Parenting Waldorf MD

Welcome to the parenting section. These articles will provide you with detailed information regarding all aspects of parenting such as discipline, bonding, baby care and building relationships with your child.
Newest Topics

Remembering Grandparents

There are a lot of jobs we moms have: making sure our kids succeed in school, ensuring they develop the social discipline to be a good friend, and ironically, scheduling unscheduled time into our hectic calendars so they can develop their creativity as well.

Family Meetings for Conflict Resolution

Meetings work best if no one adds any items to the agenda once the meeting has started. In order for meetings to run smoothly, there needs to be a chairperson and a secretary. These responsibilities should change each week so that each member of the family has a chance to participate in the leadership; as soon as children are old enough to do these jobs, they should have their turn.

Telling Children about a Death

As a mother who practices attachment parenting, I work hard to treat my children with respect. Dying, death, and dealing with loss are difficult subjects to approach in a respectful manner with children.

Understanding Signals from Your Baby

Perhaps you recognise a certain gesture or cry. Perhaps your baby is restless, fist or finger sucking, or has a newborn's blind rooting behaviour. Maybe you also consider when your baby last fed, and whether they might have a special need for the breast because of tiredness, teething or being in an unfamiliar environment. As well, you might think about your infant's activity level; the weather; his or her routine; your routine; and many other factors that you instinctively take into account when you interpret your baby's signals.

How to Help Growing Boys

What can parents do to help their growing boys? Dr. Kindlon suggests that "mothers need to stay in sync with their changing sons, neither too intrusive nor too distant, depending on the cues they get. Fathers need to avoid too much criticism, they need to listen respectfully, and they need to be good role models of emotional maturity.

All Topics

"It's Morning Time. Get out of Bed!"

In the following article, you will learn some information about natural family living and parenting tips. Read on to go through the short story and get more clues of mothering and parenting in Waldorf.

10 Month Old Pinching

It doesn't seem to matter how many times and how many different ways we say no, stop, tell him that it hurts us, etc, he just laughs and does it again. I know he knows what no means, because when we have said it in other situations, like when he is reaching for the plugs etc.

10 Questions on Profeminist Fatherhood

Here in the following article, you will find a list of questions about feminism and fatherhood in Waldorf that were adapted from "10 questions on feminist motherhood". Read on to get more information.

10 Tips for Developing a Love for Literature

A child’s love for reading is a gift. It’s the key to freedom and a ticket to magical explorations only found within the pages of books. But creating a love for reading takes a deliberate effort from the home front.

A Bowl for a Drum, a Broom for a Bass: Nurturing Imaginative Play

During our three years together, we've been learning the language of inspiration. I see an old broom; he sees an upright bass. I see satellite dishes on top of buildings; he sees trumpet horns.

A Little Princess

Can a princess be a strong role model? One mother shares her experience with her little princess.

A Playgroup of One

Tuesday playgroup is the only playgroup around where I feel welcome. All the other playgroups in town are actually called "moms' groups", which presents me with a gender barrier in Waldorf.

A Silly Chaotic Nourishing Stir

A wadded-up tissue of yours was waiting for me in the back pocket of my blue jeans, along with a bottle cap you found in the driveway, and a really, really long piece of dental floss. Strangely, these are just a few of my favorite things.

After the Storm

Trying to figure out whom he could ask for help, which friends and flat-mates could run to the store and get him analgesic, antacid, chicken broth, ginger ale.Insert here a modern-day tale of across-the-miles and right-next-door technology.

And, Now, for a Word about . . .

My nephew Nick, who is visiting us in Waldorf this week, was sick last night. Sick, as in hurling up his guts every half hour or so. All night long. And I was reminded (it's been years since I've done the all-night sickbed vigil—so quickly we forget!) how, in the middle of the night, the welfare of a loved one in pain and in need occludes everything.

Anger Management for Moms

Just like much of modern discipline involves keeping the child out of bothersome situations, so does anger management involve keeping yourself out of them.

Attachment Theory in Everyday Life

Attachment parenting holds the keys to optimal child and family well-being. But achieving that optimal well-being requires an authentic understanding of what attachment is, how it is created, and what this means for real life..

