Occupy Parade- November 19, 2011

We joined our friends with their bundled up baby and braved a chilly morning.  We headed downtown to the Raleigh Christmas Parade.  The early date of our city’s parade amuses me almost as much as the tweens clad in glitter American Idol t-shirts.  They gathered in gaggles to get a glimpse of Scotty McCreery.  He is our hometown kid and served as this year’s Grand Marshall.

Here’s some of our adventure…

In the wagon, all bundled.  He he!
Our spots.  Yeah, we’ll get there earlier next year.  
Our little family
Isn’t this the “Dad” thing to do at parades? 
This was the last time we saw this paci.  Hey Occupy Raleigh protesters, you all have been at the State Capitol.  If you see that paci, email me.  Not because I’ll want it back, but because I would find that hilarious.  
Baby snack break!
My loves  
Laughing as my baby has a meltdown.  We left after this.  
Please note it is 11:51pm, but still a post for today!  I made it before midnight in my quest to post every day in November.  Boo yah!  
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Getting some- November 18, 2011

Yesterday I was trying to convince Greyson we should go with our friends to the Raleigh Christmas Parade tomorrow.  Yes, our city has it’s Christmas parade the week before Thanksgiving.  It is often 70 degrees and not too Christmasy, but it should be cold tomorrow and I think it would be great.

Me:  “We went back when we were dating!  Remember?”
Greyson:  “Yeah, when I was trying to get some.”

Men.

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To prevent a predator- November 17, 2011

I’ve been shaking my head in disgust at the news out of Penn State.  Greyson and I have followed the story almost daily since the story broke.  As sports fans we’re exasperated.  As parents we’re frightened.  

If anything good is to come out of this awful situation, it has to be parents around our nation shouting this….
“Hey perverts!  You’re not going to prey on our children anymore!  The era of secrecy around child sex abuse  is over!  We’re going to do everything we can to protect and empower our kids!”

Greyson said, “It just goes to show we can’t trust anyone blindly with our child.”  No, we can’t.  But, we also can’t assume every teacher-soccer coach-violin instructor-scout leader-camp counselor who works with youth is a predator.  But, I believe there is something we can do.  
Parenting.com had this article with some excellent ideas on this from experts.  Tracie is an amazing blogger, child sex abuse survivor, and total inspiration.  Both the Parenting experts and Tracie have shared good ideas about prevention.  
There are things even parents of young children can do.  Advice that sticks out to me is something I’ve said from the beginning.  Call  your body parts what they are.  In our house we will use the words “vagina”, “breasts”, and “penis.”  From the start.  (Read the Parenting article with more on why.)  Tracie said it best in this one post when she said, “I wouldn’t send my daughter out into the world telling her that her nose was a ‘hoo hah’.   Why would I tell her that’s what her vagina is called?”  
So we’ll start there.  I figure that’s the first step to arming my kid against creepy dudes like Jerry Sandusky.  Allegedly.  
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Nose pose- November 16, 2011

If we didn’t know it already, we know it now.  Our baby is a genius.

Last night after Charlotte’s bath I slathered her dry little arms and legs with moisturizer.  I wrestled her wiggly body into hot pink pajamas before brushing her sweet smelling hair.  It’s one of my favorite times of the day.  We play this little game where I point out “Mama’s eyes” and “Charlotte’s eyes”, or the facial feature du jour.  
Last night was a nasal lesson.  I said, “nose” pointing to my schnoz.  After repeating this multiple times she pointed to her nose and said “noe.”
“Aaaahhh!” ::APPLAUSE::  ::SQUEALING:: ::FIREWORKS::: ::EXPLODING MAMA HEAD::
I scooped her up, smothering my little scholar with kisses.  I whisked her into the kitchen to show Daddy.  She showed off her trick again.  
“Wow!”  ::APPLAUSE::  ::HIGH FIVES:: ::FIREWORKS::: ::EXPLODING DADDY HEAD::
We told her how proud we were of her as we discussed preschool programs at Harvard and Oxford. 
I went to pick her up from school today and the class note said they were reading a story about faces and she did it again!  She even did it one more time for me in class.  Well, sort of…
Yeah, she kind of looks like she’s picking her nose.  Well, we’ll at least save for a decent State University.  I still say she’s above average.  
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Reverence?- November 15, 2011

I don’t have much to write today.  My apologies.  However, I ran across this article today and I wanted to share.  Very well said.  Tell me what you think.

Living with children

 – McClatchy Newspapers
A young mother who identified herself as a practitioner of “attachment parenting” recently told me that “children should be approached with reverence.” If the rest of my conversation with her was indication, I don’t think she used those words loosely.
Full disclosure: I do not believe any human being of any age, no matter his or her station in life, is worthy of being approached with reverence.
Respect, yes. Admiration, yes. Reverence, no.
I told her I disagreed. Adults should not make idols of children, I said.
That helps no one, especially the children in question. I proposed instead that adults should approach children with compassion, love, and respect. She didn’t think there was a difference, but the difference is night and day.
Children need compassion for the fact that they are inclined, by nature, to choose anti-social behavior over pro-social behavior. That is why they need corrective discipline from compassionate, loving, respectful adults.
Until such discipline is delivered and begins to “stick,” it can accurately be said that children truly “can’t help it” when they misbehave – they were “born that way.”
Children require genuine, affirming love because they are incapable of putting themselves in proper perspective; therefore, they are incapable of “loving” themselves in a healthy fashion. A child’s self-love is very likely to fuel tyranny. Only compassionate, loving adults are capable of responding properly to this inclination, which defines the so-called “terrible twos.”
Children need adults in their lives who have tremendous respect for their needs and equal amounts of compassion for the fact that they don’t know what their needs are. Furthermore, children rarely want what they truly need.
It is the responsibility of adults who respect a child’s potential for creative adulthood to give children all of what they need and little of what they simply want.
What are their needs then? Here’s a short, but far from comprehensive, list:
Children need to be contributing members of their families. Therefore, they need to be assigned daily household chores for which they are not paid.
Why not paid? After all, adults get paid for working! Yes, but we do not get paid for cooking meals, cleaning bathrooms, and vacuuming floors, and neither should children. This is the stuff of membership in a family.
In addition, chores help instill a service ethic, without which democracy cannot survive. Have you ever stopped to consider why charities do not thrive in socialist countries?
Children need adults who allow their brains to grow and develop naturally without much interference from television and other forms of electronic media.
Children need to be told to eat what is on their plates not because it is good for them (although it may be) but because it is rude to refuse to eat something someone, even one of your parents, has spent time and energy preparing for you. This very civilized lesson begins at home, at the family table.
Children need adults in their lives who value and promote proper character traits over academic and athletic skills. One of the most important of all character traits is “do your best at all time.” It does not matter if you are not as good as someone else in some area. What’s important is that you do what you are capable of doing, and no less. In other words, if proper character is the priority, everything else will fall into its proper place.
Children need adults who confront them when they misbehave – adults who calmly communicate that they will not tolerate anti-social behavior, even from a 2-year-old. As your great-grandmother no doubt advised, it is to the advantage of all concerned that misbehavior be “nipped in the bud.”
A person who approaches a child with reverence is giving the child an excellent reason to want to remain a child.
Family psychologist John Rosemond answers parents’ questions on his web site at www.rosemond.com
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