I was in another part of the house when my 4 year-old daughter shouted out that she needed to be wiped (she had dropped a dookie in the loo).  A relative was visiting and closest to the bathroom so she said she would help out.

The following conversation happened between them.

My Daughter:  WAIT! Don’t flush it. I want to see my poo!

Relative: Yuck! Gross! No. Why do you want to look at your poop?

That was it. A short, fairly typical conversation between kids and the adults who wipe their bums.

Who cares?  I never did…but then I learned some stuff which made me care, and I wanna share it with you.

Pooping Is Often Associated with Feelings of Shame
Over the years I’ve worked with clients (both adults and children) who experienced psychological and/or physical issues associated with defecation.  One thing they all shared was a feeling of shame associated with pooing. (Many different diagnoses exist in both medicine and psychology that are used to identify clusters of symptoms shared by individuals around this issue.  I’m not going to get into all of this here but you can explore more if you want on your own time.)

The bottom line about all of this is the following:

WHEN YOUR CHILD TAKES A POO DON’T SHAME THEM!

This is where the tricky part comes in because a lot of jokes in society are associated with pooping AND laughing/joking about poop is easier to do than sitting down and having a serious conversation about it.

As a result, we (humans) often make fun of or joke about our own poop as a way to deflect our feelings of uncomfortableness when talking about the topic.

When you are changing a dirty diaper or wiping a poopy toddler’s bum please be thoughtful in what you say in front of their little ears. I know it can be challenging and I bite my tongue a lot of the time because I want to say stuff to my kids as if they are my college roommates.

For example, DON’T say these things to your children (even though I’m sure they pop into your head as they do in mine):

  • Ew, it smells in here!
  • OMG what died?
  • **make retching sound** I’m gonna be sick!
  • Dude it’s toxic in here! I need a gas mask….**take deep breath before entering loo**

What you CAN say and SHOULD say is stuff like this:

  • Let’s see if it is hard or soft. (Gross, I know. But it tells you if your child needs more fiber and less cheese)  :)
  • Wow! That’s a HUGE turtle log…well done. Your tummy must feel better.
  • Hmmm….little rabbit pellets.  Looks like we need some more fruit and veggies.
  • How do you think it smells? Strong or mild? (Again, a poop reflects the diet of the defecator. Balanced diet usually = mild smelling poos.  Off balanced diets usually = off smelling poos.)

Bottom line: Be aware of what and how you comment on your child’s droppings.

Remember, it is completely normal for young children to be interested in looking at and exploring their poop, especially during those early potty training days.  Pooping/peeing are one of the first things a child learns to control about their bodies.

Potty training is a huge developmental milestone both psychologically and physically. During this process issues of control often arise for children (parent’s asking for children to use the loo and kids not wanting to listen to parents etc) which if not managed well may create “issues” later on in life. This is why it’s so important to be positive during the potty training process.

Think about your childhood experience with poop and how your parents/siblings/caretakers made you feel about it.  How do you feel about it now?

EXAMINATION of ELIMINATION= EXPLANATION

I know you’re thinking I’ve completely lost my marbles. I will admit to having misplaced a few, but not the majority of them. Let me explain what I’m talking about.

In all the baby courses my spouse and I took before the arrival of our first kid, every single instructor spoke about and taught us the importance of knowing how to understand/interpret our baby’s various poops. From the color to the texture and everything in between.

Did you know that people have been known to try and steal the poop of world leaders?  They take the poop to a physician who examines the “sample” and provides an extensive health report about the leader.  Our fecal matter tells physicians how our bodies are functioning. Let’s not teach our children that poop is something to be ashamed of and ignored but rather explored and understood.

When we take our pet’s to the vet what do they always ask for?  A poo sample. I laugh out loud imagining what a waiting room at a physician’s office would look like with a bunch of patients sitting there with their “poo sample.” I mean, what do you bring it in? Tupperware? Plastic baggie? Foil?

After your little one has a poop, check it out.  Examine it (from a distance of course) :) and talk about it with them.  Read up on different poos and what they mean if you don’t know. Knowledge of any kind is power….even poo power!

The Wipe-Up
Our poop tells the sordid tale of how our bodies are functioning.  It’s important to teach our children more than their letters and numbers.  We need to also teach them how their bodies work and how to use everyday poos…oops, I meant clues, to help manage their body and mind.

