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Archive for the 'Blogroll' Category

What’s the right balance of sports and activities for kids?

July 28th, 2009, 10:53 am by Michelle Reese

So when do you go with the desire of a child or make a decision for him?
My husband and I have always believed in exposing our two kids - now 4 and 7 - to a variety of activites. First, it keeps them physically active and second, it allows them to experience a number of sports to maybe make a decision to focus on one or two.
Plus, I don’t want the kids to have the option to come home every night with hours available to watch TV or play the Wii. Now and then is fine, but not every night.

Wouldn't you want to do this, too?

Wouldn't you want to do this, too?

So in the past few years, we’ve done soccer, t-ball, football, swimming lessons, karate and dance.
Our incredibly busy summer is just about behind us, chasing on the heels of a sure-to-be-busy school year.
Though both kids did karate for a month in May, my work schedule didn’t allow us to keep it up. So we maintained just a once-a-week swim lesson this summer (and still managed to miss plenty of those).
I got a coupon to try a fitness center that offers karate, dance and gymnastics. I signed both kids up for sample classes: gymnastics for my daughter and karate for my son (who has earned a yellow belt in this sport).
We got there and - yup - my son wanted to throw karate out the window and join his sister on the gym floor. I can see the temptation - check out the photo of the pit!
Our swim lessons end this week and so far I haven’t enrolled for the next session. So I tried to convince my son, 7, to take gymnastics AND karate. I’m not sure he should give up the sport he’s been involved on-and-off with for the past few years.
But he insists - he just wants to do gymnastics.
He’s very happy with it. Last night was our second class and I couldn’t believe what he was doing on the rings.
After swimming finishes this week, we’ll be down to just one activity a week - the gymnastics class - for a few months. My daughter starts soccer in October, but my son didn’t want to do a team sport.
I’m not sure what we’ll do. We could do nothing, add another gymnastics class each week or start another session of swimming. I may try again in a week or two to see if my son wants to add karate.
I’m hoping the start of school will give me a better picture of what we should do to achieve the right balance. There’s a lot to be said about down time and play time at home.

I want vacation mommy back

July 21st, 2009, 9:10 am by Michelle Reese

I was arguing with my 4 year old this morning.
One day back from vacation, my nails that were looking nice are gone, peeled down to nothing. The fun, calm demeanor I returned with from vacation with is gone, too.
Back is the frazzled morning mom, urging, no begging, two school-age kids to get cloths on (I don’t care what-just make sure it covers you-PJs? Sure!), eat breakfast, grab their bags and get out the door to get to camp.
I want vacation mom back.
I thought that the week off, the rest, the relaxation, would some how meld into my regular workweek - at least for more than one day.
There’s always tomorrow I know. I can try again - and the kids have agreed to do the same. We’ll put the cloths out tonight and NOT change minds in the morning.
It would help I’m sure if I got more sleep the last two nights. But being back in the proximity of a computer I’ve found myself spending two hours each night catching up on e-mails, editing trip photos, reading about writers and yes - eek - thinking about our next vacation!
So I’ll try tonight to put my own cloths out as well, and to stay away from the computer.
Now if someone would just let the dog know we are back at home, there is a doggy door, and she doesn’t need to wake me up any more to go out in the middle of the night!

Vacation past us, it’s back to the office

July 20th, 2009, 12:49 pm by Michelle Reese

Last week my family took a much-needed, do nothing vacation. My parents have a place up north and it is there that I, my husband and the two kids recharged. The weather was great (never higher than 91), the company was fantastic (it was so nice to just PLAY with the kids and not shuttle them places) and the food wonderful (my husband grilled just about every night.)
Now I’m back and hopefully will offer more blogs soon. In the mean time, check out this story on the EVTRIB.COM site about a mom who has brought her wisdom to television.

There’s more to being a princess than a crown and a prince

June 23rd, 2009, 10:17 am by Michelle Reese

castle1We just returned from Disneyland and I still have Disney fever. I have to confess, my daughter is obsessed with the princesses and I’ve not exactly discouraged it.
Last night while surfing the Net, I found a mom blog with a bit of a princess flair.
I share this not to plug the big Mouse and tiara-wearing girls any more than they already are, but to share in her wisdom.
More than one mom I know complains about the princesses and how they always end “getting married” in pretty gowns.
But this mom takes the stories a bit further with her daughter and this morning I had the opportunity to do the same.
My 4-year-old was talking about the mermaid princess and wondered why she had legs when we saw her last week.
“How did she swim all the way there if she didn’t have a tail?”
I laughed! Good observation I thought. So we talked about how she was brave and wanted to be independent and had a dream to be human. We talked about making choices in life that change things.
“Ok, now we’re going to talk about Aurora,” she said.
Then the conversation went on about the witch and the prince. Again, we talked about bravery and not talking to strangers (as Aurora’s “aunts” said in the movie).
I took more than one tip from the mom blog I read about referring to the qualities to admire in a princesss: sharing and being helpful (We have a book where Cinderella throws a party for girls in an orphanage). We talked about being a “polite” princess with our words. I remembered that the mom blog referred to how Cinderella was a good friend to the animals.
I’m glad I found another mom’s perspective on this. It’s given me good ways to move my daughter beyond “one day your prince will come.”

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