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For Your Reading Pleasure // 10 Things to Stop Saying to Your Kids (and What to Say Instead)

December 16, 2013 by lauren.anvari@gmail.com Leave a Comment

Shelley Phillips

I love this article so much!  I’ve never been comfortable with saying things like “good job” or “you’re a good boy” (that one sounds like something you say to a dog).  I’ve always tried to tell Asher how much I appreciate the things that he does.  When he shares, rather than saying “good boy” I say, “thank you for sharing, you’re being so generous and thoughtful”.

Raf and I have talked at length about how we want to motivate our children and ultimately we’ve decided that we don’t want to motivate them.  We want them to motivate themselves.  Of course, we will be there to guide them in discovering their own internal motivations.

When I was in college, there were definite times when I chose to take a class that I knew I could get an A in rather than a class that would have challenged me and I regret those decisions all the time.  Yes, grades matter in this world, so I do want our children to work hard and do the best they can, but more importantly I want them to challenge themselves, to push their boundaries and to focus on the journey rather than the end point.

I agree with all ten of Shelley’s points and while I’m not perfect at carrying them out 100% of the time yet, I’m sure going to keep working on it.

So go read this!

Filed Under: For Your Reading Pleasure Tagged With: article, communicating with kids, raising an ever advancing civilization, raising children, treating children with respect

For Your Reading Pleasure // How to Talk to Little Girls

July 20, 2013 by lauren.anvari@gmail.com Leave a Comment

Lisa Bloom

We live in a world full of gender stereotypes.  Even before our children are born, the way they are meant to fit into and experience the world is dictated for them.  Little girls are ‘pretty princesses’ and little boys are ‘big and strong.’  Girls get inundated with pink, while boys get blue.  Girls get dolls, and boys get trucks.  It goes on and on.  This article by Lisa Bloom touches on one half of an issue that has been weighing heavily on my mind.

I’m extremely sensitive to gender stereotypes, primarily in how they affect the station of women in society.  I wholeheartedly agree with the point that Bloom is making.  We need to engage the minds’ of our girls and stop putting so much focus on the superficial.  However, I also believe that it’s important for little girls to hear that they are beautiful, especially since we live in a society that is constantly telling them that they will never be pretty enough.  So how do we strike this balance?  How do we instill in our daughters the truth of their beauty without making it the focal point of their lives?  Women are often lead to believe that they can be either beautiful or smart, but almost never both.  How can we break down these notions?

I mentioned earlier that this article only touches on one half of the issue at hand, and I said that because it fails to touch on how we talk to little boys.  This to me is crucial.  Not only will the battle for true equality never be won unless men are advocating for it just as fiercely as women are, but we are also sending our boys many messages about their own roles and the roles of their sisters in this world.  When we tell a little boy that he runs like a girl, we are really telling him that girls are ‘less than’.  When we tell our sons that big boys don’t cry, we’re really telling him that emotions are not a part of being a man.  The messages we send to boys are just as dangerous and insidious as the ones we are sending to girls, maybe even more so, since this is still a male dominated society.

The answer lies, in part, in actively engaging our children in discourse about the world around them and the messages that society is sending them.  We can’t shield them from the world or prevent them from being bombarded by these messages or even stop them from absorbing our own flaws.  What we can do is teach them to process all the information around them and to think about what they are taking in rather than mindlessly letting these things penetrate their consciousness.  I can ask my son what he thinks about when the phrase, ‘you blank like a girl’, is used, and we can discuss its intricacies and the effect they have on the people that hear them.  If I’m ever blessed with a daughter, I can sit down with her to talk about self worth and the idea of beauty and how it isn’t really what society wants us to believe it is.  I can also accept Lisa Bloom’s challenge to leave the superficial out when talking to little girls I meet, but I also leave you with a challenge of my own:  Let’s try to elevate the conversation with any children we meet, not just girls.  When we meet little boys, lets talk to them about something other than their Spider-man pajamas or their train collection.  Instead let us engage our children in a higher level of discourse and by doing so empower the next generation to bring about lasting change to the benefit of society and the world.

