Did your kiddos catch a glimpse of Santa sliding down the chimney? Even though Chrissy Teigen and John Legend’s three-year-old Luna and 19-month-old Miles didn’t see the man in the big red suit on the roof, they did spot Santa running across the yard—and the celebs have a video to prove it!

In an oh-so-cute Christmas clip, Teigen shard a video of Santa Claus racing through the snow and waving to Luna. Judging by the excited jumping, it’s pretty clear the three-year-old was more than thrilled to see jolly ol’ St. Nick.

Along with Luna’s squeals of pure glee, the video also features Legend shouting, ““I see Santa Claus! Oh my God, I saw Santa!”

Not only did Teigen’s fan adore the adorable video, but plenty of celebs also enjoyed the cute clip. Kelly Rowland commented, “ALL THIS CUTENESS!!” and Stacy Keibler added, “The best EVER!”

Teigen also added a sweet snowman suit-clad Christmas pic of Miles to IG, captioning it, “hello has anyone seen Santa?”

—Erica Loop

Featured photo: Chrissy Teigen via Instagram

 

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Comedian and Instagram content creator, LGND, recently gifted his two-year-old daughter, Aria, a banana and things did not go as planned. In this now-viral video, we watch Aria unwrap the fruit, only to exclaim with absolute glee. Watch below. 

 

LGND captioned the clip, “I tried giving my daughter the worst X-mas gift ever and I didn’t expect this reaction.” So far, the video has garnered almost 750,000 views since it was posted. 

We simply can’t get enough of this sweet girl and the joy she exudes.

—Jennifer Swartvagher

Featured photo courtesy of Jill Wellington via Pexels

 

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Earlier this year model Ashley Graham shared the exciting news that her family was growing by one, and while we’ve been treated to a host of glowing photos, we haven’t gotten many more details––until now. Graham sat down with talk show host Ellen on Thursday and ended up revealing lots of info during one of the host’s rapid-fire question sessions.

This will be the first child for Graham and husband, Justin Irvin, who shared the news back in August. In her typical fashion, Ellen got all the details in her recent sit-down with the model, which you can see below.

Right off the bat, Graham was open to sharing she is due in January 2020. Coincidentally, Ellen shares the same birthday month and despite asking her “to hold it in though so [they] can have the same birth date,” Graham did say her due date is before Jan. 26. Sorry, Ellen!

When the model shared she was having a boy, she reacted with the mom glee we all know and love––and with tons of applause.

––Karly Wood

 

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Photo: Patrick T. Reardon

A couple weeks ago, I fell in love with a younger woman, a much younger woman.  

A girl, really.  Well, actually, a baby.

She was born a little after four o’clock on a Monday afternoon, and, although I’d known she was on her way, I was astonished at how beautiful and strong and innocent and vulnerable this little baby girl—my granddaughter—was. And is.

I was also astonished at her name, the name that our son David and our daughter-in-law Tara gave to her: Emmaline Patrick Reardon. I was honored and touched and humbled that Emma’s parents would link me in this way to this unbelievably loveable, squirming, yawning, stretching tiny human being. And I like that, in this small way, she will carry a piece of me into her future.

I know it’s a future that is likely to extend far beyond my remaining time on the face of the earth, and I’m OK with that. Emma, at this point in her new life, is filled with potential. She seems fairly calm and curious, but it will take months and years for her personality to begin to emerge and take shape.  

Nonetheless, I’m handing this world over to her now. It’s her inheritance and hers to do with what she wants. As daunting as that may sound, it’s what every baby faces upon entering this human life, a life that can be a vale of tears or a land of milk and honey but is usually a mix of the two.

From the vantage of my nearly seventy years, I envy Emma all of the magnificence and beauty that await her, like falling in love the first time. Or seeing and really noticing the interplay of shades of green as the branches of the tree outside her window dance in sun and shadow and a gentle breeze. Or winning a race. Or discovering the deep harmony of heartfelt friendship. Or getting lost in a great novel (maybe, even, Jane Austen’s “Emma”). Or finding the love of her life (as I did, back in 1981, when I met Cathy, the woman who is now her grandmother).

I also know, alas, that Emma’s life won’t all be sweetness and light.

Her immaculately perfect skin will be marred. I remember how her father, at the age of two, rolled down a small hill in the neighborhood. When he stood up, I could see that something in the grass had cut his leg just above the knee. He paid no attention to the small amount of blood but ran to the top to roll down again. I went to him to clean the wound, feeling a little gloomy that his unblemished skin was now blemished.

