Starbucks Delivers is a caffeine cravers lifesaver, but if you live in certain parts of the country, Sbucks delivery to your doorstep is only a daydream. That is, until now!

The coffee retailer recently announced the expansion of Starbucks Delivers nationwide. According to a press release, you can expect this Starbucks-Uber Eats partnership to grow in early 2020.

photo: Adrianna Calvo via Pexels

Roz Brewer, group president and chief operating officer for Starbucks, said of the expansion, “We are driven to create new and unique digital experiences that are meaningful, valuable and convenient for our customers.” Brewer continued, “Partnering with Uber Eats helps us take another step towards bringing Starbucks to customers wherever they are.”

So how can you get your caffeine fix via Starbucks Delivers (when it comes to your neighborhood)? Use the Uber Eats mobile app to place your order and that’s it! Nearly 95 percent of Sbucks’ core menu picks are available for delivery, with the option to customize some items too!

You can track your delivery status through the Uber Eats platform, and don’t worry about your cold drinks melting or your hot drinks chilling. Starbucks has special packaging to keep your beverages hot or cold.

—Erica Loop

 

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Fitness tracking devices can be a fun way to encourage tech-driven kids to get up and move. A new line of products, including a Fitbit wearable for kids, has just launched to help kids get more exercise.

Fitbit has just launched four new wearable devices including the Fitbit Versa Lite Edition, the Fitbit Inspire and Inspire HR and last, but not least, the Fitbit Ace 2, which is made just for kids.

The Fitbit Ace 2 is designed for kids six and up to develop healthy habits from an early age and to encourage kids to be more active. Made with kids in mind the Ace 2 has a bumper to protect the screen and it also has a new swim-proof protection. The new version also features new animated clock faces, colorful avatars and motivational challenges to get kids moving.

In order to use the device in sync with the newly updated Fitbit app, parents will need to first create a Fitbit family account. This helps parents keep track of kids’ activities and ensure that they are getting enough daily exercise.

The Fitbit Ace 2 comes in three band colors and will be available to purchase soon on Fitbit.com.

—Shahrzad Warkentin

All photos: Courtesy of Fitbit

 

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Who needs humans anyway? FedEx delivery robots are poised to make your life easier, bringing you everything from a Pizza Hut pie to car parts from AutoZone!

FedEx recently announced its new SameDay Bot. Developed by DEKA Development and Research Corp., its founder Dean Kamen just also happens to be the inventor of the Segway and the iBot. The SameDay Bot is an autonomous delivery vehicle that can wheel its way along your neighborhood’s roadsides and sidewalks, delivering items from retailers such as Pizza Hut, AutoZone, Target, Walgreens, Walmart and Lowe’s.

If delivery bots sound familiar, you’re probably thinking about Amazon’s Scout robots. The online retailer recently started testing these soon-to-be autonomous delivery robots in Snohomish County, Washington. But with FedEx’s recent announcement, it looks like Amazon’s bots aren’t the only robo couriers out there.

According to Brie Carere, executive vice president and chief marketing and communications officer for FedEx, “The FedEx SameDay Bot is an innovation designed to change the face of local delivery and help retailers efficiently address their customers’ rising expectations.” She added, “The bot represents a milestone in our ongoing mission to solve the complexities and expense of same-day, last-mile delivery for the growing e-commerce market in a manner that is safe and environmentally friendly.”

The bot will make its first test deliveries this summer, starting in FedEx’s hometown of Memphis, Tennessee. Even though FedEx currently offers SameDay delivery via its fleet of human-driven vehicles in 32 markets and 1,900 cities, the bots are set to expand this service, adding to the company’s already-convenient options!

—Erica Loop

Featured photo: FedEx via YouTube

 

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Microsoft is helping to make Kroger’s smart grocery stores a reality. The tech giant and mega grocery retailer are partnering to make the shopping experience easier. So what do we know about these smart stores? Read on to learn what might come to a Kroger near you.

You’ve heard about the cashier-less Amazon Go stores. The “walk-in, grab your stuff and go” formula has totally transformed the face of grocery shopping. Now, Kroger wants in.

