btrage
Cyburbian
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53. I will be looking to retire about that time....![]()
Exact same age for me too! And exact same thoughts about retirement.
53. I will be looking to retire about that time....![]()
Couldn't agree more! The Doc just got done saying, "in many other countries we don't see babies with this problem, mostly because in those cultures the mother wear's the baby around her waist for most of the time". Umm... so why can't we just continue doing that? He even brought up the comparison because we mentioned that we wear him a lot.
Glad to hear your little girl didn't need antibiotics.
--- I guess I should have put all this in the raising children thread. Oopsie. Where is Maister when we need him?
Happy Birthday to your eldest. How will you feel when your youngest turns 26??
The holiday season is exemplifying my daughter's ungreatfullness when it comes to gift giving and receiving gifts. Yesterday, she went to a special event with a gift exchange. Granted, she didn't receive a gift like the other girls (they mostly all got jewelry and other foo-foo gifts) and she just got a solar powered snowman. She started to act-up and my wife was embarrassed by it. We explained to her that it was better to receive a gift than nothing at all, and others are less fortunate than she is, but in one ear out the other. I told my wife that i think we are sometimes part of the problem because she gets handed everything so far in life. Any ideas how to turn this around?
The holiday season is exemplifying my daughter's ungreatfullness when it comes to gift giving and receiving gifts. Yesterday, she went to a special event with a gift exchange. Granted, she didn't receive a gift like the other girls (they mostly all got jewelry and other foo-foo gifts) and she just got a solar powered snowman. She started to act-up and my wife was embarrassed by it. We explained to her that it was better to receive a gift than nothing at all, and others are less fortunate than she is, but in one ear out the other. I told my wife that i think we are sometimes part of the problem because she gets handed everything so far in life. Any ideas how to turn this around?
The holiday season is exemplifying my daughter's ungreatfullness when it comes to gift giving and receiving gifts. Yesterday, she went to a special event with a gift exchange. Granted, she didn't receive a gift like the other girls (they mostly all got jewelry and other foo-foo gifts) and she just got a solar powered snowman. She started to act-up and my wife was embarrassed by it. We explained to her that it was better to receive a gift than nothing at all, and others are less fortunate than she is, but in one ear out the other. I told my wife that i think we are sometimes part of the problem because she gets handed everything so far in life. Any ideas how to turn this around?
The holiday season is exemplifying my daughter's ungreatfullness when it comes to gift giving and receiving gifts. . . . She started to act-up and my wife was embarrassed by it. We explained to her that it was better to receive a gift than nothing at all, and others are less fortunate than she is, but in one ear out the other. I told my wife that i think we are sometimes part of the problem because she gets handed everything so far in life. Any ideas how to turn this around?
If you find the answer, please share it. Not for my son. For my wife. I dread the gift-giving days (birthdays, Mother's Day, anniversary and Christmas). She finds fault in any gift. Basically, I can give her a pair of gold earrings or a gift card. Anything else is just an exercise in grief. :-{
In the thrid grade, my son hit a patch of ice and slid into a pole at school. Broke two teeth, which the dentist glued back on. We knew a root canal was in the future for him. He had one last year and today he had a second one to clear up an infection.
It is so hard to watch your kid go through something like that. It wasn't so much the actual tooth work that was so painful and terrifying for him, but all the contraptions the endodontist put in the mouth to do his job that had my son in tears and on the verge of a pain attack. He was hyperventilating. And the multiple X-rays.
I don't want to go through a root canal, but, like most parents, I would have switched places with him if I could have.
The dendodontist's assistant was remarkably unsympathetic. After it was all over and done, she told my son "Why are you still crying? It is all over." Geez, I dunno why. Maybe because he is 11 yrs old, had one of these root canals already and his mouth is ful of metal digging into his gums, and he hurts despite a couple of shots of novacaine.