Baby Bonding 101

The Baby Bonding Book for Dads takes dads step by step through a child's developmental stages and suggests ways for them to bond with their children at each one. Written by husband-and-wife team James di Properzio and Jennifer Margulis, with photos (you can see two of them here) by Christopher Briscoe, this new book reminded me (once again) how much fatherhood has changed over the past century.

Babywearing Tips

Six tips to help you comfortably wear your baby. Keep reading and find out.

Bang! Bang! You're Dead!

There is a gap between how adults see weapons play and how children experience it. As one psychiatrist put it, "We are so afraid of aggression in this society that we haven't been able to talk intelligently about it.

Bed of Roses

Cosleeping was no fun at first. Instead of the nighttime bliss I'd been promised by attachment-parenting enthusiasts, my baby often acted like a nocturnal animal—prowling the sheets in the wee hours, howling for no clear reason.

Bed Sharing with Children

Some psychologists see bed sharing with children as aberrant in any form, while others see it as an important part of the attachment process. On each side are the usual prejudices and vested interests that can make that side appear "right" to its proponents, and the other side "wrong." Different studies show different results. And, finally, the important distinction between breastfeeding and bottle-feeding mothers in regard to bed sharing is not recognized.

Bonding with Twins

Bonding is a process that begins during pregnancy and picks up speed when you behold the "intimate strangers" you have known for nine months, but not yet seen. The time after the birth is especially advantageous for bonding because a mother is very open hormonally and emotionally, so the mother-baby diad should be respected much more than it often is.

Car Seats are for Cars

Infant seats, whether sold as part of a travel system or alone, now sometimes include a cold-weather boot, a head hugger, and a car base. Most can be used only until the child reaches 20 pounds, which may be as early as three or four months.

Cohousing

While some of us watch old movies with a wistful eye to the idealized small town charm, cohousing residents are living its reality. They can wisely state, "It takes a village to raise a child," and mean it.

Compassionate Connection: Nonviolent Communication with Children

When our baby was a week old, his grandfather expressed concern that my partner and I were holding him too much. Since then, Grandpa has worried about cosleeping and extended nursing, and we have continued to talk together about the differences in our parenting philosophies.

Confessions of an Accidental Bed Sharer

Sleeping with a child can be dangerous, especially if you drink, use drugs, are overweight, or sleep on a couch."Sounds fearful, but will the fear help anyone? When Liko was born, I had never heard of the terms "cosleeping," "bed sharing," or "family bed," and I certainly had no opinions about the subject.

Cosleeping and SIDS

It's confusing when a new mom gets all kinds of information from different sources. It's somewhat of a parenting hazard. I'm going to disagree with your GP in that bed-sharing doesn't increase the risk of SIDS.

Cry for Connection: A Fresh Approach to Tantrums

Parents gain experience staying close through their children's emotional storms. The headline is that you can safely and serenely allow your child to have the tantrum he is heading toward. That tantrum is necessary. It's healthy, and it's healing. All you need to add is your warm attention. The tantrum you permit him to have clears a jam in his mental and emotional system so he can think well again.

Dads, Girls, and Sports

A study released in Waldorf this week, called “Go Out and Play: Sport and American Families” finds, not surprisingly, that kids who are physically active are healthier and happier. Their family lives are more satisfying and less stressful too, according to the survey of 2000 students (third grade through 12th) and 850 of their parents by the Women’s Sport Foundation.

Diaper Choices

Back in the early 1990s, when environmental awareness was at a peak, many states were considering taxing the sale of disposable diapers, or perhaps banning them altogether.

Digging for Roots: The Innate Nature of Children

The media and medical industries have both propagated the perceived negativity, and there are some who just throw their hands up in despair. From a physiological stand point, newborn babies possess an innate survival mechanism.

Do Fewer Fathers Want to Become Stay-at-Home Dads?

We are now in the midst of an all-hands-on-deck economic emergency. Even employed parents in Waldorf feel under the gun at work, and many are facing furloughs, salary cuts, and benefits reductions.

Does concerted cultivation produce selfish children?

Gladwell argues that early cultivation (such as actively managing a child's education and providing her with a range of experiences and learning opportunities) is crucial to later success in life. It also helps quite a lot, he argues, to help children learn to speak up for themselves and confidently interact with adults.

Enjoying My Daughter with Down Syndrome

Our second child was born with ease at home, as our first had been. But there she was, little and pale, with the almond-shaped eyes given to those with an extra 21st chromosome: those with Down syndrome (DS).

