Without a doubt, the holidays are going to look very different this year. Many retailers have altered their business hours and safety protocols due to the pandemic. Now amid the rise of cases across the country some stores are making the decision to close businesses on Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 26.

shopping bag

As of today, these are the retailers that will be closed this Thanksgiving. The list will be updated as more stores make announcements.

Walmart

On Jul 21 Walmart announced all of their locations and Sam’s Club locations will be closed for Thanksgiving Day.

“We know this has been a trying year, and our associates have stepped up. We hope they will enjoy a special Thanksgiving Day at home with their loved ones,” said Walmart U.S. president and CEO John Furner in a press release. “We are certainly thankful to our people for all of their efforts.”

The company also announced another round of bonuses for employees working on the front lines of the pandemic: $300 for full-time hourly workers and $150 for part-time hourly and temporary workers.

 

Target

On Jul. 27, Target announced that all national stores will be closed for Thanksgiving this year.

“This year more than ever, a joyful holiday will be inseparable from a safe one, and we’re continuing to adjust our plans to deliver ease, value and the joy of the season in a way that only Target can,” said Target CEO Brian Cornell in a statement.

 

Best Buy

In a press release on Jul. 28, Best Buy announced they will close all stores across the country for Thanksgiving Day. Shoppers will still be able to purchase items online and via the Best Buy app.

Best Buy will also be enhancing the way it fulfills orders, including offering more convenient pickup times at stores and making sure online orders arrive on time.

 

DICK’S Sporting Goods

On Jul. 27, DICK’S Sporting Goods announced they will close all stores and distribution centers for the Thanksgiving holiday. The company also announced a 15-percent premium through the end of the year for store and distribution center employees.

“We are so thankful to our teammates for their hard work and dedication,” said Ed Stack, Chairman and CEO in a news release. “They have navigated this year with strength, commitment and care for each other and for our customers. We will continue to do all we can to support them and show our gratitude.”

 

Kohl’s

Kohl’s announced they will be closed on Thanksgiving in a press release on Jul. 29. “The holiday season is when Kohl’s shines brightest, and as we move into the holiday season of this very unusual year, we are adapting our plans in response to changing customer expectations and behaviors,” said Michelle Gass, Kohl’s chief executive officer. “We are deeply appreciative of how our team of Kohl’s associates have shown up to serve our customers through this pandemic and know that they will continue to show Kohl’s at our best throughout the holidays.”

—Jennifer Swartvagher

Featured photo: Lucrezia Carnelos on Unsplash

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Summertime means lemonade. Unfortunately due to social distancing guidelines, lemonade stands across the country are closed. To help the smallest of small businesses, kids’ lemonade stands, Country Time is launching the Littlest Bailout Relief Fund, a fund to send stimulus checks to kids who had to close their lemonade stands due to COVID-19.

The Littlest Bailout

“The small business government bailouts helped some not-so-small companies and Country Time hopes to help a real small business near and dear to us – lemonade stands”

The Country Time Bailout Relief Fund will send stimulus checks to help kids preserve the values of lemonade stands, honest work and entrepreneurship, while putting a little juice back into the economy. For a chance to receive Country Time Bailout Relief funds, simply visit www.countrytimebailout.com and apply for a bailout check. Check your email to find out if you have been randomly selected to receive a bailout, which will come in the form of a commemorative check in the mail and a prepaid gift card by email.

country-time-giving-money-kids-lemonade-stands-closedand can be saved, or better yet, spent to help invest in the local economy.

“The small business government bailouts helped some not-so-small companies and Country Time hopes to help a real small business near and dear to us – lemonade stands,” says Andrew Deckert of Country Time, “Country Time has a history of helping lemonade stands when they are in trouble, like stepping in to pay for permit fees and fines, and this year is no different. Due to social distancing guidelines, lemonade stands aren’t what they used to be, and we want to help kids foster their entrepreneurial spirit by offering a small relief to those who can’t operate their lemonade stands this summer.”

