Becoming a stay at home mom is no easy task.

I went from working six, 10-hour days a week to being a stay at home mom. I loved my job as a manager of a restaurant. Having that job for years I was constantly busy and was used to that lifestyle. However, due to the start of the COVID pandemic, and being four months pregnant, I was unexpectedly laid off. I did not expect the transition to be as difficult as it was.

At first, it was okay. I was pregnant. I was tired and due to medical conditions, I had doctor appointments twice a week for my second and third trimester. So not having to reschedule or miss out on work to make these appointments was a positive thing. I was able to sleep whenever I wanted (which being pregnant was awesome!). My fiance worked harder than ever to make up for the lack of income. I thought once I had the baby, I would return to work. 

Once our bundle of joy came, we made the decision that I would stay at home with the baby for at least a year. It has been five months of being a full-time stay at home mom. It is the hardest, most rewarding job I have ever had.

All you might hear is how great being a stay at home mom is. Well, if I am being honest, I still have a hard time. Selfish is how I feel writing that. But the transition from working full-time to being at home with a baby is difficult. Being in a pandemic does not help at all.

Honestly, I am tired and that is okay. Being tired was something I was not expecting because I was constantly on the go while working.  I am still surprised at the never-ending tasks of being a mother and taking care of a household. Cleaning, cooking, getting pooped on and the always shocking throw up are just the beginning of all of my days. Every night is always a tale of unexpected events with a newborn.

To each and every mom (and dad) whether you work or solely stay at home with the kids, you rock! We do not get the credit we deserve (especially from our kids). This “job” is never-ending but is amazing and rewarding! I was never expecting to be a stay at home mom. Even though I can tell you a bunch of reasons why I am tired, this is the best thing that has ever happened to me. I feel blessed to be a stay at home mom.

 

 

Hi! I'm Carolyn Erickson! I am from Wisconsin and mother of a beautiful baby girl. I'm a new stay at home mom and I am loving it. I also am beginning my career as a freelance writer and blogger!

Have you been baking up a storm this holiday season? This time of year has us all reaching for our favorite sweet treat and Instagram recently released the most popular cookies in each state in a fun infographic.

The map takes eight popular varieties that include peanut butter, shortbread, crinkle, oatmeal, chocolate chip, sugar, gingerbread and snickerdoodles and which state loves them the most. Scroll down to see if your state is accurate!

photo: Instagram

To organize the information, Instagram used data from Feed and Stories over the last month to see which cookies were mentioned the most based on location. Perhaps the most shocking is that chocolate chip cookies are only the most fave in one state––Illinois.

Happy baking!

––Karly Wood

Feature photo: Monika Grabkowska via Unsplash

 

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This is the way! Add this new eyeshadow palette to your wish list just in time for Season 2 of The Mandalorian. The new ColourPop palette based on The Child (AKA Baby Yoda) is available for purchase now. 

 

This monochromatic olive green palette features a range of finishes from matte, metallic, and our iconic Super Shock formula. Create the cutest looks in the galaxy with the fun olives, golds, and neutral tones.

The limited-edition palette is limited to 2 per transaction and costs $16 each.

—Jennifer Swartvagher

Featured photo: ColourPop

 

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It’s terrifyingly cute! The next limited edition Disney x JuJuBe line is inspired by Tim Burton’s The Nightmare Before Christmas will be available Thurs., Oct. 22 at 4 p.m. PT. The spooky print is featured on JuJuBe’s diaper bags, backpacks, totes, pacifier pods and much more. 

Disney x JuJuBe

 

The Nightmare Before Christmas Lineup:

  • BFF mini BFF Bundle
  • Be Cool
  • Be Dapper
  • Be Light Plus
  • Be Packed
  • Be Quick
  • Be Right Back
  • Be Set
  • Changing Pad
  • Messenger Strap
  • Midi Plus Backpack
  • Paci Pod
  • Super Be Plus
  • Zealous Backpack

Disney x JuJuBe

Find all your favorite characters like Jack Skellington, Sally, and Oogie Boogie shining in spectral silver on an inky black background as dark as Halloween night. Each character floats in frightful frames surrounded by other ghostly residents of Halloween from Scary Teddy to Lock, Shock and Barrel. You won’t find any tricks inside, just the treat of iconic Giant Snake mysteriously slithering on purple lining. 

Disney x JuJuBe

Jack and Sally meet again as their outlined heads form matte black zipper pulls that ghoulishly adorn the double-zippered bags and individually on the other select bags. The Nightmare Before Christmas print is sure to be every Disney fan’s dream come true. 