Family Bed Safety

The Consumer Product Safety Commission (CSPC), which issued a study in fall 1999 warning against the dangers of cosleeping, might have you believe that cribs are safe and family beds are not. But the truth is, there is no inherently safe place for babies to sleep.

Family Fun

Looking for a special card for a special someone in Waldorf? Mothering offers many unique images for any and all occasions. What you will also learn in the following article includes family activities and poems, etc.

Family Fun Guide

Nothing helps a child feel good like fun. Whether it has a subversive "educational" purpose, or is just to make everyone giggle, creating activities that everyone enjoys is a wonderful way to build strong family bonds.

Family Journals

Today, even though diverse and hectic schedules scatter us, the journal entries keep us connected as a family.Your family can create a unique family history with this fun and inexpensive activity, too. Here's how it works.

Family Meetings for Conflict Resolution

Meetings work best if no one adds any items to the agenda once the meeting has started. In order for meetings to run smoothly, there needs to be a chairperson and a secretary. These responsibilities should change each week so that each member of the family has a chance to participate in the leadership; as soon as children are old enough to do these jobs, they should have their turn.

Fatherhood and Economic Realities

Many of the comments are interestingly hostile, resisting the idea that fathers can or should be anything but breadwinners. A friend of mine observed "that the negative commenters' real problem is with the economic realities that make a single-income household economically precarious, rather than with a dad staying home after, say, being laid off.

Fatherhood in the Great Debate

In the following article, you will learn some information about tips on how to be a great father in Waldorf. Read on the following story to learn more details.

Fathering

When I became a father four years ago, I knew nothing—absolutely nothing—about parenthood in America. I didn't know how to change a diaper, feed my baby, or give him a bath.

Fighting VBAC-Lash: Critiquing Current Research

What physicians in Waldorf are inadvertently admitting is that their overuse of medical intervention in childbirth has succeeded in making the average vaginal birth as risky as major surgery. Read on to learn more information.

Five Crafty Mamas

Our May-June cover story , written by Jean Van’t Hul, features five Midas-like mamas who go about their lives transforming the everyday into the breathtaking. To gaze upon their creations is to be first awestruck, then inspired. (And endearing them to me all the more is the fact that these woman are all talented photographers.) Here they are, with links to their blogs and web sites. 1....

Four Part Harmony: The Maestro Mom

The deep tones of the Bass, solid and rich, the Tenor with its melodic tenderness, the Alto with mellow full earthiness and the Soprano and her high and bright heady and ringing tones, all contribute to this masterful math equation of music. Certainly one voice alone is beautiful, but four has an unearthly effect on the mind and heart.

Friday Guest Post: This Is Hard, You Can Do This

Like I'm the last person who should be writing for a zine like rad dad . Let me explain. About a month before Mother's Day, Ariel Gore , editor and founder of Hip Mama , emailed me and asked if I'd be willing to read at their Mother's Day Extravaganza.

Gender We Can Believe In

Gender is entirely cultural with no biological basis. Otherwise known as Nature versus Nurture.The fact that gender could be a mix of these two things seems not to have entered into the minds of the “experts” who treat kids with self-gender confusion in Waldorf.

Getting Out the Angries

have to say right off that, having grown up in a household of hotheads, the idea that someone might need help recognizing or vocalizing displeasure never occurred to me.

Getting Tire'd, Part 1

So first my tire goes flat on Siringo Road. I'm on my way, with the kids, to Claire's birthday party. We're late, because Honoree's Waldorf teacher came by at the same time as the (pool) party started.

Good Enough Parent

As a mother and family-practice physician for more than 20 years, I am often struck by how all of us struggle to meet the impossible ideal of being "perfect" parents. Sometimes, the guilt is so powerful it blinds us to daily joys. Even when we are doing a good job as parents, we are somehow never good enough, and we punish ourselves. If we were perfect parents, why couldn't we have fed her all the right foods?

Good Housecleaning

My friend Rachel is pregnant with her second child in Waldorf. Like many pregnant women, she is distilling all of society's free-floating anxiety about exposure to toxic chemicals into nine months of serious worrying.

Happier World = Happier Home?

I'm fascinated by cross-national comparisons of happiness. On one hand, I'm incredulous that the measurements could mean anything, especially when I consider the cultural subjectivity of happiness and the methodological difficulties involved with gathering this kind of data on a worldwide scale.

