I am a father of two boys and two girls and I’m constantly surprised at how different they are. One area that these differences are apparent is in how they express their emotions. My girls have no problem being open about their feelings and they’ve become better at articulating what they want the older they’ve become.

My sons seem firmly lodged on the other side of the scale. While they were more expressive when they were younger, nowadays they’ve become more and more reticent. It’s especially hard to get my eldest son to open up about whatever’s going on in his life.

As their dad, I know firsthand how hard it is for men and boys to talk about how they feel. Society has conditioned us to believe that experiencing and showing certain emotions is a sign of weakness and that’s not what “real men” do. As a result, boys end up bottling up their feelings and feel increasingly isolated from their families and the rest of society. They feel they have no one to talk to and that no one will understand what they’re going through. This then leads to increased incidences of teen depression, suicide and mental illness in adolescent boys and young men.

Interpreting My Sons’ Emotions

I decided to do things differently when raising my sons. However, before I could help them work through and express varying emotions, I first had to learn how to read and interpret them.

For instance, I noticed that my youngest son always had a physical complaint whenever he was faced with a new experience. He often had a headache or tummy ache on the first day of school or before a test. I gradually learned that this meant he was anxious or nervous.

My eldest son expresses nervousness or anxiety differently. He plays baseball and doesn’t like showing vulnerability of any kind. So to hide his feelings, he often gets defensive when I ask him how he feels about an upcoming game.

My sons both feel more comfortable expressing their feelings if we chat while doing something else. I’ve learned to have conversations with them while working on the car or doing some DIY projects together. This way they don’t feel pressured so they can relax and open up.

Helping My Boys To Express Themselves

After figuring out how to read their emotions, the next step was helping my boys learn to handle and express their feelings in healthy ways. Here are some of the things I’ve done:

1. Setting a good example. Kids always look to their parents for cues on how to behave and my sons are no different. With this in mind, I tried to set an example worth emulating. I started by getting comfortable talking about what I felt and becoming a more expressive person. Once my boys saw that I wasn’t afraid to share my feelings they started to open up a lot more.

2. Providing a safe environment at home. With society doing its best to convince my sons to bury their emotions, I knew they needed a place where they feel safe being themselves. At home, my boys know that they are free to explore and discover their varying emotions. I don’t tell them what they’re supposed to feel but I instead provide lots of opportunities for them to grow emotionally.

3. Listening to them. In addition to encouraging my sons to express their emotions, I have learned to listen to them even if I don’t agree with what they’re saying. I try not to judge or invalidate their feelings and instead offer support and room for them to vent.  

4. Setting boundaries. Although my boys are free to embrace and express all their feelings, I’ve made sure that they understand the difference between feelings and behavior. They know that they’re responsible for their actions and they can choose how to respond to their emotions. So while feeling angry and upset is okay, they know they’re not allowed to hit or lash out at others because of those feelings.

The outside world is trying its best to toughen up my sons. I hope that setting them a good example and showing them that it’s okay for a man to talk about and show emotions will, in turn, help them be more comfortable sharing and expressing their own feelings.

Tyler Jacobson is a happy husband, father of three, writer and outreach specialist with experience with organizations that help troubled teens and parents. His areas of focus include: parenting, social media, addiction, mental illness, and issues facing teenagers today.

 

Photo: via Unsplash

For those who have never had a baby, it’s difficult to imagine the emotional (and physical) rollercoaster associated with growing a person, giving birth to them, and caring for them as a helpless infant. Yes, people do it every day, (and have for some time), but many underestimate the difficulties and unexpected side effects that can occur from having a child. One of the most invisible, yet devastating side effects is postpartum depression, and as a new mom’s friend or loved one, there’s a lot you can do to help.

What is Postpartum Depression?

While “Baby Blues” are universally common for a short time after giving birth, Postpartum Depression is something more severe and typically more lasting, often requiring treatment. One in seven people who give birth experience postpartum depression.

