Children do something truly amazing and they do it naturally; they play. They seek and find ways to play regardless of where they are or with whom they are surrounded. The essence of play is natural curiosity and a spirit of enjoyment and most of the time it pervades early childhood spilling over into middle childhood and even a bit into the preteen years.  

As a parent you are one of your child’s guides. You can steer them in healthy, empowering directions and you can help them become responsible global citizens. One of the most authentic and enjoyable ways to connect with your child is through play. Get down on their level. Crawl into their playhouse, help them dig the deep hole they have been working on in the backyard, take a few minutes and really be present to building the boat they are building with LEGOS.  

Through play, you and your child can connect on an easy and resonant level. While playing with your child you can introduce values and concepts of peace and gratitude. For example, after you dig the deep hole that your child has been working on, talk about where to put the dirt where it will be best for the yard and it will not interfere with the lives of the plants and animals there. While playing in your child’s playhouse model peaceful communication as you act out different characters using that as an opportunity to provide gratitude-based scripts (imaginary words different people would say to one another). An example would be, “Jimmy, thank you so much for coming over to my house. I am so grateful to have you here. I love to see the smiling light in your eyes. It gives me a peek into the beautiful person you are on the inside!” 

After, you can talk about how it might feel to be someone who received gratitude. How does it feel when someone says thank you? And, is it different when it is just a routine thank you as opposed to when it is heartfelt? Helping your child imagine what another person is feeling builds the skill of empathy. Empathetic people are more successful in all areas of life overall and have a higher quality of life. Interpersonal skills are incredibly important and you model these healthy behaviors for your child.

When you choose conscious awareness and full presence your child receives the benefit twofold. First, you are a real playmate engaged for a time in your child’s world. Second, a clear model of a present human being is directly in front of your child providing a blueprint for how to live.

If you are comfortable, you can even talk about peace and gratitude directly and in only positive terms. Use statements that affirm: “It feels so good to honor and respect every person we meet.” Instead of, “People who don’t honor each other aren’t peaceful and respectful.”    

Provide a positive script for your child. Carry this through into daily life too if you are able. And let’s be clear, everyone has bad days. You are a human being and an adult dealing with day to day life’s joys and hardships. Sometimes you may slip into a less positive mindset. In moments that are tough, you can bring yourself back to focus on that for which you are grateful.

 

Amy Leigh Mercree is a holistic health expert, medical intuitive and best selling author of 11 books including, A Little Bit of Mindfulness: An Introduction To Being Present and The Mood Book to name a few. Mercree teaches internationally sharing Next Level Healing, Meet Your Guides, Mindfulness Meditation, and Bestseller Bootcamp classes. 

At some point, every parent watches their child struggle to engage in successful play, get along with other children, make friends, and keep them. Whether it’s a phase where a child struggles or has a recurring problem, watching this struggle is painful for all parents. Helping your child to develop the social skills to play better is a key component in helping them to have positive relationships throughout their life. Children are learning not just to play better; they are learning to live better later on as they take those skills into every workplace and every interaction in the future. Some children need more direct instruction and help than others to learn how to play with different children and to improve their social skills.

Here Are Five Ways to Help Your Elementary School Age Child Play Better:

1. Teach your child the skills she needs. Ask yourself what your child tends to struggle with during play such as joining in, sharing, managing emotions, becoming overly excited with a friend, being too bossy, or being too grumpy. Then work on that skill and make it clear to your child that she has one mission for the play date or outing—practice that skill. For example, work on how your child can approach other children, what to say and what to do, role play and practice approaching kids with family members and then help her join in with friends or people she knows.

2. Seek playmates who are compatible. Pick a playmate whose temperament will allow your child a chance to play better and to practice the social behaviors you are working on. Compatibility does not necessarily mean putting two like-minded children together. For example, two overly bossy, rule-oriented children might argue and a domineering child might overshadow a shy child.