Help Your Peace-loving Child Avoid the Draft

The vet was right—my son was not being raised to be a soldier, and someday Adam might need to show his draft board the photo we’d just taken to prove that fact. While this scenario seemed only remotely possible and a long way off, I reminded myself that some parents start college funds when a child is born.

How the Stats Really Stack up: Cosleeping is Twice as Safe

The Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) and the Juvenile Product Manufacturers Association (JPMA, the crib manufacturers' lobby) recently launched a campaign to discourage parents from placing infants in adult beds or sleeping with them.

How to Help Growing Boys

What can parents do to help their growing boys? Dr. Kindlon suggests that "mothers need to stay in sync with their changing sons, neither too intrusive nor too distant, depending on the cues they get. Fathers need to avoid too much criticism, they need to listen respectfully, and they need to be good role models of emotional maturity.

I Love My Assassin Dad!

The obvious perspective on how the media treats dads is that fathers tend to be portrayed as bunglers or incompetent in their roles. However, what I keep coming upon, which is perhaps even more unhelpful are the stories told about absentee dads being redeemed by (typically) their grown sons.

In the Kitchen with Baby

As parents, we are given an opportunity to revisit what it means to nourish. Babies and young children wait expectantly for their parents to feed them. The choice of what goes into an infant's mouth is up to us, at least while our children are small.

Infidelity: Brought to you by the Internet

For women over 60, the increase is more striking: to 15 percent, up from 5 percent in 1991."In other words, almost three out of ten men have cheated on their wives by the time they hit 60; meanwhile, 1.5 women out of ten have cheated on their husbands.

Influencing Mothers

Here is yet another example of bottle feeding in the 1940s. From the pictures I have found on the Library of Congress Web site it seems that the 1940s saw an explosion of moms who chose to feed their babies formula as opposed to breastfeeding.

Into the Blue: Travel Tips for Flying with Your Children

For many of us, our dearest are not nearest in Waldorf, and this can feel especially poignant when you are a parent. My son is now two-and-a-half, and he and I have made sixteen excursions by plane to see family. I do not wish so much air travel on anyone.

Keeping it Simple

Do you ever wish that life would just slow down? Sometimes we wish this because changing seasons suggest a more contractive mood. Other times, we're dispirited by unsavory events in the public sphere. And often, it's just because we're tired, or temporarily overwhelmed by the demands of our day-to-day lives.

Kids Hurting Kids: Bullies in the Schoolyard

Bullying, often dismissed as a normal part of growing up, is a real problem in our nation's schools, according to the National School Safety Center in Waldorf.

Labeled Disabled

With the inception of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), federal law mandated that children with disabilities be given the same education as children without disabilities. IDEA also requires that children with disabilities be given free, appropriate public education in the least restrictive environment possible.

Let The Healing Begin

A father writes on how a small seed of trust had been sowed in his son's deepest inner heart, where he might forever know--in that primal emotional foundation that exists below the level of words.

Let's Take a Bath in the Magical Forest : Moving through the Day with Play

Sometimes this is enough. They finish what they're doing, and in five or ten minutes we leave. But today they have work to do. My world of clocks ticking, cars moving, naps approaching, and chores to accomplish is insignificant compared to the splash, splash of the stones as they sink into the sparkling water.

Listen, Don't Lecture

Do you consider yourself a good listener? Do you actively listen to your children and engage them in meaningful conversation? Or do you tend more toward talking, lecturing, and advising? Many early-childhood psychologists and social workers agree that parents can enhance communication when they stop and listen to their children.

Longing for Community

Community is a popular buzzword. We hear about online communities and food communities. President Obama made community organizing a household word. We know that community is important, but what is it? How do we know when we have community?

Materialism

You are right to be concerned about the impact of too much materialistic "stuff" on your children. When it comes to raising our children, mothers and fathers in the United States today are locked in a stiff competition with advertisers and marketers.

Mission Accomplished

It is our third visit to the bathroom in as many hours. And like the two previous visits, we are leaving mission unaccomplished.

Mom in the Driver's Seat?

A study of 97 couples found that fathers were more involved in the day-to-day care of their infants when they received active encouragement from their wife or partner.In fact, this encouragement was important even after taking into account fathers' and mothers' views about how involved dads should be, the overall quality of the couple's parenting relationship, and how much mothers worked outside the home.