Postpartum Depression Symptoms Include:

  • Depressed mood or severe mood swings
  • Difficulty bonding with your baby
  • Loss of appetite or eating much more than usual
  • Intense irritability and anger
  • Diminished ability to think clearly, concentrate or make decisions
  • Withdrawing from family and friends
  • Feelings of worthlessness, shame, guilt or inadequacy
  • Hopelessness
  • Severe anxiety and panic attacks
  • Thoughts of harming yourself or your baby
  • Recurrent thoughts of death or suicide

Symptoms Can Also Include:

  • Excessive crying
  • Inability to sleep (insomnia) or sleeping too much
  • Overwhelming fatigue or loss of energy
  • Reduced interest and pleasure in activities you used to enjoy
  • Fear that you’re not a good mother
  • Restlessness

If you think your friend, family member, or loved one is experiencing postpartum depression, here are some ways you can support them.

1. Help Her Coordinate Her Community: While everyone offers “to help” after a new baby is born, it is often overwhelming to ask after a few sleepless nights, when life becomes a blur of caring for the baby and dealing with postpartum depression. Visit with your friend and help her set up a system of care through a service like Give InKind so she can schedule and ask for the exact kind of help she needs.

2. Announce You’re Going on a “Store Run”: Tell her you’re going to the store this afternoon, or tomorrow morning, and ask her what kinds of diapers she wants you to pick up (as well as any formula, wipes, clothing, etc). Have her be specific, and make a list.

3. Plan a Weekly “Helping Hands” Visit: If your friend is open to weekly help, let your friend know that you’ll be there to help clean, talk, cook, etc. every Wednesday at noon (or pick a day that works for both of you), for the next 8 weeks (or however long you can). During this time, do whatever it is that she needs help with; laundry, dishes, changing the baby, babysitting while she gets out of the house for an hour. Whatever it is, be consistent, and supportive. If you live in another state, consider purchasing a gift card for a house cleaning service to visit weekly.

4. Help Her Find a Babysitter: Mama needs a break now and then, and not everyone has someone else at home to watch the baby if she needs a night off. Help your friend get some time to herself now and then by helping her find a qualified local babysitter.

5. Help Her Find a Support Network: Talking with other parents who have just gone through birth and are in the pangs of late-night feedings and 24/7 baby care can be helpful and therapeutic.

6. Offer to Help Your Friend Find a Therapist in Her Network: Taking some of the research off of your friend’s plate can be helpful if your friend is open to therapy. Resources like Psychology Today have contact information of therapists in every state, and let you sort by therapist specialty, insurance provider, etc.

Should They See a Doctor?

Postpartum Depression (and Postpartum Psychosis) are very real and should be monitored and taken seriously for the health of parents and babies and other family members. There is no shame in getting help if you need it.

If a parent’s symptoms are getting worse, or if the symptoms don’t go away after two weeks, an appointment should be made with their doctor. If the parent finds it hard to complete everyday tasks, or care for their baby, or themselves, they should see their doctor. If they are having thoughts of harming themselves or the baby, get help right away.

The National Suicide Prevention Lifeline is available for those who need it, at 1-800-273-TALK (1-800-273-8255).

Support Your Friend

Your friend may be reclusive and withdrawn at this time, but check in on them, and help them get the support, love, and care they need as they work through postpartum depression and, hopefully, into a better mental state.

How Give InKind Can Help

Give InKind is an intelligent social support platform that helps friends and family coordinate tangible, financial, and emotional support for those who need it. Everyone goes through major life events, and everyone needs a little help sometimes. From the birth of a baby to loss of a family member, to medical crisis and disasters, people need more than just money and lasagna. Every individual or family in need is different. Give InKind helps people coordinate help with things like dinner dropoffs, walking the dog, picking kids up from school, buying groceries, and watering plants. Give InKind lets givers provide or send specific services or assistance that helps those they care about focus on what matters. Article contributed by Jennifer Jacobson for Give InKind.

This post originally appeared on Give InKind.

Give InKind is an intelligent social support platform that helps friends and family coordinate tangible, financial, and emotional support for those who need it. Our custom Care Calendar + Wishlist + Fundraising in one free tool is making support simple. From new babies to cancer support, Give InKind.

What started as a platform to share photography has now become a useful marketing tool for businesses of all sizes. With 1 billion people using Instagram every month, it’s no wonder people are using it as a go-to advertising platform.

There are plenty of reasons people love using Instagram such as staying connected to others, scoping out new destinations to visit, and self-expression.

