Being a Rookie Mom Ain’t So Bad: Challenge and Winner!

** CHALLENGE HAS BEEN EXTENDED TO THE END OF THIS WEEK (SEPTEMBER 14th AT 12:00 PM EST!) **

I know things are little haywire this weekend with school starting, getting back into that routine as well as Gustav pummelling the Gulf Coast. We’ve been a little distracted with life.

My heart goes out to those affected. It really does. I’ve been glued to the television for the past two days watching CNN coverage of the hurricane, just as it was with Hurricane Katrina. I have been wringing my hands, praying. Praying that those levees hold. Praying that people do not lose everything again. Praying for friends and their families.

On a lighter note:

I want to thank those that participated in the first ever Being a Rookie Mom Ain’t So Bad! challenge. You guys did FABULOUS! I loved checking out your activities!

The winner of last week’s challenge is:

Congratulations Claire!! Email me your information and I’ll be sending off a copy of The Rookie Mom’s Handbook!

Now this week? Three new activities as well as a new prize!

Activity #26: Paint your baby’s feet

As precious as baby feet are, they just don’t stay small forever! This is a great way to immortalize those itty bitty baby toes! Grab some craft paint in your favourite colour and while baby’s alseep (or awake if you have some help) make some baby prints!

(I recommend taping the paper to something flat that you can press against a lying baby - best way to get a clean print!)

If you’re ambitious enough, take it to a paint-your-own pottery place and get that print embossed on a coffee cup / plate / tile!

Activity #187 Leave the House No Matter What!

Raining? Snowing? Go to the mall!

Activity #235 Share a Milkshake

You can make it at home or head out to a local shop!

(If you’re gonna make it at home, please share your recipe with us in your post!)

There you have it, now for the winner?

The winner will receive a brand new copy of The Toddler Owner’s Manual. Hooray!

Make sure to grab your buttons (they’re working now!) and get taking your pictures!

Challenge ends Sunday September 7th at 12:00pm EST SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 14th at 12pm EST so tell everyone you know! They really want to get in on this action!

Ice Cream, Ice Cream, We All Scream for Ice Cream!

Despite the week we’ve had, I ventured outside my house again - with kids - and took Carter for ice cream.

Since Hudson’s too small, I ate his.

*ahem*

See, It Ain’t So Bad Being a Rookie Mom!

Get your activity in by 12pm EST today to win a copy of the Rookie Mom’s Handbook!

Note: for some reason when I create the text box for the buttons it’s adding additional code. I’m working on getting them going for you!!

:::

giveaway button

Tomorrow is your last chance to share a summer picture to win an HP Photo Printer!!

Happy Sunday!

Buying Stock in Bubble Wrap and Children’s Helmets

Thank you so much for your stories about The Fall. As horrible as it sounds, it’s really reassuring to hear other stories about what’s happened with your children. (*ahem* Joovy, I’m still waiting to hear from you though!)

When Carter was about five or six months old and just begun moving around on his own I didn’t think much about resting him on our bed as I got ready in the morning afternoon. I have a sliding glass door on my closet and I have full view of my bed while I apply my make-up. Well, apparently my view wasn’t as clear as I thought because I saw Carter squirm a little, not realizing just how close he was to the edge of the bed, I didn’t react. Not until I turned around did I realize that he was on the verge of falling; and that he did, head first to the hardwood below.

Our bed is rather high - about hip height, and I’m 5′7″, so I’m guessing it’s maybe about three feet from the ground. THUD! He didn’t wail until I scooped him up and cuddled him, expecting for anything broken or damaged. My heart would have burst up through my throat had I not swallowed it down. I’ve never felt guilt so intense, not until The Fall.

When having children, we sign that unwritten, unspoken contract that we will forever protect them from harm. We will save them embarrassment and we will do everything in our power to prevent tears and shame. We will teach our children values, responsibility and manners. We will lead by example and our unconditional love for them will never falter. As a parent, we will never harm our children nor allow them harm at the hands of another.

Forget making sure there’s food on the table, shelter over their heads and clothes on their back, (Okay, well don’t because that’s extremely important as well) but we’ve resigned ourselves to failure. We will not be able to stop embarrassment. We cannot keep them from harm forever and we will unintentionally, maybe even unknowingly, cause them pain sometime throughout their lives.

The parenting gig ain’t what it’s all cracked up to be. Ya, babies are cute, but the moral, emotional and physical obligation to each child we conceive and rear is unfathomable. While Carter was growing in my womb, my first thoughts were not of how I was going to mold and create this child into the person he will become. I did not think about how my actions and words would be absorbed and eventually used by a child that is ultimately, a reflection of me.

Before having children I had envisioned just how I would raise them. I would be ‘normal’. I wouldn’t change who I am, how I talk or what I talk about for the sake of my child. I figured they would learn anyway, and I would rather it be me (or Mike) that taught them.

I never fully baby-proofed while Carter was younger. My intentions, though pure, may have been made out of laziness rather then intelligence. Our glass coffee table was only removed from the living room after Carter climbed on top of it - not once, not twice but four times. Each time threatening to fall through the glass with each step or even jump off the table.

I never put glass vases or picture frames out of reach. I preferred to re-direct and teach them that they were not for little hands to touch. For the most part, I think we were very successful.

Until one thing that I’ve said I wouldn’t do came back and bit me in the ass.

I said I would never tie down a piece of furniture, instead I would teach my child that televisions are not for climbing; we do not climb our dresser drawers.

(You know where this is going, don’t you?)

I never anticipated what additional child proofing would be required for a toddler.

A toddler with an infant brother who is very time consuming.

A toddler that would be very independent and wish to dress himself.

A toddler that would climb that dresser to get to his underwear drawer.

That very toddler who lives in this house and pulled over his dresser trying to get to his underwear drawer.

*the tears are stinging as I write this*

THANK GOD he wasn’t hurt. THANK GOD he was off to the side (like a ladder) and not at the very front because not only would he have been pinned below a dresser but also against the bed, which could have been extremely dangerous.

If not deadly.

With these ‘accidents’ we’ve had over the past week and a half: The Fall, hitting his head on the ceramics, and now this dresser, I can’t help but feel I’m screwing up. I can’t help but feel that I am a shitty parent.

Okay, it’s been a rough week. I digress.

But it’s hard. It’s fuckin’ hard. How can I be everywhere and protect him from everything? How do I protect my heart that innocently lives outside my body?

Both my hearts.

Though Hudson is very small, he’s already experienced pain because of my thoughtlessness. My disregard for the possible dangers, though I know they exist.

Even though it’s a distant memory for them both already, it’s eating me up. The astounding guilt I feel for failing them.

Failing to protect my hearts.

Page 7 of 181« First...«56789»...Last »

categories