Emma’s heart will be broken. She’ll find out stuff about herself that she won’t like. (Her father and her Aunt Sarah still complain to me that they inherited the Reardon gene for being slow afoot.) And, like any human, she’ll make mistakes—flunk a test, miss an important shot on the basketball court, drive the car a little too fast, trip over her own two feet.  

Oh, poor Emma. I hate to think of you being sad or frustrated or irritated. But that’s what you inherited when you made your appearance on this earth.  

That, and so many joys and delights. 

Life, you’ll find, is a great adventure with a great mix of a whole lot of everything. You’ll know pain and elation, sometimes at the same time. You’ll be bored and you’ll be excited and you’ll be confused. (Actually, if you’re like me, you’ll be confused a lot of the time.) You’ll mourn and you’ll find hope.

Hope is very important.  Hold tight onto your hope, Emmaline Patrick, especially in the toughest moments. It’ll help you endure until it’s time again to enjoy.

And, maybe 60 or 70 years from now, maybe sooner, you will find yourself looking into the eyes of a newborn girl child or boy child. And, when you do, I hope you feel as much sheer happiness and glee as I feel now when I look at you.

I’m sure, every time you see that new baby, Emma, you’ll fall in love all over again.

Patrick T. Reardon is the author of eight books, including “Daily Meditations (with Scripture) for Busy Dads.”

 

This post originally appeared on Chicago Tribune.
Patrick T. Reardon
Tinybeans Voices Contributor

Born and bred Chicagoan, Patrick is an essayist, poet, literary critic and an expert on the city of Chicago. He has been writing about the city, and its literary scene for more than 40 years. For much of that time, he was a reporter at the Chicago Tribune.

Your mom may have a memory book filled with photos, baby shoes and clippings from your first haircut, but you’ve already maxed out 20 gigs of cloud with photos of your baby. So while you’re Facebooking, tweeting, instagramming and tumblring every precious baby moment, include these 12 not-to-be-missed pics to commemorate your baby’s first year. #newmom #photocrazy #babylove

photo: Katie Jane McWilliams

1. #allnighter #aintwhatitusedtobe #daddysboy

Record those long nights and precious snuggles with a newborn. All-nighters won’t last forever (although it sure feels like they will).

photo: Angie Cernovich

2. #bigbrothers #instabffs #lilsis

The moment an older sibling meets the new baby for the first time is beyond words. Record the first hug and kiss so you can all remember it forever.

photo: Megan Woodard

3. #tenfingers #tentoes

Make sure to photograph those adorable newborn hands and feet. It’s way easier than attempting that overrated ink print (#pinterestfail).

photo: Megan Woodard

4.#toocuteforwords #glamourbaby

The day will come when you dress up your baby (out of boredom, exhaustion or for big laughs). From bows and beanies to sunglasses and Wu-Tang onesies, accessorize away and break out that camera.

 

photo: Stephen Lightfoot via Flickr

5. #sleepinglikeababy #sleepingbeauty

If only little ones understood the meaning of “sleeping like a baby.” When baby finally dozes off, snap a pic of that sweet, serene, non-howling face. And then sneak away and take your own nap.

photo: kate_dave_hugh via Flickr

6. #firstfood #lookatthatface #ihatecarrots

From baby food to finger food, don’t miss that first face of disgust (or delight). It’s fun to look back and see how kids’ favorite flavors change over time, and a messy face makes an awesome photo.

photo: gabeflorencio via Pixabay

7. #Iseeteeth #gummygrin #somuchdrool
Those tiny teeth may put baby and you through hell when they’re coming in, causing sleepless nights and tons of drool. But they make baby’s smile even cuter.

photo: Julie Seguss

8. #happybaby #babygiggles #babyinparadise

From gummy grins to deep belly giggles, nothing can make your heart burst like a laughing baby. Share the love with social media to make others smile.

photo: Kelly Thomas

9. #babyrolls #babyphat #thighsfordays

Who doesn’t love a six-pack of baby rolls? From chubby arms to those thick thighs, you’ll want to remember eat squishy fold.

photo: Ashly Grzyb

10. #babyselfie

Of course, the baby selfie. Your baby will soon take better selfies than you do. So say cheese now! The sillier the better.

photo: Tory via Flickr

11. #gobabygo #newwalker #firststeps

You’ve got a walker! The sheer glee on baby’s face will make each photo. And get ready, because that baby just got a whole lot faster and harder to photograph.

photo: candice_rose via Pixabay

12. #firstbirthday #IamOne #smashcake

The cake smash makes for great before and after photos! You’ll want to remember that sweet outfit before it’s covered in icing. Then let your little one year old smash and smear while you keep snapping away.  

photo: Katie Jane McWilliams

13. #momoftheyear #Isurvived

You did it! You made it through the first year without losing your mind completely (well, almost). And now you have lots of photos to look back on and smile.