However, social media can sometimes cause unnecessary comparisons, dissatisfaction with life, and a feeling of being left out. With suicide rates being associated with social media use, it’s more important than ever for parents to have tools under their belt. In a time when teens are desperately trying to fit in and find their place in the world, it’s clear that social media can harm their self-esteem and mental health.

How can we address the problem of social media and teen mental health? It’s time for parents to get involved and tackle teen mental health at home. While mental health is a complex issue, parents can safeguard their teens’ well-being with healthy social media practices. Here’s how you can make sure your kids have a healthy relationship with social media and a thriving life outside of their screens.

1. Show them what’s real and what’s fake. Social media distorts reality. Snapchat and Instagram filters are fun, but they can quickly warp our sense of what’s real. Take a photo and show your teen how filters are added to make photos look a certain way. Talk about how lighting, tones, and Photoshop affect an image. Show your teen FaceTune and other apps that allow you to alter and blur imperfections on the face or body. This allows you to alter your physique and create an unrealistic image for social media.

This sounds obvious, but many teens don’t realize that social media is full of almost exclusively edited images. They can learn to manage their expectations as they scroll through their feed, preserving their sense of self-esteem by avoiding unrealistic comparisons.

2. Encourage teens to live in the moment. Social media is great to stay in touch with friends and family—when used in moderation. Most of us like to indulge in social media from time to time, but it’s a recipe for losing time. Social media makes us feel like we aren’t living in the moment. We’re either caught up with other people’s Instagram posts or worrying about what we’ll post next to get the most likes.

While it feels like we’re connected with other people on social media, it’s a way to escape real-world social interactions. Studies show that excessive social media use can make a person feel more isolated and depressed. Set a limit on your child’s phone for social media apps. Experts suggest limiting teens’ social media use to no more than 30 minutes per day.

And instead of plugging into social media for hours on end, encourage your child to get involved with activities, like sports or school clubs, that help them feel part of a group. It’s these social interactions that will help your teen feel accepted and happy, not taking selfies on Snapchat.

3. Invest in your parent-child relationship. Adults are just as guilty as teens when it comes to social media use. Don’t let screens be a substitute for a face-to-face relationship with your child. Lead by example. Limit your time on social media and stop obsessing over your Instagram likes. Give your teen love and attention without documenting it on Snapchat or anywhere else online. Show that life happens outside of Instagram. Demonstrate unconditional love and acceptance when you talk to your teen, especially when they’re feeling low. If they’re feeling sad, validate their feelings and understand their disappointment.

Allow your home to be a safe place where they can talk about their feelings. This opens the door to positive conversations about self-esteem and their identity, which can help with early intervention to preserve teen health.

Social media is an important tool in teens’ lives, but parents have to set healthy expectations and practices. Together we can prevent self-harm and suicide by spotting unrealistic images, setting social media boundaries, and investing in our personal relationships.

For more resources about responsible social media use for teens and children, check out Common Sense Media.

If you or someone you know is in crisis, please call the free and confidential National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-TALK.

 

As a former Emmy-Award Winning News Anchor and over 10 years of experience in the news industry, Kristen prides herself on being able to tell great stories. As an expert in communications and mother of two, Kristen gives her tips and tricks.

 

To all of you work-outside-the-home and work-inside-the-home and trying-to-do-both mamas out there: I see you and see how hard you are working at *everything* and I admire you. I’m in your corner. I’ve always talked with my own mom about how grateful I am for a flexible job that allows me to both pursue my professional degree as well as pursue parenting in its entirety.

Fully emersing in both feels like an impossibility, right? It’s always ebbing and flowing; taking care of self as well as taking care of family and our roles within both. Here’s what rubs salt into the wound: when society convinces us that parenthood isn’t a “valid enough” career. I recently found a suicide note, written by my mom at age 70, lamenting the fact she didn’t have “a real career”, that she never felt educated enough or competent enough. She completed a Master’s Degree in Home Economics and then raised my sister and me. She was a kind and gentle mother. She was also a talented paper-arts artist in her later years. Her career was us, first and foremost! Raising small humans, being there to pack lunches and kiss owies and get us to piano practice each week. She taught lessons and shared wisdom and devoted herself to us in our childhoods. She then pursued her artistic talents by creating cards, art projects, and more, including teaching art classes at a local fine arts store. Her classes sold-out. Her friends were in awe of her creations. Her legacy of art and kindness is vivid and alive in her community despite her recent death. Her daughters are resilient enough to handle this time of grief and loss, in part thanks to her devotion to our childhood and raising us with a variety of skills. She had a career — she actually had two! — but acknowledged it not. It weighed her down, the feelings of inadequacy.