The Littlest Bailout comes after Country Time launched Legal-Ade in 2018, which helped kids across the country pay permit fees and fines on their lemonade stands due to outdated permit laws. Legal-Ade prompted legislation in several states across the country, including Colorado and Texas, to legalize lemonade stands by excluding them from businesses that need a permit to operate. This year, Country Time will continue helping kids and their lemonade stands to ensure even the smallest of businesses can keep their entrepreneurial dreams alive. So, when life gives you social distancing, make lemonade.

For more information about the Country Time Littlest Bailout, visit www.countrytimebailout.com

—Jennifer Swartvagher

Featured photo: Country Time Lemonade

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We are all learning to live in the new normal these days, where items like gloves and face masks are part of our daily routine. With much of the population unable to find necessary items to keep them safe, many have stepped up to the challenge, including Quinn Callander.

As a young Canadian Scout, 12-year-old Quinn found out about a request from local hospitals to make “ear guards,” small items that attach to face masks and help alleviate pressure on the ears due to long-term wear. Not only did he rise to the challenge, making dozens on his 3D printers, his efforts have encouraged others to do the same.

Quinn’s mom shared a link to the 3D file used to make the ear guards, and since then the file has been downloaded over 66,500 times! In addition, the Facebook post where his efforts were originally documented has been shared more than 462,000 times.

Making the ear guards is a labor of love, taking four hours to make eight of them. Since March, Quinn has made over 500 before handing them off to a local Registered Nurse to be handed out to fellow health care workers.

––Karly Wood

 

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Other than our own parents reading to us, many of us equate the soothing sound of Levar Burton’s voice with books and story time. Not surprisingly, Levar has stepped up to the plate during our time of need with his own live-stream story times.

Not only will Levar read stories for kids, he’ll also do a story time for Young Adults as well as grown ups. Story times will live-stream on Twitter @levarburton 

MONDAYS FOR CHILDREN, 9 a.m. PST/noon EST

WEDNESDAYS FOR YA,  3 p.m. PST, 6 p.m. EST

FRIDAYS FOR ADULTS 6 p.m. PST, 9 p.m. EST

Many authors and even publishers have relaxed their copyright/reuse permissions during the Coronavirus crisis to allow for celeb story times and teacher curriculum. When Levar announced on Twitter that he was combing through works in the public domain, he had permission responses from authors and book publishers far and wide, including Neil Gaiman, Harper Collins and more.

We can’t wait to see what books Levar curates.

—Amber Guetebier

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Everyone is stepping up during this interesting time, including some of our fave parenting celebs. Just this week, Kristen Bell and hubby Dax Shepard launched the new Camp Hello Bello to keep up smiling throughout the month of April.

The couple writes on the Camp Hello Bello website, “We created Hello Bello because parenting is hard. And near impossible to do alone. Now we’re creating Camp Hello Bello… because parenting while being home all day is even harder. And we want to do it together (virtually, of course.)”

 

Tune in Monday through Friday on Instagram Live and IGTB, where campers can partake in crafting, dancing, singing, cooking and all the best things that come with a summer at camp. You can check back every Sunday to snag the full weekly schedule, get access to activities, session highlight and meet the counselors.

And that’s not all––Camp Hello Bello is hiring! If you’re talented in singing, arts and crafts, dancing and more and want to teach a class, head to the CampHelloBello.com to apply for a paid position.

––Karly Wood

All photos: Courtesy of Hello Bello

 

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Due to the spread of coronavirus, the Girl Scouts of the USA have suspended all in-person activities and events. Unfortunately, this has impacted cookie booth sales. Consumers can still support their local troops through Girl Scouts Cookie Care, a campaign that lets consumers order and donate cookies online.

“For 108 years, Girl Scouts has been there in times of crisis and turmoil,” says Girl Scouts of the USA CEO Sylvia Acevedo. “And today we are stepping forward with new initiatives to help girls, their families, and consumers connect, explore, find comfort, and take action.” 