—Jennifer Swartvagher

All photos courtesy of JuJuBe

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Almost universally, parents experience the ritual of teaching children to say the “magic words”: please and thank you.  Many children get the idea that there is only one magic word: “please-and-thank-you.” It’s considered a triumph when children begin to use the words spontaneously.

However, the practice of calling them “magic words” seems to convey to children that if they use them, their wish will be granted. They will receive the candy, the toy, the outing, whatever is the object of their desire. This may be because the desired object is something a parent already intends to give the child. In essence, this is a bribe intended to get the child to say “please-and-thank-you.”

When the magic words don’t work—when the child is asking for something the parent is unable or unwilling to give—little Evan or Marguerite is disappointed, even upset to the point of melt-down. It’s a sad lesson in life that there really are no magic words that result in wish-fulfillment.

Instead of bribing kids into saying please and thank you, I recommend using another old standby of child-raising: The notion that children imitate adults.

But how often do children really see please and thank you, and that other essential phrase “you’re welcome,” used in the home or by parents? Manners can become a little lax when you see someone every day.

How difficult is it to say, quite naturally, “Please pass the salt” or “Please help me put away these groceries” or “Please keep the noise down. I’m going to have a nap”? And then thank the other adult when she or he complies. How often do we say, “You’re welcome” when you give someone something they have requested? And how often do we say “please” and “thank you” sarcastically, as if they shouldn’t have to be said at all? 

While family life gives plenty of opportunities for demonstrating the proper way to use the magic words, so too do interactions in the outside world. How many of us remember to say “thank you” to the server who brings our food? How many forget the “please” in the simple sentence, “Please bring me a glass of water”? When thanked by a person you’ve helped in some way, do you answer, “You’re welcome” or at least “No problem,” the modern-day equivalent?

Personally, I think that the most important time to use the words, “please,” “thank you,” and “you’re welcome” is within the family. They are words of acknowledgment, appreciation, and goodwill that surely our family members deserve. If it feels weird to say these words to your partner, ask yourself why. Do you feel that less politeness is due to family members than to a stranger? I think they deserve more. 

Of course, in daily interactions, it’s easy to forget saying please and thank you to someone you know so well. Their compliance is assumed, so much so that the sentence, “No, I can’t help you with the groceries” is shocking.

But that’s another thing that children need to learn—that sometimes their requests, even prefaced with the magic words, will receive a negative response. Then they have a chance to learn the words “I’m sorry,” as in “I’m sorry. I didn’t know you were on the phone” or “I’m sorry. I can’t help right now, but give me ten minutes and I will.”

My point is that please-and-thank-you aren’t magic words at all, that you’re welcome and I’m sorry should go along with them, and that using them as everyday words within your household is the best way to teach them.

After all, don’t we also say, “Children learn what they live”?

Hi! I'm a freelance writer and editor who writes about education, books, cats and other pets, bipolar disorder, and anything else that interests me. I live in Ohio with my husband and a varying number of cats.

If you didn’t already know, The Tiny Chef is the world’s tiniest herbivore chef. He loves whipping up teeny meals as the host of The Tiny Chef Show. Cheffy just released his new book, The Tiny Chef and da mishing weshipee blook, with Penguin Random House.

According to the book’s description: “This debut picture book adventure finds the Tiny Chef at home in his kitchen on a beautiful day, but not all is well inside the Chef’s stump. He’s misplaced his favorite recipe book—the one he uses to cook all of his best dishes, like his famous stew! What is the Chef to do?! He practically tears apart his house looking for it. He gets so frustrated he throws a tantrum. But then he does what we all have to do sometimes when we’re upset. He counts to ten. He goes for a nice long walk. And that’s when inspiration strikes! A little rosemary, some mushrooms, and the Chef might have a brand-new recipe after all. And that’s when his recipe book finally appears. Right where he left it—now isn’t that weird?”

Los Angeles vegan restaurant Little Pine has crafted a recipe for the Chef’s famous stew, which will be featured on the endpapers.

Cheffy is very excited that his friend RuPaul will be narrating the audiobook with him. RuPaul helps share Cheffy’s missing “Blegaful Shew” recipe at the end  in hopes that parents and kids will cook it together after reading the book

The Tiny Chef said, “Moognesh me im shtill en blabsholute shock Wu wead da blook wif me. blits twuwy a dweam come twu and I can neber fank my fwend Kweesten Blell enuf fo makin et blappen.”

Thanks to Cheffy’s friends, Kristen Bell and Imagine Entertainment, The Tiny Chef Show will soon be on the big screen. Bell said, “The Tiny Chef adds a refreshing dose of good to the universe, and for that, I am thankful.” 