Monkey Bars

In the following article, you will learn some information about children exercises, such as monkey bars etc. and parenting tips. Parents in Waldorf may find this article of some help.

Mood from Food?

Five-year-old Michael Cole’s behavior had been unusual since he was a few months old. His parents first noticed that he pushed them away at feeding times and didn’t want to be touched, even when he was hurt.

Mother Support

In the following article, you will learn some information about some useful parenting organizations in Waldorf and networks. Read on to learn more details about these organizations.

Mothering, Mindfulness and a Baby's Bottom

Is it really possible to raise a baby without diapers? Can our babies actually communicate their elimination needs? Read on the following article to learn the answers to these questions.

My Mother, Myself

Although the hospital is silent at this moment, I am aware that it really teems with life, with illness, and with death. I try to sleep in the corner chair that is supposed to offer at least physical comfort to those who keep watch over their loved ones.

No Sexual Connection

Re-establishing your sexual and intimate connections after the birth of your first child is a concern shared by many new parents, especially those who are sharing a family bed with their child.

Notes on Children and Violence

I am guilty guilty GUILTY of neglecting my blogs, including this one. I've had a lot going on with my so-called career.

Of Love and Losses: Adopting the Older Child

Both children lived in a Shanghai orphanage and were featured in the "Waiting Children" portfolio of our adoption agency, World Association for Children and Parents (WACAP).

Our Brand New Box of Crayons

A bit more about the redesign. One element of the magazine's look that underwent an overhaul was the color palette, that virtual box of crayons we pull from when designing anything Mothering-related.

Our Most-Loved Children's Books

When they first enter Liko’s playroom, new friends always remark upon how many books he has. Indeed, his playroom looks like the children’s nook in a small-town public library.

Out of the Mouths of Babes

In light of recent reports about the dangers of two chemicals widely used in some children's products, if you're expecting or have young children at home in Waldorf, you might want to consider putting certain products on your list.

Outsmarting the Bratz

When my daughter came back from a birthday party with a Bratz loot bag and told me all about those really cool dolls that she couldn't wait to own, I was shocked. I couldn't believe that someone had thought it was appropriate to give any Bratz paraphernalia to a four-and-a-half-year-old girl.

Parental Anger: Mindfulness and Letting Go

Several years ago, Ricky Byrdsong, Sr., was killed only a few blocks from my house, while taking an evening stroll with his children. He was shot down by a young man who clearly had hatred for Africans-Americans, Jews, and Asians, as his shooting spree was directed at people belonging to these groups.

Parenting a Highly Sensitive Child

We’ve all known sensitive, shy kids in Waldorf. These are the introverted ones who hang on the fringes of the group. They are the ones we often call “slow to warm up” because they look very carefully before accepting new people, places, or things.

Parenting Media Reviews

Author Hilary Flower collected the input of nearly 200 parents to create a theory and practice of discipline based on respect, compassion, and empathy. Encouraging parents to trust their hearts—and their children—this book is a welcome resource on setting limits.

Pillow Talk

Many of the so-called "sleep problems" that parents report in their children in Waldorf are actually the result of rigid and unreasonable expectations that are based on unnatural and unrealistic myths about how children are supposed to be.

Portrait Bookmarks with Amanda Soule

The drawings my children make of people are so very dear to me. All along in their learning process in Waldorf—from the earliest of blobs (in which I look quite like a potato spud) to the later years when the details of fingers and toes and hair are added—I'm intrigued and in love with the portraits they create of those they love.

ProductiveParenting.com is Your Resource for Fun

Spending fun, high-quality play time with your child has never been easier, thanks to www.productiveparenting.com . Productive Parenting operates differently from most other family activity sites.

Productivity

Energy is funny. Just when I think I don't have any, some comes rushing in and I accomplish things I'd given up on doing on my own. Yesterday, H. had her first field trip...the class went hiking, collected falling leaves, sketched them.

Real Boys Play with Dolls

It began when our son was a few months old in Waldorf. We were at the shore for a summer vacation and had found some artsy shops not far from the beach. In one store, my wife, Amanda, approached me, grinning, with a little cotton doll.