While these new Kroger smart stores don’t have the same sensor and camera-driven cashier-less model that you’ll find in an Amazon Go, they do use technology to make getting your groceries easier. So how do these stores work?

Customers can use Kroger’s app or a “Scan, Bag, Go” terminal to create shopping list. The app/terminal then directs the customer around the store to find every item on their list. Along with their in-store shopping smart system, the new partnership will also bring digital signs to the aisles and allow employees to monitor shelf stock.

Don’t get super-excited about your local Kroger turning into a smart store immediately. As of now only there are only two prototype smart stores—one near Kroger’s headquarters in Monroe, Ohio and the other near Microsoft’s HQ in Redmond, Washington. Fingers crossed, more roll out this year.

—Erica Loop

Featured photo: Courtesy of Kroger/PR Newswire

 

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Moms and dads rejoice! We’re here to save you (and your kids!) from the standard kid’s meals and uninspired and unhealthy menu choices. Created by Chicago parents for Chicago parents, Little Diner’s Crew will soon become your go-to for a family date night out grabbing grub. Read on to learn how they got started, their mission and how you can snag a spot at the table. Grab your bibs and read on!

photo: Nicole De Khors

How did Little Diner’s Crew get its start?
Driven by a passion for experiencing restaurants that expose them to new flavors using quality ingredients, husband and wife duo D.C. and Alayna Crenshaw created Little Diner’s Crew. The stimulus for the concept was a desire to share their love of food exploration with their two boys, after a brief stint on the dreaded mac-n-cheese and chicken tender circuit.

What is the goal of Little Diner’s Crew?
The mission of LDC is 3 fold. They want to provide kids the opportunity to try new foods from around the globe, give chefs a forum to educate kids about the food they eat, where it comes from and how it’s prepared and, lastly, they want to bring families together to enjoy a unique dining experience.

photo: Little Diner’s Crew

What are the membership details?
There are several membership options, all of which include a passport that allows members to document their culinary journey and access to free appreciation events and tastings. Passports can also be used to redeem LDC perks at participating restaurants and partners.

Members will receive email alerts about free tastings, discounts and invites to openings from partner restaurants as part of the LDC Perks. You will also enjoy non-food perks such as family events, services and products.

Annual Eat Membership: $95/year per child, does not include cost of meals

Monthly Travel Membership: $9.99/month per child, does not include cost of meals

Explore All Access Membership: $29.95/month per child, includes cost of meals, additional exclusive Explore Member events, 1 complimentary child guest at an event per quarter

Family Membership: $150/month for 2 adults and 2 kids, includes cost of meals and exclusive Family Membership events.

photo: Little Diner’s Crew

Walk me through the event, please!
First of all, it’s important to note that LDC events start promptly. So, be sure to plan ahead so you can arrive on time—no small task for parents, we know! A different restaurant will be featured each gathering and have included such notables as Carnivale, Naoki Sushi, Riva and RPM. When you arrive, you’ll check in with an LDC rep and have your passport stamped. The dining experience will include either the Chef, GM or owner discussing different aspects of the restaurant’s history, menu and cuisine. The menu for kids and adults is exactly the same, but the portions are smaller for the kids. Also important to know, kids dine alone with their peers, while parents enjoy adult time nearby.

How old do my kids have to be to join the Crew?
LDC is best suited for kids ages 4-12 and their hungry chauffeurs (a.k.a. parents).

How do we stay looped in on events?
Good question! Be sure to keep tabs on their website to get the 411.

— Maria Chambers

Photos courtesy of Little Diner’s Crew

I was so excited to go to college when I graduated high school and my initial ideas about the degrees I wanted to pursue were ambitious. When I actually began college, the reality of the long road ahead of me hit and I began to second guess my choices.

This is when I changed my major so that my classes and the journey to graduation weren’t as intimidating. But the more classes I took, the less sure I was about what I actually wanted to do. About half-way through my Bachelor’s degree I became overwhelmed by the cost of my classes and I lacked a clear direction for my future career.

I really wasn’t motivated to finish, so I dropped out of college with no real plan of when I would go back.

