So I was browsing through Parents magazine<emparents doing market research and came across the opening “Note from the Editor” for this particular issue. I was a little confused as I read how she labels herself a mediocre mom and stated that she fails her children in some way every day. </emparentsThe writer is the editor of a very popular magazine, so it’s hard for me to imagine she is mediocre at much.

She goes on to explain that this month’s issue is the “Imperfect Issue” and to tell every parent reading it that “you’re doing great.” She ends her note by emphasizing that what really counts is our daily effort and self-forgiveness.

So, I’m all for creating humor out of unfortunate events. I’m a part of more than one sarcastic parenting group on social media (more market research…) and I love a good Instagram post about cracking open a bottle of wine at 4 p.m. because #sahmlife and laughing with other moms as we share endless stories of our beloved little ones. I can’t get enough, really.

I also completely believe that it takes a village to raise a child. Our world is scarier than ever and our country’s culture has evolved into one that prioritizes privacy over the community vibe that used to help families and parents grow together and protect one another.

I value that so many women are starting to turn to each other, creating their own “tribes” and “villages,” even if that means via facebook or virtual groups. I hope that continues. I’m even more excited to see women stepping up in one way or another to celebrate our differences (from breastfeeding and baby-wearing to even the discussion of vaccines) as well as our imperfections and just call it out for what it is when #momlife is just plain hard. 

What I struggle with is this idea of celebrating mediocrity and allowing this borderline-abusive self-talk in which moms are announcing that they are the world’s “okayest” mom or stating that they “fail their children every day.” Since when is a lack of perfection equal to failure?

I’m not disagreeing with this article or even the place in which the writer is coming from. I just want to hug this mom and remind her that, she is doing a great job and that there’s really no need to self-criticize to the point of labeling one as a failure. I literally winced when I read that sentence. 

I know I’m hard on myself as a mom. I know that I’m hard on myself in general. As I grow as a mother, wife, woman, coach and student, I grow from the person I am in that day, not from who I was the day before. We are all constantly evolving and changing and learning, and that is something to celebrate.

Forgiveness is something to celebrate. Finding the good in a bad situation is something to celebrate. Being a mom who loves her children and exemplifies that love in every way she can every single day, that is something to celebrate.

Striving for perfection is a little silly when there is no such thing. But striving for your best, whatever that looks like for you, that, I can get behind. Just like we want to lift up our children and our friends, just like we learned a long time ago that negative self-talk or beating ourselves up doesn’t really help us on our journey to self-improvement, I feel strongly that telling ourselves that we are bad mothers—”and that’s okay!”—is really not that okay. 

Talk to yourself as you would your child when they make a mistake and be kind to yourself, Mama. Every family has their own flow and it’s okay to do what works best for you, as long as it’s actually working for you. Let’s celebrate the small victories, let’s forgive our misjudgments and misfires and let’s learn from our experiences so that we can be even better at being who we are the next day.

Nicole L. Schmitz, helps others to improve their energy, digestion, sleep, nutrition, weight, and health conditions with simplified, cleaner eating, and better self-care. She is a mother, aspiring yogi, writer, and artist, loves living by the beach, and inspiring others to make clear and confident healthy lifest‌yle choices every day. 

 

Technology has been both a blessing and a curse on our society. On the one hand, it makes getting the information we need instantaneous, keeps us in touch when we need it, and has made us more productive. But on the other hand, it’s also a distraction and can be used for bad rather than good.

One of those distractions is social media, however, it’s not all bad. Social media has the power to benefit us in many ways. That’s why it’s important to teach your kids these 5 critical social media habits.

1. Never add or “friend” people you don’t know. Kids love being popular and it sure feels good when someone sends you a friend request. But if it’s not someone they know personally, it’s a bad idea. Not all people in the world are bad, but there’s no reason for strangers to follow your kids on Instagram or connect with them on FB. Some may even pose as kids in the same age group. Best to avoid the danger!

2. What you post is forever. The things you say and the photos you post on social media are up there forever. Even if you post something out of anger and later delete it, someone likely will have already taken a screenshot of it. Teach your kids to be kind online and not to post any questionable photos.

