Category Archives: parental ponderings

Choosing a School or Why Cornerstone?

A year ago, we were in the midst of trying to start a small city grammar campus – starting with just one class – of the local classical school that is sponsored by a large suburban PCA church. In a lot of ways, this was our ideal. School in the city, with an urban culture, but under the oversight of an established school and its board, with most of the factors such as curricula already decided for us. Michael taught at the upper school before law school, and we saw firsthand its many benefits and excellent results. However, the idea of sending our children 15 miles into the depths of the suburbs for 13 years of education (and driving our fair share of carpools there and back) was not that attractive. So the idea of a grammar school in the city (and then maybe a bus!) sat well with us, and we were very hopeful that we had a good chance of pulling it off.

Due to a number of different disappointing factors, things never coalesced, and we never reached the momentum we’d need to open with even ONE class. In mourning the loss of a great idea unrealized, I had a really hard time getting excited about the good and fine grammar school in the suburbs. Trying to think about how I would make it work even with carpooling, since Lexi’s preschool is 5 miles in the other direction (and it takes 40+ minutes to drive between the two), gave me a headache. And I feared the headache would continue every school day for the next two years as I drove non-stop, tiring myself out. Continue reading

Finally!

The AAP is now recommending keeping your toddler rear facing in the car for at least two years.

I’ve tooted my horn about this before. I’ve heard many parents say this looks uncomfortable to them, but kids get used to sitting with their feet curled up against the seat, they rarely sit “normally” in a seat at age one anyway.

The Case Against Breastfeeding?

Moms all over the internet are chattering about Hanna Rosin’s Atlantic article “The Case Against Breastfeeding” and after a few days of thinking it over, here’s some of my musings.

.1. The most significant problem to me isn’t breastfeeding itself, but the mommy culture of competition and venomous judgment. Taking good things (breastfeeding, organic food, natural toys, whatever) and making them a barometer for deciding who is and who isn’t a good mother turns the good things toxic. What we need most is to be for one another, and encourage one another. Parenting is full of choices, and we don’t all have to make the same ones. Even if we agree something is an ideal, we all fall short of the ideal in many ways, and we have to extend grace to one another and ourselves.

.2. The scientific argument that Rosin makes wasn’t that compelling to me as I followed her rabbit trails. So, breastfeeding doesn’t prevent childhood obesity. That wasn’t my primary reason for breastfeeding anyway. The study she cites of the sibling pairs is much more nuanced than she makes it out to be. As breastfeeding is the natural choice (“human milk for human babies”) isn’t the burden of proof on formula and not breastmilk?

.3. Breastfeeding for many women is difficult, especially in the early weeks. My first month with Kate was full of stress and tears. But once we got over that hump, it was a wonderful experience. Perhaps the struggle at the onset is so that new moms stop and rest and take care of themselves, we’ll never know, but it helped me to appreciate the gift of breastfeeding and not to take it for granted. Nursing did forge an amazing bond between the children and me. In all my busy-ness and bustle, I appreciated the reminder to stop and enjoy my baby, and breastfeeding was a regular way to do that. It was a sacrifice at times, but so are many parts of parenting, it comes with the territory. Maybe I have a hard time identifying with Rosin because nursing itself was never ever an overwhelming burden to me, nor did it feel like just another duty. Perhaps it’s those endorphins, but breastfeeding calmed and centered me and now that it’s over, I miss it.

.4. I do appreciate her thoughts on part-time breastfeeding. A lot of breastfeeding advocates are very afraid of supplementing with formula, as we have all known mothers for whom supplementing was a slippery slope of diminished milk supply. But we have also all known mothers for whom supplementation works just fine! As mothers’ milk production varies widely, what works for one, may not for another. Thus part-time breastfeeding might not be the “best practice” in the sense that for those with tenuous supply issues it might be harmful, but it’s certainly not a bad idea in and of itself.

.5. If breastfeeding itself after a good college try is causing a mother to be extremely stressed out and not enjoy her child, I would be the first to say to lay down the idol and pick up the bottle. It’s not worth that. All things being equal (without extenuating health problems, etc.) I found breastfeeding to be much simpler and less time consuming than all the steps necessary to make a bottle and feed the baby that way. So I was flummoxed by her arguments about breastfeeding not being free, as a mothers’ time is worth a lot, etc.

.6. Is breastfeeding really to blame for employers not being supportive of working moms pumping? Let’s place the blame squarely where it belongs, with the government, employers and society’s views of breastfeeding in general.

What Makes a Reader?

We have long since run out of shelf space in our house, even though we have some books boxed up and others tucked behind in the shelves, so I decided to move some of our children’s books out of the main bookshelves and into the girls’ room. Doing so brought out all these visceral reactions from when I read them for the first time, and I started pondering again about what makes a child a reader.

I believe in good books. Good books teach children about the power the written word can yield. I remember reading about Sadako and her paper cranes and weeping, just weeping, and wondering how God could have let that happen. From the Mixed Up Files made me feel like loving museums was a very good and normal thing to do. There were other books as well, that made me feel accomplished or informed or what-not. And they were important to my literary development.

And yet, I loved The Babysitters Club, and probably read every single one of them and all sorts of crazy books like Bunnicula and those books, books many people I respect would refer to as twaddle, were my bread and butter in elementary school. Reading everything I could get my hands on hasn’t seemed to dull my senses for the good and the beautiful in literature as an adult.

Maybe we all need a little of both to give us balance and perspective. Everyday books mixed with really good ones, the fine wine and the steaks of the bookshelf right along with the ramen and sweet tea. What say you?