Fast forward three years and I was now married with a two-year-old son. My job involved different responsibilities but I enjoyed the aspects that allowed me to work with children the most.

All of a sudden, it became very clear to me: I needed to get an education degree. 

I enjoyed being with and teaching children and the idea of studying how children grow and learn had always been interesting to me. I had a focus and a desired career in my sights but how was I really going to do this? I was working, taking care of my son and our home and my husband and I were so young and couldn’t take on the cost of a college tuition. It seemed like there were more obstacles in the way of completing my degree than ever before.

I was so much more determined and driven though and I knew that I couldn’t waste my time. If I was going to do this, I was going to have to make a plan, work hard and consider this a part-time job.

My first semester, I took one class online and one in-person—and I was immediately overwhelmed. The mere review of the syllabi filled me with regret about what I was getting myself into and had me questioning how I could balance everything in my life.

Thankfully, that feeling didn’t last long. Each assignment I completed gave me a little confidence and each good grade or encouragement from a professor that I received pushed me to work even harder. Every semester seemed to be more difficult in some way but working towards a goal and seeing progress made me feel accomplished and it helped me to stay sharp and focused.

Honestly, it also added a layer to my identity. Before I went back to school I mostly saw myself as “just a mom” and didn’t think of myself as being that good at anything besides motherhood. I had to remind myself of the truths about motherhood that I forgot. No one is “just a mom,” because the role of being a mom is the most mentally and physically challenging thing one could take on. It’s also humbling, rewarding, joyful and empowering.

When I graduated with my Bachelor’s degree, my life looked much more different than when I began. My husband now had an awesome job, my son was four and in the middle of his first year of school, I had an 11-month-old daughter and I already had a teaching job that I loved.

Getting that degree is by far my proudest accomplishment, besides my family. It taught me and prepared me for so much more than just teaching a class of children. I learned how to manage my time and prioritize my responsibilities better. I would tell any parent who is considering going back to school that if it’s something you really want, you will find the time, resources and energy necessary to get it done. 

The reality is that you will probably be up late most nights, you will probably need to sacrifice a lot of your weekend and you will probably feel like you can never get ahead. I had many nights that I wanted to wait until my kids were asleep before I started working on assignments, but they struggled to settle down so I was up way too late working.

My daughter was 11 months old when I graduated so as you can probably guess, I was in school through my whole pregnancy and she was born during one of my winter breaks. The fall semester right before she was born brought the hardest workload of my college career but it seemed to help distract me from the less fun parts of pregnancy somehow.

Some advice I would give anyone interested in going back to school is don’t let finances stop you from going back to school. I got so much financial help when I went back to school by applying for financial aid as early as possible and applying for tons of scholarships through the university. I’m a very ordinary person, my GPA from my early college years wasn’t stellar and I wasn’t a part of any organizations or doing anything special so I was amazed that I was being awarded scholarships. I really believe that writing an honest application and showing that I was serious and driven, led to some generous donors investing in me.

I didn’t write all of this so that someone would think that I did something extraordinary. I’m writing this because as parents, we all have this determination inside of us. We can go after whatever goals and dreams we have because we all have this super parent within us. And I think we can all look back on our lives before we were parents and laugh about the things that we thought were hard or challenging then—because we’ve overcome so much more now.

I’m Murphee, a wife, mom of two and ocean lover! Our little family recently began a new adventure that brought a big change for me: I went from Floridian early childhood teacher to stay-at-home mom in Texas. I love exploring with my young children, trying new food and road tripping. 

I was set to fly to Sierra Leone, Senegal, and Kenya for work when I discovered I was pregnant. When I told my boss, he said, “Well, then you can’t go to Sierra Leone. My brother had to be HVAC-ed out of there twice.” We considered switching my trip to the Philippines but learned that the required vaccinations were too risky in my first trimester. I was grounded.

Before having children, I loved my work, especially the travel. Traveling to impoverished areas to start programs was my chance to work with and listen to people from where they were. The trips were invigorating and exhausting at the same time, because in-country I tried to squeeze out every minute I could with the locals, living, learning, and listening—but sometimes burning out.