So my plea to you, hard-working mamas: own your power. claim your worth. do any and all of the work you are drawn to do in this life, whether it inside or outside the home. be kind to yourself. be kind to your children and friends who already love you exactly as you are. Live a good life. Know in your bones that you are valid enough, every day.

Kris is a busy mama to three kids (fraternal twins and a spunky preschooler) and a full-time speech-language pathologist at a local early intervention agency. She stays passionate about pursuing both her professional goals and her parenting commitment, which leaves her grateful for both opportunities. Kris uses humor, coffee, and writing to augment her life. 

No matter the time of the school year, kids face pressure to do well in their studies along with the stress that comes with finding themselves and their place in social groups. These are the same stresses we parents faced growing up, but today there is a notable change.

The advent of mobile technology and social media has opened a world that we older generations never had to contend with when we were growing up. While it has created new ways for kids to stay in touch with their friends, it has also opened pathways for the cruelty of bullying.

Online bullying is an incessant problem. More than 43 percent of teens report being bullied online, research shows, with 70 percent of students saying they witness frequent bullying online.

Bullying includes threats, rumors, physical or verbal attacks and excluding somebody from a group on purpose. Cyberbullying includes any kind of bullying that takes place over digital devices through texts, social media, online forums—anyplace where people share content. It includes sending, posting or sharing negative, harmful, false or mean content about someone, including personal or private information that causes embarrassment or humiliation.

Why is online bullying so prevalent? One reason is that online bullies are less likely to see the results of their bullying. One study showed only 16 percent felt guilty after bullying online while 40 percent felt nothing at all. When asked why they do it, some kids say it made them feel funny, popular or powerful.

More than 80 percent of young people say bullying online is easier to get away with than bullying in person. Cyberbullies are more likely to have poor relationships with their parents, so they may not have much supervision over what they are doing online.

Kids with access to technology can be subjected to online bullying 24-7, making them feel there is no escape and leaving them feeling isolated and desperate. Cyberbullying has been linked to self-harm and suicide among young people. Kids subjected to bullying and other trauma are also more likely to carry emotional scars in the form of what I call trapped emotions. These are unresolved negative emotions that become “trapped” within the physical body, causing physical and emotional stress for years to come.

Unfortunately, many kids don’t ask for help because they are afraid of being seen as weak or a tattletale or fear backlash from the bully or rejection by friends. Teens are more than twice as likely to tell their peers about bullying than they are to tell parents or other adults, one study found.

Here are 12 warning signs parents can—and should—watch for in their kids.

  1. Emotional upset, anxiety and depression.
  2. Frequent headaches and stomach aches.
  3. Faking illness.
  4. Unexplainable injuries.
  5. Changes in eating habits.
  6. Poor sleep / frequent nightmares.
  7. A drop in school performance.
  8. Not wanting to go to school.
  9. Sudden loss of friends.
  10. Avoidance of social situations.
  11. Low self-esteem.
  12. Self-destructive behaviors including self-harm, running away or talking about suicide.

There are many things we can do to help children suffering from bullying. If you see your child struggling with any of these issues, talk with him or her about what’s going on. Talking with your children is the key to both preventing bullying and to healing the emotional trauma it can cause.

Here are some other steps you can take to help your child.

  • Help your child to know that he or she is valued and that it is safe to communicate with you.
  • Pay attention to what your child is doing online and be aware of warning signs specific to cyber bullying.
  • Encourage kids to speak with an adult they trust if they are being bullied or see other kids being bullied.
  • Talk with them about how to stand up to kids who bully and how to report bullying at their school.
  • Take action with the school and/or the bully’s parents to ensure the child’s safety.
  • Urge kids to help others who are being bullied by showing kindness or getting help.
  • Help children find and release trapped emotions. This is important both for victims and for the kids doing the bullying.

