Happy Weekend : The Last Before Summer

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Today was a little funny around the Crazybananas house, it’s the last Friday before summer break. In less than a week, school will be out and our first summer with me at home (more) will commence. I am so very excited. In the past, summer’s have been sort of hard for me and the kids. With my old work schedule, and Lucy’s school schedule, all “summer” meant was scrambling even more to get childcare. It certainly never felt slower than the school year, in fact, it was probably more chaotic. Two summers ago we had a nanny full time, which was WONDERFUL, but so expensive. Last year Lucy went to daycare back at the place where she went to preschool, and where Tate goes, but it was still hard. She wanted to sleep in and hang at the pool, but our schedule just didn’t allow for that. I hated her missing out, and dreamed of late wake-up calls and lazy days in the summer sun.

This year is so completely different from where we were before. I will still be working two days a week in the office, and our fabulous former nanny Amanda will be with us on those days. But three days a week plus weekends it will just be me and the kids! I know it won’t be easy, and there will be days when I wish I could escape to an office, but hopefully those days will be few and far between.

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The one thing I will miss are my mornings alone with Mr. Tate. For the past two years he’s been tagging along as we’ve run Lulu to this or that activity, with little regard to his wants or schedule. But while she was in school this semester and I was home, we finally got some time to hang out alone. Today we had our last lazy Friday, laying around in our PJs and playing trains, taking breaks only to watch some Mickey Mouse Clubhouse. It was lovely.

Next week it will all change. Again. That seems to be a theme in this here life of mine. So far, change is good. Let’s hope we keep the streak going!

A Belated Mother’s Day 2013 Wrap Up

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I know it’s a bit late, but I wanted to share a little from our fun Mother’s Day. Truth be told, we didn’t really do too much this year, which was pretty fantastic. Last year was lovely, with brunch and a day at the park (read all about it by clicking here), but this year all I wanted was a few hours alone to run errands. I know, super glamorous, huh? But as many of you moms out there know, a day of running errands without kids in tow is like a trip to the Bahamas!

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Before my luxerious Target run, I was served a lovely breakfast in bed, with leftovers from our date night evening before, and received some amazing gifts, including the clay frog you see below. I mean, seriously?! Best gift ever! We capped the day with an evening soccer game for Miss Lulu’s team. All the soccer moms were joking about spending our Mother’s Day out at the field, but we all knew there was no where else we’d rather be than cheering on our little girls. Every year that passes I feel luckier and luckier to be the mom of my two little rascals, and I’m sure most moms feel the same. This mothering business can be thankless and downright crappy some days, but then there are days like yesterday, when it all feels pretty perfect. Yay for the moms!

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P.S. Love this cute video one of my friends made with Blue Bunny Ice Cream for Mother’s Day. Mothering really is a lot like eating ice cream without spoons, wouldn’t you say?

P.P.S. To see what we sent our moms/grandmas for Mother’s Day this year, click here.

The Wisdom of Two Year Olds

Getting shorts on this boy was so dramatic! He thought they were "broken" pants. #2yearold

Hey, hey, it’s FRIDAY! I hope you all are gearing up for a fun weekend, and if you celebrate Easter, I hope you get lots of pink jellybeans in your basket (they’re the best kind, in my opinion). We are getting ready to head back to the farm to spend the weekend with family, but I wanted to share a quick story before I go. As you all know, this week the Supreme Court is hearing a case that might help decide the future of marriage equality in this country. If you know me at all (or have been reading this blog for any sort of time), you know I’m a huge supporter of marriage equality and equality in general. I was raised to believe that people can love whoever the heck they want, and I’m raising my kids with the same lessons. In fact, Lucy has several friends with same sex parents and doesn’t understand what all the hoopla is about some people not wanting same sex couples to be married. Tate is still a little young to understand any of this…I mean, his greatest concern in life is whether or not his Thomas the Train is within two inches of him at all times….so we haven’t yet spoken to him about equality or government or anything that doesn’t directly relate to said train or the amount of macaroni he must eat before he has a cookie.

Today Tate and I were out to lunch when he started up with his adorable two-year-old antics. He started pointing at the other people in the restaurant and LOUDLY telling me all about them.

“Mama! That girl has macaroni too!”

“Mama, they lookin’ at me!”

“Mama eat noodles?”

“That boy wear a red hat!”

Et cetera and so on…you get the gist. A few tables over there were two 30-something men with their little baby, having a nice little lunch. Tate looked at them and screamed “TWO DADDIES! TWO!!!” while pointing at their table. I looked at him and said, “Yup, they have two daddies.” Tate immediately started laughing and cheering, “YAY!!! TWO DADDIES! YAAAAYYYYY!!!” He was so happy and excited that that little baby had two daddies, it made every inch of my body beam with pride. The two men looked over, laughed, smiled and waved at Tate, who clearly thought they were rock stars. I mean, how lucky is that family? They get TWO DADDIES!