MW and I met another lesbian couple a few weeks ago at a LGBT parents group outing. I am seriously amazed by these women. They have one boy who is their own, and they are fostering 4 others, all ages 5 years to 3 months old. They have been doing this for years. They take in kids who need help and often are in emergency situations, care for them, feed them, clothe them, buy them clothes and take them on outings. It was such a breath of fresh air to meet such warm-hearted and selfless people.
They are doing it right.
It really inspired us. Someday we would like to do the same.
MW and I met another lesbian couple a few weeks ago at a LGBT parents group outing. I am seriously amazed by these women. They have one boy who is their own, and they are fostering 4 others, all ages 5 years to 3 months old. They have been doing this for years. They take in kids who need help and often are in emergency situations, care for them, feed them, clothe them, buy them clothes and take them on outings. It was such a breath of fresh air to meet such warm-hearted and selfless people.
They are doing it right.
It really inspired us. Someday we would like to do the same.
My daughter now has a "MARA" (mandibular anterior repositioning appliance) in her mouth to correct her overbite. She's been a real trooper through the braces/stretchers, etc. BUT I am terrified of sticking a sharp instrument in her mouth to adjust the thing every other day. My wife is too unsteady and nearly blind as a bat, so it's going to fall on me. :-c
We got to do that to spread our daighters palate. Bright lights &, reading, glasses helped alot. I got to turn it every night. Might think of giving her a tyenol the first couple days as thats when it will be the most sore.
I forgot report cards came home Wednesday, so last night I went searching my 7th grade daughter's backpack. Found the envelope, opened it and saw A, B, B, A, F, A. Not just an F, but a resounding 52% (on a scale of 100) F.:not:
Her trip to Washington, DC this Spring is now OFF although she will have to help raise funds so her classmates can go. Her computer is now OFF unless she is using it for homework supervised by me or her mom. Her chances at finishing junior high with her Catholic school classmates is in serious JEOPARDY. Her hope to graduate Catholic high school seems decidedly UNLIKELY.
And I'm only half as angry about it as my wife.:-@
Let me guess... she is failing geography.![]()
Math, actually.
She's a very smart kid but she's lazy. Assignments are not getting turned in; she's not showing her work; this has been a pattern -- last four math grades were C, C, D, C, B; and, she was warned that the DC trip was a reward for good grades/behavior that could be withheld. She also knows the computer is a privilege, not a right.
She knew all she had to do was ask her teacher or us for help and we would get it for her. She didn't. She wanted to dance and now she has to pay the fiddler.
Like I tell RT...you have to try hard to get an F because if you are doing the bare minimum you can pass the class. I wouldn't let her go to DC and I agree with taking her computer privileges away also. She needs to put her time into completing her math assignments...it's one thing if you are having issues conceptually, it's another thing altogether when there is no effort involved. The rest of her grades shows she is entirely capable.
RT is lazy too and had a lackluster freshman year at college. I told her that I don't pay good money for those kinds of grades and if there was a repeat performance she would be returning home and going to the community college and paying out of pocket for it as well as reimbursing me for the Ds. Guess what? She moved home, got a job, paid me back, enrolled in community college, has come out of her own pocket $750 + books each semester and has a 3.5 GPA. She also has a much greater appreciation of the quality public school education she received as compared to many of her fellow students at the community college. This morning we were discussing her transfer plans and she suggested that she keep continuing to pay out of pocket for the same amount at the 4 year school because she felt that it keeps her honest in getting good grades and staying committed to her education.
My older son was a smart but unmotivated student. When he went off to college on my $$, he had a great time but performed poorly. I stopped paying and he came home. Couldn't live under house rules so he was "invited" to find his own place. After several years of slowly succeeding in retail, he went back to school on his own dime. Straight A's, graduated cum laude in finance. Don't despair, most of them come around eventually. I did too.
My daughter's 4th grade class is having the first "body" talk with a nurse today.
