PARENTING FREEDOM

attachment parenting, homeschooling, gentle discipline
  • .: My Children :.

  • .: Status Updates :.

    Monday, May 21st, 2012 9:16 pm

    “The secret of happiness is freedom. The secret of freedom is courage.” Thucydides

    “There is only one way to happiness and that is to cease worrying about things which are beyond the power of our will.” Epictetus

  • .: Quotes :.

    Blogging since 2001.
  • “We parent the way people have parented for hundreds of thousands of years.”

    | January 23, 2011

    Meet the newest TODAY Moms blogger: Mayim Bialik
    http://moms.today.com/_news/2011/01/18/5839973-meet-the-newest-today-moms-blogger-mayim-bialik

    “We had our first son in 2005, and I nursed him on demand around the clock for 26 months – no pacifiers, no bottles, no solids until 12 months. Son No. 2 was born in 2008 at home, unassisted until pushing. He is still nursing strong and on demand, day and night, at almost 2½.”

    “This is not some fandangled new Hollywood trend. We parent the way people have parented for hundreds of thousands of years…”

    “Natural birth is not something to “try for” and feel bad you couldn’t do. Our country needs to step up to the plate in educating women about the benefits of natural birth, and we need to help women actually do it – not just hear about it…”

    “I wore my children in slings almost exclusively instead of using strollers…”

    “We don’t hit our children or punish them. We have a lot of boundaries and expectations of our children, and we are by no means permissive parents…”

    Children are a Gift of the Lord

    | December 31, 2010

    Baby GC was the latest among the five best gifts I have ever received (outside of the gift of eternal life.) How did I get the best toy in the world? She is such a life-like doll. Just like a real baby! She has been such an incredible delight and joy in our lives. We are all very thankful for her. We have been having so much fun with her. Having a baby at this age is just as great as everybody (with that experience) told me it would me – even better! It is EASY because everything comes second nature by now. I know what to do, I know what works, and I am more relaxed. I am not exaggerating (much) when I say that I spend most of the day looking at her and making her laugh and smile. I get little else done, but you know what? I don’t even care!


    Miss Christmas ~ 3 1/2 months old


    Baby GC reading ~ getting close to four months old


    Baby GC in the sling enjoying
    the winter wonderland of our beautiful province

    I’m Loving Babywearing as Much as Ever

    | December 31, 2010

    I have tried my new baby wrap a few times. It is comfortable, but it takes forever to get Baby in and out. (She’s sound asleep in the picture). I love my sling so much better, but I do use the wrap every week when I take Baby GC, C9, and L6 in the swimming pool. After five babies and owning about 20 carriers/slings, the tie for first is between an unpadded, wide/long ring sling and my Tough Traveller backpack. Both are extremely useful with different purposes.


    Baby GC in my favorite sling

    Christmas 2010: Adventures with our First Advent Calendar House

    | December 31, 2010

    I miss personal blogging. I miss the old way I used to blog. I am so behind that it almost seems hopeless. I stopped posting regular family pictures around July and never picked it up again. I haven’t even written Baby GC’s birth story. I want to get back into it, so for now, I think I will skip the summer and fall and only go back as far as the beginning of Advent 2010.

    We had a very slow, low-key month of December. I made the choice not to do many of our annual traditions. I wanted peace without commotion. I was tired of feeling tired, so we did very little. It still felt very much like Christmas.

    One new idea that proved to be quite fun was our new Advent calendar house. After Christmas last year, I ordered it on EBay. It sat in its box all year, so it was rather amusing when we opened it. Do you notice anything unusual about it? I didn’t until the children mentioned it.


    Our Advent Calendar House

    I bought some secret things. (The treats were often things we would do anyway, or candy from the Bulk Barn, or things we could have saved for Christmas presents. I had lots of ideas we didn’t even use.)

    And I made a list of hiding places. (Examples: Look in the organ… Look in the drawer under the sock monkey… Look in the doll house… Look by the doll on the stairs… Look behind the ceramic Christmas tree… Look in the front bench… Look in the fridge… Look by the Cascade… Look on the computer desk… Look in the bathtub… Look in the black cabinet in the bathroom… Look on the dryer…)

    Each day of December, I would either stuff a small treat or a “Look under/in/behind” note behind one of the doors. Instead of getting it ready all at once, I would do it one day at a time, so the most appropriate treat would go on the most convenient day.