My work demanded everything of me—my time, my talents, and my passions. I was certainly driven—driven by my faith that I felt called me to work with those who need help, driven by my love for the countries and the people I visited, and driven by the satisfaction of seeing ideas for programs come to life in ways that I thought truly helped people.

Motherhood put a screeching halt to that drive. As a first-time mother, my identity shifted dramatically, and it was jarring. Instead of being out there saving the world, I was at home keeping one tiny human alive, a tiny human that astounded me by how fiercely I loved him. In those first few months, I felt grateful to have that time just to bond with him, establish nursing, and read him stories. Still, restlessness plagued me, and soon enough I felt the itch to work again, to use the parts of myself that had laid dormant for those few months adjusting to my new and seemingly all-encompassing role.

First, I tried jumping back into my jet-setting line of work. I flew to Jordan with my mother and my still-nursing nine-month-old in tow. I delivered training in the conference room, then ran to nurse my son on breaks in the hotel room. It was a memorable experience, but impossible to repeat when I had my second and third child. Traveling for vacation with children is hard enough; traveling overseas with an infant for work can be even more stressful—and costly.

I stepped away from work that required travel. In fact, for a short time, I stepped away from work altogether.

And that was the best thing to happen to my career.

Privileged enough to be able to rely (with some budgeting) on my husband’s full-time work and health insurance coverage, being home with my children and away from the overtime demands of my career gave me time to reflect. Instead of more demanding jobs, I began to work on short-term consultancies, mostly from home, until the opportunity arose to teach academic writing at a nearby community college.

This new challenge excited me, and I jumped into it with the same fervor I did my international development work. I then continued to adjunct work at a four-year college, also teaching writing. As I balanced this with my consultancies, I also started to see a new identity emerge, an aspect of my personal interests that my whirlwind career had hidden—I started to see myself as a writer.

For years, my writing had been limited to grant proposals, handbooks, training manuals, and case studies. Only occasionally did I delve into essays and journal articles. With the time to step back from the relentless needs and priorities of my previous career, I could now come back to writing, something I always enjoyed doing.

Not only did I rediscover my love for writing, but the young motherhood stage of my life allowed me to find my writing niche. I started blogging, trying out different themes and topics until a purpose to my writing emerged: helping people restore and build personal connections and relationships with one another. That purpose put together all the pieces of my life together thus far—the work with people in communities all over the world, the isolation I felt staying home with my children, the advocacy training I did with human rights advocates around the world, the conversations I was having on social media, the service I was doing at my local church—I could write about this with passion, authenticity, and credibility. And I would not have found this voice if not for my children.

My time with my young children is busy, and like it is for most mothers, physically and emotionally draining. Yet somehow this time also gave me the mental space my prior full-time career did not. As I reflected on what my kids were doing, saying, or teaching me, I thought about how my inner world connected to the outside world and realized how much I had to share.

I have also increased my writing for my international work, consulting regularly for different organizations, glad to use my writing to make a difference in people’s lives. The passion I threw into my career before children paid dividends in my being able to construct my own consulting, teaching, and writing career now. I’ve even been able to do some travel again but on my own terms.

The stress of trying to balance attention to my family, work, and writing remains. Yet this transition has already bred new and exciting ideas about where I might go from here, as my children get older and I get more time to pursue my writing, my work, and my interests. I have ideas bubbling in my head, a book slated for publication, and other projects simmering. These, along with my children’s chubby faces, are what drive me now.

Despite the prevailing narrative that motherhood can stall or even ruin careers, I know I am not the only mom who has seen motherhood enhance her career. I know many mothers whose transition to parenthood also led them away from soul-crushing jobs to exciting entrepreneurial endeavors or new and more meaningful career paths. Children are not a challenge to overcome as we advance in our careers. My story proves they can be the best thing to happen to our careers—and our lives.