So go read this.

Filed Under: For Your Reading Pleasure, Stereotypes Tagged With: article, boys, children, for your reading pleasure, gender stereotypes, girls, parenting, social discourse, society, stereotype

For Your Reading Pleasure // I Read All The Baby Sleep Books

June 1, 2013 by lauren.anvari@gmail.com Leave a Comment

Ava Neyer

This post by Ava Neyer touches on how confusing and frustrating infant sleep patterns can be and the advice out there isn’t much clearer.  You can basically find something to support any field of thought on infant sleep if you dig deep enough.  I’ve heard a lot of people say that their babies “just aren’t good sleepers.”  While, this may be true in some instances, unless you’re willing to try a lot of different methods, you shouldn’t put the blame on your baby like that. If your baby isn’t responding well to one method, move on to another and if that doesn’t work try something else and so on.  There are so many varied methods of sleep training that you should be able to find one that works for you and your baby.  Don’t give up.

So read this.

On another note, I am once again going out of town.  This time I am heading north to the tiny and lovely town of Eliot, Maine to spend a week with my parents before we all head back to the D.C. area for my younger brother’s wedding.  I will be taking Asher with me, but sadly Rafaan, can’t spare the vacation days so it will be my first time flying alone with the babe.  While, I’m going to miss my hubs immensely, I’m so thankful to him for understanding my need to spend quality time with my parents and giving me his blessing to take his son away from him for a whole week.  I do not think I’d be able to do the same if our roles were reversed.  He truly is the better half of us.

Needless to say, posting may be light while I’m away, but I promise to document our trip thoroughly.   I have a lot of requested posts that I am currently working on in draft form in the queue.  So, if you’ve requested a certain topic, rest assured it’s coming and thank you for your patience.

Filed Under: For Your Reading Pleasure, My life Tagged With: article, baby, infant, parenting, sleep, sleep training, travel

For Your Reading Pleasure // Have American Parents Got It All Backwards?

May 11, 2013 by lauren.anvari@gmail.com Leave a Comment

Christine Gross-Loh

I firmly agree with this article by Christine Gross-Loh.  As Americans most of us are far too over protective of our children and I think it is doing them a disservice.  Children need to be allowed the freedom to experience the world relatively untethered.  If you’re constantly following your child around making sure they don’t fall down and get hurt, how will they ever learn to be respect the laws of nature?  They’ll keep flinging themselves down stairs and off of furniture  because they have been taught that you will always catch them, they aren’t learning that their actions have consequences.  They aren’t learning to be cautious.  I can remember my dad teaching me to use a kitchen knife when I was 4 or 5 years old.  A few years ago I asked my parents how they could be so relaxed about my brothers and I running around the jungle wielding machetes, especially since they had no idea where we were at any given moment.  My dad replied that they knew we viewed the machetes as tools and not weapons.  We respected the tool and weren’t reckless with it.

I want to channel that little nugget of parenting wisdom.  I really hope I can give my own children a childhood as amazing as the one my parents gave me. This article only confirms my assertion at the importance of having a global vision.

So read this.

Filed Under: For Your Reading Pleasure Tagged With: article, children, freedom, global, parent, parenting, parenting style, parenting tips, perspective

For Your Reading Pleasure // The Secrets of Breast Milk

April 27, 2013 by lauren.anvari@gmail.com Leave a Comment

Nicholas DayI am a huge advocate for breastfeeding.  THIS article by Nicholas Day touches on both how amazing breast milk is and how much of a mystery it is.  I know not everyone is able to breastfeed, which is why I am so deeply thankful that I over came my supply issues and thrush and have been able to nurse my son exclusively.  It is just so easy and convenient, not to mention cuddly!  I love it!

So read this.

Filed Under: Breastfeeding, For Your Reading Pleasure Tagged With: article, babies, breast milk, breastfeeding, formula, mammals, nursing

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