I hope someday everyone can be as open and accepting as my crazy Tater. We could all learn quite a bit from wise, little two-year-olds….

Our Solution to Screen Time Overload

Now, let me preface this entire post by saying, I’m no TV nazi. I sadly let me kids watch WAY too much, especially now that I’m working from home, and I need a moment here or there to answer emails or pee by myself. I grew up as a child raised on TV, and I think I turned out okay for the most part, so I’ve never been too strict about TV time. Besides, until recently, both of my kids were at school or in daycare full time, so they rarely had more than 30 minutes to watch TV at night anyway.

But lately, it’s gotten out of control, and you can tell. The kids have started begging for their favorite shows the minute they wake up in the morning and will throw epic tantrums when you turn off the tube. It’s gotten to be the same way with games on the iPhone or the computer too. Lucy’s homework is mostly web-based, so she has to spend that time online, but other than that, we had to cut down on the screen time. It started to become obvious, the more time they spend in front of a screen, the crabbier they are. So, after the snow started to melt and we were finally able to do something besides sit inside, I decided something had to be done.

Enter one of Lucy’s friends, whose super smart mom had developed this “Helping Hands” plan for her kids and swore it was the best thing that ever happened to them. It’s pretty basic, and even for non-crafty folks like me, was easy to put together. In fact, it involves the kids in the creation of the plan, and that seemed to get them behind the whole idea. Ladies and gentlemen, I’m proud to present, our “Helping Hands” wall!

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We keep this right in the kitchen where it’s easy to see daily and for the kids to access (please note the hilarious school photo of my brother in law who is a teacher…every year we get his school photo in our stockings at Christmas!). The basic premise is this:

– Have your kids trace and cut out 10 of their hands on paper (if your kids are like mine, they’ll want to decorate the hands…let them go wild!).
– Take three regular sized envelopes and cut the flap off. Then label them Helping Hands, Prizes, and one with your child’s name. If you have more than one child participating, just add one extra envelope per child with the corresponding name.
– Attach to the wall in a place where they can see and reach. We used some fun, fake washi tape from Target (easy and cheap to replace), but you could use whatever makes it stick (magnets, tape, push pins, whatever).
– Work with your child to make up a list of prizes. Ours include 30 minutes of computer time with Daddy, 30 minutes of TV time, going out for ice cream, picking your favorite food for dinner, playing on mom or dad’s phone and going to the bookstore at the mall. Put each item on a little slip of paper and place it in the Prizes envelope.

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And you’re ready to go! Every time your child makes a good choice or shows good behavior, you can give them a Helping Hand. They then take the cut out hand and put it in their labeled envelope. When they get all 10 hands in their envelope, they get to pick from the prizes!

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Now comes the hard part…at least for us it was hard. Cut off all screen time, excepting homework or other required work. I know, it sucks. There is nothing more I’d like to do when I need to answer a few emails or just veg after a long day than turn on some cartoons, but this won’t work unless you quit it cold turkey, and make earning the Helping Hands mean something real. We have some exceptions…for example, we have a standing Friday night movie night, and that is still a go regardless of the Helping Hands chart. Ditto to Saturday morning cartoons. But other than that, Lu has to earn screen time.

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We’ve been doing this for a couple weeks, and so far, so good! I think the fact that we really involved Lu in the process helped a lot, and these days she knows that asking for screen time isn’t going to work (even if she asks every five minutes). In fact, just having the system made her stop thinking about TV so much in general, and we’ve found ourselves doing lots of other fun activities together. We’ve sat around and read books, played board games, done experiments and played outside. Today I found Lu after school reading chapter books for an hour. It was fantastic! And the last time she earned a prize, she didn’t even pick TV or computer time…she asked to go to the bookstore. Progress!

Oh, and you might notice another little sheet in the photo above, and that’s because Mr. Tate was feeling a bit left out. Lu decided he needed a sticker chart so that he could earn prizes too (he’s a bit too young for the whole Helping Hands concept to really work for him). So now when he does a good job he gets a sweet sticker to put on his chart, and he loves it!

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Hope this helps any of you that are struggling with the whole screen time debacle. Feel free to leave any questions in the comments!

It Takes a Village

I found this via Girls Gone Child and I just wanted to share it with all of you working moms out there. We do not do this alone. Thank you so much to every person that has helped me raise my amazing children, especially Amanda, Caroline, Lauren, Molly, Amy, Stacey and Nancy. You have made the world a better place.

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