Phoebe Farag Mikhail is a writer, educator, activist, and the mother of three children. She is the author of Putting Joy into Practice: Seven Ways to Lift Your Spirit from the Early Church (2019) and Hunger for Righteousness: A Lenten Journey Towards Intimacy with God and Loving our Neighbor (forthcoming, 2025). Her essays and articles appear in numerous publications, and she blogs at beingincommunity.com. Follow her on X, Bluesky, and Instagram @pkfarag.

Phoebe Farag Mikhail
Tinybeans Voices Contributor

Phoebe Farag Mikhail is an author, educator, and international development consultant. She has lived in New York, Washington, D.C., the United Kingdom and Egypt and she and her husband love traveling with their three kids. She blogs at Being in Community and is the author of Putting Joy into Practice: Seven Essential Ways, forthcoming from Paraclete Press.

We get it. It’s summer break, you’ve had a long day, and a drink or two shouldn’t hurt, right? Watch this viral video of a dad being ‘driven’ home from the local pub by his young son. It’s giving parents quite the laugh.

Video: The LAD Bible via Facebook

Concerned folks, don’t worry. According to Metro UK, the two were on their way back home from a carnival, and the dad (not the son) was actually the one controlling the toy car with a remote control.

Father of the year? Share your thoughts in the comments below!

When you sit down to your Thanksgiving meal and give thanks for all your blessings, give a moment to appreciate this amazing and diverse city we live in.  It’s the perfect place to raise kids!  We polled our writers to find out what they’re most grateful for about being parents in LA, then add in your two cents.  Then get out there and enjoy the sunshine, arts, culture, ocean and food that we all love.

Infinite Ingenuity

Well, all you need is one real winter on the east coast, getting your toddler all bunted, bundled, galoshed and mittened, only so they can tell you they need to go potty. But beyond the obvious (the weather), I've got to say it's the infinite ingenuity that seems to spring from the sunshine around here is what's so inspiring. Just when we thought we'd seen it all, some guy's making ice cream by pedaling a bike. Or some kid is raising millions towards curing cancer by selling lemonade. I love raising my girls in a culture where creativity and passion driven pursuits runneth over. And all we need to roll out is a little sunblock. Cue Randy Newman.

—writer Jolie Loeb

photo: Jolie Loeb

So, why are you thankful to parent those amazing kiddos of yours in LA? We can’t wait to hear from you in the comments below.

West Berlin, New Jersey might not seem like the hippest day trip destination within a 90-minute drive of Manhattan, but the brand new construction vehicle inspired theme park Diggerland USA is a childhood dream come to life, for boys and girls alike. Once there, you’ll realize you’d have gladly driven twice as long to have so much fun. Where else can your child operate heavy machinery, race mini-Land Rovers, drive dump trucks, climb a 4-story ropes course and take a spin on a one-of-a-kind carousel? Here are 13 reasons why Diggerland USA is worth the drive down the Turnpike.

Welcome to Diggerland USA

With an open-air indoor arcade, rides for kids of all ages and lots of shady spots for parents to rest, the just-opened Diggerland USA is bound become a must-visit destination in the Tri-State Area. You'll also love that wristbands allow for all-day reentry, which means you can leave the park's expensive food concessions behind to cool off at a local restaurant (we recommend Victory Sports Bar & Grill (795 New Jersey 73), located just 5 minutes down the road, with big screens showing all the World Cup matches and other games. Bonus: Kid's eat for $1.99 on Sundays and 2 kids eat free with each adult diner every Tuesday!)

Keep flipping through the photos to learn about the park's top rides and attractions.

Go: Diggerland USA
100 Pinedge Dr., West Berlin, Nj

Ages: All ages are welcome, but the park is best for kids who are at least 36 inches tall (the shortest height requirement for rides, though some require kids to be 42 or 48 inches tall). Shorter and younger kids can still enjoy the Kid Zone playground.

Cost: Full-day tickets to Diggerland USA are $29.95 online ($34.95 at the gate), with free admission for guests under 36″ tall and over the age of 65.

Hours: 10 a.m. – 7 p.m. daily through Labor Day (weekend-only hours begin in September)

Have you checked out this one-of-a-kind theme park yet? Tell us about your trip in a Comment. 

–Jeff Bogle

All photos by Jeff Bogle