Girl Scouts

Consumers can also purchase cookies from Girl Scouts they know who are selling through the Digital Cookie platform, including the Digital Order Card and Smart Cookies. Cookie fans should also watch out for “virtual cookie booths,” as many Girl Scouts are reinventing the cookie booth through virtual means. However you purchase cookies. The proceeds from these sales allow Girl Scouts to give back to their local communities. 

The organization has also launched Girl Scouts at Home, a national online platform where all girls and families, not just Girl Scout members, can access free, self-guided activities from GSUSA’s expert programming. These age-specific activities for girls of all grade levels are delivered through guided videos, text-based instructions and downloadable information, making it seamless for families to incorporate into their daily lives. More program-based options will be added in the coming weeks, allowing girls to earn badges, tune in to live virtual events, and connect online for troop meetings and projects. 

—Jennifer Swartvagher

Featured photo: Girl Scouts of the USA 

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Photo: mariamichelle via pixabay

Have you ever noticed that when you take your kid to the park and you’re there to meet them at the bottom of the slide, they could go down a hundred times? Here they come with a smile, hair blowing back, arms outstretched, and you catch them. It’s like a celebration and reunion all in one. But when you go to the park with the ladies, and you stand and talk, all the kids get bored of the playground after a few trips down the slide. There is something magical in being cherished and celebrated that brings freshness and courage.

When I was a little girl, every day when I got home from morning kindergarten, my mom would greet me with a lunch tray. On it was a sandwich, usually butter and peanut butter, and a red plastic cup filled with milk. I’d eat my lunch and then we’d watch “Mr. Roger’s Neighborhood.” My mom came to all my junior high basketball games and cheered for me. (At the highest-scoring game of my career, I made 4 points). She came to visit me in college and sat down to read my honors thesis cover-to-cover. When I was in medical school, she flew across the country to hear me present at a symposium in Carmel, California and we walked along the rocky beach and gathered shells and watched the sea lions.

My mom gave me space to have my own experience but was always there to reunite and celebrate. She believed in me to near ridiculous proportions, seeing no bounds to my potential or opportunities. In her mind, nothing was “out of my league.” For instance, once we went to the symphony to hear the famous Joshua Bell play a violin concerto. I overheard her telling someone, “You know, I always thought my daughter would marry Joshua Bell someday.” The other concertgoer raised her eyebrows and said, “Oh! Were they dating?” “No, they’ve never met,” my mom admitted. Minor detail. My actual husband, with whom I’m raising eight beautiful boys, was the better catch for me anyway. All humor aside, my mom’s absolute devotion opened the world to me.

So, fast-forward to last week when I was on the phone with my oldest son. I was simultaneously marveling and lamenting at the seeming centrifugal force upon our family as we all grow and change. He’s at college studying opera and learning things that take him beyond what any of us will experience or understand. His brother is serving as a missionary in Thailand. He bikes around the village and eats foods we’ve never tried (and likely never will) like raw crab and fried crickets. I see the centrifugal force in operation with every son down the line, coming like an inescapable prophecy. Even my youngest, who is 4, just learned to ride a two-wheeled bike. For now, he circles our cul-de-sac, but it’s only a matter of time.

Sometimes this anticipatory grief from a nest that is “emptying” makes me want to hold on too tightly. I hear other moms in my small, insular community say they’ll never let their kids venture further than the college in town. I get that, but I don’t get that. As a pediatrician with a behavioral focus, I see firsthand the so-called “failure to launch” epidemic. There are many factors at play, but perhaps one is a motherly “launch ambivalence” of which I too am guilty. We want our kids to go off and experience life, but at the same time, we don’t want them to go. Author Rochelle Weinstein said, “A mother’s job is to teach her children not to need her anymore. The hardest part of that job is accepting success.” Personally, I’m in denial. I hope we’ll always need each other to some degree, because of the bonds we’ve created.

