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Copycat

tom-cruise-like-father-like-sonFrom the ‘you know you are a father files’ comes a tale of cuteness. A few weeks ago, I was wearing khakis and a blue t-shirt as I do at least once a week when LTD came downstairs wearing a blue t-shirt and light pants and announced he was dressed just like daddy. The next day when he was getting ready for bed he wore just a pair of shorts, again to be just like daddy. At first I was thinking of all the mad possibilities of us dressing like twins or that I could finally complete his transformation into mini me, but cooler heads prevailed as he hasn’t dressed like me or mentioned anything about it since. However, the memory will always be one I have of the little guy once again being sweet and let’s hope he keeps his hair so in the future he actually isn’t just like daddy.

National Asthma and Allergy Awareness

asajdfqasdfmllllAs May is National Asthma and Allergy Awareness Month these tips by Robin Wilson is CEO of Robin Wilson Home, and an ambassador for The Asthma and Allergy Foundation of America, will be useful.

Is your pillow killing you, or at the very least making you sick?  Do your kids suffer from asthma and allergies?  When was the last time you changed or even cleaned their pillow?  Most people don’t even realize how long they’ve had the same pillow – some going as long as 10 years or more without a new one or even cleaning their existing one.

-       All pillows need to be housed in a pillow protector or zippered pillow cover in addition to a pillow case. This will help keep out unwanted germs and fungi such as dust mites, bugs, dead skin and other dangerous bacteria.

-       Wash your pillow at least twice a year to keep it clean, and for allergy and asthma sufferers make sure and use synthetic pillows over feathered ones, and anti-allergen or hypoallergenic pillow cases and covers.

-       Toss two pillows in the washing machine at a time. This way, the machine will stay balanced while it spins.  If you are only washing one pillow, counterbalance by using towels or a small blanket.

-       Use the natural sunlight to dry your pillows as sunlight kills bacteria. Usually up to six hours on each side is sufficient.

-       To reduce the amount of bacteria that can impact your sleeping environment and get into your pillow, keep pets out of the bedroom and avoid wall-to-wall carpeting which is a breeding ground for dust mites.

-       As you make your bed each morning, fluff feather and down pillows to get rid of dust and redistribute the filling.

-       Get a new pillow every three years.

Product Review – Boba Carrier 3G

_mg_8279The Mommy has long been into baby carriers, but I have always been on the fence. However, now that LTD is four and BB is five months the level of activity and range of motion needed to for me to navigate these waters have changed my mind. I can’t use the stroller at the playground or library because where LTD is concerned, he is just too fast. The Boba Carrier solves my mobility challenges in way that makes me feel like Luke carrying Yoda in Empire. Since it has foot straps I guess the analogy would be that I am a horse that the baby rides. I was wary at first thinking I was going to need to take yoga to be able to put him in it by myself, but like most things I was making it more complicated than it needed to be and now I can strap the baby to my chest pretty quickly. I do need to turn him around at some point because the level of drool on my shirts is getting ridiculous. I also occasionally feel cool like last weekend when I had him strapped to my chest and the baby supplies pack on my back, it looked like I was parachuting into Normandy.

Enter for your chance to win a Boba Baby Carrier, a Boba Wrap or a Boba Air! All products can be seen at www.bobafamily.com. With Boba products it is easier than ever to enjoy Freedom Together as a family and Boba wants YOU to get a chance to use their products. To enter to win, “Like” them on Facebook (www.facebook.com/boba) and follow them on Twitter (www.twitter.com/boba).
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You Can’t Stop Him Only Contain Him

Baby MonstersSo at almost five months, BB has decided what kind of baby he wants to be, he wants to be a monster. He already has three teeth and one more on the way. This has the added benefit of making a ton of water flow out of his gaping maw onto his shirt and mine. Additionally, his drool often like in the movie Alien leaves one of those drool trails when going from his mouth to whatever surface it hits. When put on his back on a blanket, he flips over and moves around in a matter of seconds. I leave him in one spot and turn around to find him five feet away kicking and screaming. But it would not be exactly fair to call BB a monster, it would be more accurate to refer to him as the Hulk since he spends most of his time as a sweet mellow baby but then he transforms into a beast. Oh, and did I mention he is incredibly strong. Well, he is. The other day when lying in-between The Mommy and LTD for a bedtime story, in a flash he hit both of them in the face repeatedly. True he was just trying to sit up, but still it was a monster move. Now that I think about how sweet he is I’m going to change my Hulk answer to a Jekyll and Hyde one.

Interview – Scott Bedford

Made By Dad Cover.inddI interviewed Scott Bedford from the What I Made blog and author of the new book “Made by Dad: 67 blueprints for making cool stuff.” The book features cool projects you can make with your kids. But don’t worry the book also includes drawn instructions so you can’t screw them up (which I did, ugh me and glue, don’t get me started).