3. Pick an environment and activity that fosters positive play. Picking the right location and environment that supports your child’s mission is key to helping them put their best foot forward. Try to host the playdate so you can help shape the environment and remove toys or activities that have caused problems in the past. What is an activity my child enjoys? Will it be a structured or unstructured environment? In what environment does my child do well? Where do I have the most success with them? At home? A park or playground? A crowded bounce park where your child may be overstimulated may not be the best place to have a play date.

4. Help your child become a social observer. Build your child’s noticing and observation skills by having them be a social spy. Your child will rehearse with you ahead of time, then spy covertly on others to obtain key social information. Most children who struggle with social skills don’t stop to notice the important cues such as what they talk about at lunch, how loud other kids are on a train or in a museum, what their teacher does with their body language and tone of voice when they are frustrated.  

5. Debrief after your child’s playdate. Children learn by reflecting on what they are doing and how it impacts others.  Engage with your child, talk about the playdate in a nonjudgmental way. After the playdate is over, spend some time chatting with your child about what they did well and celebrate their effort saying, I heard you telling Leslie what to do and what game to play. Ask your child to consider the feelings of her playmate, asking her what do you think Leslie felt when you told her what to choose? What choices did Leslie get to make? What choices did you get to make? Let’s look at whether or not that was fair together. Then also ask your child what they struggled with and make a plan and practice for the future.

The more you pay attention to something the more it grows. Some children struggle with aspects of play and need more direct instruction and guidance to learn these skills. The more your child practices and gains confidence, the more she can feel comfortable in her own skin.

A personal coach, author, teacher, and speaker whose work has inspired conversations about social skills at schools and in homes all across the county, Caroline Maguire believes all children can shine. Her work is critical to parents who support children with executive function challenges struggling to show their best selves.

Photo: Melissa Heckscher

Dear Middle Child,

I’m sorry that your sister was crying while you were getting your award at the school assembly today. I feel bad that I had to turn my back on you so I could pick her up and tell her, “No, you cannot watch YouTube” while she whimpered, eager to get out of the quietness of the room.

I’m sorry about other things, too:

I’m sorry that your big brother seems to get all the discipline while your little sister claims the spotlight. You deserve the spotlight, too (and sometimes the discipline).

I’m sorry that it’s always noisy when you’re trying to do your homework—and that I’ve got a 20-minute time crunch to help you, after which your hard work will be interrupted by the boisterous presence of your siblings.

I’m sorry that the only “special time” we have together is when I’m driving you to and from your weekend activities. I want you to know that I LOVE those times, and I wish there were more of them.

I’m sorry that the dinner table is a nightly battleground for who can talk the loudest and act the craziest. (Sorry, also, that Daddy and I are always getting mad about that aforementioned craziness. We just want a quiet dinner!)

And I’m sorry about bedtime, when you’re the most open to conversation and when I wish I could talk with you longer, rub your back more, and wrap my arms around you for all the time it takes until you finally close your eyes and drift away.  I want to—and I try my best—but your brother and sister need me, too, and some nights I’m just so tired that I just want to drift away, too.

But, Middle Child, here’s what I am NOT sorry for:

I’m not sorry that you have a big brother who lets you bunk in his room when you’re scared at night and who reads his favorite books out loud to you until you decide they’re your favorite books, too.

I’m not sorry that you have a baby sister who adores you, who thinks you are her “prince” when you take her hands and dance around the living room to endless Alexa song requests. I’m not sorry when I see how sweet you are with her, how you encourage her, teach her, and play with her (even when all she wants to play is the make-believe fairy tale stuff that you don’t really like).

I’m not sorry that you have a playmate. A video game ally. A dance partner. A co-conspirator. Someone to catch your throw, to bounce with you on the trampoline, to jump up and down on the couch with you until we (once again) tell you to “Stop jumping on the couch!”

I’m not sorry when I see all three of you racing around the house, a wild herd of sweat and giggles that inevitably ends when one of you falls down and another runs to fetch an ice pack from the freezer.