Women Need Women I

If you are an expecting mother, or ever expect to be a mother, there is one key factor I have observed for a successful, natural childbirth: having a woman who has been there with you. You can (and should) read the books, take a class and think of coping strategies. But I have seen that having a trusted friend, your mom, or even a professional attendant (doula) with you is unparalleled. That woman can look you in the eyes and talk you through labor in a way no one else can. I was listening to a friend’s account of being present for another friend’s birth (a VBAC) and I was so excited for the both of them to have shared that experience, together. When I was preparing for Kate’s birth, I thought I wanted an intimate delivery room, with just the medical personnel and Michael. I was lucky to have a great nurse and a friend who came when I called from the hospital and asked her to, though I ended up with an epidural, I remember how soothing and comforting their presence was to me. With Lexi, I had the midwife (who has 10 kids, most of whom were born at home, including twins) and my mother to talk me through things. I am glad Michael was there as well (they are his children!) but there’s something about having someone who has done it there with you to say, “You can do this, too.” I’d be glad to be there for anyone who asked, if I was logistically able, and I think most women who have had a natural childbirth feel the same way. Don’t be afraid to ask!

I’ve been thinking about some situations where women need women, I will probably write a few more posts on this.

Just the Sort of Thing Congress Excels At

The public was scared about the lead found in cheap, imported toys. So, Congress nearly unanimously passed a law, the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act (CPSIA) with lots of new regulations to keep American children safe. Result of said law? Every manufacturer of children’s clothing and toys has to subject every batch to a third party for very expensive testing. Goodbye handmade toys. Goodbye anything for kids on Etsy. What is supposed to keep our kids safe will push the best toys out of the market completely. And baby slings? We’ll be back to only having a handful of mass produced choices. Some people have even dubbed the day it goes into effect “National Bankruptcy Day” because of the vast numbers of small businesses which will have to close their doors.

You can help. Go here for more information. Write your senators and congressman. Tell everyone you know. We have until February to save handmade for our kids!

The Times Have Changed

I really like reading the Your __-Year-Old series every year, because in just the first 20 pages, I am usually convinced that whatever strange new phase I have been worrying about in Kate’s behavior, and calculating future therapy bills that will surely follow, is “developmentally appropriate” and I move on with my life for the next year, at least convinced that she is “normal.” One of the other highlights in these books is the fact that they are over a quarter century old, leading to giggles over the outfits the kids in the photographs are wearing, and some hilarious differences between parenting then and now. In Your Four-Year-Old, the authors assert that most four year olds are ready to run small errands for their parents, as long as they don’t have to cross a major street. Ha! I can’t even leave my two locked in the car for 30 seconds to hit the library drop box without fear of child protective services descending. What a strange and sheltered generation they will be.

WBW Conclusions

I was going to write today about weaning or tandem nursing (what I have to say about pumping, you probably don’t want to hear.) But, in the last two days I have read and heard several discouraging things about World Breastfeeding Week and mocking breastfeeding in general.

THAT is why I do this year after year. As much as it can seem like breastfeeding is the easy choice (free! convenient!) there’s a reason so few moms make it to even three months of exclusive breastfeeding, even if they want to. It’s hard, and our culture doesn’t make it any easier. When women no longer stop me at church to say how much they admire me for nursing in public UNDER A BLANKET, when I turn on the tv and no one makes a breastfeeding joke, when moms have the resources they need to get through rough patches, I’ll stop blogging about it.

WBW: First Feeding in the First Hour

This year’s World Breastfeeding Week theme is to encourage the practice of mothers breastfeeding immediately after birth. Especially in hospital situations, when a baby is born people start doing things — suctioning, swaddling, measuring, medicating, warming, etc. All of those things CAN wait and its usually most beneficial if they do (barring emergencies, of course.) For example, skin to skin contact between baby and mom is more effective at warming babies than being swaddled (a blanket can be placed over baby and mom to hold in the heat.) Most babies do not benefit from being suctioned (only those having difficulty breathing.) If you elect to do things such as eye ointment or vitamin k injections, they can wait for an hour or more. When newborns are first born, they are typically more alert than they will be for the first day or so, and it’s usually easiest to get them to latch on then it will be later. Also, did you know that newborns can crawl and find their mother’s breasts? They lose this instinct very quickly, but its there! The videos are pretty amazing. So, in overview, those first few feedings of colostrum are so important for the health of newborns, initiating them quickly ought to be a routine practice. When you are doing your birth plan, remember to consider what will happen after the birth, and talk to your care provider about how you would like to breastfeed immediately.

WBW Share Your Memory

Moms, please share a breastfeeding memory that you have, sweet or funny, encouraging or reminiscing. I know we have some new and expecting moms reading, what do they have to look forward to?

WBW Terminology

I have never been a person who despised labels, and I’ve always loved words, so I’ve never had a problem with the term “demand feeding.” The way milk production works, after all, is supply and demand. But, I have heard from several people, “Doesn’t demand feeding reward children for being demanding? Isn’t that the opposite of what we are teaching our children?” I am not going there in this post, but if that’s your association and the term makes you squeamish, try “cue feeding.” When your baby gives you hunger cues, you feed them. Same difference, but maybe it will go over better where you are.

Exclusive breastfeeding is another term that can confuse. Generally, it means that an infant’s only nutrition is from breastmilk, no supplements, not even water. Some group other recommendations such as no bottles or no pacifiers into that, but they are just overachievers ;o)

WBW Interview

Rita Skeeter is doing a lot of freelance work these days, and she asked to interview me as part of a WBW piece she’s writing, perhaps for Witch Weekly, perhaps for some Muggle newspaper whose editor she confounded. I wasn’t sure. The interview follows below the cut. Continue reading