting to Parenting your Kid in College, a guide to help every mother and father. | Parenting Advice | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

There is no sugar coating the early weeks after the big college drop off. I may not have been a sobbing mess, but my emotions did splash. Just hearing my son’s name could make my eyes fill. Seeing a forgotten sweatshirt hanging by the front door could send my lower lip trembling. A fuse ready to be lit, I should have worn a sign that read “Handle with Care.” This emotional bomb was set to go off, even after perfectly reasonable conversation starters like “Hey, how’s he liking school?” Heaven help the poor woman at the checkout who looked at my items and asked me if I was making a care package. I rarely knew what would trigger me.

But almost harder than wading through my own feelings was watching all the rest of my people struggling with theirs. Just to fill you all in on a little secret from the frontlines: those big strong men you live with will buckle under the weight of this change too. Sure, your husband might talk a good game: “So proud!” “So excited!” “So happy!” You need to know that he is just so spectacularly out of touch with his emotions.

The Other Side of the Mountain: Adjusting to Parenting your Kid in College, a guide to help every mother and father. | Parenting Advice | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

Dads are not immune. No, they most certainly are not.

Your guy might even mock you just a little bit for all of your sloppy, constantly emoting emotions, but he will get his too. When he hears your sweet boy deliver his first college radio broadcast, he might even tear up and and finally get in touch with that full range of emotions you are now experiencing daily. It’s all OK. This Olympic level of missing takes the parenting game to a new plane where even stoic rock solid dads crumble a little. Pick him up and hug him and forgive him for the mocking. This stuff hurts in a way that feels new and raw and visceral. You are all exposed nerves here.

And then there are the siblings. In my house, this means a sister only nineteen months his junior and three younger brothers, the youngest only a tender eight years old. They all handled the new dynamic in our house each in their own way, but collectively it looked like a lot of mopey kids laying around my house. The bodies that were usually in perpetual motion were flopped over whatever upholstered chair, couch, pillow, or clean corner of the floor they could find. Obviously, we are not a people prone to nuance; this was sulking on an epic scale. Academy award winners wish they had our flair for the dramatic.

What it looked like was nothing compared to what it sounded like though. For the first time since we busted the seams of our house with the full complement of this crew of five, it was cool, calm, and collected around here. The profound quiet shot straight to my heart and found its target. Holy crap, I thought, this is so much worse than I thought.

The Other Side of the Mountain: Adjusting to Parenting your Kid in College, a guide to help every mother and father. | Parenting Advice | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

Now I’m not saying they are barn animals, but most of the time they sound like them.

To a mom of five, this was a bright red warning sign on the dashboard of our family. Their silence said loud and clear: all is not well below the hood. Nobody wanted to reanimate that sacred space their brother left behind nor had the words to fill it anyway. Their longing left them all mute and grasping, so we leaned all the way in and got all touchy-feely. Our family mantra became “feel all the feels, just don’t be a jerk” and we splashed those emotions around with impunity. Our sound levels slowly but surely crept back to the deafening roar that feels familiar, safe, and ours. We were discovering a new way to be home.

But the truth is that we were still kind of stuck, and I think my son was too. Things were going as well as they could go for him as he transitioned to a new town, new school, and new life. My sister, a college professor, warned us about midterm time, though. That’s when the bottom drops out, she said, that’s when they use up all their reserves. Sure enough, a couple days shy of that mark, we got a text from him saying that he wanted to come home. My Momma Spidey Senses were tingling: my boy was a little homesick and oh, my heart. We all really, really, REALLY wanted a little shot of togetherness, but we convinced him to wait until Fall Break the next week. Then we got busy. Favorite foods were prepared, rooms were cleaned, every person in earshot knew he was coming home.

And then he was here, he was HOME, and we got to be the “Us” we knew again. I didn’t even intervene when bickering broke out. Spirited conversation is the birdsong of my people. We were finding our way back to each other even in our fights over backseats and side yard soccer rules. There were many wonderful things that happened that weekend, not the least of which was that spontaneous mother-son hugs and hair ruffles happened on the regular. But, by far, the very best thing was that we finally put the devil to rest. The one that had been hanging around and giving us sloppy emotions. The one that had niggled in the deep corners of each of our minds. The one that asked the hard question: are we really us without him here?