Ashly Grzyb

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Time outs aren’t just for kids. Actors, and completely comedic couple, Jason Sudeikis and Olivia Wilde prove the point in their new “children’s music” video “Let’s Give Mommy a Time Out.”

Sudeikis recently premiered the clip during a recent guest hosting gig on The Ellen Show. The hilarious, and all too true, take on parenting got plenty of attention—racking up more than 100,000 views on YouTube already!

Even though they’re celebs, judging by the song (and video clip) Sudeikis and Wilde are kind of just like us when it comes to parenting. Wilde sings, with an overly exuberant sense of glee, “Let’s give mommy a time out. There’s no need to scream and shout.”

The actress/mama goes on to sing, “I haven;t had time to think. And mommy could really use a drink.” And, of course, it just gets better from there!

—Erica Loop

Featured photo: The Ellen Show via YouTube

 

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The new season of Arthur started this week with a groundbreaking episode featuring the same-sex marriage of Mr. Ratburn, one of the show’s beloved characters.

Season 22 of the series about the titular aardvark next door and his gang of friends just launched with the episode titled “Mr. Ratburn & the Someone Special.” With special guest star Jane Lynch in the role of Mr. Ratburn’s sister, Arthur and his friends initially mistake her for the bossy bride-to-be. But there’s a twist!

When they plan to break-up the wedding, they discover that she is, in fact, Mr. Ratburn’s sister and that he is actually marrying a man. The entire class attends the wedding and celebrates the special moment with their teacher.

Fans of the show took to Twitter to express their glee over the nuptials and applaud Arthur for its progressive stance on gay marriage.

https://twitter.com/extraspicee/status/1128034354121379840

The storyline was not surprising for the inclusive show that has never been shy about tackling challenging subjects. The only thing fans were pleasantly surprised to discover is that PBS Kids is still producing new episodes of the long-running show.

—Shahrzad Warkentin

Featured photo: Arthur via YouTube

 

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After gunshots rang out too close for comfort outside our baby’s bedroom window and yet another hit and run befell our street, my husband and I decided enough was enough. We packed up our baby and our Shih Tzu and got the heck out of dodge from smog city and headed for the majesty of the Northwest.

We had a great plan. My husband worked remotely for a television show; he had done so for nearly seven years and they agreed he could take it with him. I’d get a job once we got there and since he’d just been paid a giant lump sum from the past season, we’d live off of that for the first few months. Then he’d get another big payment four months later so there was no rush­­–I would take my time and find something that really fit.

We had family in Portland waiting for us, which meant we’d have the chance to raise our son surrounded by love, family and fresh air. Everything would be better there.

No sooner had we signed the lease to our new home on the top of a hill surrounded by gallant pine trees and the occasional bald eagle soaring overhead than we got the phone call. My husband lost his job. They had replaced him with someone younger and cheaper.

Life as we knew it began to disintegrate. We’d blown through the first chunk of money quicker than anticipated with moving costs and furnishings for our new home and now the rest of the money we were counting on wasn’t coming at all. We were flooded with fear, anger and resentment. It felt as if our selfless choice to give our baby a better life had backfired and we were being punished. Neither of us had a job, we were far away from our friends and were on the precipice of being broke.

We had broken up with our city and like any breakup in the beginning, we felt righteous about our decision, empowered and even filled with glee. Soon after, an unsure feeling stirred within us, a panicky voice questioning everything. We couldn’t help but be filled with a warm sense of nostalgia for all that we’d left behind while omitting all the reasons we’d left in the first place.

Just like a jilted lover, we pined for what once was. Luckily for us, we couldn’t drunk text our ex. Our ex-mistress was too far away, too unattainable. To go back would cost too much in every possible way. The back-and-forth of “should we stay” or “should we go” felt gnawing and self-destructive, we knew we had to make peace with our choice, so we marched on.

Two unemployed people in a marriage are a recipe for a powder keg. Our marriage, still intact, yet strained had suffered deep wounds. Both of us struggled through dark bouts of depression and anger. Had it not been for the love of our son, some days I don’t know how we would have gotten out of bed.