After each poo I always “analyze it” with my children.  It teaches them and helps me know what to feed them over the next few meals.

It’s a look-and-learn experience.  Most poos my kids do we check out together (they are still young and need help wiping).  We discuss how their body is functioning (which is why my daughter asked our relative to look at her poo) and if appropriate, have a little chuckle about something they find funny.

Don’t worry. I won’t be chasing after them once they are older asking to look at their poop.  I will however ask them questions about it if they complain of stomach aches or not feeling well.

The fact that I have never shamed my kids and we openly talk about (sometimes laugh about) farts and poos is a healthy thing.  Of course I have limits…such as no poo/fart jokes at the dinner table.

EVERYBODY POOPS.   SO LETS (AS A SOCIETY) STOP SHAMING IT AND START CELEBRATING THE POO.

I am a 42-year-old biological mother of two young children in a same-sex relationship, a clinical psychologist with a specialty in neuropsychological assessment, a music therapist, a trainer of therapy dogs and ex-communicated Mormon from Indiana with a wicked sense of humor. 

It’s finally spring—and that means its time to round up all the kid’s shows and movies coming to Netflix in April! You can expect to see some new seasons of Netflix Original cartoons, plus some fan favorites coming to the streaming provider this month.

Scroll on for our top kids and family streaming picks for April.

Spirit Riding Free Season 8

Don't miss the final season of Spirit Riding Free as Lucky adjusts to big changes. Follow her and friends Pru and Abigail as they manage thoughts of boarding school and new babies at home.

Season eight rides into town on Apr. 5.

No Good Nick

In the Netflix Original, No Good Nick, a young grifter appears on a family's doorstep with surprising news that she may be a distant relative. 

Meet the fam on Apr. 15.

Super Monsters Furever Friends

The Super Monsters and their families get for food, fun and games in the park, and meet their fellow monster pets, too!

The furry pets arrive Apr. 16.

Pinky Malinky Part 2

The gang is back! Catch up with Pinky Malinky and pals, JJ and Babs on the new season of Pinky Malinky as the hilarious hotdog finds himself on all sorts of adventures.

Watch the new season starting Apr. 22.

She-Ra and the Princesses of Power Season 2

She-Ra and her team of princesses continue their training but they're still trying to catch up with Catra and Horde on season two of She-Ra and the Princesses of Power. Can the team win the battle against evil?

Catch up with Adora on Apr. 26.

Trolls: The Beat Goes On! Season 6

The trolls are back for another fun-filled season! This round, the gang deals with a day without a holiday, camping and dancing with antics from Biggie and Guy Diamond.

Join the fun on Apr. 9.

...And Even More Family Movies!

IMDB

Aside from Netflix's lineup of original content, some classic family movies new to the streaming provider are hopping into the rotation.

In the family and kids genre, settle in for Pokémon the Series: Sun & Moon: S2, Spy KidsThe Golden CompassThe Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants and The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2 on Apr. 1

Kids' Titles Leaving Netflix in April

IMDB

Get ready to say goodbye to several kid favorites in April, too, as these titles are leaving Netflix:

Leaving Apr. 1:

  • Happy Feet
  • Pokemon: XY Seasons 1-2

Leaving Apr. 7:

  • Star Wars: The Clone Wars
  • Star Wars: The Clone Wars: Seasons 1-5
  • Star Wars: The Clone Wars: The Lost Missions

––Karly Wood

All photos: Courtesy of Netflix

 

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photo: psyberartist via flickr 

These aquatic giants are gentle, clever and very, very big. Read on for some fun facts about the beloved manatee.

1. There are three species of Manatee (Trichechus). They are the West African manatee (T. senegalensis), the Amazonian manatee (T. inunguis) and the West Indian manatee (T. manatus). The West Indian manatee is the species seen frequenting the Florida Coast.

2. The common nickname for the manatee is the sea cow.

3. Manatees are believed to account for at least some of the early-explorer’s mermaid sightings.

4. They can reach 13-feet long and weigh as much as 3,000 pounds.

5. But don’t be fooled by their size: they are gentle giants. They graze on water grasses, weeds and algae. They are the only aquatic herbivore.

6. In fact, an adult manatee can eat 1/10 of its weight in a day.

7. Manatees use their flippers to walk along the bottom of the body of water, feeling for food. When they find it, they scoop it up toward their mouths with their flipper.