    Day 1: pack of crackling candy to share (funny)

    Day 2: four lollipops and four Double Bubble gum (to divide among four children)

    Day 3: four chocolate loonies

    Day 4: Decorated wooden Christmas tree ornament crafts with marker and glitter

    Day 5: Made T.V. advertisments with video camera – Sham Wow, Goldline

    This was fun. We spent additional time watching home videos. (It makes me feel bad that I didn’t take more during the past few years. I have hardly ANY of Baby GC, but I guess it doesn’t matter.)

    Day 6: bag of peanut M&Ms to share

    Day 7: four chocolate peanut butter balls and four mints

    Day 8: four mints and four rockets

    Day 9: four pieces Hubba Bubba gum

    Day 10: chocolate rocks (It took them a while to figure out you could eat them. It looked like a bag of real stones.)

    Day 11: Ice Cream Moon Sand

    The three middles really enjoyed this project.


    Playing Moon Sand
    See Baby and cat and lights?
    I was getting ready to put the lights on the real tree.

    Day 12: Decorated Gingerbread houses with Daddy

    Derek is always responsible for the construction of the gingerbread houses.


    Our Gingerbread Houses 2010

    Day 13: Gum that tastes like SOAP. I can’t let them get TOO spoiled. It was hilarious, but they were mad and thought it was a dud. ROFLOL After, I told them if they had reacted like good sports, they would have got something else, but… FAIL… ?! (To clarify, for the biblically minded, it was a joke, not a character test… and they read the label before they tried it.)

    Day 14: foam sticker wreath craft with glitter glue, one KitKat to share


    Christmas wreath foam craft

    Day 15: watched Ramona and Beezus on PayPerVu

    I knew C9 would like this especially. I think she has read all the Beverly Cleary books by now. It will be a sad day when something happens to our cat. I LOVED all the baby wearing in the movie! Even Ramona was carrying around her baby sister in a forward facing carrier.

    Day 16: four candy canes

    Day 17: four lollipops and four Double Bubble gum

    Day 18: Three oldest went to Voyage of the Dawn Treader in 3D with Daddy… L6 watched Cats and Dogs 2 on PayPerVu

    I didn’t want to take Baby GC to Voyage of the Dawn Treader because it was only available in 3D. There is nothing worse than a seeing a 3D movie without the glasses, and I knew I wouldn’t be able to keep them on the baby, and she LOVES to watch the big screen, so I chose to skip the movie.

    Day 19: The middles painted plaster tree ornaments with me, Derek, and his brother who happened to stop by.


    Painting Christmas Tree Ornaments


    Decorating chocolate cupcakes with icing
    and Christmas sprinkles (with Derek’s brother)

    Day 20: I forget what it was.

    Day 21: two Kit Kats and two O’Henrys

    Day 22: four pieces of Hubba Bubba gum

    Day 23: four kinds of juice cans

    Day 24: made things out of clay


    Making things out of clay on Christmas Eve


    Some of our clay creations

    We had a nice, relaxing Christmas Eve.

    Day 25: four mints

    Health in the News

    | October 16, 2010

    Fever from a naturopathic perspective
    http://www.gaianaturopathic.com/resources_handouts_fever.html

    Angelina Jolie – The Mistake that Almost Killed Her
    http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2010/09/17/angelina-jolie-says-vegan-diet-nearly-killed-her.aspx

    I went vegan for six weeks, and I got more sick with every passing day. (I know that it works for others.)


    Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt Babywearing

    Nearly One in 10 Americans Depressed, Study Reveals
    http://www.myfoxny.com/dpps/news/nearly-one-in-10-americans-depressed-study-dpgonc-20101001-fc_9897171

    And OLD News, but a great clip
    C S Lewis on Pain

    Attachment Parenting Nursery / Master Bedroom Baby Nesting Pictures

    | August 20, 2010

    DISCLAIMER:
    Follow your doctor’s advice and all warning labels for ALL issues regarding your baby.

    This will be my fifth “Attachment Parented” baby. I have mothered in this way more intensely with each child, and I have no regrets in that area. I praise and thank God for leading me to “Attachment Parenting”.

    I promised you pictures of my “Attachment Parenting Nursery”, and naturally, you get my opinions thrown in, so here we go… It might make you feel better to read a different blog.

    We have the means, but not the will, to have a separate nursery for Baby. I believe a traditional nursery is NOT in the best interests of a baby. I believe a nursery only satisfies the mother-to-be’s dreams of having a beautiful baby room, as well as peer and family’s expectations and traditions.