How important is the comic book ethos to your work?


Even though the hand drawn instructions that accompany all my projects could be described as being cartoon like, it’s actually the project ideas themselves that have been more inspired by the comic book ethos. I grew up with Whacky Races, Stop the Pigeon and Roadrunner cartoons – I loved the crazy machines and gadgets portrayed in them and tried drawing my own, and when I was a bit older making them in my Dads workshop. The One-TON-lampshade is definitely “Wile E. Coyote” inspired!

What or who or some of your artistic and DIY influences?

I really can’t underestimate the influence of the Hanna Barbera Whacky Races cartoon – I spent endless hours as a kid trying to draw my own machines, I guess that’s how I developed a drawing style that is somewhere between a technical drawing and a cartoon! As far as DIY influences go, there are just so many sources of inspiration these days – whether it be Make: magazine, instructables.com, or unique blogs like Bent Objects. However, I never start there. For me projects begin organically, perhaps something just pops into my mind, or my boys are doing something that triggers an idea, either way, I very rarely start by looking at what other people are doing first, I prefer inspiration to come at a more sub-conscious level.

What was your initial motivation in creating your DIY craft world?

Two incidents got me back into making things. Firstly, to keep my son from getting bored on a visit to Starbucks I made a little house from the wooden stir sticks – it worked, he spent 10mins trying to make his own one and this became one of the first projects I blogged about. Secondly, my same son had to build a spaghetti and marshmallow tower (with the help of parents) as part of a school science project – his tower won, and I decided to share the design with the blogosphere, this continued the chain of events that eventually ended up in the creation of “Made by Dad”.

I know we can’t pick favorite kids, but do you have a favorite project (Mine is the 1-Ton Lampshade)?

Ha ha – yes, it was the last project I made, and it’s one of my favourites as well! The “Bunk-bed communicator” also tickles me, as does the “Eating Nemo” project, which was much adored by my two nieces (to my surprise).
 

From some of your designs it feels like you may have gotten hurt a couple of times creating these crafts, is that true?
Oh… I hope I haven’t created the impression that these projects are dangerous! No, I survived all 67 projects with nothing more than a paper-cut – but that doesn’t mean you don’t need to be careful when using equipment like a craft knife or hot glue, however, with close supervision even older children can be shown how to use these tools safely.

What are the rules for how long parents need to keep an art project?

Wow… that really is the million dollar question! For us space is a key factor in deciding what stays and what goes. Drawings are easy to pack away, so we keep lots of those, small crafts (such as fridge magnets made out of modelling clay) are also kept. However, things made out of cardboard boxes and toilet rolls have their moment of glory on the shelf before eventually finding their way into the trash (but only after a proper photographic record has been made!).

Kids Say The Darndest Things BTCS Edition

ladybugEach week at LTD’s school they study a different topic, some weeks it’s snow or recycling. Last week they were talking about bugs. Of course, the little guy’s favorite bug is the ladybug. As he was drawing said ladybug he told one of his teachers the following direct quote.
“This is my giant ladybug. He is so giant. We can do high jumps. He ate my name.”

Mr. Mom Part II

220px-Mr_mom_posterHere is an interesting article about finding a new name for stay at home dads. Some of the suggestions are really really weak. Click Here.

Book Review – Bangalee

51C6W5JJCQL._SL500_AA300_As a child of the seventies I enjoyed many of the vegetable of that decades cultural stew. In the book department (when not watching Chips) were the Serendipity books. Stephen Cosgrove and Robin James’ series about animals and made up creatures that teach a moral lesson. And while Wheedle on the Needle has a special place in my heart 1976’s Bangalee will always take top honors on my favorites list. The story revolves around the messy Kritters who make Pigpen look like an Purell ad. Of course every Kritter is a total slob except Bangalee who some would say has obsessive compulsive disorder. The other Kritters make fun of him but he knows that nothing good every came out of chaos and preaches clean living. The big garbage eating monster known as the Grunk comes to Kritter castle in the story’s second act conflict. I won’t spoil the ending but it is fair to say that some people learn an important lesson, a lesson that is easily relatable for parents and kids.

Mother’s Day without Mom

home_bookMother’s Day without Mom by Martin Spinelli, bestselling author of After the Crash.

It happens every year.  My son Lio will be sitting in class when his teacher will announce that next creative and fun activity will be making a Mother’s Day card.  Even six years after the death of Lio’s mom, when the children have colored pens in hand and construction paper at the ready, I’ll get a slightly anxious phone call from that teacher asking what she should do with my Lio for this project.  I’ll tell her to just ask Lio what he wants to do.  With a sigh, the teacher will usually apologize and say that Lio’s situation had slipped her mind.