Suddenly, we found ourselves on government assistance to pay our heating bills and when we took our son to get his 12-month check up we were asked what type of homeless we were. Our dignity was a thing of the past as we struggled to keep our heads above water. We applied to and were rejected by jobs we weren’t qualified for because all we have ever known is life in the entertainment industry.

My anxiety was causing my health to fail. After a disconcerting diagnosis, I was sent to a counselor to see how stress management would help ease my physical pain. The daily anxiety of what was going to happen to us was all-consuming and physically making me sick. Our downward trajectory affected everyone, including our parents and our friends. All of our loved ones felt helpless as they watched things progressively get worse.

A momentary victory like a deciding to drive for Lyft was thwarted when we realized our car was too old to qualify. A promising job interview that ended with no job because my husband was overqualified. A scald on my hand, constant physical pain, heart palpitations, another fight, one more rejection, another failure–the days passed us unrelentingly without a single reprieve from mishap or sorrow.

Our first few months are push-and-pull between instances of despair and disarray and moments of wonder and pure joy. We watched our son turn one, celebrated his first Halloween and put up our Christmas tree together. There were family trips to the Oregon Coast. A stark contrast to California’s sunny beaches, the ocean here feels as if it is possessed by a woman scorned; dark, hauntingly beautiful and angry. Our family huddled together in the cold watching her hypnotic waves and were filled with a long-awaited moment of peacefulness.

There was the night my husband and I ran outside in the freezing cold just to stare at the star-filled sky together. The sound of the train in the distance, the one that reminds me of my childhood home, that we now lovingly refer to as my train. There are howling winds, endless trees, a crackling fireplace, mountains on the horizon and finally…there’s snow.

If you stare up at the snow coming down on you long enough you can’t tell if you’re floating up toward it or about to be buried by it. I sat in the windowsill with my son in my lap and we stared up as it fell down in what seemed like a never-ending blanket of white. Giant flakes splattering against the window glass as we watched awestruck. The quiet frigid air, the chirp of a bird in the distance, the satisfying crunch beneath our feet and my toddler squeezing my hand as he takes his first step into the snow.

It is starting to warm up outside. We reach less for the extra yellow blanket on the couch. The sun beats down through our bright kitchen windows and there are ladybugs and sparrows everywhere we look.

I found a job. It’s different from anything I’ve done before and it’s forcing me to learn new things. I’m reading more–it’s how I’m coping with my anxiety. I wake up earlier, I have peaceful cups of coffee while my family sleeps and I work in the quiet.

My husband found a temporary job that allows him to spend lots of time with us. He’s saving to go back to school to learn something different. My son is not the 11-month-old baby we brought here five months ago, he is a full-blown toddler. He plays outside in the mud and is learning to talk. He knows so many things. He’s thriving.

Even our little dog has grown from a prissy city dog to a tough (ish) dog that plays with the big dogs at the doggy park. He’s shaggy and enjoying the fresh air and the warmth of our fireplace.

Yeats once said, “Happiness is neither virtue nor pleasure nor this thing nor that but simply growth. We are happy when we are growing.” I think of this each day and remind myself that though it may be painful at times, at least we are growing. The journey has been rockier than we anticipated but we are moving forward—together—to build our new amazing life.

Lisa Kay Jennings has been a regular contributor to Theatre Nerds. Her work has appeared in SecondGlanceMag, on stage at LA's Taboo Tales and in her stage play, Save the Last Potato Chip. She's a voice-over actress and writer living in Portland with her husband, one-year-old baby boy and Shih Tzu, Wicket. 

From brushing teeth to recognizing letters, preschoolers pick up a remarkable amount before kindergarten. Softer skills like kindness and the motivation to “do good” are just as important, but can feel challenging to tailor to a young crowd. Good news! The title characters of Corn & Peg  produced by Nelvana Studios and the latest show from Nickelodeon, are always up to good in their community of Galloping Grove. For more inspiration, we rounded up 5 easy ways to get the good deeds going early and often in your family and community.

1. Help Out At Home
Home really is our first community. There are different people to consider, common spaces to share, and rules to make everything run smoothly. And because preschoolers nearly always want to be involved with what you’re doing, make a fun activity out of it when you can. Ever seen a kid’s glee with a spray bottle? Let them wash the windows! Finding those ways to let them help gives them feelings of satisfaction and accomplishment—wonderful rewards for doing good that might just make them feel like little superheroes, too, the way Corn and Peg, do.