    What about Baby?

    Baby not only WANTS to be with Mother, but EXPECTS and NEEDS to be with Mother.

    What is the perfect nursery for a baby?

    Mother’s eyes. Mother’s voice. Mother’s arms. Mother’s breasts. Mother’s love. MOTHER.

    Contrary to what you might think, nesting is a big deal for me. I prepare for months to get things ready for Baby, but I do nurseries differently than most mothers. I prepare the nest in the location where I actually intend to nest.

    During the past few months, we redecorated our master bedroom, and it was completed today with the arrival of our two new swivel/rocker recliners. And now for details…

    NESTING AREA
    ~ large bed
    ~ comfortable chair for mother (Mine is the patterned one.)
    ~ comfortable chair for father (My husband wanted his in leather which I find too cold.)
    ~ Baby’s dresser (with a drawer on one end for mother and a drawer on the other end for father)
    ~ coasters for glasses on each end of the dresser
    ~ night table
    ~ lamps

    (The flash made the colors a little brighter than they actually are. The reds are darker in real life.)

    NURSING CHAIR
    ~ swivel/rocker recliner
    ~ My Brest Friend nursing pillow
    ~ blanket
    ~ book basket on floor next to chair for reading to older child

    SIDE TABLE / NIGHT TABLE
    ~ tissue box
    ~ touch lamp (so important for Mother’s panicky concerns for Baby in the night)
    ~ telephone with the ringer off (I can hear the phone from the kitchen.)
    ~ intercom where I can call for help when Baby poos all over me or when my throat is so dry that I desperately need water (My family is great to help!) The intercom also doubles as an audio baby monitor when necessary.
    ~ white noise machine (Thanks, M&C!)
    ~ place for TWO water glasses (in wooden container where I won’t knock them over during my sleep-deprived nights) (Experience tells me that TWO glasses of water are needed for nursing mothers.)
    ~ same container also holds remote controls, cream, pens/pencils, notepad
    ~ phone book in a drawer
    ~ Bible/books in a drawer
    ~ notebook in a drawer for my middle-of-the-night inspired writing and list making
    ~ night light that I can cover/uncover when needed (I prefer darkness, but need to be able to check baby quickly.)
    ~ diaper change basket (includes diapers, waterproof change pad, tissue box, container with soap, water container)
    ~ garbage can on floor

    FAMILY BED
    ~ king-sized bed (We downgraded! The biggest we have had in the past was a queen and double side-by-side.)
    ~ waterproof mattress pad for king-sized bed
    ~ waterproof change pads for Baby to sleep on (with soft material on one side)
    (If Baby’s diapers tend to leak, sleeping on these tend to protect the mattress and save unnecessary work.)
    ~ king-sized bed is also used for changing wet diapers during the night or naps

    GUARD RAIL ON BED
    ~ extra tall with anchor for king-sized bed
    ~ has attached case to hold easily accessible diapers, waterproof change pads, receiving blankets, undershirts, my books, etc.

    BED NEST
    I have never been able to nurse lying down, but I still like to be comfortable in my bed during night feedings, etc.
    ~ two 12-inch foam wedges
    ~ at least two pillows (one for my head)
    ~ My Brest Friend nursing pillow (a substitute for a nursing pillow is a regular pillow folded in half and stuffed to the end of a pillowcase with a knot in the end.)
    ~ pillow seat (I use a foam medical supply pillow for my sore you-know-what following birth)

    FLOOR DIAPER CHANGING AREA
    I always thought change tables were ridiculous. I prefer to SIT when I do diapers. I also like the safety factor of a floor changing area which means Baby will NOT roll off when being changed. I can go get more supplies without any concerns.
    ~ thin foam mattress with crib mattress pad and crib sheet for cover
    ~ waterproof change pad
    ~ diaper change basket (includes diapers, waterproof change pad, tissue box, container with soap, water container)
    ~ jungle gym blanket where we will hang our mobile/toys overhead Baby to entertain Baby and siblings during diaper changes and playtime (not pictured) (Thanks, Grammie and Grampie!)