8. Manatees are mammals, and they have one baby every two to five years. The babies are born underwater. Females are pregnant for about 1 year. The young nurse for 1-½-2 years.

9. Manatees live in the water but they need air to survive. They surface every few minutes when active and can stay under for as long as 20 minutes if still.

10. Babies need help getting up to the surface for their first breath. Shortly after birth they are able to swim on their own: usually within an hour.

11. Most mammals have seven neck vertebrae but the both the manatee and the sloth have just six. This means that manatees can’t turn their heads.

12. Besides the dugong, the manatee’s closest living relative is the elephant.

13. Manatees can actually swim up to 20 MPH.

14. Manatees face a number of dangers in their native waters: boating accidents can harm or even kill manatees and things like plastics in the water can cause health problems. You can learn more about how to protect manatees even if you live thousands of miles away, by visiting Save the Manatee. 

—Amber Guetebier

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Gerber recently announced the winner of their 2018 baby contest. And this year they are making major milestones with the first Gerber’s baby with Down Syndrome. For the first time in eight years (the contest began in 2010), the winner is a child with Down syndrome. One-year-old Lucas Warren, from Dalton, Georgia is the new Gerber baby, and we’ve got the scoop for you!

 

https://www.instagram.com/p/Be5djURhrDV/?taken-by=gerber

The 2018 spokesbaby is a coveted title that only one little guy or girl can win. This year’s contest featured 140,000 entries. Lucas’s mom, Cortney Warren, hadn’t even given the contest a thought until a relative showed her an ad for it. Warren posted her son’s photo on Instagram along with the Gerber contest’s hashtag.

Lucas’s dad, Jason Warren, told Today, “We’re hoping this will impact everyone — that it will shed a little bit of light on the special needs community and help more individuals with special needs be accepted and not limited.”

CEO and President of Gerber, Bill Partyka, told Today, “This year, Lucas is the perfect fit.” He noted that the company has always held the belief that, “every baby is a Gerber baby.”

This year’s Gerber baby is a winner on many different levels. From his super-sweet smile to his ability to affect others, Lucas is the perfect pick for this highly coveted title.

What do you think about the new Gerber baby? Share your thoughts in the comments below.

—Erica Loop

 

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A few summers ago when I was at my hair salon getting a haircut, I witnessed the most helicopter mom moment ever, and since I wasn’t up to my blow dry yet, I got to hear every cringe worthy second. I watched a mother accompany her soon-to-be-college freshman son to the beauty salon, go with him to the stylist’s chair, and then proceed to tell the stylist how her son wanted his haircut.

He was leaving for college, and he couldn’t manage a haircut on his own. Oh my.

Having taken a few kids to college myself, I knew she was in for a major shock on college move in day—not a shock like his roommate was heavily tattooed, or that the bathroom down the hall was coed—bigger than that.

The shock will be that no one at Freshman College Orientation will want to talk to her, the mom.

When students arrive at college orientation, the moms (and their carefully organized folders of very important information for moving your child into college) are invisible to the orientation staff; they only have eyes and ears for the freshman student. The college staff doesn’t care that you are standing there smiling and organized and ready to answer all the questions you have been answering for the last 18 years. Name, social security number, dorm room, you name it, they don’t want to hear it from you. They want to hear it from the student, and rightly so.

Will you be ready to step back and allow your child to speak? More importantly, will your child be ready? Will they be ready to look a stranger in the eye and speak up?

They will be—if we are purposeful about encouraging them to speak for themselves as they grow up. If we don’t, we run the risk of them not knowing how to do it when they are old enough to leave home.

Below are a few ideas for situations when kids could speak for the themselves and gain the experience they need to grow into self-sufficient and self-assured young people.

Let’s allow our kids to arrive at college orientation confident young adults able to speak for themselves.

  1. Have your child call their grandparents to tell them about their week.
  2. When your family orders takeout, have your child call in the order.
  3. When you go to the doctor’s office, give your child the insurance card and then take a seat in the waiting room. Or stay home and let them navigate the whole process.
  4. When your son turns 18, he is required to register with Selective Service. He should fill out that paperwork himself.
  5. At 18, they can sign their own school permission slips. Allow them to do it.
  6. Have them pay the bill and leave the tip when your family eats out.
  7. At family gatherings, have them sit with a distant relative and have an actual conversation.
  8. Make them be the one to tell the dentist that they never floss.
  9. Let them speak to their hair stylist about their own hair!