3. Watch out for advertisements. With influencers out there, your kids are exposed to advertisements constantly, often without realizing it. Show them what to look out for when using social media so they don’t fall into these traps.

4. Don’t spend too much time on it. Social media is a great tool for networking, particularly as one gets older and enters the job market. Building a network now can greatly help your kids as they move into college and then into the adult world. However, social media can be a huge time-suck too. Teach your kids to set time limits for how long they will spend on their social media apps so they get in the habit of putting their phones down.

5. Don’t believe everything you see. Adults do it too. We scroll through our newsfeeds and feel a bit envious at those friends of ours with so-called perfect lives. But not everything is as it seems. With people of all ages getting more clever about what they post, it can make everything look flawless. Remind your kids that being real is the most important thing.

You can set up your social media for perfection, but when you present yourself falsely, everything falls out from under you. Teach your child to be honest as they create their social media presence, something that is a true reflection of themselves. Because one day not too far away, a potential employer will be looking. Ask your kids what image they want a professional to see: is it one where they’re engaging in negative behavior or one where they are an inspiration?

This post originally appeared on S'moresUp blog.

Priya Rajendran  is a developer and “Silicon Valley tech mom” who’s created S’moresUp an innovative iPhone and Android solution to the problems of managing family’s day to day life, with over 100,000 moms and dads already on board.  She’s a technology veteran who lead the team behind Paypal's Wallet.

 

Forget about cinnamon spice. Even though everything is coming up pumpkins right now, McCormick has blend-style flavorings that are sweet, sweet sugary perfection!

Just in case you’re looking for a way to spice up your fave baked treat, ice cream sundae or anything else for that matter, now you can sprinkle a pinch of Birthday Cake, Lemon Ginger, Apple Cinnamon, Vanilla Cinnamon or Blueberry Vanilla flavoring on it.

According to McCormick’s website, you can use the Birthday Cake Sugar and Spice Blend in or on, “Baked goods, desserts, milkshakes and more.” The same goes for the other fab flavors.

So where can you get these tasty treat add-ons? Just visit McCormick’s website and click on “Where To Buy” for a retailer near you!

—Erica Loop

Featured photo: Candy Hunting via Instagram 

 

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Say goodbye to Imagination Pink and Briar Rose Gold, and hello to Arendelle Aqua. The Frozen-inspired hue is the new color trend strategy to hit Disney parks!

Like the past five color trend palettes, Imagination Pink, Magic Mirror Metallic, Potion Purple, Briar Rose Gold and Millennial Pink, Arendelle Aqua is sure to pop up in everything from delish desserts to magical merch—along with your Instagram feed. So what can you expect from this new color trend?

There are aww-dorable aqua Minnie ears.

You can also munch on cute cupcake confections.

https://www.instagram.com/p/B2DLKjYpkcl/

Score this blue backpack to wear with your aqua ears.

If you get thirsty, these beautifully blue beverages are pure perfection.

Sweet-seekers can get a sugar fix with these frosty Mickey-shaped treats.

Look for everything-aqua starting Sep. 13 in parks and online at shopdisney.com.

—Erica Loop

Featured photo: Disneytuned via Instagram 

 

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Who has the best playhouse on the block? Two-year-old Logan, that’s who! The tot from Ontario, Canada has a custom 350 square foot playhouse in her yard—and it’s a Harry Potter fan’s dream.

The playhouse, which was created by Charmed Playhouses, features Hogwarts Castle’s tower, Ollivander’s wand shop, Dursleys’ Private Drive and Platform 9¾.

Lucky Logan’s grandparents, Dave and Ruby Dunlop, commissioned the playhouse, which now resides in the family’s yard. Not only does the exterior look like an IRL Harry Potter vision, but the interior also boasts everything from owl-themed armchairs to an electric fireplace.

https://www.instagram.com/p/B1ZnR2RFieD/

As if this pure Potter perfection isn’t enough, Charmed Playhouses has also made a Neverland pirate ship (with a ball pit and fort), Rapunzel’s Cottage and Belle’s Cottage!

