Travel Itinerary for the Week of May 28th!

Another international week this week! Fasten your seatbelts!

On Monday, we will be in Florida with Nicole @ By Word Of Mouth Musings. Nicole talks about the abundance of information in our world today, and how we can use it to teach our kids how to make responsible decisions.

On Tuesday, we are in the Philippines with Martine. Last week we had a great post that discussed the recent Times article about attachment parenting. Martine tells us about how attachment parenting is viewed in the Philippines.

On Wednesday, we’re off to Indonesia to hear from Lady E. You know those gut-wrenching moments when our kids take a tumble? And the smiles that follow when our kids get right up and keep going? Lady E. reflects on the importance of letting kids learn through their own mistakes once in a while.

Read more…

Saturday Sidebar: Fulfilling a childhood dream

This week’s World Moms Blog writer Angela Y asked our writers,

“What did you dream of, or want, as a child that you have happily fulfilled as an adult?”

Check out what some of our World Moms had to say…

Jennifer Burden of New Jersey, USA writes:
“I always, for as long as I can remember, always wanted to be a mom. And here I am! My childhood dreams were to own a horse, live on a farm, be a veterinarian, be an astronaut, none of which I have carried out. There is still plenty of time though! LOL” Read more…

SOUTH KOREA: Are We Foolish Enough?

May 25, 2012 10 comments

It was the boob shot seen around the world.

The recent cover of Time Magazine, has been quite controversial. A mother and her 3-year-old son face the camera as he stands in front of her, on a chair, and suckles at her breast. The accompanying headline is: “Are you Mom Enough? Why attachment parenting drives some moms to extremes – and how Dr. Bill Sears became their guru.

There are a lot of words I could use to express my feelings about this cover, but very few of them are appropriate, so I’ll stick to just one word: infuriating.

This cover manages to insult mothers, attachment parenting, Dr. Sears, and any culture where breastfeeding beyond infancy is the norm. The photograph and headline are insinuating several things:

  1. Extended breastfeeding is so strange and unnatural that it requires props
  2. Extended breastfeeding is an “extreme”, one of many
  3. All attachment parents practice extended breastfeeding
  4. Those who practice attachment parenting and/or extended breastfeeding pass judgment on others and deem them as “mom enough” or not
  5. Those who practice attachment parenting view Dr. Sears as a guru Read more…

MASSACHUSETTS, USA: Sturdy Fences

May 24, 2012 14 comments

One of the best pieces of advice I got as a new parent was: “children and pets both require sturdy fences.” Meaning, in order for them to understand their limitations, you must establish clear and consistent rules (or “fences”) for them to thrive within.

A few years later, I attended a parenting lecture on discipline, hosted by a local mother’s group, where I heard this mantra repeated. The speaker was Lynne Griffin, author of a popular parenting book, Negotiation Generation, and a firm believer in the power of “fences” for children. The wisdom Lynne espoused in her lecture inspired me enough to purchase her book and interested my husband enough to read it when I was done.

At the time, we were living in a well-heeled Boston suburb, where we regularly encountered children with sprawling kingdoms but few fences defining their boundaries. In quite a few cases we observed late-in-life parents, who doted on their children so excessively, who met their every wish so frequently, that the children were completely out of control. According to Griffin, enforcing just a few, consistent rules and erecting some fences could put these kids back in place. The book and Griffin’s message spoke to us. Read more…

NEVADA, USA: Traditions

One of the great things about being a part of a community like World Moms Blog, is the diversity. Every day (okay, once or twice a week when I can finally catch up) readers are given treasured glimpses into a culture much different from their own. I read stories from all over the world, learning about the traditions these mothers have taken from their own heritage and brought into the lives of their children.

I’m left to wonder: what have I brought from my heritage to share with my own child? Read more…

NORTH CAROLINA, USA: When A Friend Breaks Up With You

May 22, 2012 14 comments

In the last few years, I’ve had several friendships end. Some of them have been due to difference of opinion about my separation and divorce, and others have just been a gradual drifting apart. Memories of them might cause me to feel a sharp sting, or even bring tears to my eyes. I had never cried over the loss of a friendship with a woman until last May.

I had been friends with Joy for 8 years, seeing her through her divorce, taking her kids for weekends at a time while she went away for sanity time, or on modeling jobs to help support her kids. We were like sisters. We were always at each other’s houses, helping each other, secure in the fact that we had each other’s back any time, anywhere. Read more…

NEW ZEALAND: When Do We Step In?

In our house we eat simply: mostly fresh fruit and veges, some dairy, nuts most days, pasture raised meat and a few grains. The boys  drink water or milk and rarely sodas or fruit-juice.  We don’t tend to have packet foods, but I bake a few muffins and we have ice-cream and chocolate as treat-foods.  The children who visit us mostly come from homes who eat in a similar way, so food for our guests hasn’t ever been a problem.

The few children who have come and are used to trash food have the simple option of eating or not. I never make a big deal out of it and they never go hungry. Read more…