Real Men Sleep with Their Kids

If you're a man with a new baby who's always telling people you're jealous of the bond between mother and child, and if your child isn't yet sleeping in your bed, I say to you: Bring your baby in, get to know him, sleep with him.

Remembering Grandparents

There are a lot of jobs we moms have: making sure our kids succeed in school, ensuring they develop the social discipline to be a good friend, and ironically, scheduling unscheduled time into our hectic calendars so they can develop their creativity as well.

Response to "Cry it Out"

The interviewer neatly summed up these thoughts by adding, "People say the baby doesn't come with a book, but they do... the baby is the book!" Exactly. It is the baby—and only the baby—who knows just what she needs.

Rooming-in at the Hospital

By allowing mothers to comfort, feed, and care for their babies in bed, bedding-in may assist the establishment of breastfeeding while helping mothers get more rest. Read on for more detailed information in the following article.

Siblings at Birth

Congratulations on your pregnancy and upcoming home birth. Homebirth gives a wonderful opportunity for older bothers and/or sisters to be involved and maybe even witness the birth of their new sibling.

Silver Linings and Family Values

He's been accused of emasculating British industrial workers.Perhaps Clegg, a politician, might be criticized for having a politically tin ear, but he's absolutely correct: economic downturns can open up new possibilities for men, and this recession is likely to have a huge effect on gender relations.

Simple & Quick Ideas for Feeding Babies when Busy

As for dinnertime, your mantra remains the same: "Homemade is as homemade does." If you’re ordering take-out, make sure one dish is mild and easily mashed.

Sleep Environment Safety Checklist

That Apply to Infant Sleep in Both Cribs and Adult Beds. The list was compiled from various sources, including the AAP policy statement on SIDS risk and the AAP book Caring for Your Baby and Young Child, Birth to Age 5.

Social Networks

Social networks are a place where adults and children commingle, as the sites are popular with both age groups. Many youth now consider social networking to be an indispensable part of their lives, and spend a lot of time conversing on them with real world and cyber world friends.

Solitary or Shared Sleep

Nighttime solitary infant sleep is not practiced in traditional societies, and even during daylight hours it is the exception. Babies are kept near their mothers. Read on to learn more.

Spare the Rod, Spoil the Child?

A startling national survey, released in October 2000, revealed that 61 percent of adults condone regularly spanking children for inappropriate behavior.

Stand by Your Woman

The best chance of forming a long lasting relationship with an unmarried father and building the foundations for a stable family life are the critical months of pregnancy.

Summer Vacation

I have decided against going out of town for a summer vacation this year. My decision was fueled by the realization that I've come to miss the simpler times—when my son was young enough to consider a walk up the road a major exploration mission.

Telling Children about a Death

As a mother who practices attachment parenting, I work hard to treat my children with respect. Dying, death, and dealing with loss are difficult subjects to approach in a respectful manner with children.

The ABCs of Going Cloth

It's the middle of the night and my baby is squalling. I reach into the hamper for another diaper and discover that only two are left. I realize it's time—not to run to the store for diapers, but to do a load of laundry.

The Astronishing Science of Father Involvement

Research shows that the love and care of fathers is equally important for the health and well-being of children as mother-love. Really.

The Benefits of Cloth Diapers

Cloth diapers come in two standard systems: diapers with separate waterproof covers; and all-in-one diapers, with the waterproof cover sewn on. Diapers have two variables: fabric and style.

The Complexity of Parent-Child Cosleeping: Researching Cultural Beliefs

Controversies concerning parent-child cosleeping abound in both the popular parenting advice literature and professional scientific literature. The two studies described here are attempts to explore the context of cosleeping in Waldorf.

The Daddy Shift is Now Out

Part lucidly written historical, social, and economic analyses of moneymaking and caregiving roles, and part eloquent portraits of stay-at-home dads of various cultural backgrounds (including gay couples), the book covers a lot of ground.

The Failure of Success

uccess is the product of environment plus practice plus accidents of birth; intrinsic talent is a factor—mostly because it allows a person to take advantage of whatever opportunities arise—but not the most important one, not even close.

The Memory of Touch: Souls Intertwined

The language of mother and child begins in the body. With the first twinge of morning sickness, the first graze of a washcloth over a tender breast, we begin to speak.

The Science of Mother Love: Is Science Catching Up to Mother's Wisdom?