—Erica Loop

Featured photo: Charmed Playhouses via Instagram

 

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Photo: Melanie Forstall

The pressure on women today is great, as the expectations for us to ‘have it all’ continue to mount. We must be all things to everyone; do it all, have it all, with the added pressure to be the best, most blessed, women alive. It’s no wonder women are feeling like failures.

It’s taken me a few years, several successes and failures, and a wise realization that I don’t have to keep up with these expectations for having it all—because I already do. And you probably do, too.

I love my job. I mean, I really, really love my job. I love teaching and especially love teaching future teachers. There are opportunities for me to stretch my creativity and step out of my comfort zone. I also have the chance to interact with and advise students individually as they navigate college life. I have a great deal of flexibility in my time commitments so I rarely, if ever, miss the important family times.

But there’s a catch. In higher education, there’s a little thing called rank and tenure. If you think of it as a hierarchy, it starts at adjunct, then instructor, then on to assistant professor and so on. Even though I have a Ph.D., I’m an instructor. Not quite the bottom of the barrel, but certainly not up in the desirable ranks, either.

At some point, I had to have a reckoning with myself. I may not ever move up the ranks and that has to be okay. Because, the truth is, while I really do love my job, my job isn’t everything. My job doesn’t define me nor does my job complete me as a person. My job is one part of a much bigger picture.

Honestly, no one cares if I’m a ranked professor or not. My students don’t care. I wouldn’t be a better teacher or a better person if I was. The only person who may care about my rank is me and guess what? I’ve decided not to care. I have accepted things as they are and appreciate my job for the long list of pluses. I have a great job. Period.

As a writer, it’s not much different. There are countless bylines that I wish I could land. There is always a longing for more ‘likes,’ and more followers. There’s always an opportunity to see what I am missing. But my writing isn’t everything. My writing doesn’t define me nor does it complete me as a person.

No one else is looking at my work and thinking how much better I would be if I could only land a Huffington Post byline. The only person who cares about that is me and I’ve decided to stop caring. I actually have a long list of bylines and my catalogue of publications is something to be really proud of. So, guess what? I am really proud of what I have accomplished.

As a mother, well this one can be tricky. There’s a heap of expectations out there and I’ve found it can be hard to drown out the noise. Comparison is the thief of joy and when left unchecked, the spiral into disappointment can be swift. It can be hard for contemporary families to not see what’s around them, sometimes. I readily admit it can be hard not to compare our life to friends’ lives. It’s really easy to compare kitchens, cars, and vacations.

At the end of the day, I ask myself if I am happy. I wonder if our kids are happy. I think about my husband’s happiness. If we are all honest, truthfully, we really are happy and for me, that’s all that matters. Instead of focusing on the kitchen renovation that I wish I had, I focus on the fact that I have a fully functioning kitchen. I have everything we need to make dinner, homemade cakes, and good memories.

We may not travel internationally or spend a month out west every summer but we do make the most of our getaways. We focus on the time spent together as a family. I spend more time gazing out into view from our balcony in Navarre Beach, Florida and zero time wishing we were in Turks and Caicos. It is enough. The way we spend time together as a family is enough. Besides, where we chose to vacation does not define me as a person or us as a family.

Every year during the lead up to Halloween and Christmas, I make my kids a variety of candies and baked goods. Things like white chocolate dipped strawberry ghosts and brownie and pretzel reindeer. Let me be very clear—my baking skills suck. The ghosts usually look sad and scared of me, and often my reindeer look more like grief-stricken dogs with baskets for hats. But this minor detail does not stop me from doing this each year and loving every single minute of it.

Why? Because nothing is perfect. My baking skills do not define me. No job, no life, no kitchen, or experience is absolutely perfect. The reason we feel so much pressure is because of the expectation for perfection or the unattainable search for better than what we currently have. You want to have it all? Easy. Don’t buy into this falsehood.

There is a great deal of joy to be had in appreciating the moments that are simply ours to enjoy. No one else cares about any of this so why should we? Sometimes, we get in the way of our own happiness.