My husband and I have been intentional about teaching our kids life skills and inspiring them to independence, but their adventurousness and self-sufficiency is beyond what we have given. My instinct has been to try to do everything I can for my kids and optimize their every experience, which anthropologist David Lancy would consider a recipe for failure-to-launch. In his book, “The Anthropology of Childhood,” he writes of his work in a remote Liberian village where he observed children thriving and independent because of what he called “benign neglect”—they had no one fussing over them; rather, there was a general trust in the natural growth process. Perhaps having eight kids and the inadvertent but naturally resulting in “benign neglect” has saved me from a future with eight unemployed grown men living in my basement.

It’s always a balance between stepping in and stepping back. For now, I’ll enjoy the six boys still under my roof and the two who are out venturing. I’ll cherish them, but maybe I can let go of some of that mom-guilt for not being there every single minute, because it’s actually allowing them to grow up, as painful as it feels. All my cumulative, devoted efforts thus far have helped them grow too—my efforts, plus a distillation of devotion passed through the generations.

I say to believe in your kids ridiculously; believe they can do and be anything. Cherish them and hold them tightly while you have them, then let them loose onto the world’s playground. But no matter how old they get, be there to meet them at the bottom of the slide.

—Dr. Mary Wilde

I am an integrative pediatrician, author and mom of 8. I am the owner of Imagine Pediatrics Behavioral Health and Wellness and creator of the Overcoming Childhood Anxiety online courses and the Compassion Parenting program. I love singing, hiking and eating ice cream! Learn more at drmarywilde.com.

Kids bring so much joy and excitement into the world, but with kids comes clutter. Over the years, it’s inevitable that rooms throughout your home will multiply with gear, clothes and, of course, toys. Why is it that it takes hours, sometimes even days, to clean and organize playrooms, but it only takes seconds for the toys to be all over the room again?

According to The Genius of Play, an initiative spearheaded by The Toy Association to raise awareness with parents, caregivers, and educators about the importance of play, too many choices that are unorganized can make it difficult to find a toy to play with at all.

Keri Wilmot, a pediatric occupational therapist, says, “Part of parenthood is learning how to keep up with and organize all the ‘kid stuff,’ that occupy the playroom and bedroom. Unfortunately, too many “things” can lead to toy rooms becoming a safety issue. Aside from a parent’s number one fear of tripping and stepping on building bricks, young children will try and put small toys in their mouths which are a potential choking hazard. Additionally, playrooms full of toys can be very overwhelming and distracting to kids.”

Since kids need to play to learn, Wilmot recommends these tips to clean up clutter and make your child’s playroom more conducive for playtime.

1. Bins. Whether they are open bins, closed clear plastic bins with lids, canvas laundry bins, colored buckets or baskets—bins are a great playroom storage option to organize and contain toys, art supplies, and games. While it’s easy for young kids to put all their toys in a large toy box or open container when cleaning up, the bigger the bin is, the harder it can be to locate a specific toy without emptying the entire bin. Clear bins make it easy for kids to identify the contents but might be best organized for use inside a closet. Colored or decorative bins, when designing a playroom, can provide a more visually appealing and minimalistic view.

2. Cabinets vs. Shelves. Looking for furniture to help organize and can’t decide between cabinets or shelves? You aren’t alone. Depending on your children’s age and abilities, storage options will change as they grow and achieve more independence. While storing items in cabinets can help reduce the appearance of clutter, a combination of the two might be your best option. Toys that you don’t want kids to have access to or that require adult assistance are best stored in closed bins inside a cabinet or closet that is inaccessible to kids. Make sure to secure any shelves or furniture to the wall for safety so they do not tip over.

3. Rotate Toys. Too many options for play isn’t always the best, as kids can have challenges deciding what to play with, which leads to not playing at all or playing with the same toys over and over. Put unused or seasonal toys in bins inside a closet or in a storage area. Rotate them in and out of the play area every few weeks. This gives kids new options to play with regularly, which can reduce the chances of boredom.