2. Volunteer Together
Whether it’s a neighborhood garden project or an informal beach cleanup day, keep your eye out for activities you and your kiddo or the whole family can participate in. The experiences enrich the young lives you’re raising and show them the fruits of their labor, like a cleaner beach for all to enjoy. By the time community service is expected of them later in school, it will already be second nature.

3. Express Appreciation Wherever You Go
In Galloping Grove, for instance, Corn and Peg’s good deeds might help out a postal worker, the sheriff, or the mayor. Similarly, get kids in the habit of thanking those who serve the community at large. Let them help pick out gifts for Teacher Appreciation Day, bring a drawing to that next doctor’s appointment and simply say “thank you” to whomever lends a hand throughout your day.

4. Trot the Talk
The phrase “food insecure” has come to the forefront, so go ahead and teach it to your kids, who may share the lunch table with kids who don’t have as much as they do or run up against food insecurity themselves at some point in their schooling. Raise the topic organically, as you involve a kid in meal prep. Or, the next time a picky toddler rejects a homemade meal, talk about “food waste” and what can be done with food we don’t finish.

5. Be on the Litter Lookout
Kids notice everything! Whether you’re at the playground, out on a soccer field or hiking a trail, they can pretend to be little litter police and have fun while doing good, just like Corn and Peg. Make it a habit of carrying an extra bag for some trash pick-up from time to time. Leaving common spaces a little cleaner than you found them benefits—and respects—everyone.

Get excited about Corn & Peg by watching this fun video:

Tune in weekdays to Nickelodeon to catch fun-filled original content your kids will love. Catch clips of “Corn & Peg” here anytime!

—Jennifer Massoni Pardini

 

What comes first? Goodnight Moon or This Is Us? Since we can’t definitively answer the question about the chicken or the egg, it’s doubtful we’ll get to the bottom of this question either. Regardless of our philosophical conclusions, after watching last night’s episode the real takeaway is: from this point forward, we will never be able to have one without the other in our heart space Thank you, brilliant This Is Us writers.

But the more compelling question is, “Whose soul-bound idea was it to write Goodnight Moon into the script anyway?” Weaving such a unique thread through an episode set out to prove the human collective has shared experiences across every spectrum is creative genius. Whoever you are, I’m still giving a standing O over here. Listen close and you’ll hear my robust display of hand clapping echoing through time and space.

Here’s the thing. Goodnight Moon is a simple book. No glitz, no glamour—just the story of a bunny saying goodnight to the world before going to sleep. And the simplicity is what turns this tiny classic into a family favorite. Goodnight Moon is a universal, feel-good, tuck-your-kids-into-bed staple for every parent. Who knew a make-believe book with 132 words could touch hearts across the globe? And who knew a T.V. show with pretend story lines could annihilate hearts across the same globe?

This Is Us reminded us we all walk through life with similar journeys in which we experience joy, face hardship, celebrate success, and fight demons. We aren’t alone in our own universe—all of us fall asleep under the same moon. And if we can remember everyone has a story, maybe we can muster up more compassion for our fellow man. The writers used another stroke of genius to help us hone in on this truth with the parallel of everyone has a story they read their child before bed. Just wow.

Because both the book and the show are forever classics, I thought we all could use a This Is Us version of Goodnight Moon.

Goodnight This Is Us

In the great Pearson room

There was a husband and wife

And the Big Three

And many pictures of-

Their family tree

And there were three little hearts stock full of love

And five plates

And a pair of soulmates

And a little yellow terrible towel

And a deep sense of wow

And a Buddhist necklace and a lunar pendant and a Pilgrim Rick descendent

And a quiet karma, warm and resplendent

Goodnight Pearson room

Goodnight family tree

Goodnight hearts beating with glee

Goodnight light

And the Big Three

Goodnight hearts

Goodnight love

Goodnight plates

And goodnight soulmates

Goodnight Bec

And goodnight Jack

Goodnight yellow terrible towel

And goodnight sense of wow

Goodnight Buddhist necklace

And goodnight lunar pendant

Goodnight nobody

Goodnight Pilgrim Rick descendent

And goodnight karma, warm and resplendent

Goodnight stars

Goodnight air

Good night beautiful memories everywhere

 

And, um, #ThisIsUs writers, this show can never end. Like never ever.

This post originally appeared on Shelby Spear.

Sappy soul whisperer, sarcasm aficionado and pro-LOVE Jesus-adoring mom of three Millennials writing stuff about motherhood and life, while hanging out with the hubs of 25 years.