The truth is, I do have it all and you probably do, too. How? By letting go of comparisons and focusing on the good that already exists. Too often, we’ve just spent too much time wishing for more or something else and that reality slipped by us. Remember, nothing and no one is perfect. But I’d argue that when you look carefully at the beauty that surrounds you now, in its current, unchanged state, that it’s pretty close to perfection.

Melanie Forstall is a full-time mother, full-time wife, full-time teacher, and never-enough-time blogger at Melanie Forstall: Stories of Life, Love, and Mothering. She holds a doctorate in education and yet those many years of schooling have proved to be utterly useless when it comes to actual mothering.

In celebration of National Aunt Day (Jul. 26) your fave aunt wants to give you something for a free. That is, your favorite Auntie Anne!

The pretzel shop has a sweet, or salty, BOGO pretzel deal going on right now. But you have to act fast—because it ends on Sunday, Jul. 28.

So how can you get this buy one, get one deal? Download Auntie Anne’s Pretzel Perks app and get a free Original or Cinnamon Sugar Pretzel with any pretzel purchase. And bonus––you’ll also start earning points towards free pretzel perfection with each of your eatery purchases.

—Erica Loop

Featured photo: Auntie Anne’s via Instagram 

 

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It appears the nightmare isn’t quite over for the “Monterey Five.” Despite the very final resolution at the end of the first season, the Big Little Lies Season 2 trailer spells out plenty of new trouble for the unlikely crew of mom friends.

Now bonded in their shared secret the women of Monterey face a new adversary in the form of Perry’s mother played to perfection by the one and only Meryl Streep.

It’s not just Streep who has her eyes on the ladies behind her son’s death, however. The entire town is still gossiping about the night of the big gala. “We’re kidding ourselves if we think people will stop talking,” Celeste, played by Nicole Kidman, says to the other women.

Streep’s character is looking to do more than just talk as she has clearly made an appearance in town to exact some type of revenge. Like mother, like son? Fans will have to wait and see, but the wait won’t be much longer as the teaser trailer also reveals the Big Little Lies Season 2 premiere date, which is set for Jun. 9.

—Shahrzad Warkentin

Featured photo: HBO via YouTube

 

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It’s the circle of life! Disney just dropped its newest—and longest—trailer for The Lion King and you need to watch it right now, because the mind of our ’90s youth have just been blown.

The highly-anticipated trailer was recently screened at CinemaCon and now fans finally have their first long look at this “live-action” (well, CGII) remake of The Lion King of our childhoods. As if we weren’t already not-so-patiently waiting for the film to hit the big screen, now we have real reasons to anticipate the Simba and Nala’s return.

If you were wondering how Disney could turn the iconic animated flick into a live-action movie that’s all about animals (without looking too cartoonish), get ready for some super-charged realism. Based on the just-under-two-minute trailer, The Lion King reboot is CGI perfection and so much more.

Disney’s The Lion King roars into theaters on Jul. 19, 2019.

—Erica Loop

Featured photo: Walt Disney Studios via YouTube

 

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It looks like someone has a mini me. Serena Williams and her daughter, Olympia, hit the court together recently—and there’s video of the absolute adorable incident!

She’s a star on the court—and we’re not talking about Serena. Even though the celeb mama is one of the top athletes in the world, this time it’s not the elder Williams who’s showing off performance perfection. (And it’s not her little sister, Venus, either.)

In a “like mother, like daughter” moment, Williams’ 18-month-old daughter took off, running onto the court (followed by dad Alexis Ohanian). Williams captured the magical moment on her Instagram Story, commenting, “Look at that footwork!” as the tot lost her shoe!

photo: Serena Williams via Instagram

At one point the little girl, seeming frustrated, laid down on the ground and covered her face. Williams noted the mommy-daughter similarities, adding, “Ah sweetie, you look like mommy when she’s mad on the court” through her own giggles.

While the tot may have some time before she wins a Grand Slam of her own, if this video is any indication of what’s to come—we might see another Williams (or in this case, Ohanian) on the pro circuit someday.

—Erica Loop

Featured photo: Serena Williams via Instagram 

 

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