4. Donate Toys Regularly. Come up with a donation or a general plan to pass toys on to new owners when they’ve maxed out on play. Right before the holidays, a birthday or at the change of every season are great times to have kids help decide which toys to donate. Find a neighbor with a younger child, or donate to a charitable organization, church, school or daycare. You can even try and recoup a little money to buy new toys after selling them at a yard sale or through Facebook marketplace. Make sure to throw away any broken, hazardous, or recalled toys that are unsafe.

5. Look for Space-Saving Toys. Wondering if you have enough space to fit a playhouse or tent in the room? Big toys like kitchens and playhouses offer a lot of fun but often take up a lot of space and tend to include a lot of small toys. Look for pop-up tents, tunnels, and playhouses with pieces and parts that can be easily taken down and folded up for storage when not in use.

6. Set s Clean-up Schedule. Set a schedule to regularly clean up the toys together. Teaching kids about sorting and categorizing items back into their correct spot is an excellent educational opportunity. Turn on some musical tunes and see who can put toys away the fastest.

7. Get the Toys Up Off the Floor. You’ve probably seen all the memes about stepping on building bricks. Hopefully you haven’t experienced it yourself. Consider child-sized furniture, such as a table and chairs, to include in the playroom for seating and play. A table can get small toys up off the floor, and it offers a stable surface to play on when making creations.

8. Use the Walls. Vertical surfaces such as easels are great for kids to draw on, but they take up space so consider using walls as a surface instead. Install a whiteboard or use paint to create a chalkboard right on the wall to save space and promote creativity. For avid readers, bookshelves can be attached to the wall at eye level as well.

While it can seem daunting and overwhelming, try not to let organizing the playroom become a stressful activity! Your hard work will surely pay off. When kids have an organized space to play in, they will have more amazing playful opportunities to promote their learning.

 

Anna Yudina is the Director of Marketing Initiatives for The Toy Association™, a not-for-profit trade association that represents toy companies. Currently, she’s spearheading The Genius of Play™, a parent-focused movement raising awareness of play as a crucial part of child development and encouraging families to make time for play daily.

When Tom Hanks was picked to play the iconic Mister Rogers in the upcoming film A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood, it was met with approval from fans of both stars. And while the resemblance and ease with which Hanks stepped into the roll seemed uncanny, now it seems it was more than that––it was fate.

Through the work of Ancestry, a genealogy service, it was discovered that Fred Rogers and Tom Hanks are actually sixth cousins! At the New York City screening of the new film, Access Hollywood shared the news with a stunned Hanks and wife, Rita Wilson.

When shown the family tree pulled together by Ancestry, Wilson and Hanks immediately recognized relatives from the Hanks lineage, solidifying that Access Hollywood definitely wasn’t pulling anyone’s leg. Hank’s response? “It all just comes together, you see.”

For family tree enthusiasts, Rogers and Hanks share a five-times great-grandfather. The duo descended from two brothers who both fought for the Revolutionary War.

photo: Sony Pictures via Instagram

So what would Fred have to say about all of this? “That is just wonderful. Now, that is amazing and Fred would have loved it. He loved family tree stuff,” says Rogers widow, Joanne Rogers.

Don’t forget to catch a showing of A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood when it arrives in theaters on Nov. 22.

––Karly Wood

 

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A tragic story received a silver lining for one family thanks to a generous donation from Shaquille O’Neal.

The former NBA super star just donated a new home to 12-year-old Isaiah Payton and his family. Isaiah was shot by a stray bullet in August leaving him paralyzed from the chest down. Since the shooting, Isaiah had not been able to return home because the house he lived in with his family wasn’t equipped for his needs.

Having learned about the situation, O’Neal stepped in and not only found the family a new place to live, but paid rent for the first year to help the family get back on their feet. He also plans to foot the bill for new furniture to fill the family’s new house.

“No mother should have to go [through] that,” O’Neal told The A-Scene. He added “I was watching the story and it’s just sad. It could have been any one of us … it could have been my son.”

Featured photo: Shaq via Instagram

 

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