The answer is yes and no. We are on the other side of this mountain now.  Of course, our family life is different today than two months ago. There are different daily alliances, different personalities moving into the spotlight, different roles to be picked up and tried on. But that is all as it should be. Family is a safe place to change and grow, and we make room for that here.

But in some ways, this major change, this fundamental shift, this child leaving for college, hasn’t changed a thing. The mystery of love is its ability to adapt and change to fit the people who need it and want it and commit themselves to it fully. Our “Us-ness” is alive and well and excited to explore this next new place. Our hearts are full with the sight of our sweet boy doing the very thing we so hoped and dreamed to see him doing: finding his way without our map or guidance.

But not without our love. That will do what it’s always done: light dark corners and warm cold spaces.

The Other Side of the Mountain: Adjusting to Parenting your Kid in College, a guide to help every mother and father. | Parenting Advice | Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

And make rocking Christmas card photos!

And I even appreciate that devil who sat on my shoulder for as long as he did. I see very clearly all that I have, and it’s pretty great.

Joni Mitchell should write a song about that.

-Erin

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9 Reasons to Kick Your Kids Outside

We are better, kinder, gentler parents outside. True, we are also sweatier, dirtier, and more likely to be doused with copious amounts of DEET, but the good so far outweighs the uncomfortable here that we stopped noticing. In any case, we have strong, rock solid arguments for why you need to kick your clan out into the great blue yonder.

1. Nothing connects a family like no Wifi.

Seriously. If you have fantasies of logging some serious hours of family togetherness with cards, charades, or even just actual conversation, drop your family in the closest wilderness you can rustle up. Just remember to bring a map and compass, because nothing ensures that this memory will move from good to godawful-must-recount-at-Thanksgiving-dinner-until-the-end-of-time like getting lost together without your phone’s GPS.

Want better parenting? Take your kids outside. Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

 

2. Wanna talk? Lace up those hiking boots.

Sulky teens and moody toddlers can both bring civil discourse to a screaming halt or entrench themselves in conversational stalemates worthy of a white flag. In any case, the cure for what is ailing your familial discussion is movement. Take this show on the road. Something about the fresh air and the one-foot-in-front-of-the-other nature of a trail gets the conversation juices flowing again.

Reasons to kick your kids outside---Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

 

3. Water cures all.

Great literature and religious traditions everywhere will back us up: water is a godsend. Sure, water can end epic droughts and convert the faithless masses, but that’s nothing compared to what it will do for a cranky kid, prickly pre-teen, or tetchy teen. Just add water and watch the magic happen. So get your cranky crew to a pool, lake, ocean, or even neighborhood swimming hole. You can even count that as a bath that day too. Tell your mother-in-law we told you so. Win, win, win.

Reasons to kick your kids outside--Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

 

4. They learn stuff.

Put away the summer reading and workbooks. If you are stressing about your kids’ brains turning to mush under the weight of a hundred unstructured days, we have the antidote to your anxiety. There is literally no end to what your kids can learn outside. Sure, they can learn useful skills like reading a map and compass or glean great information about local plants, animals, and history. But by far the most valuable thing they learn is the things you don’t teach them. It may look like boredom but there is important brain work being done when they are lying in the grass like that drooling on themselves. At least that’s what we keep telling ourselves.

Reasons to kinck your kids outside--Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

 

5. Nature is the best of buffers.

This far into summer we don’t need to tell you that kids are loud. Really, really loud. And messy. And stinky. And did we mention loud? The great outdoors welcomes all that kids have to offer and then offers this back: a place for them to be fully themselves without things like pesky walls or carpets to clean. Bonus: kids outside are not as loud as pictured.

Reasons to kick your kids outside--Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

 

6. Cheap Thrills

Nature inspires their creativity and ignites their wonder. This is a fancy way of saying that once you get them out there, you don’t need to do much. Just sit back and watch them play.

Reasons to kick your kids outside--Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

 

7.  Unleash their inner warriors.

By this point in the summer, they are starting to use that b-word we all hate. Banish the boredom just by opening the door. Let their “What I did This Summer” essays start with “I found adventure”.

Reasons to kick you kids outside--Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

 

8. Build their tribe.

Nothing makes a bunch of individuals a team like some shared adventures. Create the ties that bind by offering them opportunities to make memories that will last a lifetime.

Reasons to kick yourself outside--Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

 

9. Just do it.

Show them some of the amazing things that can happen when they leave their calm, cool, air-conditioned safe space behind and just jump.