Parents of bullied kids often feel helpless, angry and frustrated. Try to keep your emotions under control so your child feels safe. And don’t neglect yourself—identifying and releasing your own trapped emotions will help you to be a better parent and fully support your child.

Dr. Bradley Nelson
Tinybeans Voices Contributor

Veteran holistic physician and author of The Emotion Code, Dr. Bradley Nelson is an expert in the emerging fields of Bioenergetic Medicine and Energy Psychology. He has certified thousands of practitioners worldwide in helping people overcome unresolved anger, depression, anxiety, loneliness and other negative emotions and the physical symptoms associated them.

It is natural for parents to worry. They often find themselves wondering, “Is my daughter ever going to find a job?” or “How much longer is my son going to live at home?”

While we’ve long been hearing about the difficulties suffered by the Millennial generation, Gen Z-ers are now struggling even more than their historically fragile Gen Y counterparts—this, according to the 2018 Stress in America poll (released annually since 2007) from the American Psychological Association (APA).

During what should be a happy go lucky developmental period, 27 percent of 15 to 21-year-olds report only “fair” to “poor” mental health. Mass shootings (75 percent) and rising suicide rates (62 percent) top the significant stressors contributing to the fragile mental health of our young people.

But how might parental worries and related actions, impact how well emerging adults transcend the difficulties of mastering adulthood?

The Paradox of Loving (& Worrying) Too Much

Of course you want the best for your emerging adult child as he or she embarks upon the world of grown up roles and responsibilities. You want them to be happy! But might this simple and natural desire be somehow contributing to the difficulties their experiencing?

Could there be a paradox in our best intentions to help our almost adult children find happiness? In my experience as a clinical psychologist, specializing in Gen Ys and Zs, I’ve seen three classic errors, where parents’ best intentions create barriers to their child’s ultimate emotional development.

1. Not Allowing Space for Discomfort

Having children is like having your heart walking around, outside your body! It’s easy to become consumed with worry about all the ways they might get hurt, suffer or struggle. Our love for them compels us to do anything and everything we can to protect them from difficulties and ensure their happiness.

But here’s the deal. Our emotions, all of them, serve an essential function in our drive and motivation, as well as our mood. Our emotions tell us what we care deeply about and thus inform us of what to pursue in life.

When we overprotect our children from the messages of their emotions, we risk blunting them from their own internal compass.

From the time our children are very young, about two years old, it is the role of the loving caretaker to teach them that emotions are okay. They can tolerate their emotions. Without this space to have and allow emotions, children cannot learn, from their own experience, that they can handle it! When parents worry too much, they often fail to allow a child to have and grow from this experience.

Next time your child is up against something that makes them sad or anxious or uncertain, give them a space to have those feelings. If you want to help, rather than solving the problem causing the emotion, help them to label the emotion word. Then offer them some simple words of compassion for how difficult adulting can be.

2. Assuming From Your Own Worldview

Every generation suffers through the gap between the beliefs of one generation and the next.  Yet somehow, each generation hears itself bemoan the proverbial “Kids these days!” complaints.

This happens largely due to the way our minds and thinking processes are hardwired. All those beliefs you hold about how things “should be” and assumptions about ‘the way things are’ are based on what you’ve experienced. Right?

Well, your almost adult child is living in a very very different time with very different rules. Just as you have difficulty understanding their worldview, they get frustrated with yours.

Trying to convince your adult children of your own beliefs and perspective is likely to push them further away, leaving you less able to be of support.

Next time you notice the panic rising up that your almost adult child is about to make a mistake. Or you worry they don’t understand. PAUSE! Ask them to help you understand better. Repeat back what you heard. Then balance this validation of their perspective with the alternative view you hold. You might explore how differently two people can experience the same facts.

The best thing you can do is model the ability to take another’s perspective, even when it is completely different from you’re your own.

3. Failing to Hold Your Child Accountable for Their Behavior

While memes and idealists everywhere will tell you that “true love should be unconditional.” Reality and the laws of nature work slightly differently. Now, before you recoil in horror, allow me to clarify.

If you are one of those parents that feels loving feelings for your child all the time, then congratulations! That is a rare and amazing thing! I commend you!  But most of the time, all that loving behavior (giving, doing, failing to set limits and punishments) is not due to an overflow of unconditional love.