I found that practicing these scenarios ahead of time helped when my kids seemed anxious. I have been the one doing all the talking since they were born, and while they picked up a few things from my example; practice helps. So, go ahead and do some role plays before they check in at the doctor, or pay the restaurant bill, or have that conversation with the distant relative.

You will be glad you did on college move-in day, when your child arrives poised and confident, and no one cares that you are there… ready to sign them up for college the same way you remember signing them up for kindergarten—which seems like it was just yesterday.

Featured Photo Courtesy: chuttersnap/Unsplash

Maureen Paschal is a writer, teacher-librarian and mom. She blogs at Raising The Capable Student where she keeps family life a priority and school success in perspective. Her work has been featured in On Parenting at The Washington Post, Grown and Flown, Perfection Pending and Today Parents.

We’ve all been there. You get the annual Christmas card from your cousin, sister-in-law, aunt or some other relative and cringe. There are perfectly posed pics of the kids looking like they just walked off of some mini model runway. And then there are the stories. Oh, the stories. Well, one family’s annual Christmas update wasn’t exactly what everyone expected. Check out this brutally honest Christmas card and you’ll see why the internet is kind of freaking out about it.

photo: PNWndn via Reddit

One Reddit user submitted a fabulously funny pic of a Christmas card from “The Allen Family.” Instead of the typical glowing details that highlight a year filled with honor rolls, first place trophies and family wins, this card is almost unbearably honest.

What’s so honest about this Christmas update. To start with, apparently little Landon is, “precocious and super annoying.” Umm, yeah sounds like a 3-year-old. And, of course, most of the artwork he brings home is “awful.” Hmm. Maybe a little harsh. Right?

Then there’s Hunter. He’s energetic, but he’s also, “surprisingly unathletic.” And he just got cut from the soccer team. No trophy here!

But let’s not forget about 18-year-old Maddy. What does she do? She, “goes over her data each month on her cell phone.” Typical!

And if you were wondering about mom and dad, well “Tom still tucks his t-shirts into his jeans and just took money from our retirement account to buy a fishing boat.”

Do you have a funny Christmas card story? Share yours in the comments below.

Video courtesy of ABC News via Facebook

Nothing in this world is sweeter than the love your children (or grandchildren!), have for you. In this adorable viral video on ABC News, two-year-old Amari Jackson is saying a bittersweet farewell to his grandmother. Doesn’t it make you smile?

Do your kids have a favorite relative? Tell us in the comments below!

h/t: ABC News

In honor of World Elephant Day we’ve rounded up our five favorite pachyderms who’ve been gracing the pages of children’s lit for generations. If you haven’t already introduced your kiddos to some of these little elephants, tusk us, they’ll love them. And so will you!

Photo Brendan Adkins via Flickr Creative Commons 

Babar the Elephant

One of the most recognizable storybook elephants, Babar first appeared on the scene in France in 1931. He quickly made his way to the United States where he fast became a staple in children’s book literature. Author and illustration Jean de Brunhoff wrote seven Babar books, and his son Laurent continued the tradition with dozens more.
Photo by Amber Guetebier

Horton

Dr. Suess’ infamous gentle giant most well known as the defender of a tiny world in Horton Hears a Who, he also battles rain, freezing snow and ridicule to protect an abandoned egg in Horton Hatches an Egg. Both books have been animated and in 2008 a CGI movie version of Horton Hears a Who came out, reviving his popularity.

Ella the Elegant Elephant

A relative newcomer to the kid lit scene, this sweet and spirited little elephant has increased in popularity due to an animated series based on the books by Carmela and Steven D’Amico. Ella’s signature piece? A magic hat that can change her into almost anything.

Photo by Amber Guetebier

The Saggy Baggy Elephant

The 1947 Little Golden Book classic written by Kathryn and Byron Jackson tells the story of Sooki the elephant. Truth tell: it’s basically about an elephant being bullied by other animals until she finds her tribe. While the story is a little dated, the art by Gustav Tenggren is beautiful and this classic still remains a childhood staple.

Photo by Amber Guetebier

Elmer the Elephant

Kids will quickly become fans of David McKee’s colorful, patchwork elephant. Elmer has starred in more than 30 original stories and his books have been translated into many languages. You can even find bilingual editions including Italian/English.

Who is your favorite storybook elephant? Let us know in the comments below!

—Amber Guetebier