And… I’m (sad, but) not sorry that… someday… when I’m no longer your everything.. you’ll have two people out there in the world rooting for you. Two people to fall back on when you’re lost or confused or heartbroken. Two people who know you better than anyone.

I’m not sorry you have these two special people to share your childhood with, these two special people who will love you in spite of all the bickering and battles and noise we face today.

I love you, Middle Child. And what I need you to remember is this: While I can’t always give you all of me—you always have all of my heart.

Love, Mommy

P.S.: To Little Sister and Big Brother: I love you with all of my heart, too! (Because mommy hearts do that.)

Melissa Heckscher is a writer and mother of three living in Los Angeles. She is a former staff writer for the Los Angeles Newspaper Group and the author of several books, including,The Pregnancy Test: 150 Important, Embarrassing, and Slightly Neurotic Questions (Quirk Books, 2011). 

We all know life changes when we have children. But how much?

My husband and I battle with this often, mostly because we were raised very differently.My husband came from the generation of “children are to be seen, not heard.” My mother, on the other hand, was all about sacrificing everything for your children—and she still is. I am definitely a mix of both schools of thought. I am my mother’s daughter, so when my son was born, my purpose in life changed. He needed me now and I had to be strong, healthy and there for him 24/7.

I remember a time we had a house party—not too many people, maybe 10 or 15. My son was probably five months old. My parents were also at the house. When 9 p.m. rolled around, I was trying to get our son to sleep. He was crying and fussy. The guests were loud—drinking, laughing and telling stories.

I began getting anxious. My husband became impatient with me, telling me to just leave him alone and he’d cry himself to sleep. My mom was in my ear that this wasn’t fair to my son and people needed to leave. That, or she was going to take him to her house to sleep.

I cried. My husband got angry. Our guests left.

Because this was early on in our parenting adventure, we both worked together to compromise and navigate the challenges we faced.

I tried to lighten up a little bit. If my son was up past his bedtime or had his bottle an hour later than planned, I tried hard not to lose it. I learned to become more flexible.

My husband compromised, too. He gained an appreciation for schedules and routines. He saw how much better things functioned in our household when my son followed a schedule for feedings and naps.

He was afraid that if we allowed my son to completely turn our world upside down, that we would lose ourselves in the process. I understood where my husband’s fear was coming from: My parents.

My parents are a pretty typical couple in their sixties: Married young, had children fast and lost all sense of personal identity. Now that they’re in their sixties, they find they don’t have much in common. They aren’t the same people they once were.

If you don’t take time for yourselves as a couple—to foster and nurture your love and connection—it can become lost over time. That’s not to say being a parent should take a backseat to your own personal desires, but I do believe there is a happy balance. My husband reminds me of this often and I think we’ve figured out what works for us.

We plan date nights at least twice a month. I am fortunate enough to know several very responsible young ladies that love babysitting our son. He enjoys having a playmate to spend time with him and do all those fun things that mommy is often too busy to do.

Regular date nights allow my husband and I time for uninterrupted conversation. We drink, we laugh, we kiss and we connect. This keeps us strong as a couple and makes us better parents to our son.

As wonderful as all this is, I haven’t completely rid my husband of his spontaneous ways. He is a risk-taker—much more than I am. He’s of the “act now, figure it out later” mindset. And while that’s all well and good to some extent, we have a child now and a child requires stability, security, and planning.

The biggest point of contention between us is my husband’s infatuation with owning a successful business. He is very dedicated and hardworking. He’s owned several businesses in the past, none of which have worked out exactly as he’d planned. I know he wants to prove to himself that he can succeed—and I know he can. He is very capable. But he’s also playing with our future from our finances to our retirement fund. It’s scary. We have a child to think about.

In three years we’ll be moving to the Florida Keys. I’ve researched the schools and they’re excellent. We’re minimalists, so We don’t need a huge home or property on the water: Just something nice enough for our little clan.

My husband will have a pension to help support us and I have an amazing job as a freelance writer, which offers flexibility in my schedule. I know my husband has thoughts of owning another business: A bait shop, a bar, a breakfast joint. And we’ve discussed why that may not be the best idea for our family.