Far too often, parents fail to effectively shape and teach desired behavior, due to their own fears and worries about alienation of the adult child’s affections. As kids are moving from teens to twenties, they are home less and less and we worry about pushing them further away!

But if you want to help your child to build the behaviors they need to successfully navigate the bumpy roads of adulting, consistently adorning them with loving actions is unlikely to be effective.

Behavioral habits are very simple. People do more of what feels good and less of what feels bad. To be an effective parent, you must follow through with rewards and punishments. If it causes you discomfort to do so, return to recommendation 1 and practice this type of compassionate allowing for yourself.

Lara Fielding, PsyD., Ed.M., is a psychologist who specializes in using mindfulness-based therapies to manage stress and strong emotions. Learn more in her recently released book, Mastering Adulthood: Go Beyond Adulting to Become an Emotional Grown-Up.

By now you’ve no doubt heard of Netflix’s Bird Box and chances are you’ve wondered if you should add it to your watch list. According to the movie’s star Sandra Bullock, all moms can relate to this thrilling journey, but can you really handle your worst mom fears come true on screen?

In the post-apocalyptic world of Bird Box, Bullock plays a mom who must lead her kids away from danger when a mysterious force suddenly appears on Earth, forcing people to commit suicide. Yes, it’s pretty dark, and possibly hard to watch if you’re sensitive to stories that involve kids in danger, as many moms are. Bullock explains that the premise is all part of motherhood.

Photo: Courtesy of Netflix

“As a mom, you think those thoughts, it’s just a part of your makeup,” Bullock told Variety. “Every mom will look at this and go, ‘That river is my journey as a parent.’”

Susanne Bier, director of Bird Box, echoed Bullock’s sentiments, explaining, “I’ve always felt that motherhood is mainly defined by men and for many hundreds of years is automatically thought of as being soft, caring, naturally nurturing, calm. There are a lot of things that are part of our idealized vision of motherhood, but I always thought it was much more complex, much more ferocious.”

Parents on social media have mixed feelings about watching. Some have said they felt too stressed out while trying to watch, while others love it. All seem to agree that the movie really is all about parenthood although, in a somewhat different way.

As one mom hilariously points out, the really scary part is how much the fictional movie mimics real life for some moms by providing proof that kids never listen. “Although there’s more murder and death in Bird Box it truly parallels a day in the life of parents with children from a school holiday,” says Meredith Masony of That’s Inappropriate.

Other moms think that the Bird Box challenge, a trending internet challenge based on the movie, is also the perfect solution to the messy side of motherhood. Comedians Leeann Dearing and Michelle Fortin have created their own, safe version of the challenge called Mom Box and even if you choose not to watch the real movie, this funny parody video will give you the same thrills.

We’re honestly not sure which one is scarier—this spoof or the original movie itself. Bird Box is currently available for streaming on Netflix.

—Shahrzad Warkentin

 

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If you have not been to the Costco, the you have not truly lived.

Costco. Is. The. Bomb.

Behold the wonder of the Costco Superstore.

You read that correctly: no zombies allowed. They have no membership card so we are safe there. We can all survive in the Costco for years without struggle.

Are you seeing that giant hotdog and carbonated goodness for $1.50? Tell me where you will find a better deal…just try. You can’t. Costco food slays it.

Whoa. Let’s not get crazy now kids. That is financial suicide right there.

Oh you think you might just skip on up to the Costco on a Saturday? Not gonna happen. Costco is so popular you may have a better chance at smaller crowds hanging out at The Magic Kingdom.

People actually get married at the Costco. Being invited to a Costco wedding is now on my bucket list.

So many samples. You can create an entire meal just wandering around Costco snacking away.

Costco literally has anything and everything you could ever want. Need 5-foot bears? Of course you don’t! Neither do I…yet we own two.

I could literally live here, right here under this patio canopy eating Costco samples and hot dogs and drinking fine French wine. This is the dream right here!

You cannot beat the selection and prices of wine at Costco. You also cannot shop at Costco without spending at least $100 on the wine alone.

Do not tell me that you have a Sam’s Club nearby and it is basically the same thing. It’s just not.