We bought her a book to read over the weekend, and apparently my wife was able to answer any questions she had last night. I'm very interested in her response when she comes home from school today.
This was a wonderful book that RT and I read around that age. It's called The Care and Keeping of You published by the American Girl franchise.
http://www.amazon.com/Care-Keeping-American-Girl-Library/dp/1562476661
That's the book that we bought!![]()
The girl has an issue with wearing long sleeves. It's 32 freaking degrees outside and she still want to wear short sleeves, but she does wear a sweatshirt or fleece too. It's a continual morning struggle.
Our 9 year old is the same way. I think we're reaching the point with her that she can decide if she'll be warm or not. If not, she's old enough to remember why the next day.
The girl has an issue with wearing long sleeves. It's 32 freaking degrees outside and she still want to wear short sleeves, but she does wear a sweatshirt or fleece too. It's a continual morning struggle.
Yup...we're already doing it with our 5 yr old son (the 3 & 4 yr olds still get dressed by us).Let her wear the short sleeves. She'll figure out the hard way when she's cold and you won't bring her something else to wear.
Let her wear the short sleeves. She'll figure out the hard way when she's cold and you won't bring her something else to wear.
Let her wear short sleeves; it's not worth the battle.
Mrs. P has a problem with it more than I do. Her main issue is that she looks like she's wearing the same thing every day (well it is the same sweatshirt or fleece basically). I kinda want her to freeze her ass off so she'll figure it out. I don't want to deal with the cold or sore throat the next couple days though.
Mrs. P has a problem with it more than I do. Her main issue is that she looks like she's wearing the same thing every day (well it is the same sweatshirt or fleece basically). I kinda want her to freeze her ass off so she'll figure it out. I don't want to deal with the cold or sore throat the next couple days though.
She's going to catch a cold from one of the kids at school, regardless of what she's wearing. Get her another sweatshirt or fleece: they should be on sale now. She's getting to an age where she wants to look nice. You don't have to get her a new wardrobe, but get ready for what's to come. She at least wants to look like she had more than two outfits. I remember what that was like when I was her age, and I remember what it was like for my daughter. And I don't envy you those years. I'm glad that I'm finished with it.
Oh, my goodness, the clothes choices for pre-teen and early teen girls are awful! I'm glad my daughter is a tomboy because otherwise we'd be going around and around over what she could and could NOT wear.8-!
Oh, my goodness, the clothes choices for pre-teen and early teen girls are awful! I'm glad my daughter is a tomboy because otherwise we'd be going around and around over what she could and could NOT wear.8-!
The girl has an issue with wearing long sleeves. It's 32 freaking degrees outside and she still want to wear short sleeves, but she does wear a sweatshirt or fleece too. It's a continual morning struggle.
Our is pants. For whatever reason our daughter hates pants and shorts. She wears skirts almost every day. I have no freakin clue why she hates pants, she can look really good in a pair of skinny jeans and she can rock any pair of shorts pretty well... it's a constant struggle.
Our is pants. For whatever reason our daughter hates pants and shorts. She wears skirts almost every day. I have no freakin clue why she hates pants, she can look really good in a pair of skinny jeans and she can rock any pair of shorts pretty well... it's a constant struggle.
Our is pants. For whatever reason our daughter hates pants and shorts. She wears skirts almost every day. I have no freakin clue why she hates pants, she can look really good in a pair of skinny jeans and she can rock any pair of shorts pretty well... it's a constant struggle.
Why is it a struggle? She's comforatble in skirts, and skirts are approriate most of the time.
If you're biggest worry is about your girls wearing skirts and dresses. I would consider you all lucky. After all, kids could be brats, have serious medical issues, or a host of other problems.
Our 6 year old is also obsessed with skirts/dresses, even in Michigan winter weather. The only downside is that she is still learning that when you wear skits/dresses you can't lay on the ground with your legs up in the air. And she also puts holes in her tights/leggings on a regular basis.