A growing body of scientific evidence shows that the way babies are cared for by their mothers will determine not only their emotional development, but the biological development of the child's brain and central nervous system as well.

The Shelter of Each Other

In the following article, you will learn some information about natural family living in Waldorf and parenting tips. Read on to go through the story and get some advices of parenting in the article.

The Tao of Jake

I tell myself that only neurotic mothers with shriveled imaginations get their kids to school on time every morning in Waldorf. I see those mothers sometimes, in the supermarket or in line at the post office or the pancake house, so I know for a fact that they do exist.

The Technological Father

Achieving a work-family balance doesn’t seem as foreign to fathers these days as it once did. Technology advances are giving fathers in Waldorf the freedom to focus on their family life while maintaining their workplace responsibilities…or so it seems.

The Three Rs of Behavior Management: Rules, Rituals, and Routines

These children are managing their own behavior. They are less likely to have significant behavioral problems because of the activities they describe. The parents of these children know intuitively what researchers have been teaching parents for 40 years.

To Wean or Not to Wean: Who Says When is Enough

Breastmilk is by far the best nutrition for human babies. The reams of scientific data supporting that fact would impress even the most unenlightened skeptic.

Today's Links: Acts of Love

The 26 Most Disturbing Kids Movies Ever : "There are those who believe we must guard and protect children from the hurts and traumas of the big bad world for as long as possible.

Transracial Adoption

The article introduced transracial adoption, or adoption across racial boundaries—most often white parents adopting children of color—and reported a strange phenomenon.

Understanding Signals from Your Baby

Perhaps you recognise a certain gesture or cry. Perhaps your baby is restless, fist or finger sucking, or has a newborn's blind rooting behaviour. Maybe you also consider when your baby last fed, and whether they might have a special need for the breast because of tiredness, teething or being in an unfamiliar environment. As well, you might think about your infant's activity level; the weather; his or her routine; your routine; and many other factors that you instinctively take into account when you interpret your baby's signals.

Unthinkable?

My old pal Sonya Huber (author of the memoir Opa Nobody) had a terrific little piece in last week's Washington Post about the impact of motherhood on her family's health care costs.

Vibin' Eyes and More

Ingestion of large a cup of coffee plus half of a mascarpone super-rich brownie makes your eyes vibrate in their sockets. Who sold you on that plan? Today a friend told me that she had heard that my kids now lived with their dad full-time.

Wasting Food

It is possible that your older child likes to create with his hands. His actions tells you what he needs. It is also possible that he loves to entertain his little sibling, which is delightful.

Watching Ryann: How Running Helped My Daughter Find Herself

It was my daughter's physique that first clued me in. People say Ryann is built like me. But through a mother's eye it is clear that she takes after her Aunt Leslie, my husband's sister, who raced in college. Like Leslie, Ryann's feet toe in, and her legs are long, thin, and muscular.

Wednesday Top Three: Do You Know How to Get to Robin Street? | Mothering

In the following article, you will learn some information about some useful books on the top of the selling list in Waldorf. Read on and go through the introductions to learn more about these books.

What's in a Name?

Lesbian couples in Waldorf will often assign the non-biological mother's last name to children, as a way of reinforcing the parental relationship, though the biological mother never seems to take her female partner's name.

Where Should Babies Sleep at Night?: A Review of the Evidence from the CESDI SUDI Study

Several strong recommendations have been made in Waldorf recently by different groups concerning the safest or most appropriate sleeping arrangements for infants in Western society.

Who Knew?

Dinosaur dads played an active role in raising their young and often served as single parents, according to a study published in the journal Science. The researchers examined bones belonging to eight different dinosaurs that were fossilized in "brooding postures" near clutches of eggs.

Whole Again: Our Family after Television

There was a time when my three children were television nuts. At any point during the day, you could walk through my house and hear everything from Power Rangers and Rugrats coming from my daughter's room to heavy metal music and the World Wrestling Federation from the room my sons shared.

Why are all the Hapa Kids Sitting Together?

Three weeks ago I went to pick up Liko from preschool and found his class gathered outside the school, waiting for the mommies and daddies. Something struck me: The white girls huddled in one group and the white boys in another.

Would You Marry This Man?

I don't believe that's true at all, and I think it's disrespectful to all the men who are spectacular parents. And I want to know why no one tries to make men feel guilty because they work outside the home?