Reasons to kick your kids outside--Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

Go on now, unplug that XBOX, save the Netflix marathon for next week, and get out there already!

-Erin and Ellen

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Shining a Light on the Truth about Parenting

Sometimes you have questions. Questions like “why won’t my kid stay in her own bed?” or “why does my three year old ask 500 questions?” or “what would drive Erin to dress like this?”

Sometimes you need to shine a little light on the truth about parenting. Listen to what we mean in our new podcast---Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

The answer to all of these questions is that kids are nuts. No, not really, but parenting can make you a little nutty, or, in Erin’s case, just plumb worn out.

In this podcast, we get into some serious truth about parenting and answer the question of why Erin is dressed like that. We also tackle the big question of whether you really need to be loving every minute of it. Even if your kids are your favorite people, they can also be taxing and confounding and exhausting. We talk about some of the highs and lows, and, as a bonus, Ellen gives a little primer on children’s brain development.

Check out our latest conversation and feel free to join in! Just leave your thoughts in the comments!

-Erin and Ellen

 

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Sometimes you just need to hear the truth about what parenting is really like. Listen to our conversation. Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms Click the podcast below to listen to our latest conversation!

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Read This When You Have Time

Ten years ago, a kind but wily acquaintance was giving me the hard sell. He was leaving the neighborhood Cub Scout pack and moving on with his son. He was looking for a replacement/fresh meat/gullible sucker to take his place. I was strong and full of good reasons why I was not the girl he was looking for. He listened intently to every word I said and nodded his head in quiet acknowledgement. But as he was leaving, he handed me a note and said, “read this when you have time.”

Well, to this day, I think of him as the Lex Luther to my Supermom persona. On that little note, he had written the following:

10 Needs of BoysLet’s just say that his little note was the kryptonite to all my arguments. I have been happily traipsing, backpacking, hiking, biking, and canoeing the outdoors with a gaggle of boys (and girls too) in tow ever since.

But that doesn’t mean that I was ready for the job I had undertaken. I love the outdoors with a passion, but you know what they say about passion making you blind, right? I have gotten lost on familiar mountains more times than I can count. I would send up flares when the Diet Coke supply got a little low in the house, so my wilderness skills weren’t exactly honed yet. And the extent of my nature knowledge was mostly stuff I learned off of Snapple caps and from my own well-intentioned but equally clueless mom.

But the truth is that experience is a fine teacher and ten years in, you can feel safe sending your kids into the woods with me and giving them actual knowledge about the outdoors. We might get lost but we will have a darn good time getting there. I would have loved to have had the following book with me in my early days of figuring it all out and you will too.

The Truth About Nature: A Family’s Guide to 144 Common Myths about the Great Outdoors is a book you can sip or gulp. Organized by season with a fun myth rating system kids love, it’s a book that can serve as a reference when needed or a nightly reading staple just for fun. It’s a versatile, accessible read and how you read it will depend heavily on why you are reading it. Just know that once you open its pages, it’s hard to put it down.

My seven year old is currently obsessed with this book and goes around asking his friends things like, “Fact or Myth? Frogs freeze” or quizzing unsuspecting guests on whether they think that bats are blind. We read it in little bits each night as part of our nightly ritual and he can read it by himself but prefers to hear me say “No Way!” whenever a deeply entrenched myth of mine is debunked. But this book’s greatest value by far is the way it excites about the wonders of nature. Even lukewarm couch potatoes won’t be able to escape the allure of all the “too strange to be true” facts and fun experiments you can do at home.

So this is my note to you: Read this when you have time. I hope it changes your mind about nature and kids and kids in nature the way that other little note changed mine. If you want to take kids hiking, camping, or even just out in the great outdoors known as your backyard, you can make a great time even better if you bring this book along. Consider this the kryptonite to all your arguments about why you can’t get your kids away from the TV and on to a trail.

The fall colors are waiting. Enjoy some time with your family in nature today!


-Erin

Looking for books on nature? Reading about kids and the outdoors? Read This When You Have Time---Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

For the launch of this book, there is an exciting contest going on right now with the publisher where you can enter to win a school visit and free books!

All you have to do is make a simple video.

Just visit this site and follow the directions.

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Terrific Teacher Appreciation Gift Ideas

The first full week in May is National Teacher Appreciation Week. Did you forget? For goodness’s sake, learn how to work your phone and mark your calendar. But don’t worry because we’ve got your appreciation gift ideas right here.