These regular memory lapses on the part of Lio’s teachers don’t ever surprise me.  Everyone has a mother, don’t they?  It doesn’t bother me either, not in the slightest.  I take it as a sign that they think of Lio as perfectly normal and like every other kid in the class.  This makes me feel that we’ve done something right.

But I would be lying if I said Mother’s Day wasn’t a bit difficult for us.  Of course we feel the lack of Sasha (Lio’s mother and my wife) in our lives.  It’s a lack that can still catch us every week—a lack we feel more on holidays and especially and obviously on Mother’s Day.

One year in school, when Lio was quite young, he decided he wanted to make me a card for Mother’s Day.  I’ll never forget the pride on his face when he presented it to me and my heart swelled to bursting at his understanding that I was not just the father who played ball with him and built things with him in the garage, but that I was also doing my best to be a kind of “mother” too, with hugs and cake baking and simply holding him when he wanted to cry.

In the six years that have passed now since we lost our dear Sasha, I’ve think I’ve learned a few things about making the best of Mother’s Day and, more importantly, about raising a child without a mother.  While every situation is different and every family will find the path that works best for them through their own loss, here are my own lessons:

 

1. Don’t let Mother’s Day pass unnoticed.  Do something special, whether it’s going to a baseball game or doing something more closely connected to Mom.  Trying to ignore the meaning of a day that’s so prominent in our popular culture can make you both miss her all the more.

2. Let your children take the lead on Mother’s Day.  If they want to “remember,” then get out the photo albums and go for a hike along her favorite trail.  If they want to put some space between themselves and the loss, go and watch a movie at the mall and remind yourself that that’s OK too.

3. Be flexible.  As you’re trying to fill the gaps in your child’s life left by a missing mom, recognize that mothers do different things at different stages in a child’s life.  There’s no point in denying that in our culture fathers tend to push and praise, while mothers tend to support, encourage and console.  Your child is going to need different doses of these things at different times.  You may not be an expert on psychology, but you are an expert on your child, so stay tuned in to their needs and try to bring to them the kind of energy they need at the moment.

4. Take heart where you can.  This is a hard thing for me to write, but when my son Lio lost his mom he gained a devoted and committed father the likes of which he would have never known if his mother hadn’t been killed.  We have a parent-child relationship like few others I’ve seen, and this is a tremendously good thing.  Remember also that there are numerous studies that show that children who lose a parent through death do better developmentally, emotionally and socially than children who loose a parent through a particularly nasty separation.

5. Create some quality time with grown-up women.  Both boys and girls should have some positive examples of grown women in their lives in order to develop well.  Organize a regular one-on-one lesson with a woman teacher for an activity that your child enjoys.  Lio has a long weekly music session with a woman that often spills over into something social.  Even having a regular adult baby-sitter one night a week will get this job done.

6. Don’t be shy about getting help.  If you find yourself confused or struggling, find a counselor.  Failing that, reading some good parenting books will help give you the insight you need to get through the difficult patches.  (This seems particular true for single fathers of young-teenaged girls.)  Trusting your instincts will generally serve you well, but nowhere is it written that you have to do this all on your own.

7. Know when to let go.  (This is a lesson that I’m still working to learn.)  There is going to come a time when your child is not got going to need or want a mother or a father in the way they did when they were young.  Going through the loss of mom together will have strengthened your bond.  While this is a great thing, it’s probably going to make the letting go harder.  But console yourself in the knowledge that it will probably be harder for you than it is for your child.  The real trick here is giving yourself permission to be happy when this moment does arrive.  It’s the biggest thing to be proud of.

Martin Spinelli is a writer, radio producer and professor. His bestselling book After the Crash tells the story of his son’s miraculous recovery and his own personal transformation. Find him online at www.martinspinelli.com.

Product Review – Wummelbox

wummelbox_2Almost over night LTD has turned into an artist, I’m not saying we are in the Monet ballpark just yet, but I think he has a bright future. The Mommy and I wish to feed his creative development and so we looked at the Netflix of art projects, The Wummelbox (and yes it’s German before you ask about the name). You can order the Wummelbox as a one time thing or you can sign up for the subscription with free shipping to get new materials on a monthly basis. The box comes with different projects that are base on a theme like Music or the Circus and comes with an illustrated instruction pamphlet. Additionally, the box is environmentally friendly and designed to be used by the child again and again when the project is finished, the circus box features masks and a ring toss game. LTD loves getting things in the mail so I take care of half his energy just by opening the box in the first place. Some of the projects are best with adult supervision so the box is a little more involved then a coloring book so bewared you may have to put down the iPad and spend time being creative with your kids.

Disclosure: While I did received the Wummelbox for review. All thoughts and opinions are my own.