I don’t want the responsibility. I don’t want the long hours, work on holidays and financial uncertainty. I want to be looking for a home equity line of credit and scholarships for our son, not discussing what to look for in a triple net lease. For me, owning a business has too many unknown variables. Taking risks and acting spontaneously isn’t practical when you have a child. Not unless you have a solid plan B.

I know my husband agrees. I would never dull the fire inside him. He is a passionate, dedicated and amazing man. He will work until he can no longer stand if it means making a better life for our family. I love him for all that he is and I envy his confidence. Because we are partners, he respects my apprehension and knows that owning a business in our next life might not be what’s best for our family as a whole.

Parenting means thinking outside of yourself: No longer being selfish or putting your own desires first. But parenting also comes with countless rewards that no business or career could ever replace.

Parenting is about compromise and sacrifice. But when you look into the eyes of your child and see the amazing human being you’ve created and know they are safe and secure because of you, no sacrifice seems too great.

 

Featured Photo Courtesy: ThePixelman via Pixabay

I am a 32 year old mother of a son and wife to an officer. I am honest about both the love and struggle of parenting. I enjoy being active and writing is my passion, second only to my family.

Now that summer is trickling to an end, your stuffed bears could be feeling the winter chill. Or that’s just what your kiddo says as she bundles Teddy up in pajamas, a dress or a superhero costume. Scroll down for 10 awesome outfits that’ll delight your cutie pie and his or her snuggle buddy. Ready for a photoshoot?

Teddys in Pajamas
Jumpsuits, onesies, whatever tiny article of one-piece clothing that won’t fit your babe anymore could be their teddy’s new sleepwear.

photo: Ralph Daily via flickr

Operation: Patient Teddy
Play a little game of stitch-me-up as you and your kiddo patches Teddy back to together. All they need are a few band-aids and a hygiene mask for a fun hospital role play.

photo: Christiaan Triebert via flickr

Princess Teddy
Dress your furry playmate as the royal they are born to be. Whether its a tiara or a crochet hat, your teddy royalty will be ready for a tea party in a fancy outfit that rivals the Queen’s.

photo: Aurimas via flickr

Superhero Sidekick
Spiderman, Superman, Batman, Captain America – all these famous superheroes wouldn’t be where they are now without their trusty sidekick. Transform your kid’s teddy bear into their favorite hero’s best friend and watch them take on the world!

photo: Popculture Geek via flickr

Everyday Teddy
If your Teddy and your babe can share clothes, let them! Some of our favorite costumes for teddy bears are the clothes we’ve seen on our little ones. Pretty soon your kiddo will grow out of them, but teddy never will.

photo: Anna via flickr

Star Wars Teddy
Any costume list would seem incomplete without a Star Wars outfit. This Darth Vader bear is a popular costume at Build-A-Bear, but you could also probably dress up your furry friend in a robe to look like a Jedi.

photo: Alex & Rachel Johnson via flickr

Occupation: Teddy
We’re not sure if this outfit is a school boy, post man or old school police officer, but the matching components, from the hat to the pants, are beyond cute. Our favorite feature? The name tag that reads “Teddy.”

photo: longzijun via flickr

Sweater Weather Teddy
Nothing screams fall like sweater weather. This simple outfit is absolutely adorable and your kid won’t have to worry about their fluffy buddy getting cold.

photo: longzijun via flickr

Autopilot Teddy
Put your teddy in aviation gear and take photos of them soaring above everyone.

photo: Crowcombe Al via flickr

Tinkerbell Teddy
Even teddies can role play as their favorite cartoon or storybook character. Dress up as a fairy, like the Tinkerbell panda below, or as Mickey Mouse. The possibilities are endless.

photo: Loren Javier via flickr

How does your kiddo dress up their teddy bear? Send us a picture to greatideas@tinybeans.go-vip.net and we’ll share them with our readers on social media!

— Christal Yuen