We are big fans of  teachers here in The Sisterhood, but then again, who isn’t? They change the world one little corner of it at a time by tapping those hidden reservoirs of awesome in their students.

With that in mind, we present you with two categories of gifts: some for the whole class to do and some for just your child to make. Either way, the teachers will know how much they’re appreciated without costing you a lot of time or money.

Get your DIY on! Teacher appreciation gift ideas that are rich in gratitude, but easy on the wallet: some are class projects and some are individual endeavors. - Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

Class Projects

1. The TOTE-ally wonderful bag.

This one requires a go-getter Mom to spearhead it, most likely you, but that’s the biggest hurdle. Just order a canvas tote like the ones from LL Bean or Lands’ End. Buy an assortment of fabric paints. Arrange to meet with the class at a time when the teacher is elsewhere, usually lunch or recess. Paint each child’s hand, place it on the tote, and then have each child sign his or her hand print. (And yes, you’d better have hand wipes.) With a fabric pen, write a cute saying like “We have to hand it to you . . . You’re the best!” Or “You’re hands down the best teacher!”

2. Show them the money . . .  or at least the gift cards.

This one is a breeze but will have your teacher celebrating all year long. Have every student bring a gift card worth $5 to school. Place them all in a pretty basket and present it to the teacher.

3. “Thanks for Helping Us Grow!”

Show your teacher how much she has helped you grow by offering her a whole garden of her own. Have each child contribute a seed packet. Then help each child craft and decorate a pocket for each packet. Attach all the pockets to popsicle sticks and arrange in a pot. (Try reading those last two sentences aloud. Our gift to you.)

4. Give the “write” stuff.

Have the kids design custom stationary for their favorite teacher! Give each child two pieces of paper. Help them stamp their fingerprints in the corners and then show them how to create animals with them by drawing on details with colored pencils or crayons. Notes home have never looked so good.

5. Color your teacher fabulous!

Have each child donate a crayon he or she used in class during the year. Use the crayons to create the first letter of your favorite teacher’s name by gluing them on a piece of craft paper, then place the creation in a frame. Ask each child to remember something he or she drew that year with the crayon. Print their answers and tape to the back of the frame. Sweetness achieved!

Not really feeling up to organizing a herd? Here are six more simple ideas just perfect for your little scholar to give.

Get your DIY on! Teacher appreciation gift ideas that are rich in gratitude, but easy on the wallet: some are class projects and some are individual endeavors. - Sisterhood of the Sensible Moms

Individual Endeavors

1. Make an acrostic poem.

This quick form of poetry uses the letters of a word to begin each line. It’s an activity that even young children can do. Use the word “teacher” or even the teacher’s name. Write the name vertically and fill in the poem next to the appropriate letters. For example: Teaches us how to count, Every day, she is happy to see me, etc. Make it extra special by putting it in a decorative frame.

2. Write a meaningful thank you note.

There is something special in this fast paced world about receiving a handwritten letter of appreciation. It is also an important skill for any child to learn. There is no better time than this to show them how.

3. Create a book of gratitude.

Have your child write or type 5 to 10 valuable lessons he or she has learned from that teacher on separate pieces of fancy paper then make them into a little book.

4. Pass along some favorite easy recipes.

Do you have those go-to recipes that save you on a busy day? Share them with a busy teacher. You could put them in a decorative recipe box or better yet, just attach them to a plate of cookies. Here are some of our favorite recipes if you are searching for some to share, just click here.

5. Give supplies in a cup.

Need a quick and easy way to show you care? How about filling one of those lidded clear plastic reusable cups with some craft supplies. Paper clips, dry erase markers, or permanent markers make a colorful presentation. Don’t forget to add a cute note to the straw – “I am filled to the brim with appreciation” to complete the look of the gift.

teacher appreciation flag

Made in minutes on PicMonkey.

6. Honor an interest.

Is there something special the teacher likes? You can assemble a unique gift highlighting that interest. Use mints or candy to fill a tumbler emblazoned with his or her favorite team’s logo. Nestle a favorite DVD and some bags of microwave popcorn in a decorative bowl. The possibilities are endless.

 Now go out there and show some appreciation!

-Ellen and Erin

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Check out our books, please, “I Just Want to Be Alone” and “You Have Lipstick on Your Teeth.”

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