    FLOOR BED
    The change area also makes a great floor bed. It is also a very safe place for Baby to sleep when mother has to leave the room and Baby can roll over.
    ~ thin foam mattress with crib mattress pad and crib sheet for cover
    ~ blanket to match our king-sized bed blanket

    BABY’S DRESSERS
    ~ waterproof change pads
    ~ receiving blankets
    ~ towels/washcloths
    ~ undershirts (My babies always wore undershirts to bed because sleepers were too warm for them. I like the one-piece style with no snaps or buttons on the chest, but just three snaps at the bottom.)
    ~ diapers
    ~ baby toys basket (Baby toys range from 17-years-old to brand new.)
    ~ blankets
    ~ bathtub rack liner
    ~ socks, hats, etc.
    ~ slings and wraps and carriers (see picture below)

    BABY’S CLOTHES (IN MY CLOSET)
    It took me five babies to figure out that I should HANG the baby’s clothes on hangers instead of keeping them in a dresser. Hanging them enables you to see the lengths, and Baby won’t grow out of them without wearing them if you can see the sizes.

    BABYWEARING NEST
    When Baby and Mother are not in the nest described above, Baby still gets to be close to Mother in a carrier/sling/wrap. Here are some of my slings and wraps all washed and ready. I wouldn’t want to count how many carriers/slings I have owned over the years. They are much more important to me than any other article of clothing that I have. I am not a shoe or purse or clothes girl, but definitely a sling girl.

    EXTRA THINGS IN THE MASTER BEDROOM
    ~ definitely a TV with remote controls
    ~ clock
    ~ paintings
    ~ pictures (I have to wait for Baby to get born to get a huge family picture for over the bed)
    ~ flowers
    ~ teddy bear

    DIAPER BAG
    ~ my new red leather diaper bag ready for hospital

    (The flash made the colors brighter than they are. The reds are darker in real life.)

    ~ diapers
    ~ waterproof change pad
    ~ tissues
    ~ water bottle
    ~ soap and container
    ~ diaper wipes
    ~ opaque lunch bags with ties for dirty diapers
    ~ clothes
    ~ receiving blanket
    ~ ring sling
    ~ and more…

    Almost 17-Years-Old Going-Home-From-the-Hospital Baby Outfit Worn by All Four of My Children and Ready for #5

    That sums up everything I can think of now. When Baby actually arrives, I will no doubt see areas that need to be changed to make things easier. I like things to be practical and efficient. It’s hard to remember everything since it has been six years since I’ve had a baby in the house. AND JUST SO YOU KNOW, everything will soon be MESSY, and I will be embarrassed to show you when you visit. I tend to make people and things look better in pictures.

    If you have any suggestions that I would like, please write them in the comments, or send me a note. I love new attachment parenting ideas.

    MY SHARING SLEEP NOTES
    The following are my personal observations of sharing sleep with my baby.

    ~ I like to listen to those soft little coos in his sleep.
    ~ I like to watch him sleep.
    ~ I like to reach out and pat his back.
    ~ It is so touching to catch those little sleep smiles, and he sometimes even chuckles out loud in his sleep.
    ~ I feel secure when I hear his quiet steady breathing, and contented sighs.
    ~ I know he is safe.
    ~ However unlikely, I never fear having to go get him if there is a fire or emergency.
    ~ I like to cover up his little shoulders.
    ~ I like to be certain he is warm during our Canadian winter nights.
    ~ I am there to help him regulate his body temperature.
    ~ I am able to unconsciously teach him to sleep with my body rhythms.
    ~ If he starts to stir, I can sometimes comfort him back to a deep sleep.
    ~ Feeding baby couldn’t be easier or more convenient.
    ~ I am there to massage his tummy to relieve that uncomfortable feeling.
    ~ I am able to prevent him from completely waking up when his tummy feels empty, thus making it easier to get him back to sleep after nursing.
    ~ I never have to try to lower him down into a cold crib, desperately hoping not to awaken him.
    ~ I get more sleep.
    ~ Sleep sharing extends postpartum infertility.

    MY ATTACHMENT PARENTING ESSAYS
    William Sears, M.D. and Martha Sears, R.N. are credited with coining the term, attachment parenting, to summarize the following practices:

    * Connecting with your baby early.

    For more information, read Pregnancy, Natural Childbirth, Birth Comfort.

    http://parentingfreedom.com/pregnancy

    * Reading and responding to your baby’s cues.

    For more information, read Cry it Out, Sleep Training: Is CIO Biblical?

    http://parentingfreedom.com/cry-it-0ut

    * Breastfeeding your baby.

    For more information, read Breastfeeding, Extended Nursing, Spacing Babies.

    http://parentingfreedom.com/breastfeeding

    * Wearing your baby.