Kristin is a blogging SAHM of 4 unruly princesses.  When she is not busy raising humans and vacuuming up toys she can be found at the local Target or hiding in her laundry room where she writes for Red Tricycle, Suburban Misfit Mom and Sammiches and Psych Meds.

If your little caped crusader just can’t get enough of superheroes, there’s a new tour in town that will thrill them as much as an invisible jet. Warner Bros Studios opened their newest attraction, DC Universe: The Exhibit in May and it’s a must-see for die-hard comic fans and casual Super Man fans alike. While you wait for the Wonder Woman movie (as we all are!), take a trip through the history of DC Comics and get up-close with the Super Heroes (and Super Villains) kids love.

photo: Elizabeth Kate

Hit the Back Lot
The Warner Bros. Studio Tour was, and is, a fabulous adventure into the history of Hollywood. The basic tour takes you behind the scenes of this famous motion picture studio’s 110-acre lot and into the actual sound stages where some of Warner Bros. hit shows have been made and where some of your faves are being shot today, including Ellen and The Big Bang Theory. The kids will love The Harry Potter Exhibit and The Picture Car Vault, where they can ride on Harry’s Broomstick in front of a green screen and take a Bat-Pod for a spin. Stage 48: Script to Screen is fully interactive and you and your family can discover how movies and TV shows are created, from start to finish. The magic of Hollywood is unveiled, in a very realistic way for budding moguls. (It’s more nuts and bolts than the tram ride at Universal, which is also a great peek into movie making.)

Then, the tour went and got super. New this summer, there’s a whole additional section; DC Universe: The Exhibit allows visitors to get up close and personal with authentic props and costumes from some of their favorite superhero movies and also take an exciting sneak peek at some of the sets, costumes, and props from the upcoming summer film, The Suicide Squad.

photo: Elizabeth Kate

Squad Goals?
Featuring a movie called The Suicide Squad, how appropriate is this exhibit for little ones? Ages 8 & up will love it and have a wonderful time seeing costumes that include favorites like Wonder Woman, Superman, Batman and the Joker. However, you’ll want to take a pass on this one if you have a younger crew. Some of the displays are too much for the littlest ones.

On that note, feel free to bring visiting grandma and grandpa along for the ride this summer. DC Comics started in 1934 and now for the first time ever, original classic comic books, some dating all the way back to the 30’s, are on display. These are the actual comic books that your grandparents knew and loved and only now have they been released from DC Comic’s vault.

photo: Elizabeth Kate

Hero History
DC Universe: The Exhibit gives you the chance to walk through the development of celebrated Super Heroes and Super Villains from their emergence in comic books to their most recent appearances in major blockbusters. To make it even more fun for kids, in addition to the classic characters, DC Comics has just introduced a whole new line up of Superhero Girls, including Batgirl, Supergirl, and (teenage) Wonder Woman.

The creators of these super “teen” characters hope the new faces will inspire all girls to become strong and independent young women. The exhibit will keep things fresh and new by rotating in these new characters, as well as different props, costumes, and scenery throughout the year.

photo: Elizabeth Kate

Super Heroes Get Interactive
It’s not all just walking and talking and looking. You’ll have to tear your kids away from the super-duper video games with huge color screens on consoles and iPads featuring all of the DC Comics’ Superhero video games as well as the popular LEGo games. Visit the original Belle Reve jail cell from The Suicide Squad, the Bat Lab from Ben Affleck’s first turn as Batman, and neat set pieces from this year’s Batman Vs. Superman: Dawn of Justice. The most daring kids can even get up close and personal with a glowing piece of radioactive Kryptonite. That’s a photo opportunity you won’t want to miss.

DC Universe: The Exhibit is $62 per person for a three-hour fun-packed tour for kids ages 8 & up. Warner Bros. Studio Tour Hollywood is open daily and closed on Christmas Day. Reservations are recommended and all children eight years or older are welcomed. Tickets are $62 per person and can be purchased online or by phone.

Warner Bros. Studio Tour Hollywood
3400 W. Riverside Drive
Burbank
818-977-8687
Online: wbstudiotour.com

Do you have a favorite studio tour?  Let us know your behind the scenes in the movie making world secrets in the comment section.

—Elizabeth Kate