The Tiny Chef and da mishing weshipee blook is on sale now for $18.99.

—Jennifer Swartvagher

Featured photo: Penguin Kids via YouTube

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Photo: Unsplash

Open hole in Earth now and allow me to be sucked in please, FOR THE LOVE OF ALL THAT IS HOLY.

“Were you all just talking about how pretty I am?”

The words hung in the air like a cartoon balloon over her head. Everyone chuckled the way people do when a child says something that’s inappropriate or uncomfortable and you need something to fill the space.

It’s always the mother.

The sucky, indulgent mother who made her daughter’s head too big. She’s so full of herself she dares to proclaim her beauty audibly!

So I said, full of panic and discomfort, “Middle school will straighten her out. Don’t worry.”

What??????!!!!!

“Were you all just talking about how pretty I am?”

No, Lucy, we weren’t. But go ahead ask and make us all squirm. The world is going to try hard to mute this voice of yours. It will try and teach you all sorts of rules about being a girl. Ignore them.

This post originally appeared on Irene101.com.

I'm a mom of teenagers.  I cry.  A lot.  I also laugh when I'm too tired to cry.  So basically, I'm always either crying or laughing.  I can find the humor in most everything...except (fill in with whatever you find upsetting).  Just want to make you laugh.

Static electricity is all around us, shocking your co-workers and bringing giggles to the hearts of many parents watching their kiddos slide at the playground. Now, you can use this power to control water with a super cool science experiment that requires only two supplies you already have at home. Read on to learn how to bend water with a simple black comb

static kid on slide
photo: Ken Bosma via flickr 

You will need:

An ordinary black comb. (The grandpa kind.)

A faucet with running water.

Here’s How:

This one is great for any age, including toddlers, because it really requires very little. Just get the water in the faucet to a thin stream, more than trickle but the smallest amount you can get into a steady flow. 

Comb your hair several times (note: your hair should be dry and relatively clean for max effectiveness). Comb vigorously! Comb everyone’s hair! 

faucet comb science

On the vertical, bring the comb toward the water (but don’t touch the water) and the electricity you just generated with the plastic comb and your hair should cause the water to bend toward the comb. You may need to try it a couple of times to get it to work. 

Ooooo! Ahhhh!!! You’ve controlled water and defied gravity, if only for a second. 

You will also love:

Easy Science Experiments You Can Do at Home

How to Make a Rainbow, with Science!

Easy Science Experiments Using Water 

Air-Themed Science Experiments

—Amber Guetebier

With the extra couch time we’ve all been using lately, have you ever wondered what the world’s favorite Disney movie could be? Well, Parkdean Resorts may have the answer!

The company recently analyzed data gathered from Google to determine favorite Disney films across the world and the results are not as shocking as you might think. With an annual search volume of 1.9 million, Disney’s Frozen took home the prize for first place! But Parkdean Resorts didn’t stop there–it also created a fun map of the most popular film in each country!

Avatar and Cars took home second and third place when it comes to overall popularity, and while Frozen is actually only the fave in 16 countries as opposed to Avatar’s 28, the overall searches for Frozen were far more.

If you’re wondering what other faves the United States favors, you’ll be interested to know that the other top nine include Avatar, Ratatouille, Cars, Lion King, Mulan, Aladdin, Moana, High School Musical and Cinderella.

If you’d like to dig deeper into the rest of the world, you can check out larger maps here.

––Karly Wood

 

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Ben & Jerry’s recently announced the addition of two new cookie dough chunk flavors—and now you can put down the spoon and stop scooping up extra baking batter!

The two new fab flavors, Chocolate Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough and Half Baked Chunks (a mix of chocolate chip cookie dough and fudge brownies) join the brand’s previously released varieties: Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough, Vegan Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough and Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough.

The almost-instant popularity of these cookie dough treats wasn’t exactly shocking. Jody Eley, the innovation manager in charge of the launch for Ben & Jerry’s, said in a press release, “We weren’t entirely surprised when cookie dough chunks flew off the shelf.” Eley added, “Cookie Dough is our #1 fan favorite around the world, and we know our fans often dig around the ice cream to get to the chunks. We just made it a little easier by putting them in a bag.”

Before you skip this freezer-section goody out of Salmonella fears, these cookie dough bites are made with pasteurized eggs and heat-treated flour.

Find the two new flavors in participating Scoop Shops and grocery stores nationwide for the suggested retail price of $3.99-5.49.

—Erica Loop

Featured photo: Courtesy of Ben & Jerry’s

 

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