    For more information, read Babywearing: Why Should I Carry My Baby?

    http://parentingfreedom.com/babywearing

    * Sharing sleep with your baby

    For more information, read Sleep Sharing, Family Bed: Where Should Baby Sleep?

    http://parentingfreedom.com/sleep

    DISCLAIMER:
    Follow your doctor’s advice and all warning labels for ALL issues regarding your baby.

    Palin Family Updates

    | May 28, 2010

    Bristol Palin’s Solo Act
    http://www.harpersbazaar.com/magazine/feature-articles/bristol-palin-interview-0610

    “Both parents gave advice, including her father, Todd, who used to braid her hair every morning before school. ‘He taught me how to swaddle, which is the best trick in the world. I swaddled Tripp for like the first eight months.’”

    “He [Tripp] is learning basic sign language to communicate with Trig, including stop, which Trig signs when Tripp tackles him.”

    Bristol Palin: The Photo Shoot
    http://www.harpersbazaar.com/fashion/fashion-articles/bristol-palin-pictures-0610

    Just When Ya Think It Can’t Get Any More “Interesting”… Welcome, Neighbor!
    http://www.facebook.com/#!/notes/sarah-palin/just-when-ya-think-it-cant-get-any-more-interesting-welcome-neighbor/392687973434

    “Upon my family’s return this morning from endorsement rallies and speeches in the Lower 48 states, I finally got the chance to tackle my garden and lawn this evening! So, putting on the shorts and tank top to catch that too-brief northern summer sun and placing a giddy Trig in his toddler backpack for a lawn-mowing adventure, I looked up in surprise to see a “new neighbor” overlooking my property just a stone’s throw away.”

    I did the backpack thing for years until N was old enough to mow the lawn himself. ;-)

    Update:
    the new Palin fence
    http://gretawire.blogs.foxnews.com/the-new-palin-fence/

    Attachment Parenting Otter-Style

    | March 13, 2010

    I am otter-ly loved: The adorable image of a baby otter taking a nap on its mother’s tummy as she swims across a bay
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldnews/article-1256564/I-otter-ly-trust-Mum-The-adorable-image-baby-otter-taking-nap-mothers-tummy-swims-bay.html

    Babywearing Music Videos

    | January 16, 2010

    Baby Mamas (Put a Sling On ‘Em)

    Bæring ( babywearing )

    Somebody Loved
    Rain turns the sand into mud
    Wind turns the trees into bone
    Stars turning high up above
    You turn me into somebody loved

    Nights when the heat had gone out
    We danced together alone
    Cold turned our breath into clouds
    We never said what we were dreaming of
    But you turned me into somebody loved

    Someday when we’re old and worn
    Like two softened shoes
    I will wonder on how I was born
    The night I first ran away from you

    Now my feet turn the corner back home
    Sun turns the evening to rose
    Stars turning high up above
    You turn me into somebody loved

    Attachment Parenting View from 1951 (Original Father of the Bride 2)

    | December 31, 2009

    I am sure you have watched Father of the Bride and Father of the Bride 2. Well, they are based on movies from the early fifties. The original sequel was called Father’s Little Dividend and it was filmed in 1951. I found the following section very interesting in regard to attachment parenting. The father, Stanley Banks (Spencer Tracy), and his daughter Kay (Elizabeth Taylor) were saying that everyone should stop interfering in her pregnancy. She went on to explain her doctor’s radical views which certainly shocked her father.

    Kay: “I guess they just don’t understand the new way of looking at things. As Dr. Nordell says, birth is a perfectly natural thing, a glorious thing, and wants you to be conscious every minute so you they don’t miss a second of it. He believes a woman should be aware of the wonderful thing that is happening to her. And another thing, he doesn’t believe that a woman should be separated from her baby for one second after it’s born. You should carry it with you, right back to your room, and keep it there with you, sleeping right there with you in your hospital bed.”

    Stanley Banks: “That is a little new isn’t it.”

    Kay: “Oh, Pop, that’s not new! Primitive woman has always done it. Dr. Nordell was in the Pacific and he said the women there, why, they were never separated from their babies. They kept them slung on their backs for the first two years of their lives. He said it was wonderful for the baby. He said if he had his way, all of his mothers would do that. You would carry them on your back while you were doing housework and when it got hungry, you would swing it around and feed it, and swing it back again. He says it gives the baby a wonderful feeling of security.”

    Father’s Little Dividend 5/12 (1951) (Clip beginning at 3:40)

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